Trying to piece this thing together a little at the time!You’re definitely doing things right @the Lackster
"Never let a crisis goes to waste" is an adage that, unfortunately, many people put to work in tough times. My wife was telling me last night there's someone locally selling "started" laying hens for $125 a piece!?! That's absolutely insane!
Assume a dozen eggs is $5.
If you're lucky, the hen lays 500 eggs in her lifetime.
$5/12 = $.42/egg
That's $210 in eggs, not counting your expenses. It's not a stretch to say it costs $20/year to raise a chicken. So knock $60 in overhead off that and you're monetary ROI is enough for a meal at Wendy's.
Conversely, I just bought 20 chicks for $100. Let's assume 12 live out their 500 egg lives. That's 6,000 eggs, or $2,460 in eggs. It'll cost $750 to raise them, netting enough to justify a nice coop and fencing.
Owning chickens is about more than the return on your $, but it doesn't need to be a terrible $ decision!
We can get feed down here for 10 cents a lb so that's not bad for us.Heard something the other day that I never realized before. Average food consumption for each chicken too lay a dozen eggs is 4lbs.
@bowhunter1023 Jesse have you seen or verify this?
You using a feed mill of tractor suply type store? Notice anything different over the winter with laying?We can get feed down here for 10 cents a lb so that's not bad for us.
We use a feed mill. Cattle feed comes from one and we get chicken from another.You using a feed mill of tractor suply type store? Notice anything different over the winter with laying?
Welcome too the world of the retired travelerI came home from Ohio, 1 day after getting home and a coon got one of my chickens. Wife bitching at me like it’s my fault .