![]() That way you can just buy a few hundred or thousand more hay from Marnie when convenient, shove it in the chest, and not worry about it. If money isn't an issue, you can do what I do, and have a chest full of hay (hundreds or thousands of hay) next to a silo, and shove more in there once every X days (once per week per silo is my typical schedule, so if I had 2 silos, once every other week). As indicated, at 50g per animal per day, just buying it certainly works as well, and leaves the rest of your farm clear to do other things. ![]() It’s simple and gives your chickens the joy of. So, you don’t have a silo in Stardew Valley and you’re wondering how to feed your chickens No worries There’s an alternative solution for that using fresh grass as a food source. Of course this only applies if you care about them eating fresh grass at all. Read more: How To Quickly Level Up Foraging In Stardew Valley. Large fields of nothing but grass won't spread anywhere but at the edges, so instead, make it like swiss cheese, and repeat the process as the holes fill in. Grass begets grass, so the key to efficiently harvesting it is to cut out little chunks all over the place, so there's plenty left spread out which can quickly fill in the gaps. Don't let animals do so either, have at least one grass field apart from them entirely. There’s a 40 for the latter to drop this loot, and if you have some Junimos around, you’ll eventually find it in the Junimo Hut Storage. This is the cheapest yet not-so-convenient way to obtain them for busy players like you. The biggest thing I'd emphasize is, don't full clear grass if you're farming hay. Note: You don’t have to till soil to plant them.
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