Bummer.If I bring a small step later. A disadvantage of a raised coop.
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Bummer.If I bring a small step later. A disadvantage of a raised coop.
This is my plan for my new coopI don't do a poop board. 1X2 welded wire under the roost.
works good in the dust bath too.. I add a lb of elemental sulfur per 10 lbs of sand to keep lice/mites awayI've been searching for a type of sand to put down in the poop boards that would be effective and that I can easily source again in the future. I decided to go with a tube of sand. They sell these at any home improvement store. I found them at Farm & Fleet though too. A bag of Sakrete Tube Sand weighs 70 lbs and was more than enough. It was $3.99 just. The sand is very course, which makes it less likely to compact, both in the poop boards as well as in my composter/garden beds.
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does the coop wall scrape the poop off as you slide the floor out? then poop just falls below onto the grass/dirt?My chicken coop is somewhat unique in that the entire floor is a slide out poop board made of tempered hardboard - no litter or shavings in the coop (except in the nestboxes).
Here is some info + some pix:
Tour my Tennessee coop (semi permanent tractor) and run
does the coop wall scrape the poop off as you slide the floor out? then poop just falls below onto the grass/dirt?
Just wait until it thaws, then scrape.Pictures of our sand filled board below roosts and a bucket of poop I easily sifted out with a kitty litter scoop. Works great! Only takes a minute to clean and cleaning in the frigid cold (-17 with -50 wind chill the other day) is very easy - except for the poop that actually freezes to the roost... Not sure how to work around that. Heated roost is an idea that was thrown out there, but I'll just wack it with a hammer and chisel if I need to.
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