What Do You All Do For Winter Dust Baths?

I use deep litter (wood shavings) but remove the top 2" or 3" daily and replace with fresh shavings. That makes for a nice insulated floor, but removes any fresh poop and ensures that the stuff they "bathe" in is clean.

I'm starting to throw handfuls of play sand, sweet lime and woodstove ash into just one of the stalls, the one where the chooks like to hang out the most. That's where they're most likely to dust-bathe when it's too cold to use the sand pit in their outdoor run.
 
Inhaling dust from anything, house dust, ashes, wheat flour, chicken poo, garden dirt, DE, or anything else, (make sure you include toxic pesticides in that list) is not good for your lungs, or the rest of your respiratory tract.

But chickens love to stir up dust and bathe in it.
They don't seem to have as much of a problem with that as humans. I don't know why. Maybe they have something that protects them from inhaled irritants, since it is part of their nature to do this.

Not all silica is bad. Crystalline silica is the bad form, it causes major lung problems if inhaled. Pool filter grade is heat treated, the heating causes partial melting and the formation if crystalline silica. It may have other substances added as well, so you should never use pool filter grade DE for anything other than pool filters.

Freshwater diatomite is mined from dry lakebeds and is mostly hydrated amorphous silica. Food grade diatomaceous earth contains less than .5% crystalline. (that's less than 1/2 of 1%) The saltwater form contains a highly crystalline form of silica that can be dangerous if inhaled.

Food grade DE has been used in grain storage for a long time, to prevent infestation by insects. If you eat grain products, you eat food grade DE.

It kills insects by abrading the outer cuticles and absorbing the moisture from the insects. It dries them out. Not all food grade DE is equal. It should have a hardness rating of around 7 on the mohs scale. The softer grades are not as effective, not being hard enough to abrade the insect shells, which may be why there is such disparity of results among different people who have tried it. Permagard is supposed to be one of the better brands, I'm sure there are other good quality brands as well.

I use food grade DE in my coop, under and over the straw on the floor, and in the nest boxes. I sprinkle it over the dirt in the favorite dusting sites. I mix it with the feed. I feed it to my dogs and cats. I take it myself when I have digestive upsets, and so does my DH. It hasn't harmed any of us.

DE is composed, not of fish bones, but the fossilized skeletons of microscopic aquatic animals, called diatoms. Here's a link to some nifty diatom info. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatom

Here's
another link with more info about food grade DE.
http://www.shadowridgedonkeys.com/perma_guard_difference.htm
 
They won't eat wood stove ashes. You might end up eating them if the chooks come over to visit you after their `bath' and begin shaking like dogs and you're downwind...

Just make sure that they are wood ashes. A `trash' burn pit (where plastics, etc. have been burned) is not so `hot'.
 
I put a plastic pan of wood ashes out for the girls- they looked at me as if I'd lost my mind. You want us to do WHAT??!
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It's been a week, the ashes are quite dry, and no one will touch it. I put them in it, I tossed it around, stopped short of actually gettin in it- though it looked like I had!
 

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