We switched from pine shavings to sand. The shavings work great as long as it's dry. The sand just seems to keep the flies and odor at bay . My run has 1x2 welded wire on the floor
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My run is completely covered and I still dealt with muddy floors when it would rain, it would just soak/run right in. Created all kind of problems ... well, really it was just dirty chickens, and it looked bad!! After reading several posts of people using sand I gave it a try. What a difference it made. I probably put about 4 to 6 inches of sand directly on top of the ground. No more mud and the chickens loved it!! They will scratch and dig and roll and give themselves dust baths. The rooster goes so far as to dig holes just for the girls ... and they love that attention!! My chickens are no longer dirty, the chickens seem happier, and no more mud!! After about six months the sand has turned a slightly tan color and I can tell that in about a year, I'll have some of the richest dirt around to add to my garden! I HIGHLY recommend it!
How does sand help control the poop build up? Do you have to rake or till the sand periodically or does the poop just go away? I've got 28 pullets in a decent-sized run (12x16 covered, 16x24 uncovered) that is mostly going to be their winter yard since there will be nothing to forage in the tractor (if it's not covered in snow, it will be too miserably cold and windy to be out). The run is on a slight slope and hard rains blow right in and get it fairly muddy. I'm thinking sand is a good way to go, especially when the spring thaw rolls around. I'm just curious as to how much maintenance it requires.
Wow, I'm wondering if we should go with sand after we get the run finished.... so far I was thinking I would just leave it dirt and put out a shallow container with DE... we could give them greens and other foods they like... I gave them watermelon and they loved it! Just throwing out thoughts....
I have zero poop build up. I'm not sure what's going on with it or where it goes, but I believe they just scratch so much that it gets incorporated into the sand. Now don't take me wrong, when they do their business it's there and it sits for a bit and then it just magically disappears. Gotta love it!!
I left my coop floor dirt for some time and it worked. My problem was/is is that my coop is in a low lying area and it gets drenched when it rains and drainage was extremely slow. By using the sand I was able to build up the coop floor and that kept my birds nice and dry. The extra cleanliness and happiness of the birds is a bonus.I know that DE is supposed to have all kind of health benefits, but honestly I haven't had to use it. No mites, no illnesses just happy, healthy chickens. My chickens love watermelon as well ... I'll throw a few rinds in their coop and when I go back nothing left but paper thin skins.
On a side note: My nephew built a coop and because of the success I had with sand he did the same and he is very pleased with the results. I recently completed a breeding/grow out pen and also filled it with sand. The sand in this pen doesn't stay as clean as my main coop and I think it's because my young birds just don't scratch as much as the big birds. But ... they're getting bigger each day!! I still don't have a problem with poop build up and haven't had to clean the floor of this coop yet and they've been in there for about a month now.
I'm not sure if this is right as after reading this thread I went ahead and just bought it, but I bought playground sand - ie the type for kids to play in. The chickens are THRILLED. They've been bathing in it all day, and @timbowsr is right - no poop. I'm astonished. Yesterday there was poop, today it's vanished! I guess the sand sucks in the moisture and the whole thing gets scattered around.What kind if sand? Where to get it and dehydrated earth? Just don't want to make an expensive mistake and get the wrong thing![]()