Oops, hit the wrong button.
Deep Litter *can* be done over a floor, but it much better done with ground contact because that way the beneficial organisms are seeded into the bedding through the soil.
Chickens themselves are inherently dusty because of the feather dander
All coop cleaning should be done with a mask on to protect our lungs regardless of the bedding system.
The ventilated ceiling is good up to a point, but that clear roof will turn the coop into a rotisserie on a hot summer day. Chickens tolerate cold very well -- down to 0F and below -- but they suffer in the heat.
It would be much more beneficial to use an opaque roof to provide shade. Personally, I was surprised and delighted to discover how easy it is to install metal roofing on purlins using self-tapping screws as provided by the seller of the metal and a cordless impact driver.
I'm a small woman with arthritic wrists, but the metal I did personally was easy to handle.
Pine shavings are fine. Just wear a mask against the dust when you clean.
Does your part of New Jersey have pine straw available? I'm not quite sure where on the US east coast the loblolly pines stop growing. Pine straw is, IMO, terrific bedding for a run because they resist packing and matting -- though I like something more absorbent for the coop itself.
How often you're going to need to change the bedding is going to depend on how deep a layer you will put in and how much time the chickens spend in there. A smaller coop with shallower bedding needs to be cleaned more often. A larger coop with more bedding needs to be cleaned less often.
The coop shown in the article requires cleaning 4-5 times a year depending on the number of chickens and the time of year. My big Open Air coop is coming up on it's first cleaning after about 18 months.
Yes, the dry poop remains in the Deep Bedding, but as long as it's completely dry it's inert and harmless. Then when you take it out and form the compost pile it gets wet and composts instead of just rotting and reeking because of the chemical interaction between the nitrogen in the manure and the carbon in the bedding as facilitated by the composting organisms.
For the Deep Litter in the run, those organisms work the entire time processing the nitrogen and carbon into compost.
s there a difference in deep bedding vs deep litter besides deep bedding is dry because it's in the coop which is dry - and deep litter is moist because it is in the run where sometimes there might be some rain or dew or snow?
Deep Litter *can* be done over a floor, but it much better done with ground contact because that way the beneficial organisms are seeded into the bedding through the soil.
Just something to watch for, shavings can be dusty. Watch for respiratory issues like runny nose and sneezing
Chickens themselves are inherently dusty because of the feather dander
All coop cleaning should be done with a mask on to protect our lungs regardless of the bedding system.

I heard back from the coop designer. He said the henhouse is very well ventilated with a hardware cloth ceiling that runs the entire width. See the attached photo.
The ventilated ceiling is good up to a point, but that clear roof will turn the coop into a rotisserie on a hot summer day. Chickens tolerate cold very well -- down to 0F and below -- but they suffer in the heat.
It would be much more beneficial to use an opaque roof to provide shade. Personally, I was surprised and delighted to discover how easy it is to install metal roofing on purlins using self-tapping screws as provided by the seller of the metal and a cordless impact driver.
I'm a small woman with arthritic wrists, but the metal I did personally was easy to handle.
Got it, no pine shavings. I thought some people use pine? Is it a different material than shavings?
Pine shavings are fine. Just wear a mask against the dust when you clean.
Does your part of New Jersey have pine straw available? I'm not quite sure where on the US east coast the loblolly pines stop growing. Pine straw is, IMO, terrific bedding for a run because they resist packing and matting -- though I like something more absorbent for the coop itself.
But doesn't it sit there for at least 6 months before you clean it out? So it's just dried up poop in the coop and run for all that time and it's safe?
How often you're going to need to change the bedding is going to depend on how deep a layer you will put in and how much time the chickens spend in there. A smaller coop with shallower bedding needs to be cleaned more often. A larger coop with more bedding needs to be cleaned less often.
The coop shown in the article requires cleaning 4-5 times a year depending on the number of chickens and the time of year. My big Open Air coop is coming up on it's first cleaning after about 18 months.

Yes, the dry poop remains in the Deep Bedding, but as long as it's completely dry it's inert and harmless. Then when you take it out and form the compost pile it gets wet and composts instead of just rotting and reeking because of the chemical interaction between the nitrogen in the manure and the carbon in the bedding as facilitated by the composting organisms.

For the Deep Litter in the run, those organisms work the entire time processing the nitrogen and carbon into compost.
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