Organic Chicken Feed

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By Marye Audet

If you are raising poultry and you want completely organic eggs and meat then you will need to use an organic chicken feed. Like most organics it is more expensive than the conventional varieties, and may be harder to find. These challenges are worth overcoming to many small farmers and backyard hobbyists.

When it comes to organic feed you actually have a couple of options; buying commercially prepared, organic feed or making your own feed. There are drawbacks and benefits to both choices.

(c)maryeaudet2008
(c)maryeaudet2008

Commercial Organic Poultry Feeds

All Natural and Certified Organic feeds are not the same.

Certified Organic Chicken Feed

Certified organic feeds must be certified by the USDA and everything that goes in them must be certified as well. Organic chicken feed will not contain any of the following:

  • Animal by products
  • Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs)
  • Antibiotics
  • Pesticide treated grains
  • Grains grown with chemical fertilizers
  • Synthetic amino acids

For truly organically raised chickens, you must keep them on organic pasture as well.

All Natural Chicken Feed

All natural feed is not the same. It does not have the same requirements as certified organic feeds. For some people, all natural is acceptable because it is usually less expensive and often easier to get.

  • All natural chicken feed does not contain:
  • Additives
  • Preservatives
  • Coloring agents
  • Antibiotics

The ingredients in all natural products might not be organically grown, however, and may have been treated with chemicals and pesticides.

Resources from Amazon

Storey's Guide to Raising Chickens: Care / Feeding / Facilities
Amazon Price: $12.00
List Price: $18.95
Chickens In Your Backyard: A Beginner's Guide
Amazon Price: $1.83
List Price: $14.95
Nutrition and Feeding of Organic Poultry
Amazon Price: $105.18
List Price: $135.00
Organic Farming: Everything You Need to Know
Amazon Price: $8.87
List Price: $24.95

Sources for Organic Feed

  • Countryside Naturals has several 100 percent organic products from chicken feed to chicken scratch. You can buy your organic feed by the fifty pound bag and have it shipped. Prices are excellent but shipping may be expensive.
  • The National Sustainable Agricultural Information Service has an interactive tool that allows you to add your location and the type of feed you are looking for and then pulls up various suppliers in your area.
  • Lions Grip has a listing of organic feed suppliers by state.

You can also check with your local feed store. Many of them will order in organic feeds if you will buy enough of it. Since many people don't use organic feeds it is often not worth it to the local feed stores to carry them. Be sure that they know you want 100 percent certified organic and not all natural feed. Many store owners are not fully aware of the difference.

How to Make Organic Homemade Feed

Homemade Organic Chicken Feed

Another option is making your own chicken feed. This is very do-able, especially if you chickens and other poultry are on pasture as well. Chickens will eat a lot of grass and vegetation so pastured raised poultry generally won't need a lot of extra nutrients.

Some people feel that there are disadvantages to fish and soy meal in homemade feed. Some people feel that soy products, with their heavy concentration of phyto-estrogens are not healthy. Fish meal may be high in mercury. You will need to decide whether or not you will add these things to your flock's diet.

Homemade Poultry Feed Mix

In order for this mix to be organic every grain and every seed must be organic, too. You won't find organic kelp or oyster shell but that is o.k.

  • 2 parts whole corn
  • 3 parts soft white wheat
  • 3 parts hard red winter wheat
  • ½ part Diatomaceous Earth
  • 1 part hulled barley
  • 1 part oat groats
  • 2 part sunflower seeds
  • ½ part peanuts
  • 3 parts millet
  • 1 part wheat bran
  • 1 part split peas
  • 1 part lentils
  • 1 part quinoa
  • 1 part sesame seeds
  • 1/2 part flax seeds
  • 1/2 part kelp
Oyster shell in a container for free feed.


Raising chickens on organic feed is one of the benefits of having your own chickens. You can produce organic eggs at a fraction of the price of those you can buy. If you are mixing your own feed it will be more fresh, and you will know what is in it.

Comments

Aya Katz profile image

Aya Katz Level 4 Commenter 2 years ago

Marye, I have four hens and am interested in the possibility of feeding them in ways that are both healthy and economical. For instance, it would be great if we could make chicken feed from kitchen scraps.

I was wondering why organic feed should not contain animal products. Don't chickens naturally go for the meat of insects?

Marye Audet profile image

Marye Audet Hub Author 2 years ago

Aya, the commercial feeds cannot contain animal products because of health concerns. However, you are correct- chickens are omnivores. Mine even keep the mouse population down by the barn! Scraps will not hurt them a bit..but make sure it is organic. :)

Gypsy Willow profile image

Gypsy Willow Level 5 Commenter 2 years ago

We kept chickens years ago when I was a girl. They were fed only kitchen scraps, mainly boiled potato skins. They didn't seem hard done by but they had the run of the garden too.

sooz 2 years ago

Where do you get these grains? A feed store, or co-op?

Are the peanuts whole? Quinoa cooked, or right out of the box?

FREDDYBEAR09 profile image

FREDDYBEAR09 2 years ago

iam as you know now, an avid lover of all chickens. also turkeys, game fowl, and other domestic poultry. these are for pets only!!!!!

Blogging Erika profile image

Blogging Erika 2 years ago

I agree on the "no animal protein" issue. Not because chickens are vegetarians - because they aren't! But because you have NO idea what KIND of "protein" it is. Which means you can pretty much assume the worst.

bengriston profile image

bengriston 2 years ago

We do cattle now and want to add chickens to the mix next summer. Part of our plan includes growing our own feed for both since we have plenty of land. I was just reading your hub for some pointers on chickens.

hubmu profile image

hubmu 2 years ago

never know about this info before, good hub.

cristyn 22 months ago

I'm so glad I found this page. My regular egg farmer wasn't available and I almost bought eggs from another until I read his feed ingredients. First ingredient corn and second was soybean meal. Soy is so horrible for us and they sneak it in everywhere! I felt bad for him when I said 'no thanks'.

Keeping Chickens 22 months ago

What an excellent article. I recently posted on Organic Chicken Feed as it's so difficult to source locally for us back garden chicken keepers. This gives me all the info I need to make some of my own up. Cheers!

Joe 19 months ago

Hi, i want to make my own chicken feed too, but i was wondering how much you'd need to make and how long it would last with 30 chickens?

swtwin2 17 months ago

Very informative and helpful. Thanks.

K9keystrokes profile image

K9keystrokes Level 7 Commenter 14 months ago

My chickens are going to flip over your organic chicken feed recipe Marye! I can't wait to try it.

K9

johnboscojr@yahoo.com 7 months ago

Please email me more information on how to raise local chicken. I'm based in South Nyanza region in Kenya and have great passion to raise local African chicken. I'm challenged on how to acquire feeds locally. What are the locally available opt,ions for feeding chicken?

Tracy 3 months ago

What percent are you aiming at with your feed recipe? I need to come up with a 22 percent feed for my turkeys. Mnay thanks

Josh Hatkin 2 months ago

In the 2 yr old comment above yoy indicate organic chicken feed should not contain animal products due to health concerns. What health concerns? Other animals eat animal products regularly and are healthy. Are you promoting vegetarian chickens? You also indicate your chickens control the rodent population. You have no idea what the rodents ate. was it organic? Maybe they ate grain treated with a chemical fertiizer. Furthermore, good poultry husbandry includes an IPM program. You can obtain a good IPM from your local pest control service.

louromano profile image

louromano Level 1 Commenter 2 months ago

Beautiful and interesting. Thanks for sharing.

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