tweetzone86
Songster
Hello all!
Thanks to health issues flaring and surgery coming up for said issues, I'm on a lifting restriction, and thus am unable to build a roof for my chicken run until spring at the earliest.
I get snow here though, and lately it's been raining as well (which is bizarre, as I'm in north Idaho 2 hours away from the Canadian border and we're getting rain but New Mexico had blizzards?!). The run was nothing but mud, as the chickens ate all vegetation within it, so I added 3 bales of hay to keep the mud down.
It worked, but now I've got poopy hay in there (and unlike what I use in the coop, this hay has not been verified herbicide-free, so I won't compost it for the garden just in case) and I have no idea what to do with it.
I thought about putting a tarp up, and I may still do that, but if we get more than a couple inches of snow (not likely at this point since the weather's been unusually warm of late- at least, warm enough to rain more often than snow), the wire I've got across the top of the run to keep cats and hawks out is going to collapse under the weight.
Thoughts? I really wish it weren't so dang wet under there. Additionally- should I just put sand in there (with the tarp so it stays dry) and just scoop up the poop regularly like one would scoop up dog poop? Instead of the hay that I have to haul to the dump?
Thanks!
Thanks to health issues flaring and surgery coming up for said issues, I'm on a lifting restriction, and thus am unable to build a roof for my chicken run until spring at the earliest.
I get snow here though, and lately it's been raining as well (which is bizarre, as I'm in north Idaho 2 hours away from the Canadian border and we're getting rain but New Mexico had blizzards?!). The run was nothing but mud, as the chickens ate all vegetation within it, so I added 3 bales of hay to keep the mud down.
It worked, but now I've got poopy hay in there (and unlike what I use in the coop, this hay has not been verified herbicide-free, so I won't compost it for the garden just in case) and I have no idea what to do with it.
I thought about putting a tarp up, and I may still do that, but if we get more than a couple inches of snow (not likely at this point since the weather's been unusually warm of late- at least, warm enough to rain more often than snow), the wire I've got across the top of the run to keep cats and hawks out is going to collapse under the weight.
Thoughts? I really wish it weren't so dang wet under there. Additionally- should I just put sand in there (with the tarp so it stays dry) and just scoop up the poop regularly like one would scoop up dog poop? Instead of the hay that I have to haul to the dump?
Thanks!