Dani4Hedgies
Lovin' The Homestead
Yea wow someone needs to send that show an email explaining the issues with what they are teaching our kiddos.
I don't think they really care… Or they would've done their research properly. But fear not, I don't think anyone's going to be that serious about coop cleaning after the first few days!Yea wow someone needs to send that show an email explaining the issues with what they are teaching our kiddos.
My coop has a cement floor. There was about 8" of deep bedding in there on top of the slab. We did run into a section that was frozen but it busted up easy enough with a pitch fork.
My first mistake as a newbie chicken guy was to put in a pipe with nipple waterers INSIDE the coop. Once I abandoned the inside nipple waterer for watering outside - things got a lot better. Ammonia smell is almost all gone now and humidity inside the coop is a lot better. It's taken almost 3 years to get the concrete slab dry... Chickens don't have cheeks and waste a lot of water when they try and drink from a over head nipple waterer. All that wet deep bedding was not a good combination at all.
I got the idea for inside nipple pipe waterer from BYC. Lots of positive talk about nipple waterers but no-one mentioned what a bad idea it is too have it inside the coop with deep bedding. Oh-well live and learn...
Here I am piping in rainwater so as to get my DL good and wet! I used to have an intentionally leaky coop and, man, did it produce the compost, but ever since I got this new, bigger tarp, I've no way of getting good moisture into my DL and the composting is much too slow.
Now I'm dumping buckets of water in the DL under the roosts and setting up a rain catchment system in order to pipe it into that area.
Could be you are just using the wrong bedding~wood shavings and sawdust produce a LOT of ammonia when wet and decomposing and take a long time~ but the nipple system would have been alright with different bedding, especially if you located it back where the manure is most deposited. A flip of dry bedding on top of the moist each morning and you are golden. Ever since I switched from the wood shavings I've not had one whiff of ammonia in the coop.
Another option for keeping it dryer would be to use the cup nipples...not much mess at all with those.
Wood shop saw dust and wood shaving and hay is all I have an abundance of for free. So it's wood shaving, saw dust and hay is what they get.
What kind of bedding do you use?
Thank you for the compost info I have wondered about doing that in my coop for years but everything I read argued against it. I thought it would come out like yours is so good to know am planning this for this year.