- Thread starter
- #231
Have 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/

Also, in my coop, the only place I see chicken poo in the winter is directly below the roosting bar. There the poo will freeze and pile up. The rest of the coop is basically poo free, at least you can't see any. I cover the frozen poo under the roosting bar in the winter maybe twice a month with fresh paper shreds, and that seems to have worked out well for me this winter. We have had a few days of above freezing weather, and the chickens have leveled out the frozen poo pile under the roosting bar and now you can't even see the pile of poo anymore. The dry bedding absorbs the poo and I still have no smell in the coop.
In the past, I have gone inside the coop and turned over the bedding. Lately, I just throw some chicken scratch in any area that I think needs some attention and the chickens will do all the work of turning over the bedding instead of me. Works better for me and the chickens love to scratch and peck for the treats.
And, like I stated, my coop was designed to have deep bedding (12 inches) from the start so I don't have any blocked doors or such to worry about. For my twice annual cleanout, I have a drop down panel in the back of the coop so I can just shovel or broom out the old bedding into a wheelbarrow or garden cart. Makes everything very easy.