Interior paint

Jazzmin

In the Brooder
Apr 7, 2018
13
9
29
Iowa
What is the best kind of paint to use for the walls, roost, and nest boxes for the interior of a chicken coop. Also is semi-gloss the best finish?
 
What you want is whitewash, and to make it a yearly ritual - usually part of spring cleaning. Whitewash preserves wood, kills insect eggs and germs and helps with odors. Also, you don't need a clean, scrubbed surface, it will grab dirt and flake off, so you can actually just sweep a really grubby wall, slap on some white wash, repeat a few days later and have it look pristine.

So, 3 parts barn/ag/masonry lime (NOT garden lime) and one part salt. Mix with enough water to make it about the consistency of milk. Do it in small batches and stir frequently - it will settle. Slop it on with a course brush.
Please Note: When you first do this, it will look awful. It will look as if a 3 year old spilled milk on the wall, at best. If you are putting it on new wood, you might even be hard-pressed to see it.
Just take a deep breath, have a little faith that I'm not having a joke on you, shut the door and walk away until morning.

In the morning, when it's dry, you will be stunned at the lovely, pristine whiteness of it.

Sometimes, if you are doing it on old plywood, it will dry yellowed. I don't know what's in old plywood that soaks through, but you can layer a few coats on and it will be alright. Coats of more watery whitewash come out better than trying to make it thicker.
 
Sap and glue?

Do you just whitewash over any poop?

I'm guessing it's probably glue, but who knows??

I have just whitewashed over poop if it's dry. But it will flake off! I like that it will kind of grab dirt and bring it down, but it doesn't make for a pretty finish. I take an old corn broom and sweep it hard (wear a dust mask!) and slop on my whitewash. If the walls were really cruddy, in a week I'll do it again.
When that is the case, all manner of crud will come off with the whitewash, if it hasn't already. the 2nd time always comes out lovely, and I've done some gnarly walls.

Now, whitewash does rub off a bit when you lean on it, especially when it's new. But the really nice part is if you've made this a yearly ritual, in a few years you get this great layer built up - you're creating a thin coat of limestone and it really does preserve the walls so well. You can also instantly tell anywhere you have a moisture problem - it will make a dark spot on the whitewash that's impossible to miss or ignore.
 

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