0821-3453-6124 || Jual Bibit Ayam Kalkun Di Cikalong Tasikmalaya – Jawa Barat

Anda mencari bibit Ayam Kalkun di Cikalong ? Sangat tepat anda masuk dihalaman website ini. Kami menyediakan bibit Ayam Kalkun untuk ternak untuk wilayah Cikalong Kabupaten Tasikmalaya Jawa Barat . Berikut daftar bibit ayam ternak yang disediakan

1.Ayam Serama
2.Ayam Mutiara Hitam
3.Ayam Mutiara Putih/Albino
4.Ayam Mutiara Silver
5.Ayam Mutiara Plangkok/Putih Hitam
6.Ayam Kapas
7.Ayam Batik Itali
8.Ayam Kanada Coklat Gold
9.Ayam Cemani
10.Ayam Cemani Walik
11.Ayam Kate
12.Ayam Kate Walik
13.Ayam Poland
14.Ayam Ketawa
15.Ayam Kalkun Bronze
16.Kalkun Royal Palm
17.Kalkun Golden Palm
18.Kalkun Black Spanish
19.Kalkun Self Buff
20.Kalkun Putih/White Holland
21.Kalkun Bourbon Red
22.Ayam Onagadori Ekor Panjang
23.Ayam Phoenix Ekor Panjang
24.Ayam Pelung
25.Ayam Giant Chocin
26.Ring Neck Pheasent
27.Green Ringneck Pheasant
28.Bebek Mandarin
29.Bebek Caroline
30.Reeves Pheasent
31.Lady Amherst’s Pheasent
32.Red Pheasent
33.Yellow Pheasent
34.Golden Pheasent
35.Merak Biru
36.Merak Putih
37.Merak Blackshoulder
38.Merak Cameo
39.Merak Blorok
40.Ayam Brahma
41.Ayam Bantham Chocin
42.DOC atau bibit Ayam Kampung Super/Joper
43.DOD atau Bibit Bebek Hibrida Pedaging
44.DOD atau Bibit Bebek Peking Pedaging
45.DOD atau Bibit Bebek Mojosari Petelur
46.DOC atau Bibit Ayam Broiler Pedaging
47.DOC atau bibit Ayam Arab Petelur
48.Beragam Buku Panduan Beternak
49.Paranet Jaring Kandang Ayam
50.Aneka Sangkar atau Kadang Ayam Hias
51. DOC Pejantan
52. Merpati Hias
53. Burung Unta
54. DOC Ayam Petelur
57. DOC KUB (Kampung Unggulan Balitbangtan)
59. DOD Bebek Hibrida
60. DOC Mojosari Petelur
61. DOQ Puyuh
62. Ayam Potong

Untuk pembelian bibit Ayam Kalkun di Cikalong Kabupaten Tasikmalaya Jawa Barat Hubungi kami di 0821-3453-6124 (Ihsan Laidi)

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There’s a great deal to like about raising chickens in your backyard. The eggs are a real temptation—tastier and fresher than any store-bought eggs, and better for baking, too. The shells, along with the chicken poop, may be tossed right in to the compost pile. A lot of the day, the birds entertain themselves, picking at grass, worms, beetles, and all the good items that enter making those yummy farm eggs. Plus, making use of their keen eye for insect pests, chickens make for great gardening companions. Remember, though: Nothing good comes easy! THINGS TO CONSIDER BEFORE GETTING CHICKENS. First, check local town ordinances to make sure that keeping chickens is even allowed in town or if you have a control to the number of chickens you can keep at once. The past thing you would like is to invest time and money into finding your way through chickens and then learn that you can’t even keep them! Make sure you have the area for a henhouse or perhaps a full-size chicken coop. It’s to put on a feeder and water containers, a roosting area, and a nest box for each and every three hens. An effective coop should be big enough that you could stand inside it to gather eggs and shovel manure comfortably, but a simple henhouse may be a great deal smaller. Plus, any housing must be sturdy enough to keep your chickens safe from all of the predators out there! Here’s how to create a chicken coop in your backyard. Chickens need food (and water) daily. Feed is about $20 per 50-pound bag at my co-op, but prices vary based on your local area and the grade of the feed. How long a bag lasts is dependent upon the number of chickens that you have. Hens will lay eggs through spring and summer and in to the fall, provided that they’ve 12 to 14 hours of daylight. Expect to collect eggs daily, or even twice a day. Chickens are sociable creatures, so plan to keep three to six birds. With this particular amount, you’ll always have a regular way to obtain eggs, since a grown-up hen lays about two eggs every three days, on average. Chickens are most productive in the first couple of years of these lives; next, egg production will slow, so you’ll need to consider replacing your flock with younger birds eventually. Young chicks can be bought from suppliers without difficulty, or you can hatch your own personal when you yourself have a rooster (which we do NOT recommend). Read more about raising baby chicks here! How Much Space Do Chickens Need? Ultimately, this will depend on which breed of chicken you’re raising. Based on the University of Missouri Extension, one medium-sized chicken needs at the least 3 square feet of living area in the coop and 8-10 square feet outdoors. The more space, the happier and healthier the chickens is going to be; overcrowding plays a role in disease and feather picking. The birds will require a destination for a spread their wings, as we say: a sizeable chicken run, for example, or perhaps a whole backyard. (Our hens have a lot of outdoor time. They’ve places to take a dust bath and catch a couple of rays.) Either way, the area must be fenced in order to keep carefully the chickens in and predators out. (Predators include your own personal Fido and Fluffy, too!) Add chicken-wire fencing to your listing of equipment.