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- #3,701
That's another questionable term. Some folks think of deep litter as just that....someone using a deep layer of bedding in their coop so that waste is lost in the thickness of the wood shavings/straw/hay until it just can't hold anymore without stinking and then they rake it all out and start again.
Some add a few inches when it it gets saturated, lets it get around 6-8 in. deep using this method and then cleans it out and starts again.
Others add new bedding now and again, keep the old bedding turned, letting it decompose and settle over time and rarely ever remove the bedding from the coop for many months or years. This takes really good ventilation and an understanding of what healthy bedding should smell like, look like, feel like. Deep litter purists subscribe to this method as being a true deep litter system as opposed to cleaning it out more often and before it has composted properly.
True deep litter that is well managed provides an environment for good bacterial/microbial growth that will prevent an overgrowth of more harmful pathogens in the coop environment...but it's easy to let that get out of balance if you don't know what you are doing and it can become a petri dish of harmful bacteria or excessive ammonia build-up when too moist, no ventilation, etc.
Some add a few inches when it it gets saturated, lets it get around 6-8 in. deep using this method and then cleans it out and starts again.
Others add new bedding now and again, keep the old bedding turned, letting it decompose and settle over time and rarely ever remove the bedding from the coop for many months or years. This takes really good ventilation and an understanding of what healthy bedding should smell like, look like, feel like. Deep litter purists subscribe to this method as being a true deep litter system as opposed to cleaning it out more often and before it has composted properly.
True deep litter that is well managed provides an environment for good bacterial/microbial growth that will prevent an overgrowth of more harmful pathogens in the coop environment...but it's easy to let that get out of balance if you don't know what you are doing and it can become a petri dish of harmful bacteria or excessive ammonia build-up when too moist, no ventilation, etc.