- Mar 26, 2013
- 13
- 1
- 57
Hello! This is my first time on here and I was wondering if anyone could help me out. I have a nice, large, clean barn with two horse stalls. The horse stalls have heavy gauge rubber horse mats on top generic sand on the floor. Given that I have such a nice area and don't have any other animals, I'm going to convert the stall into a coop for my up and coming guinea hen and Orpington flock. My flock is a little over two weeks old so I haven't moved them to the barn just yet. I want to do the deep litter method in the stall and was wondering about my options.
1) Should I remove the rubber mats and just put the litter on top of the existing sand? Or would it work out better to leave the rubber matts and just start the litter on top of the rubber? The rubber matts are not perfectly placed in the stall so you can see some of the sand between the matts.
2) My other question is about the litter. I've bought some pine shavings which I plan to use as litter. Would it be OK to use other free material that I have around my house and mix it in with the pine shavings? I have lots of dried leaves around the yard that I can mulch or leave intact and put them in the stall. I know not to use cedar chips but I have other varieties of down trees in my yard which I am going to put into my wood chipper. They are oak, cherry and birch trees mainly. I have so much mulch that it would obviously be free for me to just mulch it and put the stuff in the stable mixed in with the pine shavings. Would that work for the deep litter method? I'm trying to find ways to recycle all of my downed trees and save money on the birds' litter.
Thanks
1) Should I remove the rubber mats and just put the litter on top of the existing sand? Or would it work out better to leave the rubber matts and just start the litter on top of the rubber? The rubber matts are not perfectly placed in the stall so you can see some of the sand between the matts.
2) My other question is about the litter. I've bought some pine shavings which I plan to use as litter. Would it be OK to use other free material that I have around my house and mix it in with the pine shavings? I have lots of dried leaves around the yard that I can mulch or leave intact and put them in the stall. I know not to use cedar chips but I have other varieties of down trees in my yard which I am going to put into my wood chipper. They are oak, cherry and birch trees mainly. I have so much mulch that it would obviously be free for me to just mulch it and put the stuff in the stable mixed in with the pine shavings. Would that work for the deep litter method? I'm trying to find ways to recycle all of my downed trees and save money on the birds' litter.
Thanks