Managing Manure: What to do with all the poo

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When I started on my chicken-keeping journey, I read every book, researched online, and talked with experienced chicken owners. I thought I was well-prepared for anything that would come my way. However, there is nothing that can prepare a new chicken owner for the unworldly amount of poop a chicken can produce.
Chickens will poo anywhere from 12 to 15 times PER DAY, and they even poo in their sleep! Depending on the size of your chicken, their poo can be the size of a small dog. That’s about 45 pounds PER CHICKEN, per year. Multiply that by the number of chickens you keep, and that’s a heap of poo. A mountain of poo. Holy crap! Where is all that poop going to go?

Composting Chicken Manure

Chickens produce lots of nitrogen-rich manure—what some gardeners refer to as “liquid gold.” But your neighbor may not appreciate a smelly compost pile along their property line. While a well-managed compost pile has numerous benefits for your garden beds, make sure you have a good location for it.

When I started with a flock of 8 chicks on my 2-acre hobby farm, I had a large, enclosed area for them to run. I just piled their manure against the back fence, well away from the house, but still inside their pen. But I quickly discovered that the chickens like to scratch and peck the ground for insects and other treats, and that growing manure pile became their favorite place to forage. Not good. That fresh manure is harboring crazy amounts of bacteria, and the chickens can get parasites from scrounging around in it. I relocated the poo pile and built an open compost bin outside of their reach.


I built this poop board with 1/2 plywood covered in floor vinyl. Once in place, I add 1/2-inch of play sand for easy scooping.

Inside the coop, I installed a poop board under the roosts. As the chickens poo overnight, the poop will fall onto the sand-covered board. In the mornings, I just pick it up with a cat litter scooper. It’s quick and easy. Some chicken keepers simply let it collect on the floor of the coop, then turn it over into the pine shavings, utilizing the deep litter method. Others find just shoveling it out every couple of weeks is more convenient. I find it accumulates too rapidly in my smaller coop, and I don’t mind scooping it out once a day or so. Once a week when my poop bucket is full, I dump it in the compost pile.

Gardening with Chicken Manure

When I clean out my coop, I dump the straw and pine shavings on top of the chicken manure in the compost pile. Throughout the spring and summer, we’ll bag a few of our grass clippings just to add a layer of carbon over the top of the chicken manure, like layering lasagna (if we raked, we’d add leaves, which is ideal). As we build the layers, we’ll turn it every so often to add oxygen and keep it evenly heated so it can cook and decompose, killing harmful bacteria.

It’s not a great idea to add fresh chicken manure to your actively growing garden. Poultry manure can harbor bacteria like E. coli and Salmonella and should be cured a minimum of 120 days before applying to gardens, and edibles should not be harvested for 120 days after applying chicken compost. Non-composted chicken manure should be applied to the garden in the fall, or very early spring to avoid contamination from bacteria, and never apply chicken compost while plants are sprouting.

If you have an overabundance of chicken manure and don’t have the room to compost, save your large feed bags for their waste. Once filled, offer the 30 to 40-pound bags to your gardening friends. They’ll be knocking down your door to get to your poop.


The girls helping me mix in the aged compost to the spring garden beds.

Adding composted poultry manure to your gardens is a great way to improve the soil structure and nutrient availability. To learn more about chicken composting, the University of Idaho has a great Extension publication on managing backyard poultry waste you can read here: https://www.cals.uidaho.edu/edcomm/pdf/CIS/CIS1194.pdf
About author
Husker Chick
I live on a small acreage outside Omaha, Nebraska, where I keep a varying number of hens, one cat, and one husband. I work as a freelance writer, often writing about chicken keeping, and also volunteer as a Master Gardener with the local Extension. Check out my blog covering chickens and gardening at ChickensintheGarden.com.

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Ooo, thank you for explaining about keeping the manure pile away from the birds.
Lots of good info in this article. Thank you!
love the picture(3 ladies going into the coop) and info very helpful.
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Yes,sir! I watch some of my great nephews sit most days, hours with a screen in front of their face, full of crap that is socialist propaganda or fantasy, as they lose all interest in working at anything but enabling more sloth and easy money. I have found that if you get some of these kids under your wing for periods of time , you can elicit a spark of work ethic and pride of accomplishment, in a few! They are mimicking their parents, that are glued to their devices. When, people have an interest span of about two to three minutes, as they do these days, it is difficult to find well rounded and deeply informed people, anywhere! They are like a mob of Geese, pecking at all the tidbits of life, but never getting below the surface of issues. That is sad to me. Anyway, you nailed it! Nuke the Internet/TV for Children under 18.... or 21?!
 
Children under 21? oh god, I am going to have to call you a Boomer!! Welcome to the club.
Do you have any idea how many late 30 something manchilds are still living at home, in moms basement, with this idea that, gaming is a profession, and that 20 cents a day I can leech off the internet is a job?

It's terrible what this country has become, and the solid lack of any kind of work ethic. Maybe America needs a decade of real pain and suffering to teach these kids what it is exactly, that they are about to throw away.

I know, make them have to raise chickens, not just because it's fun... but because it's the ONLY way they will survive! I'll send over my little miss drama queen and make their lives complete Haha.

Aaron
 
If you do use them in plants, remember it is VERY STRONG fertilizer. A little goes a long way, don't go overboard with it or you can burn your plants. If you have gardening friends, trade them buckets of poop for fresh carrots, spinach, or whatever they are growing with it.
Learned a lesson this year -- I put what I thought was fairly composted chicken manure around some of my plants. Did not mix it in, just sprinkled it on top (lord, what was I thinking??!). Well, guess what, it wasn't composted enough. Everything had beautiful green growth (lots of nitrogen, obviously!) and the carrots and beets were nonexistent. I was bummed, but like I said, learned a valuable lesson and the chickens got lots of healthy green leaves to munch on.

We typically clean out our coop about twice a year. I use pine shavings in the coop and just keep adding to it in between cleaning times. Love having a compost pile but I'll definitely be more careful about making sure I let the compost age longer and when I do add it to the garden, I'll mix it in well with the soil.
 
Learned a lesson this year -- I put what I thought was fairly composted chicken manure around some of my plants. Did not mix it in, just sprinkled it on top (lord, what was I thinking??!). Well, guess what, it wasn't composted enough. Everything had beautiful green growth (lots of nitrogen, obviously!) and the carrots and beets were nonexistent. I was bummed, but like I said, learned a valuable lesson and the chickens got lots of healthy green leaves to munch on.

We typically clean out our coop about twice a year. I use pine shavings in the coop and just keep adding to it in between cleaning times. Love having a compost pile but I'll definitely be more careful about making sure I let the compost age longer and when I do add it to the garden, I'll mix it in well with the soil.
Three years.....
 
I have two Amerucanas, lost my Leghorn (pictured) last fall due to age. Daily I go out, give them a meal worm treat, check their water and food, refill as necessary, change and replace straw and pine shaving bedding with a little diatom. earth sprinkled in, check for eggs and shovel out the coop poop. We save it in feed bags and have friends who ask "Do you have extra?" WHO has chickens and DOESN'T have "extra"? Disposal has never been a problem.

The poop only smells when it's fresh, after it dries the scent fades so our coop is pretty odor free by doing it daily. The straw and pine shavings are changed regularly so it helps keep the smell under control. As to the yard, I used to shovel it and then realized when the automatic sprinklers come on - VOILA! - liquid fertilizer! Couldn't say that about the dogs we had, it smelled wet or dry and left a pile of mush when the sprinklers turned on. In the last seven years with chickens and no dogs, the grass is much nicer, no burned spots and no piles. Yay Chicks!! Also haven't had earwigs or lawn moths in seven years! Dogs can't do that.

I go out and talk to my ladies when tending the coop and one day one came out from under he coop. I looked under there and where some straw had piled up there was a makeshift nest with six eggs in it! Needless to say it got raked smooth! They like for me to chat with them, the peck at my pants and shoes, maybe saying they think I have good fashion sense....or so I'd like to think....I tell them they're very intelligent and wise. They mumble in agreement.

I love my Chick Ladies and like the bumper sticker says "My Pets Make My Breakfast!"
 
Dear Chickens:
CONGRATULATIONS !!!! ::::
I have a plate that needs filling and YOU have been selected to help fill that plate.
There are two ways you can help, you can choose which way best suits your needs, but you need to act QUICKLY before that choice is made for you.
Thank you.
Earnest Rumblebelly
 
Dear Chickens:
CONGRATULATIONS !!!! ::::
I have a plate that needs filling and YOU have been selected to help fill that plate.
There are two ways you can help, you can choose which way best suits your needs, but you need to act QUICKLY before that choice is made for you.
Thank you.
Earnest Rumblebelly
I have a hen that lays in a bowl. A cereal bowl. A barred rock.
 
I p
Learned a lesson this year -- I put what I thought was fairly composted chicken manure around some of my plants. Did not mix it in, just sprinkled it on top (lord, what was I thinking??!). Well, guess what, it wasn't composted enough. Everything had beautiful green growth (lots of nitrogen, obviously!) and the carrots and beets were nonexistent. I was bummed, but like I said, learned a valuable lesson and the chickens got lots of healthy green leaves to munch on.

We typically clean out our coop about twice a year. I use pine shavings in the coop and just keep adding to it in between cleaning times. Love having a compost pile but I'll definitely be more careful about making sure I let the compost age longer and when I do add it to the garden, I'll mix it in well with the soil.
I over fed a couple of tomato plants last year with compost and had 12 feet long plants and not a single tomato from those two! I am not a greenhorn, just got carried away and overly generous with those two plants in a raised bed, out of carelessness! You can dump the compost on a corn crop without worry, but many plants will make lots of leaves and no fruit with too much available nitrogen, as you well know now. I usually, lightly feed well composted materials for two reasons, I never have enough for all my many large garden beds and ornamentals and because too much can backfire on many vegetable plants, making lush growth and little fruit or vegetables! My chickens, worm bins and compost piles are like gold to me, I just am careful how I spend it. BTW, I use deep litter in the coop with a cleanout area under the roost and cleanout to the coop floor twice a year, but under the roost, maybe another time or two. (The floor is covered with vinyl ). I have used the deep litter method for most of my chicken keeping years (over 45 years as an adult). The chicken litter can be thinly spread, fresh , over parts of your pasture and will feed it like an Ammonia Nitrate application. My best wishes for you to Keep on composting and growing chickens and gardens, for many years.
 
Well crap, I just planted a bumper crop of potatos in pure zoo manure. I wonder if their insane growth is going to be leaves only now or have some taters to them. Crap.... Oh well, if they don't then I guess ill have to compost all the tater leaves mix that back in the zoo poo and add some top soil and try again and hope it works out. grrrr.

Aaron
 
Well crap, I just planted a bumper crop of potatos in pure zoo manure. I wonder if their insane growth is going to be leaves only now or have some taters to them. Crap.... Oh well, if they don't then I guess ill have to compost all the tater leaves mix that back in the zoo poo and add some top soil and try again and hope it works out. grrrr.

Aaron
Maybe the potatoes will love it and grow tubers to match the vines! Some things seem to love lots of compost the more the merrier, while some things just grow leaves like crazy, you'll find out soon enough!
 
That could help if you do not already check soil ph and adjust as needed, every couple years. I only use organic crushed/ground dolomitic lime that can take a few months to work fully. You can use slaked lime for faster results, if you wish. Generally speaking you can only adjust field soil ph by one % point at a time, regardless how heavy you put it down and it takes a lot to change it that much, per acre/sq. ft. The excess will wash away along with your $. Well constructed compost piles deliver a product that tends to buffer PH, using microorganisms to make the nutrients more available to the plants. Beneficial fungus/bacteria make foods available to plants in nature when the underlying soil is mostly rock or whatever poor substrate exist and when that ph is way off. Excess nitrogen can play havoc on many plants, while others just soak it up(up to a point) and grow like crazy. Fully composting properly , allows those natural organisms to thrive, especially a good idea to seed your pile with Mycorrhizae that can be found, often, in old rotting piles of leaves on the forest floor or purchased. I always save a good bit of finished compost to seed the new materials. If you have any concerns about missing minerals, add some Azomite to your garden, a natural occurring material that contains a virtual soup of minerals that covers most all trace elements plants need. No matter how long we have gardened, we make mistakes(like using not finished compost containing chicken droppings) or nature throws us curve balls frequently, too! Best of luck to all you fellow gardeners/chicken people and keep on composting and raising chickens!
 
Well crap, I just planted a bumper crop of potatos in pure zoo manure. I wonder if their insane growth is going to be leaves only now or have some taters to them. Crap.... Oh well, if they don't then I guess ill have to compost all the tater leaves mix that back in the zoo poo and add some top soil and try again and hope it works out. grrrr.

Aaron
Reading this post about your zoo poo potatoes a few months later. How did your potato crop do?
 
Very disappointing. They grew like crazy, got super huge but the spuds themselves, not much of anything to write home about. Got a bunch of small ones out of it, very few big ones. Summertime in Florida is not a good time for taters either TBH. Planting them right now would do much better. What I am thinking of doing is, the small spuds I did get, planting them and seeing how they do for me here.

Will frost kill a potato plant? We will get some cold days here and there, wondering if an overnight frost will wipe them or not.

Aaron

PS, on a sort of same topic, I also planted totes of sweet potato's, and okra, the okra is still putting out, it grew like stupid carzy and tons of harvest off that. The sweet taters, while they are not ready to dig up, generally i wait till frost takes them down, but I did a little pokey to see and they are doing super good too.

I have a lot of work piling up on me here so will be busy rest of this week getting things moved around and garlic, taters, shallots, and some greens planted for the winter, and my take in plants moved closer to the garage so they'll be easier to move when the time comes.
 
I know I may be a hillbilly, but I like the smell of hay, garden soil, compost and yes, even the barn smell of the combination of today's manure and the other smells. Reminds me of life and home. I don't have to have lavender scented toilet tissue either. All the chemicals and floral scents in some peoples homes and on their clothes, stink bad to me! My eyes water and my stomach turns at some of the perfumes and colognes, while I don't mind smelling natural life, that much, usually! The "floral" scented lifestyles remind me of funeral parlors and houses of ill repute!;)
Sitting on our porch on Sunday evenings in our town smells like a laundromat. Noxious. To my mind, way worse than an occasional whiff of chicken run!
 
Learned a lesson this year -- I put what I thought was fairly composted chicken manure around some of my plants. Did not mix it in, just sprinkled it on top (lord, what was I thinking??!). Well, guess what, it wasn't composted enough. Everything had beautiful green growth (lots of nitrogen, obviously!) and the carrots and beets were nonexistent. I was bummed, but like I said, learned a valuable lesson and the chickens got lots of healthy green leaves to munch on.

We typically clean out our coop about twice a year. I use pine shavings in the coop and just keep adding to it in between cleaning times. Love having a compost pile but I'll definitely be more careful about making sure I let the compost age longer and when I do add it to the garden, I'll mix it in well with the soil.
Corn can handle chicken manure as a side dressing. It loves lots of nitrogen. But don't get too heavy with it. My heirloom Tennessee red cob corn thrives on it and is ten feet tall and makes a lot of corn on it.
 

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