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UPDATE: 7 APR 2022. Just a nice observation that I wanted to pass on to those of you interested in this thread. We had a few days of mid 40F's temp so things started to thaw out in the coop, and by stuff, I mean mainly the mound of chicken poo underneath the roosting bar. Frozen poo does not smell, but a mound of fresh thawing out poo might. So, last week, I threw on some fresh paper shreds on all that poo underneath the roosting bar.
Today, I had another bag full of paper shreds to dump out into the coop, and I expected to cover the mound of poo underneath the roosting bar again. To my surprise, there was no longer a mound of poo under the roosting bar. All the frozen poo seems to have automagically disappeared into the paper shreds and everything was down to level with the rest of the litter in the coop. Best yet - no smell!
We are the end of a 3 day April snow storm here, so I dont'know how much longer it will be before we actually get some spring time temps that stay, but I will try to update at least once more when I spring clean the coop litter out and dump it into the chicken run. Right now, I have about 8 inches of snow left in the run, so it might be at least a few weeks.
Bottom line, the paper shreds are performing much better than I had hoped.
Reading through this thread has been a great resource. I have a near limitless supply of paper shreds through work.
I'm wondering how often you have to clean out the coop bedding. Apologies if you already said.
Thank you for the detailed reply!IMHO, free coop litter is the best litter. If you can get paper shreds through work, that is fantastic! I make my own paper shreds at home, but it seems like there is almost an unlimited amount of paper products I can shred just from home use.
The past 2 winters, I would clean out the wood chips coop litter in the spring after the snow melts. I plan on doing the same with the paper shreds this year - maybe in the next ~4 weeks, or less, where I live.
Right now, I can tell you that there is still no smell in my coop even though the paper shreds have been in the coop since OCT-NOV of last year. Every couple of weeks I have been dumping another kitchen garbage bag (13 gallon size) full of paper shreds into the coop, and that has been good enough to keep everything looking clean and smelling fresh. Well, actually, the paper shreds have no real smell.
I compost all my spent coop litter, so I have it in my mind to clean out the coop litter twice a year. Once in the spring after the snow melts, and once again in late fall just before the snow starts to fall. In reality, I don't think I would even have to clean out the coop twice a year. I go by the smell, and if the coop litter smells, it is time to be gone. Having said that, cleaning out the coop just twice a year has been more than enough to keep the coop odor free. But I want to use the spent coop litter to make compost, so I clean out the coop twice a year regardless.
Because my goal with the coop litter is to turn it into compost for my gardens, I expect that the paper shreds will compost down much faster than the wood chips coop litter I used in the past 2 winters. So, I am looking forward to verifying that idea this summer.
When I used wood chips as coop litter, I would just throw the wood chips out into the chicken run compost system on top of all the run litter. With paper shreds, I will have to cover them so they don't blow all over the yard. I will be either digging a shallow trench or covering the paper shreds some other way so I don't have confetti all over the yard.
At any rate, I got my wood chips for free, and they worked great. This year I am using paper shreds I make at home, and they are working out great. Both are free options to me and both work great. Since I am currently using paper shreds for the coop litter, I am now using my free wood chips mainly as covering for the pathways in the garden and as mulch around plants.
And, as I have mentioned before, using these free resources that would otherwise end up in a landfill, is just my small part on being more green and friendly to the environment.
I'm trying to decide on deep litter vs deep bedding for my coop. I'm in the building process still. My coop currently has a 1/2" plywood base. The info on bedding is a bit conflicting. Most of what I've read says that unless you have a dirt floor, you must remove as much poop as possible regularly in order to keep everything completely dry in the coop. But I think I read that your coop has a wood base?
Oo thanks! I'll go read it nowHave you read my article yet? I tried to go into not just what separates Deep Bedding from Deep Litter, but what conditions make Deep Bedding possible or set you up for failure.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/using-deep-bedding-in-a-small-coop.76343/
I'm trying to decide on deep litter vs deep bedding for my coop.
Most of what I've read says that unless you have a dirt floor, you must remove as much poop as possible regularly in order to keep everything completely dry in the coop. But I think I read that your coop has a wood base?
Here is my situation:
*Small backyard flock of 6 hens (arriving in the fall)
*8x7' foot with 8x10-12' covered run (still under construction) that the birds will live in full time
*Full time working parent, so the least amount of maintenance, the better
*In the "snowbelt" of Central Eastern Ontario, so we have below freezing temps and a few feet of snow for 4-5ish months of the year
*Coop will *not* be artificially heated
Do you think it would be ok to use shredded paper in a brooder? Or too tempting for the babies to eat?