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Poop board for my specific set up.

We’ve run with Coated Plywood Board (it’s super slick) and Pine Shavings as our poop board for 7 years. Just recently built a new one with a slightly different design to better hold the shavings.

The center gap aids in cleaning. Basically use a dust pan to scoop droppings and shavings into a bucket.

Coop floor is Linoleum. You can see it is pretty clean after all these years.


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:idunno I know we all keep chickens in a manner that works for us. I'm OK with that. But I really don't understand the use of poop boards that need to be cleaned once or twice a week when you can use the deep bedding litter system and clean the coop out once or twice a year.

FYI, where I live, the chicken poo freezes hard as concrete in our winter months, so nobody I know around here where I live uses poop boards. In fact, until I joined the BYC forums, I had never heard of that practice.

And for those of you who might be thinking that 6 months of accumulated frozen chicken poo would be terrible, let me tell you that frozen poo does not smell. Every few weeks I toss on a thin layer of fresh litter on top of the frozen poo under the roosts to keep it clean looking. Come spring, when everything starts to melt, the frozen poo starts to dry up and mix in with the litter. The top layers of the litter remain clean and dry. When I clean out the coop litter in the spring, after all the snow is gone, the litter does not smell until I get down to the last few inches when I haul it out. Even so, the smell is not terribly overwhelming.

Having said that, I start off in the fall with about 2 inches of litter in the coop, and after tossing a fresh thin layer of litter into the coop once or twice a month, I have about 8-10 inches of litter accumulated in the coop by spring cleaning. All of that gets tossed into the chicken run composting system in spring cleaning and is turned into compost in a couple of months. It's a system that really works for me.
 
:idunno I know we all keep chickens in a manner that works for us. I'm OK with that. But I really don't understand the use of poop boards that need to be cleaned once or twice a week when you can use the deep bedding litter system and clean the coop out once or twice a year.

FYI, where I live, the chicken poo freezes hard as concrete in our winter months, so nobody I know around here where I live uses poop boards. In fact, until I joined the BYC forums, I had never heard of that practice.

And for those of you who might be thinking that 6 months of accumulated frozen chicken poo would be terrible, let me tell you that frozen poo does not smell. Every few weeks I toss on a thin layer of fresh litter on top of the frozen poo under the roosts to keep it clean looking. Come spring, when everything starts to melt, the frozen poo starts to dry up and mix in with the litter. The top layers of the litter remain clean and dry. When I clean out the coop litter in the spring, after all the snow is gone, the litter does not smell until I get down to the last few inches when I haul it out. Even so, the smell is not terribly overwhelming.

Having said that, I start off in the fall with about 2 inches of litter in the coop, and after tossing a fresh thin layer of litter into the coop once or twice a month, I have about 8-10 inches of litter accumulated in the coop by spring cleaning. All of that gets tossed into the chicken run composting system in spring cleaning and is turned into compost in a couple of months. It's a system that really works for me.
We go about every two weeks on the poop board and three months on the deeper litter on the floor. We have a pretty compact coop in the burbs, so we prefer to clean out regularly. (we’re allowed eight hens max being in the city limits)

We have frozen poop here as well. Our poop board is slick enough and with the pine shavings, it cleans right up.

We often compost in our garden boxes over the winter using the lasagna method.

It’s worked for us for some time, we’re happy with it based on our setup.
 
We go about every two weeks on the poop board and three months on the deeper litter on the floor. We have a pretty compact coop in the burbs, so we prefer to clean out regularly. (we’re allowed eight hens max being in the city limits)

We have frozen poop here as well. Our poop board is slick enough and with the pine shavings, it cleans right up.

We often compost in our garden boxes over the winter using the lasagna method.

It’s worked for us for some time, we’re happy with it based on our setup.

Certainly, size of the coop to how many chickens you have matters. My coop has almost 8 square feet per bird. If you have a smaller coop and cleaning it out more frequently works for you, then I think that is great.

:caf FWIW, before I built my chicken coop, I asked a number of chicken owners in my local area how they keep their chickens. What I learned is that I had to build a bigger coop to house my chickens comfortably in the winter months when they don't want to go outside. Along with that was everyone I talked to was using the deep bedding method because it was too hard to perform frequent cleaning in the winter with frozen poo. The people I talked to set up their coop with deep bedding for the winter and did not clean out the coop again until after the snow melts in the spring. So, I designed and built my coop to have 8 square feet per bird, which I believe has led to me successfully using the deep bedding method in my coop.

Without a doubt, if I had more birds or a smaller coop, I might have to clean it out more frequently.

I do not intend to criticize anyone caring for their chickens differently than the way I do. I am sure there are many ways to successfully raise chickens. However, years ago, before I used the deep bedding method, I was constantly cleaning out my coop and I was never really happy that setup. When I switched over to the deep bedding method and cleaning the coop out only twice a year, it was much better for both me and my chickens.
 
@gtaus What is your summer cleaning process? Any smells?

After the long winter, I clean out all my spent deep bedding and toss it into the chicken run composting system, where it turns into compost in a few months. I put fresh litter down in the coop, about 2 inches to start with in late spring, and add additional fresh thin layers maybe once a month throughout the summer into fall. Most of the time, during the spring/summer/early fall, my chickens are outside all day and only go into the coop to roost at night. So, it does not get very soiled with chicken poo - at least compared to the winter months when they don't leave the coop.

Come late fall, I might have 4-6 inches of litter in the coop. Honestly, I would not have to clean out the coop at that time in the late fall, but I do, and I start with a fresh 2 inches of litter for the winter months. Then I add a thin layer of litter throughout the winter maybe twice a month. Come spring, I usually have about 8 inches of litter in the coop.

My coop never smells. I have used wood chips, leaves, dried grass and my current favorite litter is just shredded paper that I make at home. If you have enough litter, it should easily absorb the chicken poo and prevent any bad smells. If I start to detect any urine smell at all in the coop before my twice annual cleaning, I will immediately toss down another thin layer of bedding and/or toss some chicken feed in an area that might need some scratch and peck action by the chickens. I used to periodically go into the coop and fluff up the bedding, but I have learned, for my chickens, that a handful of scratch will get the chickens to do the work for me.

I advocate for using whatever free litter a person can get. I started off with free wood chips I load up at our county landfill. That worked great. I also used dried grass, and that works too, but of course the grass breaks down much faster then wood chips. I have used leaves as liter in the coop. They work wonderful but can be a bit dusty, especially when you clean out the coop. Of course, I have also mixed all three types of litter together and that works as well.

A few years ago, I stated to use paper shreds that I make at home in the coop. That has become my favorite type of litter. It's free because I just shred all our paper, newspapers, and light food grade cardboard for the litter. It does not have any smell at all, being paper. It is much lighter in weight compared to wood chips so when I clean out the coop, my muck buckets are not nearly as heavy. Paper sheds don't get all dusty like dried leaves, or grass. Plus, I no longer haul out paper products to the recycle center because I use them as litter in the coop. Additionally, I toss the spent paper shreds litter into my chicken run compost system and turn it into usable garden compost in a few months, compared to wood chips which take many months longer to break down.

I live on a lake. Years ago, I used sand as litter in my coops because I have all the sand in the world for free outside my door. But the sand always smelled bad, needed constant cleaning, and frequently I had to shovel out the old heavy, stinky, sand and replace it with fresh sand.

I used straw for awhile, but I had to buy it a bale at a time, and straw is not cheap anymore. Like sand, I was never really happy with the straw because it did not dry up and soak up the poo. It more or less got wet, slimy, and smelly. Fresh straw smells fantastic, but after a few weeks, I had to toss it out and put in fresh straw. Straw can also get moldy, which is not a problem with the wood chips, dried leaves or grass, or paper shreds that I currently use.

I think lots of different things could be used as litter. Some just require more work than others. Free paper shreds I make at home is my current favorite resource for coop litter. As far as the chickens go, I don't think care one way or the other about the coop litter as long as their house is clean and does not smell.

When I switched over to using paper shreds as coop litter, I started a thread Using Shredded Paper for Coop Litter - As Good As Wood Chips? which has my experience in the process of converting to using paper shreds as coop litter along with lots of good comments by other members here on the BYC community. Check out the link if it sounds interesting to you.
 
I love my poop board! I use a cat litter scoop and a small bucket to scoop poop from the pdz. I dump the small bucket into a larger pail and when that's full I dump it on the compost or in whatever plant or bush needs it. Easy in summer and winter. My girls get a clean coop each day. It takes literally 2 minutes. I thought I'd have to pull the board out to clean now and then, but summer then fall and winter now spring - it just does not need it. The pdz is AMAZING stuff. So easy. I even sprinkle it on the roosting bar when they get any on there and scrub it off easily.
 

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