South Louisiana.
12 hens in future.
I am currently building a 8x8 coop with windows on the east/west/south walls and a large screen/wire wall that can be enclosed on the north wall. The roof will be tin with approx 4 inches off the rafters for more ventilation. The run is 14x28.
The area I am building was in a 1-1/2 foot depression under 3 oak trees. This area always held water when it rained so I hauled in about 5yds of river silt to build it up. I enclosed the river silt with brick as boundaries. When shoveling the river silt it appeared to be dirt but over the last week of building the coop, I noticed the river silt has dried out and it is more sand that any kind of dirt. I would venture to say that the 14x28 run has a floor of 1 foot of sand now.
I have been doing a lot of reading and research for the most optimal floor material for the run. I see that a lot of folks disapprove of having an all sandy run for many different reasons. The hens can’t get a foot hold, they sink when walking/running/jumping. It can cause injuries to the hens feet from the unstable surface, etc….
So if this sandy floor is not good for my future hens health, what should I add to it to make it better? Straw, pine shavings, hemp, grass clipping from mowing?? I am completely new to this and have no idea.
Your suggestions would be highly appreciated!!
12 hens in future.
I am currently building a 8x8 coop with windows on the east/west/south walls and a large screen/wire wall that can be enclosed on the north wall. The roof will be tin with approx 4 inches off the rafters for more ventilation. The run is 14x28.
The area I am building was in a 1-1/2 foot depression under 3 oak trees. This area always held water when it rained so I hauled in about 5yds of river silt to build it up. I enclosed the river silt with brick as boundaries. When shoveling the river silt it appeared to be dirt but over the last week of building the coop, I noticed the river silt has dried out and it is more sand that any kind of dirt. I would venture to say that the 14x28 run has a floor of 1 foot of sand now.
I have been doing a lot of reading and research for the most optimal floor material for the run. I see that a lot of folks disapprove of having an all sandy run for many different reasons. The hens can’t get a foot hold, they sink when walking/running/jumping. It can cause injuries to the hens feet from the unstable surface, etc….
So if this sandy floor is not good for my future hens health, what should I add to it to make it better? Straw, pine shavings, hemp, grass clipping from mowing?? I am completely new to this and have no idea.
Your suggestions would be highly appreciated!!