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- #11
Oh, fantastic feedback!!
"galgo - Here is a pic of my set-up. I have 5 Runners and 2 Sebastopols. (DH wouldn't give up entire shed
) I have been using the equine pine pellets since they were in the brooder and have not had any problems. I do give them straw in the dog house to make nests and bed down in, I've added more to the main area since it is colder now and we've added the geese. There is linoleum up the wall about 5". They free range during the day so this is only used at night. I would also like to paint the interior walls, but haven't gotten there yet.. Excuse the mess in the pictures, they were molting and the camera seems to have enhanced the dust!
The ducks just moved in here July '11, so it's still new yet, but seems to be working ok!"
galgo: Okay, some questions: This looks almost exactly what I had in mind for my shed. The little house to the side - that's their nesting area? I am guessing they haven't laid there yet? It looks large...I assume for the Sebies? Tell me more about the pine pellets - I use them for my horses so have them on hand anyway, and I do use them in my brooders, as well. I'd wondered if they'd do well, because they are so much more absorbent than shavings!!! A problem I do have is that the door is only about 3" from the base of the floor. So there's no way I could do a deep litter method like Amiga describes below. 18"??? HOLY COW - that's definitely deep! But galgo - I'm super interested - how deep do you have your pellets? How do you clean them out - stir them up daily, and then remove when they are saturated? How often do you find you need to do this? Details would rock!
celtic:
If you can find marine grade paint sealant, that is the best for waterfowl. Cleans well, protects against the wetness. Congrats on the ducks!
celtic - thanks! I'm really looking forward to them! Marine grade paint sealant - would that be sort of like a clear coat, like polyurethane or something?
Amiga:
How nice you have a shed you can use!
Our setup has worked very nicely. We needed to build it, but I think some things will translate well for you if you think they will work for you.
The duck house is 4´x8´ double walled plywood (vermiculite and perlite insulation - they don´t mold). I put vinyl sheet flooring on the floor, and went up the sides several inches. I screwed 1¨x3¨ boards across the top to keep anything from slipping down behind the flooring. I covered seams with duck tape (of course).
I use pine shavings, about a foot and a half deep. On top of that I have a few inches of straw, which gets changed out every few days. I stir the shavings when the straw gets replaced. I add about a 2 gallon bucket´s worth of peat moss to the shavings, by the way. I do that to keep ammonia from forming. And the shavings stay so dry, anyway (talking ten runners) that ammonia has not been a big issue even before I started adding peat moss, which raises the acidity a bit.
I have not painted the interior walls, but when I do, I plan to use milk paint because that doesn´t make fumes, which I don´t want to subject the ducks to (their little lungs, I am told, can be sensitive to volatile compounds).
The Veranda (a porch attached to the house) originally had sand flooring. It got aromatic quite quickly. The way I figure it, the nitrogen in the duck poo had no carbon to bind to to reduce the odor. So, the Veranda now has sawdust over the sand and that works wonderfully! I use a cultivator to fluff the sawdust every day or two in warm weather, and it can be days to weeks before the top couple of inches need to be raked out and put on the compost and replaced with fresh sawdust.
Something I try to do is capture the nutrients from the ducks and use them in the garden. To do that, I use straw, sawdust or leaves. Oak leaves are great at reducing odor where it stays damp.
I have pea gravel under the swim pans, and that area has a slight slope, maybe 2 percent. I can dump the swim pan and the water flows through a small channel to a garden where it waters and fertilizes the plants. Once a year I need to work on the gravel and rake and hose out some of the organic matter that collects in the gravel.
Amiga: Do you think the peat moss would work with pelleted pine bedding? I had not heard that it helps in keeping the ammonia down. It's dry, correct, and comes in bales? Do they have it at feed stores, or do you need to go to a landscaping supply place for it?
Milk paint? I've never heard of this - is it called anything other than milk paint?
"galgo - Here is a pic of my set-up. I have 5 Runners and 2 Sebastopols. (DH wouldn't give up entire shed


galgo: Okay, some questions: This looks almost exactly what I had in mind for my shed. The little house to the side - that's their nesting area? I am guessing they haven't laid there yet? It looks large...I assume for the Sebies? Tell me more about the pine pellets - I use them for my horses so have them on hand anyway, and I do use them in my brooders, as well. I'd wondered if they'd do well, because they are so much more absorbent than shavings!!! A problem I do have is that the door is only about 3" from the base of the floor. So there's no way I could do a deep litter method like Amiga describes below. 18"??? HOLY COW - that's definitely deep! But galgo - I'm super interested - how deep do you have your pellets? How do you clean them out - stir them up daily, and then remove when they are saturated? How often do you find you need to do this? Details would rock!
celtic:
If you can find marine grade paint sealant, that is the best for waterfowl. Cleans well, protects against the wetness. Congrats on the ducks!
celtic - thanks! I'm really looking forward to them! Marine grade paint sealant - would that be sort of like a clear coat, like polyurethane or something?
Amiga:
How nice you have a shed you can use!

Our setup has worked very nicely. We needed to build it, but I think some things will translate well for you if you think they will work for you.
The duck house is 4´x8´ double walled plywood (vermiculite and perlite insulation - they don´t mold). I put vinyl sheet flooring on the floor, and went up the sides several inches. I screwed 1¨x3¨ boards across the top to keep anything from slipping down behind the flooring. I covered seams with duck tape (of course).
I use pine shavings, about a foot and a half deep. On top of that I have a few inches of straw, which gets changed out every few days. I stir the shavings when the straw gets replaced. I add about a 2 gallon bucket´s worth of peat moss to the shavings, by the way. I do that to keep ammonia from forming. And the shavings stay so dry, anyway (talking ten runners) that ammonia has not been a big issue even before I started adding peat moss, which raises the acidity a bit.
I have not painted the interior walls, but when I do, I plan to use milk paint because that doesn´t make fumes, which I don´t want to subject the ducks to (their little lungs, I am told, can be sensitive to volatile compounds).
The Veranda (a porch attached to the house) originally had sand flooring. It got aromatic quite quickly. The way I figure it, the nitrogen in the duck poo had no carbon to bind to to reduce the odor. So, the Veranda now has sawdust over the sand and that works wonderfully! I use a cultivator to fluff the sawdust every day or two in warm weather, and it can be days to weeks before the top couple of inches need to be raked out and put on the compost and replaced with fresh sawdust.
Something I try to do is capture the nutrients from the ducks and use them in the garden. To do that, I use straw, sawdust or leaves. Oak leaves are great at reducing odor where it stays damp.
I have pea gravel under the swim pans, and that area has a slight slope, maybe 2 percent. I can dump the swim pan and the water flows through a small channel to a garden where it waters and fertilizes the plants. Once a year I need to work on the gravel and rake and hose out some of the organic matter that collects in the gravel.
Amiga: Do you think the peat moss would work with pelleted pine bedding? I had not heard that it helps in keeping the ammonia down. It's dry, correct, and comes in bales? Do they have it at feed stores, or do you need to go to a landscaping supply place for it?
Milk paint? I've never heard of this - is it called anything other than milk paint?
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