Growing a balanced homegrown quail feed

This year we purchased our very first quail. They are Coturnix quail with a rare gene causing them to lay gorgeous little blue eggs with cute little brown speckles. These eggs, and the quails themselves, have been used to sustain humans for centuries. In modern times, their commercial feed at your local grain store is expensive, and closely ties to transportation and fertilizer costs—and therefore our petroleum ever increasing prices. To offer a healthier and more cost-effective food source for our quail with minimal carbon footprint, we are growing our own homegrown quail feed.

This feed will contain:

  • Borage
  • Amaranth
  • Crimson Clover
  • Live mealworms
  • Egg shells
  • Beetles

Comfrey as a poultry fodder

Chickens. Comfrey is well-suited as a feed for chickens. Chickens’ digestive systems are not equipped to handle much fiber (fiber should be kept to between 5 and 8 percent of the diet). Comfrey is low in fiber and high in protein and minerals, especially when cut regularly. It has a protein to fiber ratio of about three to two. If the high-yielding Bocking 14 strain of comfrey is planted, 30 plants spaced at 3 feet by 3 feet (for example, six plants by five plants) will yield enough comfrey to feed 12 birds their entire allotment of green plant matter.

Comfrey can be an inexpensive source of vitamin A. Second-year hens fed half a ratio of comfrey laid large eggs with deep yellow yolks. The flesh of chickens that have been fed comfrey also ends up being more yellow, perhaps because of increased vitamin A content.

Chopping comfrey with a chaff cutter is especially recommended for birds less than eight weeks old. Another method for feeding comfrey to chickens is to hang it on a string and let birds jump for it (so it doesn’t get trampled on).

Citation: Russian Comfrey for Fertilizer, Feed and More

Principle100 g Borage Leaves100 g Amaranth Grain100 g Amaranth Leaves
Calories2110223
Carbohydrates3.06 g18.69 g4.02 g
Protein1.80 g16.50 g2.46 g
Total Fat0.70 g1.58 g0.421 g
Vitamins
Folate (B9)0.013 mg0.022 mg0. 085 mg
Niacin (B3)0.900 mg0.235 mg0.658 mg
Pyridoxine0.084 mg
Riboflavin (B2)0.150 mg0.022 mg0.158 mg
Thiamin (B1)0.060 mg0.015 mg0.027 mg
Vitamin A1.26 mg0.146 mg
Vitamin B50.064 mg
Vitamin B60.113 mg0.192 mg
Vitamin B12
Vitamin C35 mg43.3 mg
Vitamin K1.140 mg
Vitamin E0.19 mg
Electrolytes
Sodium80 mg6 mg20 mg
Potassium470 mg135 mg611 mg
Minerals
Calcium93 mg47 mg215 mg
Copper0.130 mg0.15 mg0.16 mg
Iron3.30 mg2.1 mg2.32 mg
Magnesium52 mg65 mg55 mg
Manganese0.349 mg0.854 mg0.885 mg
Zinc0.20 mg0.86 mg0.9 mg

Amaranth

Amaranth, although it is often classified as a grain, is actually a gluten-free “pseudograin”. Pseudograins, unlike true grains, are not grown from grasses, and rather come from flowering plants; Quinoa and buckwheat are two other examples of pseudograins. Because they have similar nutritional properties and culinary uses as true grains, these pseudograins are lumped together with other cereals.

Before the Spanish conquest, amaranth was estimated to represent up to 80% of the Aztec diet. Spanish conquistadors ordered that amaranth fields be destroyed and proclaimed growing the plant to be a punishable offence.

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