jeria
Songster
thanks. will do
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I have sturdy painted plywood.
Deep litter needs to be on the dirt. As in a dirt floor coop. Now for me that was a NO. I had that in the country and was not happy about snakes coming in.
The rattler was the final straw for me.
Can you expound on that; why didn't it work over concrete? I have a little chicken house sitting inside an existing dog kennel (6'x6' chain link panels on a concrete pad). I've planned to build a roof over the kennel, and enclose the floor around the bottom of the kennel with 1"x 6" as a barrier to keep the litter in the run. I had originally planned to get a yard of construction sand but was considering the DLM also. Would it work over the layer of concrete sand to wick away moisture and have a way for water to drain?I just learned that the hard way. Tried it over concrete.....didn't work out at all.
Can you expound on that; why didn't it work over concrete? I have a little chicken house sitting inside an existing dog kennel (6'x6' chain link panels on a concrete pad). I've planned to build a roof over the kennel, and enclose the floor around the bottom of the kennel with 1"x 6" as a barrier to keep the litter in the run. I had originally planned to get a yard of construction sand but was considering the DLM also. Would it work over the layer of concrete sand to wick away moisture and have a way for water to drain?
Welcome to BYC!Hello! So we've moved onto 5 acres and there is a shed that we are converting into our coop. We live in southeast Missouri where the summers are hot and humid and the winters are cold and rainy with occasional snow. The floor of the shed is wooden and is elevated so I'm wondering what we should do for the floor. I want to do the deep litter method, but husband doesn't seem too enthusiastic about it. He'd rather put plywood down and put straw or hay over top and call it done. What would you do since there's wooden planks for the floor of the coop?
Welcome to BYC!
There are almost as many ways to floor and bed a coop as there are chicken keepers. Manure management plays a big part in how to bed the coop.
Look around, see what you think....you may try several things before you hit on what works best for you.
I use poops boards under roosts, vinyl over plywood with shavings on floor in coop, and deep litter in the run.
The links apparently are not working yet.
Pics of the existing coop and floor might help here.
Also how elevated is the coop and do you plan to have a run??
Here's some good info on deep litter:
Here's a great description of contents and how to manage organic 'bedding' in a run or coop...and there's a great video of what it looks like.
http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/1037998/muddy-run-help-please#post_16017992
..and how I do poop boards:
http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/6...raphic-gross-poop-pictures/1100#post_13179595
Dry will not rot/compost/breakdown......Mehh from what I've researched, as long as you keep it dry and turn it over at least once a week it should be fine. I live in an area with a very dry atmosphere...I think that makes a difference.
Dry will not rot/compost/breakdown......
....dry is not true composting Deep Litter, but deep bedding.
It can get confusing.
I have deep bedding in my coop using pine shavings. It stays dry, absorbs poop moisture...then once or twice a year all that goes out into the run where I have a cold composting deep litter.