Should I change out deep litter bedding before winter? Because it could cause too much moisture?

I'll just mention that I only clean my coop floor bedding out every three or so years. Not because I need to but because I want that stuff in my garden. I clean it out in the fall and spread it in my garden, then run the tiller over it to mix it in. By planting time in spring it has broken down.

If you clean it out in the spring what will you do with it?
 
I'll just mention that I only clean my coop floor bedding out every three or so years. Not because I need to but because I want that stuff in my garden. I clean it out in the fall and spread it in my garden, then run the tiller over it to mix it in. By planting time in spring it has broken down.

If you clean it out in the spring what will you do with it?
You are more organized than me. I really should do that too. Instead I just go get a bucket of the wonderful stuff when I need it (rather than doing a full clean-out).
 
I'll just mention that I only clean my coop floor bedding out every three or so years. Not because I need to but because I want that stuff in my garden. I clean it out in the fall and spread it in my garden, then run the tiller over it to mix it in. By planting time in spring it has broken down.

If you clean it out in the spring what will you do with it?
I plan to begin a compost pile with it.
 
There are going to be many ways to do this, as there are people doing it.

People worry about heat, and the idea that the deep litter is adding heat to a coop in South Dakota or Iowa is going to be minimal. And really, chickens do not need added heat. They produce heat, more than enough heat. What keepers need to do, is keep them out of the wind and DRY.

A lot depends on the number of birds you have, the amount of space they roost in, the space above their heads, and the type of bedding. All of those things determine the moisture in the coop. From your pictures, and the number of birds, I would expect you to be set up well. I would worry about the snow load on the outside on the 'roof'.

I have a wood floor in my coop, western SD is arid. However, a dozen birds already going to roost earlier and earlier and getting of the roost later and later - quickly the manure piles up. When temperatures are below freezing - that manure is frozen and dry. When it is 50's and above, that manure drys out. But when the temperature is in the thirties, it is not frozen and it is not dry.

Now you can toss scratch in the bedding, and they will fluff the bedding for you, tearing apart clumps so that they dry out. Which will prolong this bedding.

However, if you go into the coop and smell ammonia - you really need to get it out of the coop. I just pile it by the coop on the outside, add fresh bedding, and eventually get it up to my garden. If you clean up your garden in the fall, it is a good practice to put that bedding on top of your beds covering up your soil.

I have found, that I don't tend to get frostbite on my girls in bitter cold weather, all the moisture is frozen solid. When I get it, is we have been cold, then it warms up, everything melts, and that night the temp drops, and I will get frostbite from all that moisture.

So, I would not hold myself to a 'this is how I am going to do it' I would watch, smell, and look for signs of moisture on the walls, on the ceilings, on the hens. If that starts to happen, add more ventilation, and dry bedding.

Mrs K
 
Thank you so much for teaching me!! I wouldn't have thought about the moisture in the droppings when it's frozen and then thaws momentarily like that. That will really help me keep it on my radar better with that in mind. I hear some people say put Vaseline on combs and waddles to prevent frostbite. Is that a good thing to do? I think just following everyone's feedback is of course the best at being proactive but just curious about it. It's hard to know what is good advice on some videos you see. Thanks again!!
 

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