I vote for dirt floor and DLM
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It gets fairly wet there when it rains so that's why I put the rocks there, plus I need to level it out since it's rather uneven and this was less expensive than cinderblocks to raise the coop upA concern I would have would be the difficulty cleaning the rocks in the lower part. Similar to having gravel in a run, poop will work it's way down into the rocks and be stinky and hard to clean out.
Maybe someone with more experience can chime in about putting sweet pdz (something dense enough to walk on, but odour absorbing) in those pockets?
I'm guessing they'd go inside the coop walls as opposed to having the walls sit on top of them to keep critters from using the space underneath, and for structural reasons?
If you used sheet vinyl flooring, pond liner, something to act as a barrier, you could fill the holes with sand and have a smooth floor surface. If it's going to be really permanent, it wouldn't take too much concrete to fill in the holes.
If you can sort out the details, the skids would be a long lasting tough solution!
@aart could you give me more details on why it would be unstable long term? And any way to make it more stable - if we went this route.I see no pros to this set up.
Unstable foundation for long term.
What does your coop look like?
What is your geographical location?
Even if the divots had drainage, they would still become filled with poops between the gravel added to them.
What is DLM? We currently have dirt and it's just so difficult to clean out. Was thinking the plastic pallets for the ease of just hosing off. Still rather new to it all, so any tips on cleaning the dirt floor?I vote for dirt floor and DLM
Deep litter methodWhat is DLM?
What @aart said.I see no pros to this set up.
Unstable foundation for long term.
What does your coop look like?
What is your geographical location?
Even if the divots had drainage, they would still become filled with poops between the gravel added to them.
Placing the coop on dirt, or elevated above a dirt floor, allows use of the deep litter method of management, which is almost completely odor free, produces good compost, and requires only limited and infrequent effort by the owner to maintain.I actually think your plan is feasible. Would the chickens be in it 24/7 or do they have access to free range occasionally? I see all the concern about smell and literally don't understand it. I would make sure you incorporate some type of dust bath area for them to let them be able to scratch, other than that I think your plan is a good solution to a muddy problem![]()
The run in the original photo is new and will be an addition to our current setup. We were letting the girls free range, but after losing two to hawks, we aren't letting them do that anymore, so we are trying to create as much roaming space as possible while still keeping them protected.Seeing the pictures of your set up, I'm not sure where you want to put the pallets. I understood the gravel in the photo to be a base you would build on. The rock I advised against was for filling the pockets in the pallets, which I thought would be inside the coop. In the new photo I see two coops connected by a run. In the original photo I saw just a run. Can you clarify your plan?