Should I use the deep litter method?

Meri Maura

May 2024 bring less misery 🥂
Feb 6, 2021
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the BYC underground
My Coop
My Coop
Should I put pine shaving up to the concrete top?
20221209_100232.jpg
 
It's up to you.

Potential benefits of deep litter:
  • Eliminates stink and greatly reduces mess from chicken poo.
  • Eliminates the need to scoop poo on a regular basis.
  • You can collect the litter periodically as a very good compost for gardening and other plants.
  • Provides some entertainment for chickens as they can dig around in it looking for food bits and insects and may even dust bath in holes that they dig.
Potential downsides:
  • Cost may be a factor if you aren't using free materials.
I collect and use fall leaves with some pine needles. If you have access to free pine shavings, then those are a good option as well.
 
Is this a dry, covered area or a moist, open to the sky area?

I'm asking because Deep Bedding and Deep Litter are two different things, with the main difference being moisture level. :)

Deep Bedding: A dry, non-composting system where you keep adding bedding to the coop as it becomes soiled -- managing it by turning it as necessary (or getting the chickens to turn it for you) -- and clean it out only infrequently when the bedding has become both thoroughly soiled and piled up to the point of not being able to add more. Usually used above a floor in the coop but *can* be done in a covered run over dirt in a favorable climate.

Deep Litter: A moist (not wet, moist), system where the lower layers of material are actively composting while new, dry material is continually added to the top. *Can* be done on any floor surface but is most readily accomplished on a dirt floor because the dirt will seed the material with the beneficial composting organisms.

I'm a tremendous fan of both methods but when I wrote this article I tried to cover the cons as well as the pros: https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/using-deep-bedding-in-a-small-coop.76343/
 
It's in my coop, which is dirt floored and open air on 3 sides. I don't know what the people who built it were thinking, because it cold and very windy here. The side with a wall is on the south, and the cold front come from the north 🤦‍♀️ I plan on building a new coop in the future, but it could be a long time until then. I may try to string up some tarps 🤷‍♀️
 
It's in my coop, which is dirt floored and open air on 3 sides.

In that case it would probably end up a hybrid of Deep Bedding and Deep Litter -- which is fine, it just composts more slowly.

Build it up in thin layers as you go along. That tends to work better than dumping in a great mass of bedding/litter all at once.

I may try to string up some tarps

Do, but don't over-do it. :) Leave plenty of ventilation open.
 

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