I’ve been hearing about putting a compost pile in a chicken run and love the idea of it. I have the perfect spot in my run right now. How would I get started making a compost pile and would I need to be careful of what I put in it, for example would I put egg shells in it or what types of plants are toxic?? Would this be a place my chickens could get some protein from in the winter and would they go out to it in the winter?? (We live outside Buffalo, NY and our chickens don’t go in the run if there is snow on the ground) Any other thoughts or ideas would be helpful as well. Thanks so much.
The compost pile would not be a source of anything in most NY winters as it will be frozen.
I give the egg shells directly to the chickens in a specific dispenser I made for them. All the egg shells I generate in the kitchen get zapped in the microwave for 30 seconds, crushed and put in the dispenser. It's a good calcium source. And protein if you don't rinse the shells out first. Be ware that once they figure out that eggshells are in that bag you are carrying out they will jump up and rip it from your hands before you can get it in the dispenser so hang on tight!
I do not put in avocado skins and very fibrous vegetable stalks like broccoli. And no large pits that they could choke on. When I clean out the garden in the winter/spring, that all goes in. Before putting prunings in for landscaping work, check see if they are toxic to chickens. Things like holly, azaleas and rhododendrons don't go in.
Try to keep a good mix of carbon (plant matter: pine/hemp bedding, veggie waste, garden trimmings, leaves, grass clippings) and nitrogen (chicken poop) and turn it regularly. You want lots of carbon to the nitrogen to keep it composting and to keep the pile from stinking. The ideal ratio is 30-35 parts carbon to 1 part nitrogen. And those chickens make that one part nitrogen BIG!
I typically feed the "good" produce scraps directly to the flock: squash guts, apple cores, past their prime produce, etc.