Love your A frame. I love best the things I build with wood off the side of the road. Congrats.
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.
Love your A frame. I love best the things I build with wood off the side of the road. Congrats.
How many do you have? if you have enough, you might have enough to make a small green house with them.Guys there is a neighbor that gave me some old single glazed windows do you thing i could paint them and use them????? cause they will cover a big part of the cst if they get in use..
Sorry to hear about the doves... We plan to put up a privacy fence and set up a pin for the dog... Better separated than dinner....
thank you so much for the info ...I was able to get pine that was specially made for small animals..I cleared the cedar all out and cleaned their " bedroom " as I like to call it lol ...I feel so much better now ..I was so worried ..I really love those girls like my kidsThere are couple of kinds of species of cedar tree some are worse than others.... If they smell very strong I would relegate them to the area around the coop... there is a reason they are excellent bug deterrents.... for that same reason they are an irritant to some animals.... Dogs cats, birds... birds are more susceptible because of their respiratory system... I am reading from memory here....
If they don't spend much time in them that's why you aren't getting a reaction... But there are several options besides cedar which I have used Over the years. Pine shavings come in a couple of varieties. if you are getting them at the feed store you will be able to see options...
There is a large flake which is great for horses but they pack down with moisture... There is a mini flake which still looks like a flake but is more like corn chips soft corn chips. I haven't used those. Then there is a micro which is made of even smaller chips but they are thicker i am told they are the least offender for packing down.
IF you have available to you Rice hulls I very much like those. Not only do they not compact they also are water resistant and if you get a leak or water spill only the bottom layer will remain wet.... Once the water is removed they dry out. They are small and break down in the compost well. My horse LOVES them... because they stay soft and cushy for bed time.... I bought them for her and happened to use them in the coop... The chickens love digging through the rice hulls and finding little bits of rice... LOL so did the horse... till she found out how much work it was.
Another excellent option is sand. It doesnt compost but hay there are trade offs. The poo just disappears.... Sand doesnt pack down especially with active chickens in there. You can rake it very nice and clean in a very short time. It also deals with moisture very well. It will allow rain and accidental run off to make its way out from the coop and into the soil OR if you put a water barrier under it... sloped of course... it will allow the water to simply drain away. It also can be used in the coop where the nest boxes are and can be cleaned with a kitty litter scoop. I know of some people that use it in the nest boxes too. A choice i have yet to try.
Mind you I am talking from my own experience of raising chickens and horses and live in a very dry climate.... I don't do compost because I dont Garden.... I also know there are certain things that arent possible to do in other climates... Just offering out some stuff to take or leave.
deb
There are couple of kinds of species of cedar tree some are worse than others.... If they smell very strong I would relegate them to the area around the coop... there is a reason they are excellent bug deterrents.... for that same reason they are an irritant to some animals.... Dogs cats, birds... birds are more susceptible because of their respiratory system... I am reading from memory here....
If they don't spend much time in them that's why you aren't getting a reaction... But there are several options besides cedar which I have used Over the years. Pine shavings come in a couple of varieties. if you are getting them at the feed store you will be able to see options...
There is a large flake which is great for horses but they pack down with moisture... There is a mini flake which still looks like a flake but is more like corn chips soft corn chips. I haven't used those. Then there is a micro which is made of even smaller chips but they are thicker i am told they are the least offender for packing down.
IF you have available to you Rice hulls I very much like those. Not only do they not compact they also are water resistant and if you get a leak or water spill only the bottom layer will remain wet.... Once the water is removed they dry out. They are small and break down in the compost well. My horse LOVES them... because they stay soft and cushy for bed time.... I bought them for her and happened to use them in the coop... The chickens love digging through the rice hulls and finding little bits of rice... LOL so did the horse... till she found out how much work it was.
Another excellent option is sand. It doesnt compost but hay there are trade offs. The poo just disappears.... Sand doesnt pack down especially with active chickens in there. You can rake it very nice and clean in a very short time. It also deals with moisture very well. It will allow rain and accidental run off to make its way out from the coop and into the soil OR if you put a water barrier under it... sloped of course... it will allow the water to simply drain away. It also can be used in the coop where the nest boxes are and can be cleaned with a kitty litter scoop. I know of some people that use it in the nest boxes too. A choice i have yet to try.
Mind you I am talking from my own experience of raising chickens and horses and live in a very dry climate.... I don't do compost because I dont Garden.... I also know there are certain things that arent possible to do in other climates... Just offering out some stuff to take or leave.
deb
Quote:
I an expert with regard to composite materials and the fabrication of such. Fiberglass by its self is inert. Problems arise when the particles that break off touch the skin.... Rinsing with COLD water keeps the glass fibers from migrating into pores. So... if you are cutting on fiberglass keep your body covered and wear eye and hand protection.... We have been using Fiberglass and its components since the sixties or before.
But that being said. The epoxy that is used for manufacturing fiberglass is benign once its cured. Curing is the process of chemical reaction between the plastic and catalyst. Usually mixed in a gun of sorts prior to spraying on Fiberglass sheets in the lay up process. Curing in this case is a matter of minutes to a couple of hours.
I will look up Extreme coops Yep its as I thought... Fiberglass panels... Non issue.
The coloring process is a gel coat process that is done in the mold. then the Fiberglass is layed in the mold with some of the epoxy as part of the process.... then the whole thing is sprayed with two part epoxy like I described above.
There is a second step that can be done to seal the product completely... which I dont know if its done....
The following is the link to the manufacturer.
http://www.eggstremecoops.com/
Like I said.... benign... You should smell no smell or detect any chemical once it leaves the production facility... If you do... it will be gone within a day or two.... but it will not be there unless a problem occured in the epoxy mixing process.
deb
Oh and for what its worth the skylite panels you buy for coops are fiberglass.... And there are other forms called Pulltrusion which contain Glass fibers for strenght but are made of either polcarbonate plastic or HDPE... both are inert once the manufacturing process is done.
deb