The Prepper Broadcasting Network - A Biologist on Chicken Keeping
Episode Date: March 8, 2025Visit ChickenClucks.com for more! www.pbnfamily.com...
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All right, so let's get into it.
I guess the best place to start is how you got wrapped up in the world of chicken keeping, you know, in all facets?
And that's a good question. Well, actually, I always loved animals already when I was a small
child. And later I wanted to study as a, to become a veterinarian. That didn't work out.
I was bored a little quick. And if you a veterinarian, some of the work you do is quite repetitive.
I thought, well, let's explore other options.
So I went to study animal sciences and that's how I kind of rolled into it.
Animal sciences.
Yeah.
Animal sciences is pretty broad.
They're like subcategories you can drill down into
and that's how you wind up in chicken world?
Yeah, it's mostly it's on livestock.
So poultry, swine, cattle.
Got it.
It's not like cats and dogs.
So it is agricultural.
But then the topics you can choose are genetics, feed, management,
all kinds of things, behavior.
I chose the feed and the physiology direction.
What was that like?
What did you think about with the feed?
How did the feed come up?
Because that's an interesting one.
If you hadn't already had an interest, was it more of like the nutrition and improving
nutrition and improving nutrition,
that kind of thing? To be honest, I found it interesting, but it was also kind of a practical
choice because I thought, well, it's interesting, but there's also at that time, quite a lot of work
in it. Genetics and behavior were not my cup of tea, so it was either physiology or feed. And then
yeah, there are multiple feed companies you can work for. So I thought, well, it's kind of a practical choice. If
it doesn't matter to me, I like both. So, man, I like that somebody in college who was
thinking about working after college. I don't see that much in America. Yeah, personally,
at some point, I thought I'm very happy if school is over, you know? Yeah, you're like 24. I
was 24. I just wanted to do something. So that was the that was the starting point for
chickens. And then it was it was it getting into the industry and all that kind of stuff
that made you like, sort you develop a passion for it?
Yes, I always had a passion for agriculture in general. A lot of my family members also have farms.
I live in a very rural area. Thanks. So I have affinity with that and then yeah for me it didn't really matter It was either poultry or cattle that I liked swine
Little but not that much. Yeah, and I kind of rolled in to poultry because I also like traveling and
You know poultry is present in all countries worldwide
So yeah, that was a bit of the reasoning behind I
Like it. I like So, yeah, that was a bit of the reasoning behind.
I like it.
I like it.
This is the reason we all get to eat the way we get to eat, right?
If not for agriculture, it'd be back to, you know, borderline starvation for the human
race most of the time.
Exactly.
And, you know, at some point, if you make a choice, you also, in my case, develop a
big passion for it as well
That's a good thing
There's a big difference. I don't know what what service is like in uh, europe right now
But but it's a very clear distinction who has developed a passion for what they do and who has not
It's pretty rough. Sometimes you run into certain people with certain jobs and they are not happy to be there
So that's good. That's good to hear, you know, it's always better to deal with someone who's into what they're
doing. Yeah, and in my case I like animals but I also like people maybe even more and the things
you can do for farms, sometimes family farms, yeah, that's just a great feeling. So what are some of the things that you see maybe trend related or
I want to say recipe related or something in animal feed that are happening right now?
Sustainability is a big thing. CO2 reduction, environmental impact, antibiotic reduction.
Reduction? Okay.
Yeah, I don't know the situation in the US.
I don't think antibiotics are allowed in feed.
You can only probably get them on veterinary subscription.
I don't know exactly, but in Europe it's like that.
Because you want to make sure that humans do not get resistance to antibiotics.
Yeah, through the food. Right.
Yeah, exactly. So when when you're talking about
sustainability, that's the types of crops that are going into the
feed. More sustainable growing practices, that kind of thing.
For example, co2 reduction is a big thing. But also, even other
things like nitrogen, phosphorus. Yeah, all those things end up in the environment.
And by feeding the animals well, we can, yeah, if you control the input, you can control
the output.
So, yeah, that is what we're working on quite a lot.
And it goes pretty far into measuring the CO2 that goes in and out the poultry houses,
professional farms
How long does something how often does something like that change in terms of a feed recipe like
You've got this recipe that's making money
It's doing doing you know what you want a product to do
Do you guys evaluate like every year and say well, we're going to change this and tweak this or
Don't get scared, But sometimes even weekly.
Otherwise, weekly, your feed prices would go crazy because you people that are not
into feed, they think that if you keep the recipe the same, everything will say the same.
But that's not true because your protein level in your corn will vary.
Every batch you get will have different, maybe slight differences.
Wow.
You have seasonal changes.
So if you keep the recipe the same, your nutrients will fluctuate quite a lot.
So we fix the nutrients that we say we want to have this much protein down to the 22 amino
acids almost that are consisting of protein.
Sure.
We tweak it completely.
And then you have on the one side the nutrients in the feed and on the other side you do have
Ranges of ingredients that you do want in the feed right ingredients that you do not want some
But if it's wheat or corn for me there can be fluctuation that doesn't matter for the bird
We did a lot do a lot of research on it
Wow
So even though we go and we pick up that same bag and the pellet looks the same or the crumble looks the same
That things getting tweaked on a regular basis because of market price and nutrition and all that kind of stuff
And it's a good thing that it gets tweaked. Sure. Yeah
No, that means anxious about it, but it's actually a really good thing
No, I think it makes sense. Well, look, I mean, I've kept chickens for almost a decade, so I have a lot of, you know,
a lot of confidence in the feed companies because that's what I feed my chickens.
So if they were doing something crazy, I'd be losing them all the time.
I mean, I'd lose them, but it's not because of that.
It's because there's other hungry animals around that want them more than I want them.
Yeah, exactly. Or diseases or whatever.
There's so many things that can go wrong.
I've only lost a really very few to diseases.
And I don't even know how many were diseases.
We have some poisonous snakes in the area.
And when I look back on those birds
that died pretty rapidly and what I thought was illness,
I didn't really feel around their bodies a whole lot.
I'm wondering if maybe they didn't run into a copperhead and get bit.
I started to think about that.
So I don't know.
We don't see a disease very often.
I guess that's a testament.
Along with the feed, though, our chickens, they're out back right now
kicking around, kicking up dirt.
That's a very good sign. Eating bugs and eating grasses, that kind of stuff. are chickens like they're out back right now kicking around, kicking up dirt, eating bugs
and eating grasses, that kind of stuff.
And also mature laying hens, they're quite resistant.
They can handle quite a lot of stress in general before they already show the signs.
I think it's like nature that, you know, the mother type animals, they will produce offspring and in
laying hens case eggs anyway, you can do quite a lot also in swine.
Like a mother pig can be totally skinny, but still produce offspring.
It's crazy.
It's biology like determined on reproducing, no matter the cost.
Oh, we're similar. Right? Yeah, yeah, sometimes. Yes. determined on reproducing, no matter the cost.
Well, we're similar, right?
Yeah, yeah, sometimes. Yes.
There were babies born in the concentration camps. That's amazing to think about.
Exactly. Yeah, it's a resilient thing.
Yeah. So feed.
One of the things about feed when we first started talking
that really blew my mind was the effects of, in the prepping
world like our audience, when the wars started with Russia and Ukraine, we were really up
in arms and alarmed about the breadbasket of Europe taking a hit and how it would affect
food security.
And then, you know, being so far away from the problem and having our own breadbasket,
I kind of like forgot about it.
And you had mentioned that you guys have seen price increases in various things because
of that.
Yeah, it had a huge effect because Ukraine is actually exporting quite a lot of grains
to Eastern Europe and also Africa even by sea transport.
And by the time the war happened, not only, yeah, between Russia and Ukraine,
not only the energy prices went crazy, but also grain supplies in Europe and
Africa really dried up or not dried up, but there were really huge price effects.
At some point, the price quadrupled in some regions in Africa. It was really crazy. Yeah. the grains rather than export and they got a ton. Yeah, it's a supply and demand thing and there's so
much trade going on between countries that if something like that happens and it's an exporting
country or an importing country then all the other countries, yeah, they suffer as well. And I think
even people, not only animals, but people in Africa actually suffer because in Europe, you know, you
can pay for it. So you do it, but in Africa, maybe they can't pay for it.
Maybe people have nothing for a while.
Yeah, that's kind of what we were worried about was how far reaching the effects of the
the lack of grains would go and if, you know, with human human life would be affected by it.
Yeah, but it's weird.
It was just you bringing up bringing that up and the price of the raw ingredients to go into the feed raised that whole thing in my head about, oh, this has consequences that I just wasn't thinking about because my feed price stays the same.
But yeah, that's a big one. And so being in chicken feed as you're in it,
you probably are seeing different things.
I know the avian flu is happening and taking its toll in Europe as well as America.
One of the biggest stories here in our country is the price of eggs right now.
It's really out of control.
And people don't know how long it's going's really out of control and people don't know
how long it's going to be out of control for. Are you guys experiencing similar things with
the avian flu, similar challenges?
Yes, that's true. It's the same. I have to say that I don't know out of the top of my
head the egg prices in all the European countries. It has went a bit crazy, but it's more related, I
think, to feed prices. I think the AI, not artificial intelligence, but the influenza,
has not changed the last year. The threat and the pressure is the same.
Okay.
So I think from that side, there's not so much change than before.
Only the laws and legislations continuously change.
So you can imagine if there is AI and you have the regulations that you have to clear a whole farm.
And take out thousands, hundreds of thousands, some countries, maybe a million birds.
But that's that, of course course doesn't have an effect. Sure. Is there any proposed?
Solution beyond the mass slaughter
Well vaccination is an option yeah
Yeah, you have several options. I think in prevention in general
What do you think what do you think is the best is it good to just go in there and wipe them. What do you think? What do you think is the best?
Is it good to just go in there and wipe them out or do you know vaccination makes
sense? I think advantage.
But I think I would say the best opportunity is just to rely on research.
Yeah, yeah, I think it's the same with with COVID, something like that happens
and quickly vaccines are developed and then we handle the situation
That's the only way to handle it
Yeah, that's a
It will be interesting to see going forward how that because that that just seems like such a crazy response, right?
Every everything gets killed and then start over. it's got to be hell on the farmers the farmers have to just be like
This is crazy
I can't do the other hand if you are in a location as a farmer where there are very much
Yeah, a lot of other farms and you don't call and they all get it
And there are people living in this area as well. That's maybe even worse. So well good point
Yeah, it's like two evils, you choose the lesser one. And it's also I think,
depending on the first of all, you don't want a too high
concentration of full poultry farms in a certain region at all,
or close to a nature zone, where there is a lot of migrating
birds. That's the first thing you shouldn't do. But then, yeah,
if it is like that, and there are a lot of
poultry farms located in a certain area and one gets it, then yeah, sorry, but then this
is the best opportunity to save at least the rest.
So if you go show up to a have precautions changed for humans at all if you go show up
to a farm, are you doing anything different than you've done in years past in terms of masking?
And I know you guys probably cover your shoes and wear suits and stuff when you go if you visit and
go in to see the birds. Yeah, this sounds totally stupid. But we have like suits, boots, mouth caps,
and everything. But not I'm worried about my own disease. But if I infect a poultry farm myself,
that's not what you want to do. So worry more worried about the birds than about me. Oh, I got well, that's fair thing
But it's not even it's not good for your
Respiratory system anyway, right to breathe in like just a healthy
Bar bird farm particularly those indoor ones not healthy to breathe that stuff in right? Well for me
I am a really good yeah in general you have to have good ventilation
in a commercial big poultry farm because it's often closed housing.
There's a lot of pressure but also there should be really good ventilation
and we have actually in our company also people are specialized in that.
If you have good ventilation you have good air
quality because then your birds will do better. Yeah it makes sense. In my case I have really
sensitive respiratory system. I start coughing right away as soon as there is a small particle
in the air. So if I walk in and I start coughing I don't need any equipment I can say right away
it's not good if the ammonia or dust level is too high then I will start and I will not stop. Oh no. Oh god
Well, but that's a good sign. I guess plus it probably keeps you honest in terms of bringing your
All your gear your masks and everything that you need
Yeah, and in general in the farms where I do visit, in general, the air quality is actually
quite good because if it's not, then you're simply losing production, losing money, basically.
You have to take care of your animals really well, otherwise you lose money.
Sure.
As a farmer.
And often farmers also really care about their birds, but that's more the case for family-owned
farms and for huge corporations.
Yeah, definitely. So with flus and with government restrictions and with even the price of feed,
do you think we're in a situation where keeping chickens is going to be something that we do more of on the
personal level and in the agricultural level?
Do you think the problems aren't big enough that it'll change?
Or, you know, how do you see the future
of poultry keeping from both from a civilian standpoint and then also
from people who do it for a living farming? I think
overall poultry has the biggest chance of all the farm animals of a future.
Backyard I'm not so sure because the regulations that governments and local
municipals yeah but they're quite strict and it's getting worse and worse
it's the same with building houses you have all kinds of rules where you can put your coop
and how far it should be from your neighbor,
how many chickens you can have.
You cannot have a rooster if you live in a small town
because of the noise.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, so for backyard people, I don't know.
I think it's more up to those kinds of regulations
and for big farms.
I think that in general a lot of people are moving from eating meat to being vegetarians, to being vegan, so that's risk number one. But on the other side, poultry is the most,
I don't know if you noticed, but poultry is the most efficient farm animal there is, because
farm animal there is because what we call feed conversion ratio means the amount of kgs of feed you need for one kg of meat or eggs.
Yeah, that number is actually the lowest.
I believe that.
Yeah, it's like 1.6 for broilers and maybe two for layers.
But for swine and for cattle, it's way, the number is way higher.
Wow.
And you have to keep them for a much longer time before they start producing anything.
Because it's a bigger animal, it takes up more space.
I do think that, and we already see it, that a lot of the production, yeah, sometimes is
moving from cattle, swine, more to poultry.
Unfortunately, also from my, at least from my profession, unfortunately, more to poultry. Unfortunately, also from my
athletes, from my profession, unfortunately, also from poultry
to vegetarian to vegan. Yeah, those are the movements that are
going on.
Well, then you guys could just sell feed directly to the people.
Yeah, only one thing that you may or may not know is that
actually animals are fed, not grains.
Those are also ingredients for human food industry.
But for example, soybean meal, which is a big component of animal feed as well, which
supplies protein, is actually a byproduct of the food industry that cannot be used by
humans.
So it's also a way of efficiently getting rid of your human food byproducts.
Wow. So if that would collapse, we may also need to pay extra money for soybean oil,
because I see the big companies crushing the soybeans and extracting the oil cannot
get quite a lot of money for their byproducts anymore.
Yeah, that is weird, isn't it?
Those little interlinking networks that we don't know exist,
but they're back there working hard all the time.
Yeah, I think maybe the grains, you know, that's yes, that's human food,
but all the other stuff is mostly not.
So what kind of things locally and globally do you think are like the biggest
effectors of food, not food, but grain price and then the follow through on animal feed prices?
Like what really makes animal feed prices go up that you've seen? I think you have to first look at is your country self-sufficient yes or no?
Let's take the US. I'm from Europe so I have less experience in the US but I think you're
self-sufficient right? On grains for sure. Yeah.
Nobody's self or almost nobody's self-sufficient for protein meals but for grains yes so that's
a big plus because then you're not impacted by any geopolitical stuff. Right. But
the weather is a big thing. Definitely not make conditions.
So if you have if it has to go overland, then fuel prices and
stuff like that. Yeah, do matter. So still, you're you may
be affected by, yeah, by other countries geopolitics or big
economical recessions, or things like that.
And if your country is importing, then you have a heap of affecting factors.
Right. Yeah, then there's trade and all that kind of stuff, I guess, get wrapped into it, right?
Yeah. That's quite severe. But for example, the weather has a huge impact.
Yeah, we see it. We get a lot of floods in central part of the country.
And we see the videos of corn fields underwater and that kind of stuff.
It's scary because you never know what the full extent of that is
and what it's going to mean to the price of bread and so on.
But what do you think that the efficiency of the chicken, the taste of the chicken, the fact that a chicken produces an egg every day mostly is the reason that it's got to be the most popular agricultural bird, if not animal, all over
the world, right?
Yeah, for my company, I work for an international company as a poultry expert and also nutritionist.
So I've made recipes for millions of chickens throughout my career, maybe even billions
and I'm not exaggerating.
Wow. So it's it's really
a lot of birds but then yeah still our our revenue is 50% poultry. Wow 50% 50% wow and
the rest is swine, ruminants, aqua. Yeah. If you could do it without the overhead.
If you could do it without the overhead
Okay, here's a question if you could do it without without profits in mind
What would a what would a feed mix look like like the ultimate feed mix?
If you had to produce a recipe, you know, and you didn't have to worry about like, you know costs whatsoever You just I want to give them the best thing I can
And you didn't have to worry about like, you know costs whatsoever. You just I want to give them the best thing I can
Cool I would say still the same as the recipes that I make on a day-to-day basis because
Because we formulate on feed on feed conversion ratio. So we don't just look at the feed price per kg. We look at
lowering the feed price per kg of eggs or per kg of meat
Oh, okay. So So the production really counts because for farmers, yeah, that's a really big factor they look at, at least the developed ones,
the underdevelopment ones, maybe not, but yeah, so I would say almost the same. And
then you have for laying hands, you have about 15% of protein in your feed, 15 to 16, but
I'm not so much, I don't care about the protein level I care about
the amino acids of which the protein consists and then the digestibility of those amino acids
and the ratio of one to the other I can I can go into really amount of detail but let's not do that
well there is a valid question about I, it probably doesn't matter that much knowing
birds and what they eat, but the crumble feed in the pellet feed, is there, from a digestibility
standpoint, they handle both of those pretty well or is, should a laying head have a crumble
or does it matter?
It doesn't really matter because a crumble is actually nothing less than a crumble pellet.
That's what I figure.
So in a feed factory, you make the pellet and then you have an extra machine, which is like a
crumbler, sort of a big balls that's crumbling the pellets. So the same heat treatments,
everything else is the same. Yeah, I give the quails the crumble.
Because they're smaller, I guess. Yeah, that's that is the only thing that matters. So for smaller birds, you cannot feed a pellet, you feed a crumble.
Or really small pellets, but that's more difficult to produce in a factory.
But mesh feeds for laying hens are also perfectly fine.
Okay, good to know.
For me, it's more about feed and take.
So if you have laying h hands that have difficulties eating enough
feed, especially when they just start laying, they're not mature yet. Yeah, when they're around 18
weeks, they're still growing until they're about 30 weeks old, they're still growing and they start
laying. So they have to eat suddenly really big amounts compared to before. And if they're not ready for that, they might go into like a negative
energy balance that might give some issues. So that period is most critical.
Yeah, that makes sense. And if you then give, yeah, if they have difficulties eating, then a
crumble of pellets sometimes helps to increase the feed intake. Oh, I see. It takes them less time.
Yeah, okay.
It's easier.
For match feed, you have to pack a lot of times before you finally have your head or
fill.
Sure.
And if you then are a beginning hobbyist and you feed a little bit too little, then all
the big ones, they will be at the feeder and the small ones will maybe get nothing.
Oh, packing order thing will kick come into play.
Yeah, so that is Yeah, make sure that you always give your
chickens that everybody has a space to eat. So don't just look at how many kg should be in my feeder, but also that they all
have enough space, not too close together because otherwise otherwise the bigger ones will take everything, and the smaller ones will have
nothing.
Sure.
Yeah, so I mean, feeding and getting the right amount of feed to your birds is a problem
that backyard chicken enthusiasts have to deal with.
Are there any other things that kind of stand out in your head that could go wrong or that
people could improve in their backyard coops that, you know, best practices from the farms
or something like that?
Yeah, for sure.
Lighting is a big one because that's something you often forget.
But laying in sometimes stop laying in the winter because the days get shorter because
they have a biological block saying, hey, the days get shorter, let's stop
laying.
But you actually in big poultry farms, we give them artificial light so that the whole
coop is lighted in the same amount of light intensity.
And we give them about six, 16 hours.
Yeah, what shall I say?
It varies.
But yeah, we give them the same amount of light during the year so that they keep laying.
Because if you shorten the day length a lot
when they're laying, so if you are not artificially
lighting your hands, and in your country,
you have a winter with shorter days,
the risk that they stop laying.
That's really a pity, and it's not necessary.
OK, that's a good one.
Yeah, the lighting.
OK, so feed and lighting, water, pretty
straightforward. Predation. I know that the chickens are kept inside at farms. So predation
probably isn't that big of a deal there.
Can you explain? I don't know that word.
Oh, sorry about that.
So predators, you know.
Yeah, that's a big one as well. Oh, sorry about that. So, predators, you know. Oh, predators.
Yeah, that's a big one as well.
That's a tough one for me.
I'm always battling predators in the backyard here.
I think it's mostly just setting up your coop, right?
I also have a few articles on my website about that, about most topics that we discussed.
But I think that is more the setup of your coop at the beginning that helps and just having the, how to say, routine to take it to take the
feeders inside things like that during the night.
Oh, that's a good idea.
Put your chickens in the coop during the night. Because predators they like, some of them
attack during the day, but also a lot during the during the dark. Yeah, so that's a great segue
You know we met via the website and I think you have a really cool angle
Because you know a lot of these websites are new homesteaders preppers like us something like that, but you are
probably the The first chicken keeping website that I've ever been to where and you're an actual
Biologist on the subject. So why don't you tell the audience about your site?
Yeah, so my site is
www.chickenclucks.com
and it's really yeah side for hobbyists, but then with expert knowledge for myself,
because I really have a passion for chickens specifically.
And I would like to share some of that knowledge
with people who are just in the backyard.
And I see so many wrong information on the internet.
Also-
Oh, I bet.
Also really a lot of nonsense sometimes.
So yeah, this is kind of my own passion project,
side hustle, I don't know what to call it. Yeah, I like it. I like being able to go to
information that it's, you know, it's from a different source. And from your source is,
it's not just your sources from, you know, farmers that are, their lives are dependent on your
recipes and your Product working, you know, so I think that's really a cool angle
I don't know too many chicken keeping blogs that have a person with a four-year degree on the topic being being written
You know, yeah by those people and there are few really good ones, which you have to know them
And yeah, I think sometimes also I think it's just in general an agricultural thing
that those people, you know, they're not too worried about these kind of stuff.
Sure.
They don't really focus on it too much.
But then you don't get any, how to say, media access as well.
So you're, yeah, that would be a pity.
Makes sense.
So chickenclocks.com is where to find your insight on chicken keeping.
Yes.
And I actually also just made a free printable chicken log where you can track
your, how many eggs you've got, how much feed.
It's quite simple.
It was a challenge for me to keep it simple.
That's a great idea though.
I like that.
So yeah, you can go ahead and download it if you like.
Yeah, we're big fans of lists around here for sure.
Well, thanks so much for coming on today.
I really appreciate it.
And I hope the audience goes over and checks out your site.
You brought in some chicken insight
that we don't often hear about, more
of the global and economic and nutritional and scientific.
Yeah thanks a lot for having me.
It was nice to be here.
All right PBN Family, check out the website and download the list.
Get your chicken keeping house in order and we'll talk to you guys soon, okay?
See you tomorrow.
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