- Thread starter
- #11
digitS'
Garden Master
Okay, okay!!
Tell us about you hulless oats. What was your intention for these -- are you feeding them to your chickens? If so, what did the birds think of 'em?
There has been some studies of hulless oats as livestock feed. Oats are a high-protein grain but they have a lot of fiber! That is, the oats with hulls have a lot of fiber. And, chickens don't do well on a diet with too much fiber.
A bad tomato year seems to be the story for the Pacific Northwest, Old Fashioned. I'm lucky that this is a little more of the Intermountain West than the PNW. By the time the coastal weather blew away in July, my poor tomato plants were in a heck of a state, however. Really, all the warm-weather crops that were planted before July suffered from the cool, cloudy days, and the wind - especially the wind! The result: stunted plants and a smaller with later than usual harvest here.
Steve
Tell us about you hulless oats. What was your intention for these -- are you feeding them to your chickens? If so, what did the birds think of 'em?
There has been some studies of hulless oats as livestock feed. Oats are a high-protein grain but they have a lot of fiber! That is, the oats with hulls have a lot of fiber. And, chickens don't do well on a diet with too much fiber.
A bad tomato year seems to be the story for the Pacific Northwest, Old Fashioned. I'm lucky that this is a little more of the Intermountain West than the PNW. By the time the coastal weather blew away in July, my poor tomato plants were in a heck of a state, however. Really, all the warm-weather crops that were planted before July suffered from the cool, cloudy days, and the wind - especially the wind! The result: stunted plants and a smaller with later than usual harvest here.
Steve