Producer’s Pride Scratch Grains Poultry Feed, 50 lb.
Producer’s Pride Scratch Grain is a feed supplement designed to provide nutrition for adult chickens. This blend of clean, whole and cracked grains serves as an energy source, while pecking behavior provides a stress-relieving activity for confined or semi-confined birds.
Nutrition for Adult Chickens
Producer’s Pride Scratch Grain is a feed supplement designed to provide nutrition for adult chickens. This blend of clean, whole and cracked grains serves as an energy source, while pecking behavior provides a stress-relieving activity for confined or semi-confined birds.
We Love Animals and Know Just What Their Bodies Require
Who better to make food for pets than farmers? At Tractor Supply Company, we bring our deep passion for land and animals to the center of our products and services. By sourcing the best produce, utilizing water purification processes and thoroughly testing our formulas, we guarantee excellent quality food for your animals.
About This Formula
Producer’s Pride Scratch Grains is a poultry feed supplement developed specifically to meet the nutritional needs of adult chickens. Featuring a special blend of grains, this delicious recipe offers optimal nutrition to help your chickens stay happy and healthy.
*Labeling requirements vary from state to state. For an accurate list of ingredients and guaranteed analysis in your region, please refer to the label affixed to the feed product.
Additional information
Food Form | Grains |
---|---|
Poultry Life Stage | Adult |
Product Weight | 50 lb. |
50 may refer to:
- 50 (number)
- one of the following years 50 BC, AD 50, 1950, 2050
- .50 BMG, a heavy machine gun cartridge also used in sniper rifles
- .50 Action Express, a large pistol cartridge commonly used in the Desert Eagle
- .50 GI, a wildcat pistol cartridge
- .50 Beowulf, a powerful rifle cartridge used in the AR-15 platform
- .50 Alaskan, a wildcat rifle cartridge
- 50 Cent, an American rapper
- Labatt 50, a Canadian beer
- Fifty (film), a 2015 film
- "The Fifty", a group of fifty airmen murdered by the Gestapo after The Great Escape in World War II
- 50 (Rick Astley album), 2016
- 50 (Chris de Burgh album), 2024
- Benjamin Yeaten, widely known by his radio call sign "50", a Liberian military and mercenary leader
- "Fifty", a song by Karma to Burn from the album V, 2011
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- Audi 50, a supermini hatchback
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Poultry () are domesticated birds kept by humans for the purpose of harvesting animal products such as meat, eggs or feathers. The practice of raising poultry is known as poultry farming. These birds are most typically members of the superorder Galloanserae (fowl), especially the order Galliformes (which includes chickens, quails, and turkeys). The term also includes waterfowls of the family Anatidae (ducks and geese) but does not include wild birds hunted for food known as game or quarry.
Recent genomic studies involving the four extant junglefowl species reveals that the domestication of chicken, the most populous poultry species, occurred around 8,000 years ago in Southeast Asia. This was previously believed to have occurred around 5,400 years ago, also in Southeast Asia. The process may have originally occurred as a result of people hatching and rearing young birds from eggs collected from the wild, but later involved keeping the birds permanently in captivity. Domesticated chickens may have been used for cockfighting at first and quail kept for their songs, but people soon realised the advantages of having a captive-bred source of food. Selective breeding for fast growth, egg-laying ability, conformation, plumage and docility took place over the centuries, and modern breeds often look very different from their wild ancestors. Although some birds are still kept in small flocks in extensive systems, most birds available in the market today are reared in intensive commercial enterprises.
Together with pork, poultry is one of the two most widely-eaten types of meat globally, with over 70% of the meat supply in 2012 between them; poultry provides nutritionally beneficial food containing high-quality protein accompanied by a low proportion of fat. All poultry meat should be properly handled and sufficiently cooked in order to reduce the risk of food poisoning. Semi-vegetarians who consume poultry as the only source of meat are said to adhere to pollotarianism.
Pride is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as "reasonable self-esteem" or "confidence and satisfaction in oneself." The Oxford dictionary defines it as "the quality of having an excessively high opinion of oneself or one's own importance." Pride may be related to one's own abilities or achievements, positive characteristics of friends or family, or one's country. Richard Taylor defined pride as "the justified love of oneself," as opposed to false pride or narcissism. Similarly, St. Augustine defined it as "the love of one's own excellence," and Meher Baba called it "the specific feeling through which egotism manifests."
Philosophers and social psychologists have noted that pride is a complex secondary emotion that requires the development of a sense of self and the mastery of relevant conceptual distinctions (e.g. that pride is distinct from happiness and joy) through language-based interaction with others. Some social psychologists identify the nonverbal expression of pride as a means of sending a functional, automatically perceived signal of high social status.
Pride may be considered the opposite of shame or of humility, sometimes as proper or as a virtue and sometimes as corrupt or as a vice. With a positive connotation, pride refers to a content sense of attachment toward one's own or another's choices and actions, or toward a whole group of people and is a product of praise, independent self-reflection and a fulfilled feeling of belonging. Other possible objects of pride are one's ethnicity and one's sex identity (for example, LGBTQ pride). With a negative connotation, pride refers to some foolishand with corrupt irrational sense of one's personal value, status, or accomplishments used synonymously with hubris or vanity.
While some philosophers such as Aristotle (and George Bernard Shaw) consider pride (but not hubris) a profound virtue, some world religions consider pride as a fraudulent form of sin, as stated in Proverbs 11:2 of the Hebrew Bible. In Judaism, pride is called the root of all evil. When viewed as a virtue, pride in one's abilities are known as virtuous pride, greatness of soul, or magnanimity, but when viewed as a vices, it is often known to be self-idolatry, sadistic contempt or vainglory.
S, or for lowercase, s, is the nineteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and other latin alphabets worldwide. Its name in English is ess (pronounced ), plural esses.
by Zamix
My chickens LOVE it. I throw it down and they come running. It’s great for when I have to put them up a bit early.
by Marsha
I use this in the afternoons to get my chickens to come into the run so I can lick them up at night. They look forward to it every day. They see me with the bucket and they come running.
by Karen
My chickens enjoy the scratch grains. It doesn’t have sunflower seeds so I add them in . Great price for the amount you get.
by Nessaanne
Been using this feed for years. Mainly for the price; It’s lower than all the rest. This brand still provides the nutrients my birds need.
by Ally
I really like this feed and my chickens do too! They’re smaller pieces than other feed stores. They seem to waste less when I buy this versus the other brands. It’s a great price too. I also love using curbside pickup because I usually get my order after a long 10 hour shift so it’s nice to have help!
by Potter
With the price of EVERYTHING skyrocketing, I could no longer afford sunflower seeds for my birds. My grandson gave me a jar of the Pride Scratch Grains that he feeds his chickens, told me to see if my birds would eat it. I was so happy to find they loved the scratch grains almost as much as they loved the sunflower seeds. If I’m one of the gift card winners, I will buy a bag of sunflower seeds for my birds! Love shopping at TSC!
by Dee
I use this product as a winter face or my home mix that I make for my chickens. Winter because the corn adds a lot of heat to the chickens bodies and with the current weather we are having in central California I do not need the chickens to be hotter in the summer.
by Ginger
My chickens and my goats love the scratch. The chickens leave the bigger pieces of corn for my goats. Nothing goes to waste.