Yes! Cook your potato peelings, throw them over the fence to your chooks, and watch them gobble them up! Then watch them lay eggs with free potato peeling vitamins. Throw lots of greens to your chooks, vegetable scraps from the kitchen or from the garden. Better yet, let them have the run of the yard and find their own greens.
worms
NO
Sure, deer can technically eat potato peelings, but it's not the best idea. Potato peelings contain solanine, a toxic compound that can be harmful to deer if consumed in large quantities. So, while they may nibble on them, it's best to stick to their natural diet to keep them healthy and happy.
It is not recommended to put potato peelings in a fireplace as they can produce a lot of smoke and can cause a buildup of creosote in the chimney, which could lead to a chimney fire. It is best to dispose of potato peelings in the trash or compost pile instead.
Yes, slugs will eat apple and potato peelings.
Only for putting in a compost heap.
Yes! They'll eat most food scraps; ours even eat old grilled cheeses. Make sure to give them greens, too.
Yes you can feed a cow fruit or peelings. In Yuma AZ. They fatten up cattle with dump truck loads of cantaloupe.
Frabill worm food. You can find this at sporting good stores. Also you can feed them leftover garden food (lettuce, carrot peelings, potato peelings, grass clippings). Keep their bedding damp, not wet. Frabill also makes a worm bedding and Styrofoam housing container.
No, rabbits can't eat salted potato peelings, because processed seasonings and spices aren't good for rabbits, and too much salt isn't good for rabbits, either. Rabbits get all the minerals and salt they need in their pellets. Rabbits should only eat clean, fresh produce (vegetables, fruits, herbs, plants), not any dried seasonings or flavourings. Potato peelings aren't very good for rabbits because they're pretty high in starches. If you feed your rabbit pellets, you should limit the other starches they eat. Potato peelings aren't a great choice because other vegetables, like carrot and squash, have healthy nutrients as well as some starch, but potato isn't very nutritious. Also, the green parts and eyes on potato peelings are toxic to rabbits. See the related question below for more info and helpful links about a healthy rabbit diet.
The smallest potatoes because their surface to volume ratio is higher than for large potatoes.
Let the pigs in.Sweep them up and compost them.Sweep them up, wash them and make lovely potato soup full of natural fibre.