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@gtaus Your setup looks fantastic! It looks like you have 2"x4" welded wire for the fence -- how do you keep the chickens from flinging everything out of the run?
Apologies if this has been covered in the thread, but do any of you use composting worms or other invertebrate helpers? Composting is a slow process in my arid climate. I have tried black soldier fly larvae to great success, but they cannot reproduce in my environment, so I have to keep ordering new larvae.
Can't speak for @gtaus, but I have a similar setup and I just have a flower bed right outside the coop...I consider it "self mulching".![]()
The benefit of black fly larvae is they generate their own moisture when metabolizing compost. Worms do this too ("compost tea"). Even regular house flies will liquify compost, but I don't want to encourage them because they are disgusting.I don't have any experience with black fly larvae, so I cannot comment on that subject.
Maybe someone else has a thought or two on composting in arid climates? I hope so. I would love to hear how composting would work in your climate.
@gtaus Your setup looks fantastic! It looks like you have 2"x4" welded wire for the fence -- how do you keep the chickens from flinging everything out of the run?
Can't speak for @gtaus, but I have a similar setup and I just have a flower bed right outside the coop...I consider it "self mulching".![]()
Sage, borage, and butterfly bush have been chicken-scratch-proof for me thanks to their woody stems and deep roots. They are also drought-tolerant. Since you have rain and a fenced run, you could grow just about anything: nasturtiums, marigolds, coneflower, etc.If I go that route, do you have any suggestions as to what flowers to plant? I would like some flowers that encourage pollinators to visit the flower garden, then visit my raised beds which are right next to the chicken run. Also, I would assume that the flowers would have to be non-toxic to the chickens in case they try to eat them. Thanks for any help.
I don't deliberately add worms but worms natural to the area crawl in from the soil, reproduce and have fun wriggling around in it until it's mostly broken down. As I rotate between bins each year the worm population pretty much migrates from one bin to the other.Apologies if this has been covered in the thread, but do any of you use composting worms or other invertebrate helpers? Composting is a slow process in my arid climate. I have tried black soldier fly larvae to great success, but they cannot reproduce in my environment, so I have to keep ordering new larvae.
Sage, borage, and butterfly bush have been chicken-scratch-proof for me thanks to their woody stems and deep roots. They are also drought-tolerant. Since you have rain and a fenced run, you could grow just about anything: nasturtiums, marigolds, coneflower, etc.