Supplies

Cow Feeds

  • Succulent Hay.
  • Mineral Salts.
  • Lab-Lab.
  • Sorghum.
  • Seed Hulls.
  • Molasses.
  • Oilseed meal cake.
  • Beets.
  • Whey.
  • Pea regrowth.

  • Although the most common types of cattle feed include hay, grain such as oats, wheat, rye, or barley, straw or chaff, salt, milk, fats and oils, vitamin or mineral supplements, and by-products like alfalfa pellets or soybean meal, you need to know exactly what you can feed your cattle and in what rations.

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    Chicken Feeds

    Starter Pack
  • The primary source of food for baby chickens is starter feed, which is feed specially designed to have the right nutrients growing chickens need. The anatomy of chick starter begins with a most necessary nutrient-protein. Next to water, protein, both plant and animal, is the second most essential nutrient for young chicks.
  • Grower Chicken Feed
  • Grower feed in many ways is like chicken feed for teenage chooks. The dietary requirements for a chicken between 6 to 20 weeks old is very different from a baby chick. Essentially grower feed contains a protein content that is between 16-18% but has less calcium than regular layer feed.
  • demo

    Goat Feeds

  • Succulent Hay.
  • Mineral Salts.
  • Lab-Lab.
  • Sorghum.
  • Seed Hulls.
  • Molasses.
  • Oilseed meal cake.
  • Beets.
  • Whey.
  • Pea regrowth.

  • Although the most common types of cattle feed include hay, grain such as oats, wheat, rye, or barley, straw or chaff, salt, milk, fats and oils, vitamin or mineral supplements, and by-products like alfalfa pellets or soybean meal, you need to know exactly what you can feed your cattle and in what rations.

    demo
    demo

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