MySheen

How to raise worms and chickens?

Published: 2024-11-21 Author: mysheen
Last Updated: 2024/11/21, How to raise worms and chickens?

(agricultural get Rich Network) how to raise insects and chickens? -- raising chickens with high-protein live feeds such as maggots and earthworms, broilers can be caged 10 to 15 days in advance. The cost of raw materials used for breeding insects is 5%-25% of that of conventional feed, which is an effective way to increase efficiency in raising chickens. The introduction is as follows: 1. Gruel method of breeding insects. Choose 3 small plots of land and sprinkle gruel on the ground. Cover it with grass, etc., and pay attention to the protection against rain and flooding. After 2 days, you can give birth to bugs, and let the chickens eat them in turn, which can meet the chicken's demand for protein feed. two. The method of breeding insects with rice straw. Dig width 0. 6m, depth 0. In a 3m rectangular pit, the straw is cut into long sections of 6~7cm, boiled in water for 1 to 2 hours, removed and poured into the pit, covered with 6~7cm thick sludge (ditch mud or pond mud, etc.), garbage, etc., compacted with sludge, and poured 1 pot of rice washing water every day. After about 8 days, it will give birth to worms. Open it and let the chickens peck at it and then cover it with sludge. Wash the rice water and continue to produce worms. three. Bean cake breeding method. A small amount of bean cake (or peanut bran, etc.) is broken and fermented with bean curd dregs, then mixed with blighted grain and leaves, put into a deep pit of 20~30cm, covered with a layer of thin sludge, covered with grass and so on, and insects will grow after 6-7 days. four. The method of breeding insects with bean curd residue. Pour the 1~2kg bean curd dregs into the jar, pour into the rice washing water, cover the mouth of the tank, give birth to worms after 5-6 days, and let the chicken feed on maggots after 3-4 days. Rearing worms in 6 cylinders in turn can meet the needs of 50 chickens. five. Mixed method of breeding insects. Dig 0. In the 5m pit, the bottom is covered with a layer of straw and the grass is covered with a layer of sludge, so as to cover the pit until the pit is full, and water the pit every day. Worms are born after more than 10 days. six. The method of breeding insects with rotten grass. Dig width 1 in more fertile land. 5m, length 1. 8m, depth 0. The soil pit of 5m is covered with a layer of rice straw, a layer of tofu residue, a layer of cow dung and a layer of sludge. Spread this until the pit is full, and finally cover with a layer of grass. The worm will be born in about 1 week. -7. The method of breeding insects with cow dung. Add 10% rice bran and 5% wheat bran (or 0. 1% wine cake powder) mix well, pile it in a cool place, cover with weeds, straw, etc., seal with sludge, and give birth to insects after 20 days. eight. The method of breeding worms with distiller's grains. 10kg of distiller's grains and 50kg of bean curd dregs are mixed and stacked far away from the house in the shape of steamed bread or rectangle. worms will be born after 2-3 days, and maggots can be pecked by chickens after 5-7 days. nine. The method of breeding insects with horse dung. In the wet ground, the length, width and depth are 1m, 2m and 0 respectively. The soil pit of 3m is covered with 1 layer of crushed weeds, 1 layer of horse dung on the grass, and 1 layer of wheat bran on the dung. So one layer and one layer, until the pit is full, the top layer is covered with grass, watered once a day, and worms will be born in one week. ten. Sundries breeding method. The raw materials of easy-to-grow insects such as fresh cow dung, weeds and dung were mixed and mixed with water to form a paste and piled into 1 m high and 1 m high. The 5m wide and 3m long pile is covered with thin mud at the top and around it, and then covered with grass to prevent it from drying. Worms will be born after 7 to 15 days. eleven. The method of breeding insects in wheat bran. Two piles of wheat bran are piled in the corner of the courtyard and pasted with grass mud (a mixture of broken grass and thin mud). A few days later, worms are born, and chickens take turns to feed. After eating, the wheat bran is concentrated and piled into a pile. twelve. Pig manure fermentation method. Add 20% fat mud and 3% wheat bran or rice bran to 7 days after each 500kg pig manure is dried, pile it into a pile, seal and ferment with plastic film for 7 days; dig deep the soil pit of 50cm, spread the above fermentation material in the pit 30~40cm thick, cover it with grass, grass curtain, gunny bag, etc., keep it wet, and then give birth to fly maggots, worms, earthworms, etc. -- 1. Fresh grass raises insects. Mix with 80% fresh grass and 20% fine sugar, boil well with a small amount of water, then pour it into a jar or pool, and after 5-7 days in hot weather, a large number of maggots can be reproduced. 2. Human dung raises insects. Dig a pit 17 centimeters deep on the ground, cover the bottom with a layer of straw, put human dung on the grass, and then cover it with a straw curtain. Usually a lot of worms can be born after 7 days. 3. Cow dung raises insects. The feces are dried and crushed, mixed with a small amount of rice bran and wheat bran, and then mixed well with thin mud to form a round pile with a diameter of 100cm and a height of about 100cm. Cover it strictly with straw curtain or random grass, and water the sewage once or twice a day to keep the pile half-dry and half-warm. In this way, a large number of worms can grow in half a month, pile up after eating, and grow a lot of worms in 2 or 3 days, and they can be bred for 3 or 4 times without changing materials. 4. Raising insects in chicken manure. Mix the fermented chicken manure with brewer's grains or soy sauce dregs at 4:1 and spread them flat on the floor with a thickness of no more than 17cm and a water content of about 70 per cent. Then put some rotten leeks, smelly fish and rotten shrimp on it, so that a lot of maggots will be born in a few days. In addition, rice straw, bean dregs, bean cakes and other worms can be used to raise insects-bugs are rich in nutrients, chickens love to eat, and are good feed that chickens need most. Broilers grow quickly when they eat. The long speed can be accelerated by 30% to 100%, the hen lays more eggs, and the laying rate can be as high as 95% to 98%, with high efficiency. From March to October every year, the weather is warm and worms multiply quickly, which is a good time for artificial breeding. The method of raising insects is simple, small in land, small in investment and quick in effect. it is a shortcut to open up animal protein feed and a good way to raise chickens to get rich. There are many ways to raise insects, and where there are conditions, they can be fully utilized. -- Cow dung is collected, baking powder is added, hot water is added and stirred fully, covered with crushed grass, then pasted with thin mud, and stacked in a cool place. After about 20 days, a lot of worms can grow inside, which can be dug up and fed to chickens. If there are many chickens, mixed retting can be used: first dig a ditch on the ground, the length and width of the ditch is not limited, the depth of the ditch should not exceed one meter, in order to facilitate access. The bottom of the ditch is covered with a layer of straw, then a layer of cow dung, a layer of rice chaff, and then a layer of bedding grass and cow dung, so as to spread one layer at a time until the ditch is covered. After laying, water is watered once a day. Generally speaking, more than ten days later, straw and cow dung begin to rot, that is, a large number of worms are produced. When feeding chickens, chickens can be put in turn to eat worms. After eating for 15 to 20 minutes, the second batch of chickens and the third batch of chickens are released. Feeding once a day can meet the actual needs of chickens for protein nutrition. -- raising earthworm waste, livestock and poultry droppings, weeds and leaves, etc., can be used as earthworm feed. Earthworms are hermaphroditic, allogeneic fertilized egg-laying animals that reproduce quickly, spawning 3 ~ 4 times a year, and an average of 50 ~ 150 earthworms. A good variety can reproduce 1000 times a year. The method is to dig a ditch 1 meter wide and 0.7 meters wide on the ground, which can be long or short according to the need. The cushion material in the ditch is divided into 6 layers, the bottom cushion black soil 20 cm, the second layer cushion 13 cm horse dung, the third layer cushion 10 cm soil, if you can add some rice bran, four layers of 20 cm withered grass and rotten leaves, five layers and then 10 cm soil, and the top layer 13 cm horse dung, after cushioning, according to the number of chickens, you can put hundreds of big earthworms. Add weeds and rotten leaves every other month. Usually to keep the ditch moist, too dry to water, after two months, you can first dig out earthworms from one end to feed the chicken, while digging to the other end, dig the first end, and then reproduce, so that you can take turns digging to feed the chicken. However, do not feed raw, cooked and then fed, so that chickens will not get parasitic diseases. -- breeding fly maggots, which are rich in 59.9%-63% crude protein and 12.6% crude fat, and contain several essential amino acids, calcium, phosphorus and vitamins for chickens. -- the method of cultivating maggots: dig a hole or put several large vats in the remote corner of the chicken farm, and put in some dilute dung or dregs or rotten melons and vegetables (but do not let dead pigs and chickens and other animal meat, so as not to spread disease). It will attract a lot of flies and maggots. When the maggots grow up, they can be salvaged with a screen, rinsed with clean water, then scalded to death with boiling water, and fed to the chickens. It produces about 6.5 kilograms of fresh maggots per square meter. As long as you keep fishing for maggots and feeding them to chickens in time every day, there will be no more flies.

 
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