How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (2024)

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Ready to cut your animal feed costs substantially? Learn how to grow fodder for chickens and other livestock! Whole grains like oats, wheat, or barley make for an easy way to provide fresh greens to your flock.

Be sure to check out more ideas on how to feed chickens on the cheap!

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (1)

If you’re raising chickens or other livestock, you know that animal feed can get quite expensive. Growing fodder to supplement their diet is an easy endeavor and one that will keep your flock happy.

What is fodder?

Fodder is a mat of sprouted seeds that can be used to feed a variety of livestock and small animals, including chickens.

While we think of whole grains as food, they are really seeds formed by a plant to regenerate itself. Untreated whole grains need nothing more than a little moisture to try to do what they’re meant to do: grow.

By giving grains the conditions necessary to sprout, they’ll do what comes naturally with very little effort on your part.

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How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (2)

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens

Sprouting grains into fodder requires a little bit of set up, but it’s not difficult. You’ll need some sort of shallow tray to get started. I used an upcycled storage unit with shallow sliding drawers. Check your local thrift store or rubbish bin for options — you won’t need anything fancy. You could also use:

  • Styrofoam meat trays
  • Baking trays
  • Plastic clamshells
  • Seed starting trays

The essential thing is that you are able to drill drainage holes in the trays.

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (3)

Why grow fodder?

One of the best reasons for sprouting grains into fodder is that it helps stretch your animal feed budget. Fifty pounds of whole grain can be transformed into as much as 300 pounds of fodder simply by sprouting it.

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Sprouting grains increases their nutritional content and boosts protein content slightly. And while it’s great for chicken feed, this fodder works as feed for other livestock as well.

You’ll need:

  • Shallow trays — you can use baking trays, an assortment of recycled containers, or a unit like mine
  • Shelving or a rack on which to place the trays
  • Drill with a one-eighth-inch bit
  • Bulk whole grain – barley, wheat, or oats work well
  • Bucket
  • Water

Making the fodder system

Drill several drainage holes in the bottom each tray. Test to make sure water drains sufficiently. A bit of residual water is okay, but if it’s really puddling, add a few more holes. Using a stacked storage unit makes for a mostly ready-made system.

If you scavenge an assortment of trays, you’ll need a place to set the trays while the seeds sprout. Remember that the area will get wet.

Where to put your growing fodder trays

My fodder system is set up outside near the chicken run, making it easy to access and maintain. If you have hot summers, a shady spot is a good idea. Growing fodder during winter weather will require an indoor space where it’s a bit warmer, but supplemental lighting is really not necessary.

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (5)

Growing fodder

  1. Soak grain in a bucket of water overnight. Cover the grains by about two inches of water. How much grain to soak depends on the size of your trays and how many you’re filling. Aim for a half-inch depth for each tray. The grains have a tendency to mold if they’re deeper than that.
  2. Drain grains and transfer to trays. Spread evenly.
  3. Water each tray morning and night. If your region is really dry and the sprouting grains dry out quickly, you might need to water them during the day or experiment with using lids on the trays to help prevent evaporation.
  4. You’ll see roots within the first couple of days, followed by greens. The growing fodder is edible at any point, but it usually takes a week or so to have a nice solid block of fodder that you can lift out of each drawer.

Related:How to Keep Your Hens Cool This Summer

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (6)

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (7)

Growing Fodder

Prep Time: 1 day

Additional Time: 3 days

Total Time: 4 days

While we think of whole grains as food, they are really seeds formed by a plant to regenerate itself. Untreated whole grains need nothing more than a little moisture to try to do what they're meant to do. By giving grains the conditions necessary to sprout, they'll do what comes naturally with very little effort on your part.

* This post layout has been updated, and the original star ratings lost. This project had 4.6 stars prior to the update!*

Materials

  • Shallow trays -- you can use baking trays, an assortment of recycled containers, or a unit like mine
  • Shelving or a rack on which to place the trays
  • Bulk whole grain - barley, wheat, or oats work well
  • Bucket
  • Water

Tools

  • Drill with a one-eighth-inch bit

Instructions

  1. Soak grain in a bucket of water overnight. Cover the grains by about two inches of water. How much grain to soak depends on the size of your trays and how many you’re filling. Aim for a half-inch depth for each tray. The grains have a tendency to mold if they're deeper than that.
  2. Drain grains and transfer to trays. Spread evenly.
  3. Water each tray morning and night. If your region is really dry and the sprouting grains dry out quickly, you might need to water them during the day or experiment with using lids on the trays to help prevent evaporation.
  4. You’ll see roots within the first couple of days, followed by greens. The sprouted grains are edible at any point, but it usually takes a week or so to have a nice solid block of fodder that you can lift out of each drawer.

Notes

Making the fodder system:

Drill several drainage holes in the bottom each tray. Test to make sure water drains sufficiently. A bit of residual water is okay, but if it's really puddling, add a few more holes.

Where to put your growing trays:

My fodder system is set up outside near the chicken run, making it easy to access and maintain. If you have hot summers, a shady spot is a good idea. Sprouting grains into fodder during winter weather will require an indoor space where it's a bit warmer, but supplemental lighting is really not necessary.

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Hints & Tips for Keeping Chickens in Your Backyard

  • How to Grow Fodder for Chickens
  • Make a Chicken Swing
  • Feeding Chickens on a Budget
  • Butchering Chickens
  • Mistakes I Made in the Chicken Coop
  • Put Your Backyard Chickens to Work in the Garden
  • Grazing Boxes for Chickens
  • Plant a Chicken Garden
  • Do Your Hens Need Supplemental Light?
  • Chicken Coop Supplies
  • Controlling Mites
  • Keeping Chickens Cool in Extreme Heat
  • Build a Chicken Coop Extension from Pallets

Originally published in July 2017; this post has been updated.

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock (2024)

FAQs

How to Grow Fodder for Chickens and Other Livestock? ›

It is essential to begin fodder sprouting with clean seed that is free from mold. The seed is soaked for 12 to 24 hours, spread onto trays, and watered two or three times daily for seven days. Seven-day sprouts are harvested every day and fed to livestock.

How to grow fodder for livestock? ›

It is essential to begin fodder sprouting with clean seed that is free from mold. The seed is soaked for 12 to 24 hours, spread onto trays, and watered two or three times daily for seven days. Seven-day sprouts are harvested every day and fed to livestock.

How to build a fodder system? ›

The components of a DIY fodder system will include:
  1. A temperature- and humidity-controlled space.
  2. Trays on which to sprout the grains.
  3. Buckets to soak the grain.
  4. Buckets with slits to drain water if you use this system.
  5. Enough light for the sprouts to green up.

How much fodder per chicken per day? ›

You can feed up to 2% of the animal's body mass in fodder per day. For example, if you estimate the average weight of your chickens is 6 pounds, you would feed approximately 2 ounces per bird, per day. (6 lbs x 16 oz = 96 ounces (bird weight) x 0.02 (2%) = 1.92 ounces).

What is the fastest growing fodder? ›

Italian ryegrass is one of the fastest growing forage grasses available. It establishes well and starts growing early in the following spring. Italian ryegrass has a rapid regrowth after cutting and the quality of the grass is very high in respect of digestibility.

How do you grow fodder step by step? ›

Steps We Use to Grow Fodder

start soaking the wheat in a bucket for 12-24 hrs. Note: If you agitate the wheat after it settles and sinks into the water, the chaff will float to the top. Skim that off since it won't sprout and you don't want that in your trays. Spread about 5 cups of soaked grain in a tray.

What is the best fodder for chickens? ›

The 4 best options for chicken fodder:
  • Wheat – This is what I use and have had the most success with. ...
  • Barley – Another very common grain used for fodder and provides the most antioxidants (Qamar, 2018).
  • Oats – Harder to find, but works well. ...
  • Rye – Harder to find, but grows nice fodder.
Nov 25, 2022

What is the best fodder for livestock? ›

The most popular fodder seeds are barley, alfalfa, millet, oats, wheat, grain rye, ryegrass, buckwheat, field peas, clover and sorghum. Fodder Rule of thumb is "2% of the animal's live body weight of fodder per day." One pound of seed can produce eight pounds of fodder.

Are fodder systems worth it? ›

While there are some benefits to fodder, the challenges are also present. There are a low but growing number of research studies. The product is often too expensive (see Table 2, but consider that different systems cause a major shift up or down in price) when adjusted to cost per dry ton.

Can chickens survive on just fodder? ›

Fodder can be supplemented to reduce feed, or they can be used as the primary source — but be aware that chickens need to consume between 2% and 3% of their entire body weight each day.

How much feed do 10 chickens need per day? ›

However, there is a simple figure to provide you with a solid starting point: 1/4 of a pound per fully grown chicken per day. This means each chicken will eat approximately 1.5 pounds of feed in a week. This amount will vary based on the age and size of your birds.

How to feed chickens for free? ›

Because chickens are omnivores, they will eat a wide variety of foods.
  1. Lawn clippings/Grass.
  2. Snakes, frogs and lizards.
  3. Eggs (hopefully not their own)
  4. Bugs.
  5. Kitchen scraps (greens, sprouts, etc.)
  6. Hay.
  7. Animals (mice, snakes, frogs, lizards)
  8. Crops (leftover broccoli leaves and stems, squash, and other garden scraps)
Jul 22, 2023

What is the king of fodder? ›

Berseem is very important Rabi season legume fodder and popularly known as the “King” of fodder crops.

What is the highest yielding fodder crop? ›

Fodder beet is the highest yielding forage crop

In many countries farmers depend on it for winter storage feed and it is good for filling gaps in the yearly forage cycle.

How long does fodder take to grow? ›

In just 8 days, barley fodder is ready to harvest. If you leave it longer than 8 days, thefoliage will begin to yellow because the light requirements increase. At this stage the entire mat of seeds and foliage can be removed from the trays and fed directly to your animals.

Is growing fodder worth it? ›

It would be a tremendous amount of work if you had a large number of animals, but it is also good feed and it is very gratifying being able to grow that for our animals — an option we have never had on such a tiny farm.

What is the best fodder crop for hay making? ›

Oats and barley are commonly grown for hay, with oats the better crop for hay-making. Wheat and rye are not that suitable for hay-making. Maize can be used for hay (or stover) but is generally used more for silage-making.

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