- Thread starter
- #11
Thank you, everyone, for all of your feedback. It is helpful and definitely giving me food for thought.
A new medical building went up next door to my property. They installed a sprinkler system and put down sod. That grass established itself within a month. I walk my dog over there from time to time. They run the sprinklers every night. It feels nice, soft, thick, and green. Granted, they don't have chickens scratching at it every day which probably makes ALL the difference.
That being said, except for the craters where my chickens have decided to make an impromptu dust-bath hole, they don't seem to tear up my pasture grass.... I'm not sure WHY the chicken runs are different? There's more than enough space for the amount of animals. I feel like the lack of regular watering is what makes the difference. If the area was watered daily or every other day, I bet I could get grass to grow there. Also, I do have a garden tiller that I could use to prep the area.
Btw, my chickens DO have a couple of special areas where they 'dust bathe' inside their run. Leaving these areas without grass won't be a problem. The problem is keeping them out of the area beyond a few days or even a week. Since I can't do that, maybe I could figure out how to section off 30' x 10'-ish sections at a time and keep them blocked for a month at a time? At best, I'd only get 2 sections done before everything would go dormant for the winter (unless I used a winter grass).
A new medical building went up next door to my property. They installed a sprinkler system and put down sod. That grass established itself within a month. I walk my dog over there from time to time. They run the sprinklers every night. It feels nice, soft, thick, and green. Granted, they don't have chickens scratching at it every day which probably makes ALL the difference.
That being said, except for the craters where my chickens have decided to make an impromptu dust-bath hole, they don't seem to tear up my pasture grass.... I'm not sure WHY the chicken runs are different? There's more than enough space for the amount of animals. I feel like the lack of regular watering is what makes the difference. If the area was watered daily or every other day, I bet I could get grass to grow there. Also, I do have a garden tiller that I could use to prep the area.
Btw, my chickens DO have a couple of special areas where they 'dust bathe' inside their run. Leaving these areas without grass won't be a problem. The problem is keeping them out of the area beyond a few days or even a week. Since I can't do that, maybe I could figure out how to section off 30' x 10'-ish sections at a time and keep them blocked for a month at a time? At best, I'd only get 2 sections done before everything would go dormant for the winter (unless I used a winter grass).