deep litter & throwing scratch in it to get the chickens to mix it..

gale65

Songster
9 Years
Aug 19, 2010
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north central indiana
My Coop
My Coop
I read that people throw some cracked corn or whatever on the pine litter in the coop every so often to get the chickens to stir up the litter. Last night I read (not here) that you shouldn't do that because the chickens eating in the proximity of the poop can increase the chance of them getting worms. Has anyone had this problem? This is aimed at people who use pine type shavings and deep litter-not sand people.
 
Quote:
I have not heard of the worm thing before, I use deep pine shavings in my coop and all last winter I would throw out scartch grains for them in the evening when I put them to bed. They loved going through the litter. I also worm my chickens 2 times a year because diggin in the dirt ouside they will pick up worms. And the bonus as you said is they stir up the bedding. you might enjoy reading this http://www.plamondon.com/faq_deep_litter.html
 
That was what went through my head. If it's their own litter, how could they get something they didn't already have?
 
Very useful link, Miss Lydia. Curious though about a couple things; I've heard using food grade diatomaceous earth works well to absorb moisture, it was mentioned instead of lime in one article I read. Anyone know whether that's true or not? I would think it would be less caustic than lime.

Also, anyone have any experience with this method at persistent sub-zero temperatures (frequently 20-30 below here, for fairly long stretches) Will it still work?

Of course, I'm guessing it will work for me a LOT better than going out and cleaning the coop every week when it's that cold. Yuck. But is it going to work for the birds?
 
I've been using a sort of modified "deep litter" method since getting my chickens in April. Put them in the outside coop around the end of May. Using straw for about 4" deep litter. Haven't changed it so far. I do turn the litter underneath the roost every couple/three days using a three-pronged garden soil hand tool. I sprinkle DE if the coop starts to get a smell. I have removed a small portion of the litter about 3 times, and threw in a flake of hay, about 4". I use two of those "tree" vanilla hanging car deodorizers. (really!) which helps keep the fly population to a minimum. The floor of the coop is oil-based painted wood, which creates a slick, non-stick, non-porous surface. I find that the litter does not actually compost with this method; it dries out. The poop gets to be little hard balls, which stay that way till it goes into my compost pile with the hay I have removed. Yesterday I found I could use the three-pronged tool in one hand, and a dust pan in the other, and sucessfully scoop up soiled straw, rake the straw off and have the poop balls remain in the dust pan, to be placed in a bucket headed for the compost pile. This saved more straw. I only did this under the roost. I kind of stir the straw around in the rest of the coop, to keep it fresh. The chickens assist in this. Honestly, I don't spend more than 15 minutes a week cleaning inside the coop. I rake around the yard just about daily, trying to get most of the poop out of my path. That takes very little time, as well. My coop doesn't stink. The yard only stinks if it has just rained. A liberal sprinkle of DE in the yard takes care of that.
 
I'm not so much concerned about the parasites as I am keeping a clean safe coop with the diatomaceous earth. I'll probably go with the more standard treatments for parasites. But will the DE work as well as the lime?
 

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