Eggsakly
Chirping
- May 5, 2015
- 200
- 129
- 91
- Bedding in the coop: What do you use?
Pine or white shavings
- How deep do you let it get?
At the moment it's about 8 or 9 inches. I have to take some out every few weeks and make room.
- How often do you clean it out?
I attend to the coop and shavings at least once a week, and I tweak it whenever things are less than I like.
- What is your coop floor? (Earth, wood, protected wood.)
Wood covered with vinyl flooring
- Do you use a poop board or something similar? If "yes", tell us more?
No
- Anyone use the deep litter method? Tell us about your experience?
I think I'm doing some form of deep litter method, but I'm such a novice at chickens I cannot be sure I'm getting it right. Basically I stopped cleaning out all the coop shavings and began laying fresh shavings on top of old shavings in the fall last year. Living in Alaska, I adore the idea of the deep litter method. This is my first winter to have chickens in a coop. I previously only had a house chicken. My coop is contained within another building which affords a lot of protection from the elements, but it still gets very, very cold in there, so when it is very cold, like this morning at -15F, I also give them a secure heat lamp that keeps their water from freezing. The chickens turn the litter regularly - they are quite the diggers - and I add generously to the top in a big way once a week, and I tweak it whenever things are less than I like. I go by my nose, and if I get the slightest whiff of ammonia, I add some fresh shavings. If the shavings are getting too high, before I add fresh shavings I remove some dirty shavings first and level out the shavings that remain before adding the new stuff. So far this winter I have removed shavings 3 times. For a cold climate, DLM is awesome; I can feel the warmth from the coop bed and it sure is a wonder when temps are -25F.
- What products, beside bedding materials, do you use to keep smells/moisture under control? (For example lime, sweet PDZ)
Nothing. I just clean the coop, but the pine shavings do help.
Pine or white shavings
- How deep do you let it get?
At the moment it's about 8 or 9 inches. I have to take some out every few weeks and make room.
- How often do you clean it out?
I attend to the coop and shavings at least once a week, and I tweak it whenever things are less than I like.
- What is your coop floor? (Earth, wood, protected wood.)
Wood covered with vinyl flooring
- Do you use a poop board or something similar? If "yes", tell us more?
No
- Anyone use the deep litter method? Tell us about your experience?
I think I'm doing some form of deep litter method, but I'm such a novice at chickens I cannot be sure I'm getting it right. Basically I stopped cleaning out all the coop shavings and began laying fresh shavings on top of old shavings in the fall last year. Living in Alaska, I adore the idea of the deep litter method. This is my first winter to have chickens in a coop. I previously only had a house chicken. My coop is contained within another building which affords a lot of protection from the elements, but it still gets very, very cold in there, so when it is very cold, like this morning at -15F, I also give them a secure heat lamp that keeps their water from freezing. The chickens turn the litter regularly - they are quite the diggers - and I add generously to the top in a big way once a week, and I tweak it whenever things are less than I like. I go by my nose, and if I get the slightest whiff of ammonia, I add some fresh shavings. If the shavings are getting too high, before I add fresh shavings I remove some dirty shavings first and level out the shavings that remain before adding the new stuff. So far this winter I have removed shavings 3 times. For a cold climate, DLM is awesome; I can feel the warmth from the coop bed and it sure is a wonder when temps are -25F.
- What products, beside bedding materials, do you use to keep smells/moisture under control? (For example lime, sweet PDZ)
Nothing. I just clean the coop, but the pine shavings do help.
Last edited: