Harvesting my Chicken Run Compost - Black Gold!

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gtaus

Crossing the Road
5 Years
Mar 29, 2019
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Northern Minnesota
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I turned my chicken run into a chicken run composting system a couple years ago. I throw all my wood chips, grass clippings, leaves, weeds, spent coop bedding, and just about anything else organic into the run and let the chickens break it down and turn it into compost.

Here is a picture of my run with a large pile of grass clippings I just mowed this afternoon. I don't know if the picture is clear enough, but maybe you can see that in that mowing of grass I pulled up a lot of dead leaves from last fall, lots of dead brown material on the ground, and probably a fair amount of loose dirt got sucked up into those loads. Point is, my grass clippings are not just grass, which is why I was able to pile it so high. If all I had in the bins was grass clippings, then I would never pile them that high because the pure grass clippings would heat up and smell really bad. With all that brown material in the mix I don't have to worry about a stinky pile of grass matting up and going anaerobic.

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Here is a picture of the chicken run compost that I was harvesting from the chicken run today. Note that all my chickens were all right there "helping" me as I was forking out the litter into my compost sifter. I hope you can see how darker the lower layers of the compost is. That's black gold in book.

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Here is a picture of my cement mixer compost sifter. Notice all the screened, finished compost falls into the wagon below the wire on the barrel, and the unfinished compost and larger pieces fall out the end (where I have the blue muck bucket).

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The section of the chicken run I was harvesting today was about 1 year old. In the past, I was getting about 50% finished compost in the first wagon and 50% unfinished compost in the reject wagon. Today, I was getting about 90% finished compost and maybe only about 10% rejects. So, my sifting job was really going fast today - even with the "help" of all my chickens in the area that I was harvesting. BTW, my cement mixer compost sifter sifts out about 6 cubic feet of compost every 15 minutes. I used to buy my compost at the big box stores for about $5,00 per 2 cubic bag. Now I make my own compost and sift it out to the tune of about $60 worth of compost every hour of run time with my compost sifter. Saves me a lot of money.

This year, I have built a few more 4X4 foot galvanized steel panel raised hügelkultur beds. I mix the chicken run compost 1:1 with good Red River topsoil I purchased from a local nursery. That 1:1 mix goes on the top 6-8 inches of my raised beds. Here is one of the raised beds I finished filling up today.

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I will be planting peppers in this raised bed this weekend. Where I live, our average last frost date is the end of May, so I'm right on time with my projects.

Love talking about my chicken run composting and gardening projects. Willing to answer any questions you may have, or look forward to comments and pictures of your setups. Thanks for any feedback.
 
I'm impressed, you definitely made this form of composting look easy, fun and sexy.

I have never thought of making compost as sexy, but OK! Using the chickens to make compost in the run is easy. The fun part is seeing all the food I can grow with the chicken run compost in my raised beds. Also, since I save so much money on no longer buying compost at the big box stores, I guess I have more money to spend on fun stuff.

Terrific sifter and all of the thoughtful effort put into your successful composting- including the great share with the photos for us folks- easy to glean some big inspiration and a few tricks from you.

:old For years, and years, I used a manual sifter I made out of 2X4's and some hardware cloth. I just got too old to put all that work into sifting compost manually. The cement mixer compost sifter was a great solution for me as I upped my game with the chicken run composting. I have way too much compost to sift manually, even if I was a lot younger.

Composting is such a great thing to do for a whole bunch of reasons that you helped make perfectly easy to follow.

Chickens, composting, and gardening all seem to go together so well. And, I'm at an age and stage in my life where I really enjoy the process. If you don't use your chickens to make compost, then I personally think you are missing out on one of the best benefits to having a backyard flock. I tell people I bought composting chickens and get eggs as a bonus. Some people laugh, but the gardeners know what I mean.
 
I'm impressed, you definitely made this form of composting look easy, fun and sexy. Terrific sifter and all of the thoughtful effort put into your successful composting- including the great share with the photos for us folks- easy to glean some big inspiration and a few tricks from you.
Composting is such a great thing to do for a whole bunch of reasons that you helped make perfectly easy to follow. Mahalo!
5 ☆, 2 👍 and a golf 👏 for sure!
 
I love the sifter!! I haven’t harvested any compost from the chicken run, but I should. All the chipped wood we added about 3 years ago is essentially decomposed other than the largest pieces. We have a separate compost 3-bin system bc there is no great way for us to put a lot in the run.

I know some people may have chicken runs too small to make compost like I do. But, there are probably many people who could make more compost in the run if they wanted to do that.

That cement mixer compost sifter I have is great because I can also put in different sized screens to sift my compost. I'll use 1/4 X 1/4 inch hardware cloth screen for seed starting mix. I use the 1/2 X 1/2 inch for most of my raised beds potting mix. And, I'll just take out the inner screen and use my 1 X 1/2 inch main hardware cloth for filling beds. What I like is that the wood that is too big for the sifting screen will get rejected and I can throw all that back into the chicken run for some more composting.
 
This is amazing!

The system is amazing, IMHO, because it uses the natural instincts of our chickens to scratch and peck for food, which mixes all the stuff I dump in the chicken run, and that turns into compost which I harvest as needed. I have way more compost than I can use, but the good thing about this compost system is that the compost just gets better the longer it sits in the run.
 
Here's a picture of one...the thing is insane. It's like a compost pile, if a compost pile was a combination of a computer and a robot. :D

Organic material (food scraps for greens, wood chips for carbon) go in one end, and is slowly moved through by an auger.

Auger speed, moisture level, and more are controlled by a computer. Rough final compost comes out in about 30 days.

They let it sit, sift it, and then use it. They have a pipe coming out of it that goes into a pile of wood chips next to the device...a "bio filter" for odors.

I stuck a compost thermometer into it the other day while giving a tour...it was over 140 degrees before I finished by spiel about the composter.

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I love the sifter idea, and that is really beautiful looking compost.

For coarse sifting I have a panel of 1/2" welded wire on a wood frame (recycled from my old prefab's wall) and that can sit on a yard cart and sift right into that.

My fine sifter is a lot slower and more lowkey... hardware cloth folded around a 5 gal bucket.

Chunky bits get tossed back into the run or dumped in depressions in the lawn to help even the ground level out.
 
We've had a bit of a non-winter here in Rhode Island. We literally got our first shovel-worthy snow just the other day. I dug a small area out of the chicken run and used it to fill a flower bed in front of the house I'd dug out last fall. Was a lot of work, but whatever flowers or shrubs my wife decides she wants to grow there this spring should grow like crazy.

I have a bunch more compost in a particular area to clean out come spring. I plan to use it to follow my chicken tractor across the lawn in my attempt to eventually convert my entire backyard into much more lush grass and clover.

I have a few bags of leaves left, and I know I have a few neighbors who still have leaves they won't mind us sucking up with the tractor. That should hold me until the pre-Memorial day cemetery cleanups, which usually get me a truck full of leaf bags or two.

The only real "new" thing I'm trying this year is a I just bought 20 lbs of "spring pea" seeds. I'm going to start trying to mix soaked seeds into the compost system to see if they'll sprout and give the birds more motivation to scratch and a bit of tasty sprout treats as a reward.
 
Had a table set up with inputs, different stages of compost decomposition, and my wheelbarrow and sifter.

:thumbsup That is an awesome setup. Very well done. Very informational. Looks like a perfect demonstration for anybody getting into composting.

Yes, compost may be a bit of work, but I don't have to go to the gym when I'm doing a lot of turning, hauling, sifting, and applying of compost!

I love how you used the wire frame on the wheelbarrow to show people how easy it is to get into shifting your compost. I did that for years and years. It works.

But, like I have said many times, when I converted my chicken run into a chicken run composting system, I had way too much compost material to shift manually. So, I made my cement mixer compost sifter. It's a real labor saver. In only 15 minutes, I can now sift as much compost as it used to take me a few hours with the manual sifting frame on the wheelbarrow.

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And, of course, the 4-wheeled carts are much easier on the back than a one-wheeled wheelbarrow.

:old Somewhere along the way, I discovered that I could make and sift much more compost using these tools than doing everything manually. For me, it has meant I can enjoy this composting process for maybe another 10-15 years without beating up my back and body. Also, because I can make so much more compost with so much less labor, I have increased my gardening square footage more than 2X in the last few years. And, I will be adding yet more raised beds this year! I could have never considered that if I had continued to do everything manually.

:old:old I'm less worried about having to go to a gym for a good workout than staying out of the hospital for a bad back from all the composting I now do!
 

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