Yard Retains Water

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but it seems like they would stay wet to me especially if deep.
They do stay wet, until they dry :D
I don't have them too deep, an inch or three, they don't need to be deep to 'eat up' the poops...more like slow cold compost.
If you are 'making garden soil' in the chicken run, best not to use wood at all, IMO, as it takes forever to fully break down and you don't want mixed into your garden soil as it will suck up the nitrogen present stealing it from the garden plants.
 
They do stay wet, until they dry :D
I don't have them too deep, an inch or three, they don't need to be deep to 'eat up' the poops...more like slow cold compost.
If you are 'making garden soil' in the chicken run, best not to use wood at all, IMO, as it takes forever to fully break down and you don't want mixed into your garden soil as it will suck up the nitrogen present stealing it from the garden plants.
SO True....wood chips would not work in my composter at all.
I use some wood shavings for when my nitrogen levels are too high. Chickens poop is awesome but...powerful!
Thanks again
 
You should not mix the woodchips into garden soil. @aart is correct that it will eat up the nitrogen. Woodchips should be spread over the top of the garden soil. Rainwater washes any deteriorating vegetation down through chips to the soil below holding excess moisture and releasing it as the soil drys which keeps the soul at perfect moisture for growing plants. Chips mulch perfectly. Weed seeds blow and fall on the top of these chips and die because it can't reach the soil. When people hear about using woodchips in the garden they don't look at the plan close enough and they start burying chips in the soil. Think of chips as the skin protecting the soil below.
 
You should not mix the woodchips into garden soil. @aart is correct that it will eat up the nitrogen. Woodchips should be spread over the top of the garden soil. Rainwater washes any deteriorating vegetation down through chips to the soil below holding excess moisture and releasing it as the soil drys which keeps the soul at perfect moisture for growing plants. Chips mulch perfectly. Weed seeds blow and fall on the top of these chips and die because it can't reach the soil. When people hear about using woodchips in the garden they don't look at the plan close enough and they start burying chips in the soil. Think of chips as the skin protecting the soil below.
Thanks!...but don’t worry I wouldn’t add wood of any type atop my garden beds. I mulch separate and amend my soil each year. The only thing that goes on my soil in my beds is...chicken wire!! :duc
 
I know I'm super late to the party, but I'd still like to contribute more ideas...
What about under ground drainage pipes. That might work?? We have some extras ones i could bury under the run area.
Like a french drain? I'm not sure the exact procedure, but I bet it would help.

I think a very overlooked factor is the additional rainwater runoff you'll get from the coop roof. You definitely need a gutter. If the ground already has a tendency to get saturated, all that runoff will pool on the ground and seep (or flood) right into the run area. It has to be directed somewhere else. I have a rain chain and collection bucket with a hose that leads to my garden beds. Before that was set up, I just had a temporary 5 gallon bucket to hold the gutter runoff, and during heavy rain spells it was overflowing in just a few hours!

7807e796-8352-4f74-8c0f-44eaa96a3afc-jpeg.1647052
That is exactly what my chicken yard used to look like before it became the chicken yard! It was lined with landscape fabric and topped with bark mulch when we bought our house. I put my birds there for a short time, but they scratched down to the fabric and turned it into giant fluffy remnants floating all over and left the dirt exposed, which turned to mud when it rained. Needed a better solution.

Like others have said, chunky material like big wood chips are the way to go. It'll let the water drain through and they hold up well. But having used wood chips in my horse paddock in the past and watching them just sink away and disappear over a few short months, I wasn't sure it would work with chickens any better long term, because as you know, chickens are excellent mixer-uppers of dirt and bedding. It's really rainy here in Oregon and I wanted clean wood chips, not muddy.
Important to mention: This was for the exposed yard area, not my covered run.

So I copied this mud management idea from Newland Poultry in the UK.
What makes this system work so well is that the ground (mud) and the surface material (wood chips) is kept separate by a sturdy barrier... I used PVC poultry netting. First I removed all the old landscape fabric and mulch (a terrible chore), then laid the netting, attached it to the ground using garden pins, and put wood chips on top.
112.jpg
The wood chips never get mixed with the muddy ground below, and it's not slippery or mucky or stinky at all! It's amazing! My chickens still enjoy scratching and finding bugs, and the PVC material won't hurt their feet or turn into floaty fluff balls. These chips should last a couple/few years before they start to break down enough to be replaced. Then I'll reuse the old as mulch for my other landscaping.
112a.jpg 112b.jpg 112c.jpg
113.jpg


@MandaRae you have so much beautiful grass, it seems a shame to turn it into wood chips. But chickens do have a way of turning grass into dirt pretty quick. I think you should definitely plan some gutters and a system to divert the water away.
 
Thank You! I love how big the yard is. That picture is less than half our back yard! I think we have decided to put the raised garden in just above to coop. I figure that will help with the drainage too plus it will be close enough o can build a chicken tunnel around it for the bug control!




I know I'm super late to the party, but I'd still like to contribute more ideas...

Like a french drain? I'm not sure the exact procedure, but I bet it would help.

I think a very overlooked factor is the additional rainwater runoff you'll get from the coop roof. You definitely need a gutter. If the ground already has a tendency to get saturated, all that runoff will pool on the ground and seep (or flood) right into the run area. It has to be directed somewhere else. I have a rain chain and collection bucket with a hose that leads to my garden beds. Before that was set up, I just had a temporary 5 gallon bucket to hold the gutter runoff, and during heavy rain spells it was overflowing in just a few hours!

That is exactly what my chicken yard used to look like before it became the chicken yard! It was lined with landscape fabric and topped with bark mulch when we bought our house. I put my birds there for a short time, but they scratched down to the fabric and turned it into giant fluffy remnants floating all over and left the dirt exposed, which turned to mud when it rained. Needed a better solution.

Like others have said, chunky material like big wood chips are the way to go. It'll let the water drain through and they hold up well. But having used wood chips in my horse paddock in the past and watching them just sink away and disappear over a few short months, I wasn't sure it would work with chickens any better long term, because as you know, chickens are excellent mixer-uppers of dirt and bedding. It's really rainy here in Oregon and I wanted clean wood chips, not muddy.
Important to mention: This was for the exposed yard area, not my covered run.

So I copied this mud management idea from Newland Poultry in the UK.
What makes this system work so well is that the ground (mud) and the surface material (wood chips) is kept separate by a sturdy barrier... I used PVC poultry netting. First I removed all the old landscape fabric and mulch (a terrible chore), then laid the netting, attached it to the ground using garden pins, and put wood chips on top.
View attachment 1659948
The wood chips never get mixed with the muddy ground below, and it's not slippery or mucky or stinky at all! It's amazing! My chickens still enjoy scratching and finding bugs, and the PVC material won't hurt their feet or turn into floaty fluff balls. These chips should last a couple/few years before they start to break down enough to be replaced. Then I'll reuse the old as mulch for my other landscaping.
View attachment 1659951 View attachment 1659949 View attachment 1659950
View attachment 1659983

@MandaRae you have so much beautiful grass, it seems a shame to turn it into wood chips. But chickens do have a way of turning grass into dirt pretty quick. I think you should definitely plan some gutters and a system to divert the water away.
 

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