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Lessie Louise Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 08:55:48 AM
I came home with two bales of hay instead of straw for the chickens to scratch around in. Is hay OK for them? It can't be any worse than what they scratch around in in the yard but I thought I read somewhere that hay wasn't a good choice. Thank you!

Forget buns of steel, I'd rather have buns of cinnamon!

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Alee Posted - Feb 25 2010 : 08:57:58 AM
When I worked out at the ranch the hens would always try to nest in the hay. They really loved it. They wouldn't make too much of a mess of a hay bale but a straw bale they would tear apart. I wonder if they were trying to figure out where the tasty hay was in all that yellow stuff! LOL Either that or they were just having fun!

Alee
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AliciaNak Posted - Feb 25 2010 : 05:57:52 AM
Chick-chick

Hay is either mowed and dried grasses, or alfalfa (which has lots of tiny leaves), or a mix, and it's what you would feed to horses, goats, cows, sheep, etc. Good hay is still green in color when dried.

Straw is dried wheat or oat stalks. Hollow, yellow in color when dried, good for bedding and lots of other uses, but not for feed.

Lessie Louise-

You should be just fine with the hay. My girls run over to eat with my horses when I feed, or heck just jump in the back of the truck or climb the haystack. This is the hen's first winter and they weren't wanting to make the treck up the driveway to the hay with all the snow and ice, so every once in a while I'd take some hay down to them. They were overjoyed to see something green and tasty in the middle of all the snow and yellow straw.

Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.
Lessie Louise Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 5:24:48 PM
not dumb at all. I have always used straw because it was cheaper and hay has a lot of seeds in it, I did not want that in the garden. And you use straw in the stalls or, in my case nesting boxes. Hay is what you feed the horses and goats. I am sure there is some one out there with a much better explaination,

Forget buns of steel, I'd rather have buns of cinnamon!

Farmgirl #680!
chick-chick Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 5:18:35 PM
OK ladies,this may sound really dumb but what is the difference between hay and straw?
I thought they were the same thing.
I just recently discovered that I'm a farm girl at heart and I really have ALOT to learn.
I don't know if i've been putting hay or straw in the coop for my chickens! But they seem pretty happy anyway.

Liz
Lessie Louise Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 5:05:04 PM
Well they seem pretty happy with it, and tonight the coop smelled much better than it had been. I might just stick with hay.

Forget buns of steel, I'd rather have buns of cinnamon!

Farmgirl #680!
willowtreecreek Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 4:51:37 PM
Mine only get hay.

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Ms.Lilly Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 3:30:13 PM
Carol- I keep a bale or two of alfalfa around during the winter to feed the girls, helps keep their eggs nice and yellow! Since they only pick the leaves off the rest stays on the ground and keeps the mud down.

Lillian
kristin sherrill Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 2:14:54 PM
Kimberly Ann, I put old hay down over the mud paths. It works pretty good and it's good for the ground. I have tried the crush-n-run gravel on those same muddy paths and they have all practically washed away. Wierd but true.But the hay stays unless the chickens get to it before it gets sunk n real good. I want concrete paths now. That's the only thing that will work and stay.

Kris

Happiness is simple.
CherryPie Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 11:05:52 AM
I have straw in their run right now but I can attest that it gets pretty mucky when it rains. I'm swapping out for gravel as soon as I can afford to get some. I wonder if potential mold is a problem with the straw? I hadn't thought of that.

Kimberly Ann
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Lessie Louise Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 09:51:32 AM
Thank you guys, I bought it to add to the coop and yard since winter seems to drag on. I had the truck yesterday, which I hardly ever do, and went to the feed store. Well it was closed for lunch, so I just backed up the truck and grabbed the two bales. Went back later that afternoon and paid, but by then I had put the hay away. I love small town life!! The chickens seen to be happy with it, Carol

Forget buns of steel, I'd rather have buns of cinnamon!

Farmgirl #680!
kristin sherrill Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 09:46:20 AM
Carol, that's all I have. I use it in the goat barn and that's where the chickens are. I don't actually use hay for bedding, but anyone who has goats knows how wasteful they are and how much ends up on the ground. So it becomes bedding. I need to go out there and remove about half of it. I keep hitting my head on the roof, that's how much is in there now. But it's good insulation for them. It's a really short barn. And the hens also lay eggs all over out there. They find a nice clean pile and make a nest and there they go. So yes, I think hay is fine. I have never lost any due to it. Well, maybe they have gotten buried under it!

Kris

Happiness is simple.
child in harmony Posted - Feb 24 2010 : 09:45:21 AM
I think hay is fine. I've used it before. It's WET hay you always have to be careful with cuz mold can grow.

~marcia

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