Official BYC Poll: How Do You Get Rid of Dirty Coop Bedding?

How Do You Get Rid of Dirty Coop Bedding? Do you...

  • Compost it

    Votes: 227 69.2%
  • Throw it away with the garbage

    Votes: 40 12.2%
  • Give it away to others

    Votes: 8 2.4%
  • Dump it in the woods

    Votes: 37 11.3%
  • Use it in the garden as fertilizer

    Votes: 118 36.0%
  • Burn it

    Votes: 13 4.0%
  • Other (elaborate in a reply below)

    Votes: 25 7.6%
  • Scatter it in the run

    Votes: 57 17.4%

  • Total voters
    328
I have 4 hens and a 12ft × 12ft run. The actual coop is 4ft × 2ft with a nesting box off one side. I just cleaned it out before reading this post. I just rake it out into the run, which also has pine shavings in it. I do this because the area my chicken run and coop is in has turned into a low spot so when it rains it almost floods there. It never did that before I put the chicken run there but now it does. Another chicken keeper in the area suggested I get pine shavings to help absorb some of the moisture and the chicken poop....I also put grass clippings, veggies, and fruit in there for the chickens....the hens also scatter their dust bath dirt all over the run also....then the chickens scratch through it all, all day which in turn makes their whole run kind of a compost pile. I have only used 3 or 4 bags of pine shavings or flakes in 18 months. Because they spend most of their time in the run and not the coop, I have very little to clean out of the coop, so normally just scoop the poop out into the run and only clean the shavings out every 6 months or so. For now this works for me.......and there doesn't seem to be a any deep build up of matter so far, maybe 3 inches across the whole run floor......later on I may need a better solution until then I will keep doing what I am doing.
 
I scatter it in the run after spring clean to help keep down any mud, then move it to the compost when the weather dries up, then to the garden in late fall.
It is essential to keep your chicken coop clean if you raise chickens. This includes changing the bedding (regardless of the method you use).

This week, we want to find out: How Do You Get Rid of Dirty Coop Bedding?

Place your vote above, and please elaborate in a reply below if you chose "Other".

View attachment 3168975

Further Reading:
(Check out more exciting Official BYC Polls HERE!
 
Screenshot_20220710-074114_Gallery.jpg
It's hard to see the steam but I added a wheelbarrow of pine shavings and chicken coop poop to my leaves from last fall and it got the pile cooking good. It's 80° out and my pile is steaming when I flip it. By spring I will have a pile of nice black gold.
 
Actually [pushes up glasses] it is really hard to shoot something into the sun. The rocket would more likely just slip into an orbit around the sun.
All we really need is a decaying orbit, somewhere inside of Mercury. Even if it takes a million years or so to finally reach the sun, should be okay. We just need to be sure it isn't too eccentric and that it doesn't become a Kuiper or an Oort comet. Given humans level of luck, we'd create our own extinction-level cometary impact.
 
My husband and I are trying to build up the bank at the creek by our house. So we throw the bedding there, it works really well!
I am building up the ground level near the road, we will be planting a hedge and garden there once I dredge the soil out of the surface well. It has built up a good thickness (which will compact once it decomposes), and the trees will have a good soil to grow into. It is something like landfill in use, but it will be great growing material.

I have done this at a different spot to block the view of the driveway from the road, but there I already had small trees. I put the bottom of the coop there without even composting it, and it has grown the trees at an astounding rate. They grew more than 2 feet last year alone. (Same trees elsewhere have grown about 6 inches over the same time period)

I sometimes think I get more out of the manure than the eggs. (Great excuse for keeping old hens who no longer lay)
 
It is essential to keep your chicken coop clean if you raise chickens. This includes changing the bedding (regardless of the method you use).

This week, we want to find out: How Do You Get Rid of Dirty Coop Bedding?

Place your vote above, and please elaborate in a reply below if you chose "Other".

View attachment 3168975

Further Reading:
(Check out more exciting Official BYC Polls HERE!)
We compost it and use it the following Spring in our garden! IT is great!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom