Rodrad
Songster
Thanks, that makes sense about the difference of two “deep” floors! What I read about the deep litter is that with some management, adding at the right time some shavings, or putting down some grains for chicken to do more scratching, adding occasionally some lime and with a very good ventilation the system can work real well. Of course, the wooden floor must be covered with linoleum or vinyl or possibly rubberized with some coating for this system. I plan to build a coop so making a proper type floor is not a problem.What I do is deep bedding, not deep litter. The difference is that deep litter composts and needs moisture, while deep bedding is bone dry and doesn’t compost. I don’t want deep litter because it doesn’t work well on a wooden floor, it needs bare dirt which is not what I have. Also, I don’t want the moisture (it can freeze in the winter, contribute to coop humidity, or smell if not done right). Deep bedding - the dry method - is less maintenance and easier. I bury the dirty bedding in the garden in the fall, and let it compost there overwinter, so I still get compost in the end, just not in the coop.
The basic advantage I see that it can be cleaned only once a year, it provides some low heat in the winter and is ready compost to put in the garden.
Have you tried that system?
I have been thinking of having a poop board and for the rest, based on your experience, now I am thinking of deep bedding. So, I have doubts that I should go with a poop board system.
I may want to hear more from people who are doing deep litter before I decide which “deep” system I will go.
BTW, what type of roost perches you have, how high from the floor are they, and if you have two or more, how far are they from each other?
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