Animal Fanatic
In the Brooder
- Jul 14, 2021
- 11
- 34
- 39
I scoop poop every day and do a full bedding change out and cleaning once a month.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I adore your coopI clean out the coop once a year. Whether it needs it or not!
The poop boards are cleaned every morning. The floor of my coop gets very little poop in the bedding as the birds go out to the run as soon as they come off the roost and wait there for me to release them.
When winter really bears down, they will spend more time hunkered down in the bedding of the coop.View attachment 2583454
I'll be doing a cleaning next month. It'll get hit with a spray down of Elector PSP when I've emptied it and before I bed it down.
Yep, Amen and Amen! Sand makes all the difference!I clean my 4 coops early each morning. What makes easy cleaning is sand. Simply scoop the poop and put it in a bucket and dispose of it. Done.
Other than building coops to withstand strong storms including cat 1 hurricanes, ease of cleaning coops was a priority. It takes me about 30 minutes to clean out coops each morning.
But (no offense) deep bedding still is layers of straw and poop that gets turned to the surface by the chickens. It's marvelous smelling when you first clean and spread new straw or shavings, but it's still just a compost pile that builds ammonia and stinks every day. Plus mucking out is a huge, smelly job. I'm getting too old to want to do all that shovel work.
You are certainly doing deep bedding right, then!My Deep Bedding is completely odor-free.
It's an absolutely bone-dry system, dry enough that it can't support the growth of pathogens. The amount of litter used dries out the poop almost instantly and the ventilation prevents any possible build up of ammonia or moisture.
There is no odor at cleaning time either -- again because it's perfectly dry. Of course I wear a mask to filter particulates, but we should all wear masks at any time when we're cleaning the coop regardless of our manure management system. The straw and shavings are not heavy either -- because they are dry.
When I wrote my Deep Bedding article I admitted that distaste for the idea of manure accumulating and finding the Big Cleanout chore intimidating were two valid reasons to dislike the system. But on the flip side you get the advantage of not having to handle poop as part of your daily chores and a significant savings of time overall.
Personally, I cannot imagine either cleaning my chicken coop before I've even had a cup of coffee in the morning or cleaning ANY animal facility twice daily.
Fortunately, there are many good systems to accommodate many different personal preferences. I encourage people to try different ones until they come up with what works best in their unique circumstances.![]()
Later: Now that I've read your very excellent article, I see that I was describing with distaste the system I used for decades, deep litter, and you were defending the much better, drier system you described, deep bedding. I'm not sure I could have accomplished that type of dry deep bedding with a barn full of goats peeing gallons, but it sounds great for chickens!
, I love walking barefoot out into the dark cool desert morning with a sky full of stars and the moon to greet me. I smell the wonderful morning smells and hear a dove waking or distant coyotes singing and I luxuriate in the feeling of soft dirt under my toes.
Ah, Bible study in a chair in the chicken run in the evening sounds marvelous! Morning or evening or midday, we all need our soul-soothing relaxation time, don't we? My best meditation time is playing hymns on the harp on the porch with the chickens or on some mountain or by some stream with the dogs. I know this is a chicken forum, not a harp one, but I want to share with you the pretty places I've been blessed to worship with my harps.I do Deep Litter in my run, adding more dry organic material at the first hint of any odor, but getting a balanced, actively-composting system going inside a building is a far, far more difficult task.
I am blessed with very well-drained soil, which helps tremendously.
Alas, I have largely been trained out of going barefoot by fire ants, holly leaves, and centipede grass (which is like walking on ball bearings because it has so many joints).
Though I am a natural morning person, my contemplative time is in the evening -- often sitting in a chair in my chicken run with my evening Bible study or just a book on my phone while the sun sets and the bats come out.