Colorado

Update on the eggs you gave me: it seems all of them are infertile. Every one
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Grrrrr. Sorry about the wasted efforts.
 
okay i got a supit question;

does anyone have a website link of how to set up a deep letter method or (Di-o-grams) on how its work?

my coop has a wood floor and reading the deep litter thred most people that use this method dont have floors in their coops. i have Rust-Oleum Ultimate Polyurethane varish paint to sill the coops insides. i was hoping with this varish i can hoes out the coop and clean it out easly and quickly.
 
okay i got a supit question;

does anyone have a website link of how to set up a deep letter method or (Di-o-grams) on how its work?

my coop has a wood floor and reading the deep litter thred most people that use this method dont have floors in their coops. i have Rust-Oleum Ultimate Polyurethane varish paint to sill the coops insides. i was hoping with this varish i can hoes out the coop and clean it out easly and quickly.
Not a stupid question. No real need for a diagram. You put down a layer of bedding. (wood shavings, straw, sawdust, leaves, hay, etc) The chickens poop in it and scratch around. When it gets really poopy, add more bedding. Repeat several-many times. It will get deep, and shouldn't smell bad if you have enough ventilation. It actually starts to compost.

The reason most don't have flooring is that with the deep litter method you are encouraging the bedding to break down, which tends to attack flooring, especially wood floors. Depending on how moist you keep it, it can start to rot out your floorboards.

I have a dirt floor in my large hen house. The foundation boards, 2 x 12's, are treated with used motor oil, and are pretty much impervious to rot.
 
Not a stupid question. No real need for a diagram. You put down a layer of bedding. (wood shavings, straw, sawdust, leaves, hay, etc) The chickens poop in it and scratch around. When it gets really poopy, add more bedding. Repeat several-many times. It will get deep, and shouldn't smell bad if you have enough ventilation. It actually starts to compost.

The reason most don't have flooring is that with the deep litter method you are encouraging the bedding to break down, which tends to attack flooring, especially wood floors. Depending on how moist you keep it, it can start to rot out your floorboards.

I have a dirt floor in my large hen house. The foundation boards, 2 x 12's, are treated with used motor oil, and are pretty much impervious to rot.
Yes, what Wendell said.

I am using DL in my coop that has a wood floor, painted, it is so dry here I doubt there would be much of an issue with wood rot unless it got pretty moist. I had about 8 inches of litter in my coop before I cleaned it out last week, I took out two wheelbarrows full, which was about 2/3 of it, then put a couple inches of new shavings over the old. What I took out was very dry. I normally don't have water in the coop but I did for a few of the coldest/stormiest weeks of the year, and it was still dry in there. I dumped it all on my raised beds, scattered some scratch, and let the girls start turning it into the soil. They've got it about half done, just need to put some more scratch out there this week and they should finish it up. Then I'll water it in a few times, let it sit until late April or early May, and see if I can sprout a few seeds before I plant everything just to make sure it isn't too "hot" (high in nitrogen). I would normally have added it to my compost pile, but most of it has been sitting in the coop so long it should be pretty well aged.
 

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