I have no trouble getting turkey poults to eat. Their natural tendency is to peck at things on the ground. Because I live on a sand dune and sand is free for the digging, I use sand for the bedding in my brooder. I sprinkle a 28% protein turkey or game bird starter on the sand. The poults usually start pecking at it and eating eat within 15 minutes of being placed in the brooder.Welcome to BYH!
As to turkeys.... I had the darndest time getting them to eat on their own..... other than that they were "just like chicken", just bigger.
Do you already have turkeys? If so, what ages and what kinds?
You will pay less for the poults if you buy live poults instead of buying hatching eggs that get shipped.Ooooo... I really want Turkey.
There's an online listing for bronze hatching eggs in my town for $3.50 each.... Really wanna grab a dozen to put in the incubator. Would have just enough time to hatch them before we move to the farm, but hubby has said no
Will probably have to wait till next breeding season.
Might be a bit different here pricing-wise cause New Zealand and they'd be pickup, not shipped. No, had a rough time shipping Orpington eggs from South island. Had 12 to start with, only 5 made it to lockdown and 3 hatch, then one had a congenital issue and passed at 1 week old. Lots of detached air cells and the eggs themselves were a bit all over the place - big size ranges, uneven shell colouring, even a corrugated egg in there. My other shipped batch didn't fare so bad, 4/10 with two clears.You will pay less for the poults if you buy live poults instead of buying hatching eggs that get shipped.
Hi Jessy, welcome!Hey, I'm Jessy! I'm new to turkey raising. I need all the advice.