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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I know horse poo sells / gives fast because if it's done right it dont stink and is good fertilizer, so Ive been told, have not experienced it first hand yet, but wondering on the chicken poo because even when composted, it seems to have a smell somewhat still, but must admit mine is kind of moist still so I don't really know what it'll smell like when bone dry, have to wait till july for that :D

aaron
 
I am a former County Health Inspector, have been gardening for over 50 years and the last 30 years "organic". No chemical pesticides or fertilizers in my food gardens for decades! I compost all my waste from the sheep, goats and chickens, along with leaves, trimmings, kitchen waste, etc.. Humans have lived for several hundred years (at the least) using organic gardening techniques and only began to lose that knowledge in the past 75 years or so. Wash your hands, wash your produce and cook your meat. It is real simple! Eat at home, you know what you have done with it. I grow heirloom Corn,10 to 12 feet tall, with a large handful of finished compost in each hill, approx. 8 , 9 inch, well filled ears per 4 plants to a hill, on a large handful of compost! Also , the same hill produces many handfuls of cornfield beans and heirloom seminole pumpkins grow in between the hills. I don't have to buy the seeds, the fertilizer or use any chemical insect/weed control. All farm sourced, open pollinated and organic. I have been infected with food poisoning before, from eating food other people prepared or served. I have never had it from food I grew and prepared! Of course , I grew up before we used AB soap and had dishwashers, back in the stone ages! I figure, I ate enough good healthy dirt growing up, to make me healthy enough to survive my organic garden for all these years! Anyway, the litter from my chicken coops are like gold to me! It makes my compost work faster and be even richer in nutrients for my gardens. My livestock, gardens and I are all in the same circle of life and it is good! I only wish I had worked this lifestyle and understood the real quality of life issues, when I was 25 -30 years old!

Exactly. I never trust "Organic" labels. And many of those outbreaks originated in the "organic" soil.
The contaminates on produce, regardless of fertilizer is to be washed off before you eat it! "Organic " labels do not imply "sanitary"! Most of the food borne illness we tracked at the county level Health Dept. (actual cases of infection Locally), was from improper handling, usually poor temperature or storage practices, employees handling food improperly, somewhere in the harvest to table process! Shelby County, Tn. had a million residents and most of the typical health problems for an urban area. Organic , in fact can be on the label of Arsenic or Lead containing products, as they are natural organic substances. The most frequent sources for produce induced outbreaks of salmonella, was from eating improperly washed produce, usually green onions, lettuces, cilantro, radishes, mushrooms and other stuff seen commonly on salad bars or in your homemade salads to be consumed raw. No produce, eggs, or meat can be assumed free of pathogens and safe to eat, either, unwashed or undercooked .
 
Be sure to clean up the doggie doo first! :D
Good point about the dog poop! Animals that you feed meat containing foods, poop is dangerous and stinks worse, usually full of dangerous organisms! Never add dog/cat poop to a Manure composting pile! Never!!! :) Just in case someone doesn't think about that! BTW, make sure you don't feed your chickens feed containing animal protein from meat. Insects and the occasional frog or tidbit , usually no problem. Add meat and the pathogens and the stink goes way up! What do you think happens when a chicken eats meat or poop from meat eating animals? More stink and Often parasites! Worms, bacteria, virus and more. Cleanup dog poop or Raccoon,etc, before your chickens see to it! Chicken poop needs to be handled carefully! Wear mask and gloves, wash well afterwards. Usually, mixing it with carbonaceous materials and composting it is the best solution. It does require some work, what doesn't? An actively worked and diverse material compost pile, will have much less odor, provide a , more weed free product and less harmful pathogens and more beneficial organisms and do it in just a few months (in warmer seasons). I have spread the uncomposted straw litter across my pasture, when the animals were in another paddock a couple months and seen the grass explode with new growth, similar an ammonia nitrate or Urea fertilizer application. Happy Homesteading!
 
Most of the commercially available chicken poop here, has more odor than horse or cow manure products, but not too strong! Over the years my favorite animal poop(excluding worms) for gardening, in descending order , has been Rabbits, goats, sheep, chickens , horses and last cows. Out of all of those animals I have raised, the rabbits may of been the top for no weed seeds, fast composting and low odor doing so. The goat and sheep made lots of great,low odor, rich, all purpose compost, but a few weed seeds would sometimes survive composting. The horses and the cows, allowed the most weed seeds to survive, more work to keep odor and flies under control while processing, but made rich compost in the end, just as fast as sheep and goats. The chicken poop not mixed with litter is very strong, and should likely best, be blended with Carbonaceous materials to introduce more oxygen to the process as well as the carbon source. Aeration of a diverse compost pile, makes it work fast. Too much poop and not observing or turning/adding more carbon materials as needed, can result in strong odors, flies or spontaneous combustion! Chicken fertilizers sold here are dried, blended and/or composted products , but may still be very strong and may burn plants without careful use. Composting worms make the very best poop/ compost!!! Those little red wigglers "castings" have no objectionable odor for most people and are a non burning, slow releasing, rich, nutrient providing RX for plants! They (the worms)do not taste near as good as a chicken!
 
Horse manure does not stink!??
Well composted horse manure does not have much odor. Composted bark has some odor(may be stronger than manure!) and none of the organic products will smell like "fresh scented" laundry! But when well composted the vegetarian animal's poop, will have little more, if any, smell than natural earth.
 
Well composted horse manure does not have much odor. Composted bark has some odor(may be stronger than manure!) and none of the organic products will smell like "fresh scented" laundry! But when well composted the vegetarian animal's poop, will have little more, if any, smell than natural earth.
Last week I visited a Beglian horse stable (getting a feed bin). Didn't stink. Looked bad is all, and I didn't go into the stalls....quite a stallion there, a champion as he said...
 
Last week I visited a Beglian horse stable (getting a feed bin). Didn't stink. Looked bad is all, and I didn't go into the stalls....quite a stallion there, a champion as he said...
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!;)
 
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!;)
Try being in a 600 sq ft chicken coop and heave a bale of hay. 150 chickens fluttering up will give you a good dose of what you love. :D
 
I use to work occasionally, in chicken barns 500 feet long containing thousands of birds, so I can relate to that as well x 100! I always wear a dust mask these days for that reason when cleaning/working in the coop! That chicken barn dust is not very tasty or healthy!☺️
 
Luckily I don't have it that bad, once in a while in the coop, you can tell when you turn over a fresh stanley steamer... the lovely scent gets you smack in the face. IM glad the Cockatoo Poo don't stink.

To be honest I dont mind the smell of nature either, well, pigs might be a bit much, ive passed some really bad farms out here. It reminds me of a simpler, more wholesome life, where people were more honest, and a hard days work was actually a thing of pride.

Aaron
 
Luckily I don't have it that bad, once in a while in the coop, you can tell when you turn over a fresh stanley steamer... the lovely scent gets you smack in the face. IM glad the Cockatoo Poo don't stink.

To be honest I dont mind the smell of nature either, well, pigs might be a bit much, ive passed some really bad farms out here. It reminds me of a simpler, more wholesome life, where people were more honest, and a hard days work was actually a thing of pride.

Aaron
The bad pig farms are due to industrialization. Stanley steemer---ammonia. Don't fall down. :D
 
I have grabber tongs with 16 inch handle on them, I can reach right in and snatch the turds right out of the pine bark and throw into the compost bucket. Unless one of them got into something and it looks more like a cow pie rather than chicken nuggets, then the whole goop gets scooped up. I got the extra extra long handles so I can get the stuff in the back w/o having to crawl or bend over into there so much.

Aaron
 
I have grabber tongs with 16 inch handle on them, I can reach right in and snatch the turds right out of the pine bark and throw into the compost bucket. Unless one of them got into something and it looks more like a cow pie rather than chicken nuggets, then the whole goop gets scooped up. I got the extra extra long handles so I can get the stuff in the back w/o having to crawl or bend over into there so much.

Aaron
Sounds like it works. I plan on hiring a neighbor.... oooff.
 
I try to minimize bending and crawling these days! A neighborhood teen under my direction would be a good thing at muck out time! But they expect so much $$$ that my eggs would cost much more$$$! It appears, I still have more time than money, but who ever really knows how much time? I have cleaned to the floor about twice per year(deep litter method), except under the roost, where it is much more often! I made it easy this time(new coop build), to just open two three foot wide doors and rake out directly into my garden cart the area under the roost, while standing straight up! The rake reaches easily into the corners of the little 101/2 ft. wide coop roost clean out area. That is enough work for me these days!
 
Yeah, that's the problem with these little B34#$# kids, they think they are worth 15 dollars an hour and IF you pay them, they might do their job. I remember growing up, mowing lawns, raking leaves,washing cars, whatever you had to do to make money. Now they are lazy overweight slugs thinking they can just get rich playing WoW or shilling crypto coins and have no clue, honor, or even idea of what a good days work is and the integrety and feeling of pride, accomplishment, etc, all that stuff that helps shape young kids into good adults.

The days of, clean the coop and Ill give some a few dollars and some eggs to take home for mom to make you a good breakfast are LONG gone. I think a nuke destroying the internet and making these people actually go back to HAVING to interact IN PERSON would actually be a good thing for society as a whole. But what do I know, Im just an old ornery bastard who tickles chickens and bribes them with snacks to lay eggs...

Aaron
 

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