I think that is a great idea!Come spring when you do that big cleanout you should turn the experience into article.
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I think that is a great idea!Come spring when you do that big cleanout you should turn the experience into article.
Come spring when you do that big cleanout you should turn the experience into article.
@gtaus Thank you for tagging me! Your post was extremely helpful and the pictures helped me understand how the whole thing works! I appreciate the time you took to do that, especially in the cold weather!Will be looking forward to your spring report to see how the whole thing turned out during thaw!
If there’s any Backyard Chickeners in the area, you could make it an “interactive experience”.
BYOBF (bring your own barn fork).
I don't think using paper shreds as coop litter is a new concept by any means,
Much of what I've read about it talked about the paper matting and getting/staying wet.
Obviously yours isn't.
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I am just getting started with my worm bin. Got the worms at Christmas and they're still alive!I don't know what you have read, but almost all the responses I have received from people who use paper shreds as coop dry bedding litter report that the shreds do not mat down. That is what I have found, too. I know one of my early concerns with paper shreds was that they might get wet and mat down. Inside the coop, however, they stay dry and are still fluffy after 3 months of use inside the coop.
I still think that once I clean out the coop in the spring, and dump all those paper shreds outside into my chicken run compost system, they will get rained upon and turn into compost in almost no time compared to the wood chips I used the last two years. I'll mix the paper shreds in with all the other litter in the chicken run, so it will not be like one big pile of paper turning into a paper Mache clump of goo. But I suspect the paper will be composted in just weeks once outside. Wood chips make great compost, too, but they take a long time to break down.
Another good use for soiled paper shreds from the coop might be to use them in a worm bin. I am currently thinking about building some kind of flow through worm bin system. I wonder if chicken poo is good for worms like cow manure is? Don't know. Last time I tried to have a worm bin I failed miserably. I think I overfed them and made the bin toxic. The poor worms tried to escape, the bin smelled horrible, and all my dead worms turned into a slimy smelly goo. I had to throw everything outside into the tall grass. Epic failure.
If one person does something and says it does or doesn’t work and another thinks something will or won’t work, it’s probably best to put more weight on the former.![]()
I found your picture very helpful.Exactly. This is why I am experimenting with paper shreds myself and reporting my results compared to wood chips as deep bedding in my coop. Also, I hope my pictures of the shredded paper in the coops give people a good idea that the coop bedding is dry and not at all exposed to wind or rain.