play sand ???

That is a very good idea. I think I will do that this spring. I only have one runner and it is for my French Black Copper Marans, they free range most of the time. But if we will be gone for a couple days, or if we know we wont be home early enough to shut their coop door, then we put them in a runner. The ground does get super hard in there..
thumbsup.gif
 
yes, the chickens eat it all day. I have quails and they even eat it more. Thye need it so don't be alarmed.
 
Construction/Play sand has worked out well for us. Much easier to remove feathers when the turkeys (the worst) `explode' (molt), for raking out leaf clutter in the fall (big trees in chicken run/over turkey run) and poop, of course. Both runs are on slight slope so large rocks on low side allows for raking up the sand washed downhill during big rains.

262_littlegrey0811.jpg
(black spots are `excess' BOSS).

They prefer the fire pit for dirt bathing but, will use the deeper sand in runs while waiting for pit ashes to dry out (never burn anything but wood/leaf/vines).

ed:sp
 
Last edited:
OldGuy43 wrote: WARNING!: I bought a bag of play sand for the same purpose just the other day and was amazed to find a notice similar to this on the bag:



How did the state of California get so much smarter than the rest of us?

Because `actual' risk isn't what they're interested in. They place labels like this on many products and it is all `relative'. Play sand/beach sand/almost all sand is composed of silica. Finely ground - powdered sand/or calcined amorphous DE can, over the course of years (occupational exposure, primarily) lead to Silicosis. The easiest way to allay ANY concern about ANY sand is to simply rinse it (fine particles into ground). The greatest exposure to Silica `dust' by most anyone not in the industry is on hot, dry windy afternoons when, depending on the composition of the local soil, one can huff a considerable amount of wind borne (though far, far below a clinically significant amount) crystalline silica; gravel roads, anyone?

A study on workers mining/processing diatomaceous earth to give some sense of `actual' risk among those who are exposed on a daily basis to Crystalline Silica over a period of years (amorphous is what most chickeneers use/Calcined (crystalline) is what really kills insects quickly, can lead to Silicosis and keeps pool filters from clogging up):

Workers in this study were employed in one diatomaceous earth mining and processing facility in Lompoc, California; operations at the facility included extraction of the mineral from open-pit mines, crushing of the ore, and heating of the crushed ore at high temperatures (calcination). When extracted, the mineral exists primarily as amorphous (noncrystalline) silica; after heating, the product typically consists of 10 to 60% crystalline silica, primarily in the form of cristobalite.

The percentages of respirable dust estimated to be crystalline silica for jobs involving exposures to natural, calcined, and flux-calcined diatomite were 3%, 20% and 60%, respectively. If the exposure was to a mix of these diatomite types, a weighted percentage corresponding to the estimated mix was used.

http://ajrccm.atsjournals.org/cgi/content/full/158/3/807

Though, anyone wanting to worry about going to the beach, go ahead and worry.​
 
Last edited:
Quote:
We're so lucky here in Georgia. The afflictions they have if Ca we bother us here. And praise be to God that's so. I don't think it bothers the folks in Alabama either.
lol.png
If it wasn't for Ca the rest of us never would get a laugh.
tongue.png
Not the folks, the state government.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom