Inside pine flakes. Outside I use straw and straw bales to scratch, sit and lay on because it is still warm on their feet even it if gets wet. Give them a part of a bale of straw on the ground in flakes, throw wheat, oats, and sunflower seed, popped popcorn, crumbled cornbread, and watch them scratch the flakes apart. In the spring if any missed wheat, oats, or sunflowers sprout, your chickens will gobble them up.
Cathryn
--- In CHICKENS-101@yahoogroups.com, "Mary Beth" <mwalker39@...> wrote:
>
> I sure hope Iâm not still on moderation, but if so, thatâs ok, Iâll bounce back. At any rate, the winter has hit here in Upstate NY. It snowed like nobodyâs business a few days ago, and Itâs snowing like that again right now. We live in the city and have one of those chic urban coops with a large garden pen for free-ranging of our red star hens. On a nice day, when weâre home, we give them free roam of the entire yard. But now with the snow, they seem completely unimpressed (as am I) and arenât venturing further than the protected solarium my husband built for them, which is about 6â by 10â. To top it all off, Alice is doing a complete molt, and she looks like she got caught in a microwave oven or something.
>
> So my question is regarding litter. The girls had a whole big yard to poop and scratch in â" now theyâre quite limited (self-imposed â" if they liked the snow, they would have a lot more territory in which to peck and paw). I want to go out and rake their area and clean up the poo and lay down some litter. Does anyone actually litter? The ground is frozen and it seems cruel to not give them something in which to peck and paw. If any of you litter, what do you use?
>
> As always, thank you so much for your kindness and knowledge transfer!!!!
>
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