Hellbender .... I'm starting to like you .....
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That's a little scary...........hahahaha
Walt
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Hellbender .... I'm starting to like you .....
![]()
The problem, to my understanding, with cedar shavings is when they get wet. There is no reason roosts should get wet in a coop, so I don't worry one bit about that. Cedar has a natural repellent to pests and rot, so it seems a no brainer to me. I also used it to build my outdoor runs and to hold down the vinyl flooring in my breeding pens.Hum .... nice idea ..... I have heard not to use cedar shavings with chickens.... after I did to no ill effects ..... so I just had kept cedar out of my mind when thinking of chicken things ....
But if you are having not only no problems - but a benefit .... I bet in my new coop going up this year - I could do cedar nest boxes and roosts ... with pine shavings on the floor .... Do you think that would be too much cedar fumes ???
Look who joined the partyThat's a little scary...........hahahaha
Walt
Look who joined the party
Hey Walt, Since you have had oodles of experience with poultry...
What is your take on roosts? At what age do you think they need to start using one and do you believe that using them too early has an ill effect on feet or do they help keep the feet in good condition?
That is something I have had issue with from the beginning with my Buckeyes, and I keep coming back to the question of whether what I am seeing is due to genetics or due to housing/brooding them. I don't mean the crooked, crippled looking toes on freshly hatched chicks, but those that suddenly at a month or 6-weeks start looking crooked. Got any wisdom you can bestow upon us?
In nearly all things poultry, I find that the phrase "there's more than one way to skin a cat" always comes to mind.
I don't claim my way is the only way, just offering my experience. So, hellbender, no offense taken.
One thing I do HIGHLY recommend though, is make your roosts out of CEDAR. Yes, I meant to shout those. I have found the only birds I have get mites are the ones who's roosts have not been. I would have built the whole barn out of cedar if that had been feasible to help combat the creepy crawlies.