Wanted to use tree mulch for chicken and geese.

Pgw

Chirping
Sep 4, 2024
56
29
53
I have several downed trees from Helene and wanted to use for new chickens and geese. Have a Sycamore and pine. My question is how to keep. Should I keep in a container, let it air dry etc... I am housing my coups under a 3 sided pole barn. Didn't know how to store that much mulch to prevent mold issues.
 
I assume you ran the branches thru a chipper?
Also assume you mean to use this in a run rather than in a coop?
Pile it up somewhere out of the way, let it sit for a week or so.
Scrape the outer of pile off and spread thinly in your run.
Do this about once a week and you should be fine.
It's the best bedding for runs, IMO.
 
Green undried trees will always produce wet green chips. No way for you to stop the mulching process if you put it in a large pile -- just nature doing its thing. While it makes for good substrate, there isn't any good way to stop the mulching process unless you have a way to kiln dry the tree prior to chipping and store the dried chips in a pole barn or a place where it will not get direct/indirect moisture from rain.

I mean, if you have large equipment at your home -- you could always do daily rotations with a tractor to the mulch pile to bring the wet to the top and the dry onto the mid/bottom. That'll take some dedication and am not sure if it's worth the time in doing that :). It'll stop the mold for sure but will not stop the mulching/composting activities.
 
I get a few drops of wood chips like this every year for my chicken area and for mulching the property, and just keep a pile around. Have used it when it's fresh off the truck, a few weeks later when it's hot and filled with mycelium, and when it's cooled down and aged. Chickens haven't complained, lol.
 
If you don't need to use it immediately I'd pile it up somewhere out in the open and let it sit and air out - a couple months would be my preference, but at least a few weeks, to reduce risk of aspergillus.

Most wood molds are normal and not harmful, I dig up all sorts of mold in my wood piles and it's a natural part of the wood breaking down.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom