No The laying mash or pellets are fine for the rooster. There really is no way to stop the rooster from eating the same things you feed the hens other than keeping them separated. My hens are fed laying crumble all year long and the roosters thrive on it.
No, laying mash is just food, it has nothing to do with fertility.
NO. It would be counter productive to supply an appetite suppressant to laying hens. The whole idea of feeding the hens laying mash is to have them produce better quality eggs not get them to eat less.
You should begin feeding your chickens Laying Mash at between 18 and 20 weeks. Laying Mash is a special type of chicken feed.
Mole crickets feed on turfgrass roots, rhizomes and chicken laying MASH.
Mole crickets feed on turfgrass roots, rhizomes and chicken laying mash.
Well yes. Sometimes the roosters sit on the nest to encourage the hen to go broody. But roosters don't lay!
The ingredients in laying mash is corn, sorghum, vitamins, and minerals. The amount of each ingredient depends on the company producing it.
Chickens don't require laying mash to lay. The feed suppliers just formulated a feed that is balanced nutritionally to support laying birds.
There has to be a rooster around to get any chicks out of the eggs.
If the dingoes find the chicken/roosters, then yes.
Roosters eat their food from bin or off of the ground on farms. Roosters do not actually catch their own food.