"Louisiana "La-yers" Peeps"

I compost 3 ways. I use a barrel composter (worked awesome! But just listed it because it doesn't make enough for the property, mainly great for one or two smaller gardens or a normal sized yard.) But every 12 week's or so a full barrel of gross scraps turns into rich soil.
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I also have a pile of long term compost (chicken poo, cardboard, excess grass cuttings, and excess of hay.) Chicken poo is a "hot" fert and should be composted before use (i do use it right outta the chicken in my banana trees tho (heavy heavy feeders when fruiting)
And then I have these lovely stackable pallets we stack up 3-4 high. Fill with all kitchen scraps that chickens don't get, garden waste, egg shells, everything except meat (predators) then once a month I unstack each one and re stack it directly in front or behind the original place sliding compost with it effectively "turning" it. These boxes work pretty fast when full and turned regularly.
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I personally don't compost rabbitry waste unless I need a lil bit to top it off. I sell rabbitry waste and use a ton of it ourselves in the gardens. Full circle. Rabbit poo does not have to compost, its a cold fert. Sprinkle directly through gardens and potted plants, lawns, fruit trees love it. I wrap spent hay around veggie garden plants to fertilizer when I water and the spent hay works also as a mulch keeping soil near roots cool and moist a lot longer in our brutal heat.
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I have an old plastic kiddie pool and was wondering if I could use it to compost? I like the info about the hay. We have a small garden and I have some hay that say out and got kind of funky. Could I use it to put around my plants as mulch?
 
I got the black plastic one from the EBR parish mulch giveaway a few years back (I paid for it). I hate it. In 3 years I hardly got any compost out of it, it's very hard to churn, and it's hard to get compost out of it. I plan to make my own with chicken wire and throw away the black plastic failure.

Let me know how the new one works for you!
 
do y'all compost? I'm thinking about starting. What type of container do you use? What do you put it it? Ive heard of chicken and rabbit poo of course, then coffee grounds, and egg shells... what else? 

I have the one from SAMs you can spin it. No meat in compost. Brown stuff , dead leaves etc. green stuff, grass from mowing kitchen trimmings like the end of broccoli , lettuce etc. chicken droppings with shavings. Add all together keep moist turn and keep adding as you go once you have a big pile . Then just keep moist and turn. In 4 to 6 months add to garden. I also have a worm composter. I just started. It about 2 months ago. I'll give an update on the worm method once I've had them longer. Worm castings and rabbit do not need to be composted you can put them straight in your garden . Pam
 
Anyone else have a chicken coop that flooded a little today? So much rain. My coop is in one of the highest parts of the lawn and it still flooded. The news said that we received 5" in one hour. My three young chicks are in the coop where it is dry. My two older hens are just standing in 4 inches of water under the coop.
 
I have the one from SAMs you can spin it. No meat in compost. Brown stuff , dead leaves etc. green stuff, grass from mowing kitchen trimmings like the end of broccoli , lettuce etc. chicken droppings with shavings. Add all together keep moist turn and keep adding as you go once you have a big pile . Then just keep moist and turn. In 4 to 6 months add to garden. I also have a worm composter. I just started. It about 2 months ago. I'll give an update on the worm method once I've had them longer. Worm castings and rabbit do not need to be composted you can put them straight in your garden . Pam

Is duck poo the same as chicken? Needs to be composted?
 
Anyone else have a chicken coop that flooded a little today? So much rain.  My coop is in one of the highest parts of the lawn and it still flooded. The news said that we received 5" in one hour. My three young chicks are in the coop where it is dry. My two older hens are just standing in 4 inches of water under the coop.


The water got high, 2" or so, but my coops are on legs that are about 5", so it didn't get in the coop. It never has, but when we get those big downpours, it can get within a couple of inches.
 
Anyone else have a chicken coop that flooded a little today? So much rain.  My coop is in one of the highest parts of the lawn and it still flooded. The news said that we received 5" in one hour. My three young chicks are in the coop where it is dry. My two older hens are just standing in 4 inches of water under the coop.

It won't bother your older hens. Chicks a few weeks old need a heat lamp. After a they feather out thy should be ok to be in the coop but in a dry place.
 
Yeah, my coop is about three feet above the ground. The rest of the run was flooded. What sort of sand does everyone use in there coop run. I wanted to put some sand in the space under the coop so that they have a dry and cool place to rest during the day.

Yeah my youngest are over two months and full feathered. They were just relaxing in the coop door watching it rain.
 
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