@hoosiercheetahI have a question that's probably been covered, but I couldn't find it with a cursory search and I'm feeling too lazy today to dig any further. So please forgive me and love me anyway.
I want to use deep litter method, but my coop has a linoleum floor. Is there any chance that will work? What techniques or practices will help me to be successful?
Thank you for your wisdom, insight, and tolerance.
I have the same situation and I do like sally said. I start out with about an inch of dirt just dug up from the garden. Then I start putting the pine chips on top of that.
Last winter I had put some bagged peat moss in a couple times in a small area and I LOVE the way that does in the litter. Found that out quite by mistake as I was using it for a different purpose but I think I'll add a little peat moss every now and then too.
AND HERE IS THE EXCITING THING....
Even though I don't have a dirt floor in the coop, I do have the outdoor run. I didn't want it to become compacted and unhealthy after the grass was gone so I started a deep litter out there. Started out with wood chips from some trees we had cut down. I had the tree service put them in a pile at the back of the property and they had cured about 6 mos before I started using them. In the summer they're full of red worms naturally...the kiddos love digging through them.
Anyhow, I started putting those in (just a big pile - the kiddos will spread them all out and it gives them something to do).
LAST YEAR'S EXPERIMENT
Then...last year's experiment has turned out some wonderful composted soil for the garden. .
Whenever the litter gets on the deep side in the coop, I just toss it out the door into the outdoor run. (Always leaving some inside to start new litter there.) Since my run is large, I sometimes set a wheel barrow just outside the pop door and shovel it into the wheel barrow and wheel it around the back side so it's not all in one place.
I was hoping that over the coarse of the winter it would compost into a nice, rich soil that I could use in the garden. And it did! I have the most beautiful broken-down soil under there. My daughter came and dug out a pick-up load full to take to her gardens and we're going to dig some more out for ours and continue to mulch and dump the deep litter back into the run from the chicken house and do it all over again.
Some people actually more their chicken house and plant the garden right there. It won't work that way for me.
So...
I get good, healthy litter for the chickens to live, scratch, find bugs, etc on in the outdoor run - AS OPPOSED TO A COMPACTED, SICK, DISEASE-VECTOR that is so prevalent in chicken yards everywhere
AND
I get wonderful composted, healthy soil for the gardens.
WIN WIN

PS: I found in our area that if you contact tree services many of them will drop off loads of chipped wood free if they're working in your area as they prefer to not have to deal with it. You can just let it sit a while to "cure"...I take my cue that it's ready if there are worms living in it.