Smells so bad

Rather than straw from cereal grains (like wheat, oats, rye, etc), which have large thin walled stems that collapse and mat down, use coarse GRASS hay instead. Old wasty stuff. Grass hay has a small, strong walled stem and does not mat like straw does. Pile it deep......like 6 to 8 inches to start and add to it as needed. Birds will run around on top (which will dry most of the time). Way down below, the hay will start to compost and rot.......droppings actually helping the process along. And no smell. In this process, you want no acid to kill anything. You want the bacteria, molds and fungus working for you to break things down.

But it will also help if the center is not a bog/depression that ponds water. Birds should be placed on a site that resembles an inverted bowl....one in which water runs off from vs. an upright bowl that traps and holds water.
 
Hey! I have had chickens (12-30) for the last 8 years. Super clean w them. I clean the coop once a week and rake the run biweekly. This spring in Pa we have had soooo much rain. I developed a bit of a smelly mud hole in the middle of the run. I pulled up all the old straw that was matted down that has not been raked up and then loaded the run w wood chips. Well the rain keeps coming now I have the same problem in the middle. A stinky stagnant smell. Im so OCD I contemplated getting rid of them, then I thought Id just move them but the spot they are in is perfect. Id love to let them free range but we have to many predators and they murder my flower beds. HELP!!! What do I do?

I can definitely feel your pain! I'm north of you in NY and we have had LOTS of rain this summer, too. The run is so wet. :( It just starts to dry and not stink and it rains again. And we have a drain pipe in it already. It's just that the ground is so saturated. I will have to try the grass hay idea, I have some of that. I've lost two to foxes this year, so am leery of letting them free-range too much unless I'm out with them. They are forecasting some dry weather coming up, so that will help.
 
I feel ya, wet standing water stinks. Our property has two seasonal streams. The one closest to the house under the stand of willow trees has been dubbed “Shrek’s Swamp”. From late winter through mid summer is it filled with water and stinky. Nothing I can do about my swamp really but improving your drainage should fix your problem. A French drain system should solve the issue provided that you slope it appropriately and have it drain to either a well or a slope away from your coop. Also sloping your run itself to encourage run off away from the middle of the run. If your girls are dead set on digging in that area then build it up like a raised sandbox. That would give them more depth to dig in while providing better drainage.
 
I’ve been hauling dirt in my run. Making a berm so I can direct the flow of rain water/snow melt away from or around my run. Since I’m busy doing that I also bury more wire on the perimeter. The idea is to have a chicken island so to speak.
I garden with chickens too. I’ve learned many adaptations based on their natural behaviors. In the fall when things die back I put chicken wire atop my beds. Different sizes based on the plants. Even my empty beds. They get board in winter and can dig up everything. I wire hoops around my perineals. As they grow in spring they create a maze of hiding spots.
 
I had this happen after a rainstorm (like flash flooding storm that washed out some dirt roads in the area). I pulled out all the bedding, matted down straw, etc. which took some dirt and poop with it. I then added dirt to the run and raked it all to be level again, it took more dirt in the lowest grossest spot. I then let it sit a few days before adding bedding back in to dry a bit and let the dirt get packed down a bit. I then added dry bedding back in and for the most part it's been good. It's far better than it was at it's worst (which was really bad). Good luck.
 
I can definitely feel your pain! I'm north of you in NY and we have had LOTS of rain this summer, too. The run is so wet. :( It just starts to dry and not stink and it rains again. And we have a drain pipe in it already. It's just that the ground is so saturated. I will have to try the grass hay idea, I have some of that. I've lost two to foxes this year, so am leery of letting them free-range too much unless I'm out with them. They are forecasting some dry weather coming up, so that will help.
Ugh Ive lost 5 to a raccoon, we caught him in a foothold trap and he chewed his foot off to get out! Ewww, haven't seen him in a while so hopefully he died!
 
I had this happen after a rainstorm (like flash flooding storm that washed out some dirt roads in the area). I pulled out all the bedding, matted down straw, etc. which took some dirt and poop with it. I then added dirt to the run and raked it all to be level again, it took more dirt in the lowest grossest spot. I then let it sit a few days before adding bedding back in to dry a bit and let the dirt get packed down a bit. I then added dry bedding back in and for the most part it's been good. It's far better than it was at it's worst (which was really bad). Good luck.
Thank you! I have actually decided to downsize and move them. We have a coop and an outdoor run. What is the best to put down in the outdoor run that can get wet?
 

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