- Mar 28, 2014
- 22
- 1
- 22
Hello hello!
After countless hours of research and reading forums, I decided to turn to y'all for your opinions and hopefully examples.
I've read time and time again that the Deep Litter Method (DLM) works best on a dirt floor, but it seems more popular to do the DLM on a raised floor.
I've seen examples of DLM on a dirt floor for chicken coops containing a large number a chickens, but not one example for a small flock!
I've also read a lot of recommendations for this, but those recommendations are from people who are not currently practicing dirt floor / deep litter / small flock method.
Has anyone had success with a deep litter method on a dirt floor in a coop for a very small flock? (I have 4 chickens in an urban area).
If I were to go this route this the coop, it was be built in such a way to have very good drainage and be protected from predators. My initial brainstorming envisions something like this: raise ground up about 4" to make an island for the coop. Lay down hardware cloth. Use 2 layer of cinder blocks on 3 sides, one layer in the front (door). Fill the inside with gravel and then bricks or pavers up to about 6", the other 6" up to the first cinder block will be the "reserve" deep litter to get the next batch rolling. A removable board will be place on the door side to meet the height of the 2nd cinder block. Wood coop built on top. The coop will be attached to a very predator proof run so that I can leave the door open on weekends I'm gone. I live in Richmond, Virginia if y'all want to factor in climate. The summers are long, hot, and humid. The winters are mild, little snow, but also humid. (Having lived in Northern Missouri, I find southern humid winters much more unbearable than northern dry winters. Even though its not nearly as cold, the humid air penetrates through your clothing no matter how much layers you wear.)
I've read threads of this forum for raised vs dirt floor, and yet no thread has answered my question specifically for a small urban flock.
Here are my concerns:
(1) Is a 4 chicken flock too small to successfully do deep litter inside of the coop?
(2) Will the chickens even be inside the coop enough to successfully do deep litter when they have access to the run?
(3) Even with all the proposed drainage, will there still be issues during super intense rain events such as a hurricane?
To summarize:
WHO HAS A VERY SMALL FLOCK ON A DIRT FLOOR INSIDE THEIR COOP WITH DEEP LITTER??
I really hope that there are other people out there who have done this (bonus points if in an urban area!). With all my research on deep litter, it seems like my plan could work and make all my compost dreams come true, but my hubby-to-be keeps give me the no-go on this design and is arguing for the raised floor approach.
Thank you for your time and energy!!
After countless hours of research and reading forums, I decided to turn to y'all for your opinions and hopefully examples.
I've read time and time again that the Deep Litter Method (DLM) works best on a dirt floor, but it seems more popular to do the DLM on a raised floor.
I've seen examples of DLM on a dirt floor for chicken coops containing a large number a chickens, but not one example for a small flock!
I've also read a lot of recommendations for this, but those recommendations are from people who are not currently practicing dirt floor / deep litter / small flock method.
Has anyone had success with a deep litter method on a dirt floor in a coop for a very small flock? (I have 4 chickens in an urban area).
If I were to go this route this the coop, it was be built in such a way to have very good drainage and be protected from predators. My initial brainstorming envisions something like this: raise ground up about 4" to make an island for the coop. Lay down hardware cloth. Use 2 layer of cinder blocks on 3 sides, one layer in the front (door). Fill the inside with gravel and then bricks or pavers up to about 6", the other 6" up to the first cinder block will be the "reserve" deep litter to get the next batch rolling. A removable board will be place on the door side to meet the height of the 2nd cinder block. Wood coop built on top. The coop will be attached to a very predator proof run so that I can leave the door open on weekends I'm gone. I live in Richmond, Virginia if y'all want to factor in climate. The summers are long, hot, and humid. The winters are mild, little snow, but also humid. (Having lived in Northern Missouri, I find southern humid winters much more unbearable than northern dry winters. Even though its not nearly as cold, the humid air penetrates through your clothing no matter how much layers you wear.)
I've read threads of this forum for raised vs dirt floor, and yet no thread has answered my question specifically for a small urban flock.
Here are my concerns:
(1) Is a 4 chicken flock too small to successfully do deep litter inside of the coop?
(2) Will the chickens even be inside the coop enough to successfully do deep litter when they have access to the run?
(3) Even with all the proposed drainage, will there still be issues during super intense rain events such as a hurricane?
To summarize:
WHO HAS A VERY SMALL FLOCK ON A DIRT FLOOR INSIDE THEIR COOP WITH DEEP LITTER??
I really hope that there are other people out there who have done this (bonus points if in an urban area!). With all my research on deep litter, it seems like my plan could work and make all my compost dreams come true, but my hubby-to-be keeps give me the no-go on this design and is arguing for the raised floor approach.
Thank you for your time and energy!!

