coop floor question

It would be cheap insurance for slightly longer longevity to put a coat of sealant or a couple coats of polyurethane on the floor. OTOH particularly if the floor is 2" planking I kind of doubt you will see a big difference unless you are around a looong time. (Assuming you keep your litter dry and clean).

However, I want to point out that putting vinyl down DOES NOT substitute for sealing the floor -- in fact, putting vinyl flooring down makes it *more* worthwhile to seal or paint the floor first. Reason being, realisticially the chances of your being able to prevent some moisture from gettting under the vinyl are very, very slim. Waterers DO spill, rain DOES come in the windows, walls or roofs DO sometimes leak, etc. The water can creep in around the edge of the vinyl or track under from below, really it can, and then the water is mostly STUCK there rather than getting dried out somewhat by the litter if you didn't have the vinyl. I would really really suggest a coat of deck sealant or polyurethane or paint under any vinyl flooring. (ESPECIALLY for those brave souls who think stick-on 1' squares are a good idea).

Just make sure the fumes have aired out real well before you put the chickens in. Like, aired out to the point where if you close the coop overnight, you don't smell sealer in the morning when you go back in.

Good luck, have fun,

Pat
 
my floor boards have spaceing inbetween each board.basically we stuck a nail between each board and gapped them that way. so if ther is any water it will go out side thru the floor gaps.
 
Your rot most likely will not come from above.. underneath is the worry.. You need to have PLENTY of air circulation under the floor or your joists will dry rot.. I have seen joists give way in less that 5 years.
 
I couldn't find any cheap linolium last fall when I finished my coop so I grabbed my kids big vinyl pool they had abandoned and cut out a piece to tack down.
I figure whenever I find something affordable I can lift it out and have a clean surface to stick it to. It extends up the sides of the coop a few inches so there is no worry about water getting under it. With so much filler in there, they haven't even scratched down to it so it shouldn't get punctured.
 
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theres at least 2 feet of crawl space under my new barn coop there should be plenty of floor ventilation your right it probably wont rot.
 

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