Hay and safety

duckophile1998

In the Brooder
Feb 13, 2019
15
34
34
i'm the only member of my immediate family not allergic to hay (or anything else in the world, except penicillin and the wet insides of a pumpkin).

i have been putting hay in the newly completed shed in the backyard. my ducks are scheduled to ship on the 25th (excited!). unfortunately i cut my finger on some hay and bled a bit. i didn't know it could do that. is hay safe for ducks?
 
I use straw for adult ducks, but used pine (not cedar) shavings for mine when they were ducklings. Hay and straw are not the same thing. Hay rots a lot faster than straw in my climate. Straw is coarser, drains better, and dries out faster. It is typically cheaper, too.
 
i'm the only member of my immediate family not allergic to hay (or anything else in the world, except penicillin and the wet insides of a pumpkin).

i have been putting hay in the newly completed shed in the backyard. my ducks are scheduled to ship on the 25th (excited!). unfortunately i cut my finger on some hay and bled a bit. i didn't know it could do that. is hay safe for ducks?
No, not really, at least the hay we get here isn't. The hay here produces a lot of dust with spores that can effect the respiratory organs of fowl.
Hay here also tend to carry mites.
Straw is a much better option.
I prefer only to use hay in the nest boxes or sleeping areas. I leave the coop floors bare.
Apart from reducing the use of bedding in my set up bare floors allow me to check the poop more easily and when cleaning I can just scrape the poop off the floor without having to deal with barrow loads of straw.
A lot will depend on the way you keep the ducks and how your coop is built.
 

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