5Australorpasaures
Crowing
- Jan 20, 2023
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Husband and wife disagree? I'll stay out of the middle of this one. 

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Ditto to this - it is our method as well. Although I rely more heavily on the actual compost pile and less food scraps in the run that will mold. Essentially, if the chickens won't eat it within a day, it doesn't go in the run. Attracts way too many ants and other which they obviously don't eat.I do deep-litter in my run, average 6" or so deep, and occasionally toss scraps, especially weeds, in there directly. The chickens scratch it around and mix it into the deep litter (pine straw, hardwood mulch, bark nuggets, dead leaves, grass clippings, and bugs, worms, and chicken doots - lots of chicken doots), so in fact, it is composting.
If it gets smelly, there's either too much green (scraps, doots) or needs better mixing into the brown (the litter described above.) Throw some dried mealworms or something in there, and while they frantically scratch for the snack, they'll turn the litter for you. If that doesn't work, take out the excess and put it in your compost pile, where you will do the same work turning it as the chickens would do.
I like to create natural conditions as much as possible for our chickens, and making the "floor" of the run as similar as possible to a forest floor is a big part of that.