Reasons for Raising Chickens with Seabuck 7 – You May be Surprised!
Raising backyard chickens is an exciting and rewarding
hobby. You want the best for your birds and you know that healthy, happy
chickens produce great eggs. Whether you
are raising birds as family pets, or for exhibition, a feisty and vibrant bird
is at his or her best. While we can’t
protect our birds from everything, we can take steps to provide them with a
strong foundation. Here’s what you can do.
Chickens need shelter from the weather and from predators,
activities to prevent boredom, vaccinations (for Marek’s, Fowl Pox, or IB) and
good nutrition. Chickens, like other animals (and ourselves), require an
environment that is free of chronic-stress and that allows for natural
activities. Ensuring your chickens live a long and productive life involves
employing a varied approach. The birds
will build a flourishing immune system when they are content, but they will need
a few “outside resources” to do that properly.
Seabuck 7 helps with that. When you couple the following habitat
suggestions with the added protective benefits of the sea buckthorn fruit - your chickens will thank you!
Design Shelter and
Forage Space for Stress Reduction
Proper
chicken husbandry involves maintaining a clean, stress-free environment —but
this includes creating an enriched environment that encourages the birds to
enjoy natural behaviors, such as socialization and food discovery (chickens
love to find their own food). Drs. Smith
and Johnson, in The
Chicken Challenge – What Contemporary Studies Of Fowl Mean For Science And
Ethics,
warn that inappropriate housing with a high “stocking density and the lack of
environmental enrichment leads to aberrant behavior, such as feather pecking
and cannibalism.” We all know that stress = disease.
It’s easy to provide your birds with plenty of room and
adequate foraging time. The domestic chicken
is descended from wild
fowl that roamed the verges of tropical forests. While we can’t develop our homes into lush, palm-lined
jungles, we can “chicken-scape” the birds’ run and pasture with foraging
material.
Here’s how:
Here’s how:
1.
Plant stands of raspberries, gooseberries and
blackberries. These canes offer secure foraging areas for the birds….and tasty
berries to share. Mulch the plants fairly heavily with pine needles, leaves or
wood chips. Don’t forget to try
grapevines (and hops…yes, the flower buds are used in beer). Grapes are
fast-growing vines that give the birds shelter, cover and provide a snack when
the clusters ripen. All of these plants provide beneficial resources for local
wildlife as well. Landscaping for chickens instantly turns your home into a
conservation minded property!
2.
Chickens forage by turning over piles of leaves
and ground mulch. They find seeds, insects and plant roots to eat. Chickens
also eat sand, loam, grit and pebbles to aid in their digestion. Your birds
will seek out certain soils and loam for nutrients as well.
3.
Shrubs are perfect places for the chickens to
relax under. Be sure to add a variety of
bushes that work in your area. Try forsythia, holly, boxwood, small evergreens,
blueberries and hydrangea. These dense shrubs offer cover to allow the chickens
to feel safe. Chickens naturally avoid
any open areas, you will notice them sticking close to trees and other places
to hide under. This feeling of security reduces stress.
Promoting Healthy
Flocks with Seabuck 7
A recent
study from the journal, Anti-Cancer
Research, found that the berries of the sea buckthorn provided tumor
resistant properties. This is good news! Chickens are prone to many cancers as
they grow older, and they suffer from the same age-related issues as other
animals – and ourselves. Offering
nutrition that helps to stave off and deter arthritis, cancer and other
maladies is a good idea. We want our
birds to live long and productive lives – and fortunately, reducing chronic
stress and providing healthy foodstuffs, are the two easiest ways to promote
poultry longevity.
The study
from the publication Anti-Cancer, focused
on the sea buckthorn’s phytochemicals (phenolic acids, anthocyanins,
proanthocyanidins and flavinoids). These phytochemicals are known to inhibit
the formation and proliferation of cancers (chemopreventative). The physiochemical benefits of the fatty
acids, amino acids, dozens of antioxidants, over 20 minerals and vitamins B1,
B2, C, A, E, K and folic acid are hard to ignore. All of these elements promote exceptional
immune support for your birds, helping them resist occasional stressful periods
(adding new birds, weather changes, brooding, injury, egg production or
showing) and to fight off disease.
Researchers
noted that the “cancer protective effects of fruits and vegetables have been
suggested to be due to different mechanisms such as inhibition of carcinogen
activation, stimulation of carcinogen detoxification, scavenging of free
radical species, control of cell-cycle progression, inhibition of cell
proliferation, induction of apoptosis, inhibition of the activity of oncogenes,
inhibition of angiogenesis and metastasis, and inhibition of hormone or
growth-factor activity.”[i]
The study
used minimally processed sea buckthorn berry juice against 5 lines of cancer
cells, revealing that the sea buckthorn berry offered one of the highest levels
of cancer prevention (and reduced cell proliferation) when the fruit was not over
processed. The anti-inflammatory and
antiproliferative effects of adding berries, especially the sea buckthorn,
showed impressive abilities in these studies.
Germs With a Side Order of Mold? No, Thanks.
Sea
buckthorn’s beneficial effects were also shown, in a 2013 study printed in the
journal Poultry Science, to ward off the impact of dangerous mold
toxins. Sea buckthorn oil’s
phytoantioxident properties were found to have significant results in
preventing the effects of aflatoxin poisoning – a dangerous mold toxin known to
grow in spoiled grains, in soil and in rotting vegetation. [ii]
Aflatoxins are also known to encourage cancer formation as well as mortality in
birds. The sea buckthorn acted by protecting the chickens’ livers against the
accumulation and activity of the toxins.
The
anti-fungal and anti-microbial functions of sea buckthorn seed and oil is
contained in the Kaushal and Sharma study of 2011. Coupled with the fruit’s known antioxidant
and stress-lowering abilities, these additional benefits are exciting! If aflatoxins are wary of the sea buckthorn
fruit, E. coli bacteria showed similar fears![iii]
Using non-chemical
antibacterial agents is a step forward, and green chemistry is providing some
promising results with the sea buckthorn – including
the fruit’s ability to combat strains of avian influenza and Newcastle Disease.
And that’s exciting news, indeed!
Another
study found that chickens fed sea buckthorn experienced a fortified immune
system and strengthened mucous membranes. The healing properties also included:
• reducing skin irritations from inflammation or
injury
• slowing sun damage and speeding wound healing
The positive
and protective activities of the sea buckthorn fruit are not simply topical — they have a
proven anti-stress activity coupled
with a holistic effect on physiology allowing the animal to heal itself from within. [iv]
Moving Forward
While
research is continuing on the antiviral, antibacterial and regenerative effects
of sea buckthorn berries, we already see the results in our flocks. They key to poultry management rests in
setting up a holistic approach with preventative actions that keep our birds
sturdy and rugged from the inside out. Ensuring they have access to forage, a
nutritious and varied diet, mental activities (such as getting time to
free-range in safety, good flock interaction, dust bathing), quiet and clean
nesting areas, sanitary housing and
reducing exposure to disease are all building stones in the foundation. Adding
sea buckthorn to your chickens’ daily rations cements that approach.
Our chickens
love Seabuck 7. Apparently, they
already knew what scientific studies are proving – that the sea buckthorn fruit
really is a superfood and a significant support system to promote and foster
the health of our flocks. With a few good husbandry practices, our chickens can
have long and happy lives.
We love to
hear from our readers. Share your experiences and information in the comment
section. Let us know what Seabuck 7
does for your flock!
[i]
D. Boivin et al., “Inhibition of Cancer Cell Proliferation and
Suppression of TNF-induced Activation of NFKB by Edible Berry Juice,” Anticancer
Research 27 (2007): 937.
[ii]
C. Solcan et al., “The Hepatoprotective Effect of Sea Buckthorn
(Hippophae rhamnoides) Berries on Induced Aflatoxin B1 Poisoning in Chickens,” Poultry
Science 92 (2013).
[iii]
Manisha Kaushal, and P
C Sharma, “Nutritional and Antimicrobial Property of Seabuckthorn (Hippophae sp.) Seed Oil,” NISCAIR-CSIR,”
70 (2011): 1035.
[iv] Jana Krejcarová1 et al., “Sea Buckthorn
(Hippophae rhamnoides L.) as a
Potential Source of Nutraceutics and its Therapeutic Possibilities - a review,”
Journal of the University of
Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences 85 (2015).
Really great information. Thank you.
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