Marla
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-----Original Message-----
From: deb <perchie.girl@gmail.com>
Sender: CHICKENS-101@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2011 09:53:01
To: <CHICKENS-101@yahoogroups.com>
Reply-To: CHICKENS-101@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [CHICKENS-101] Second try at an intro
I sent this once, I prefer to introduce myself before jumping in as a
stranger to other peoples conversations....
Been reading for a couple of days. Love this group lots of info for
sure. I had chickens a few years back lost them to predators. I am now
attempting to raise some Guineas and have hit a terrible predator
problem. I am dealing with it but out of forty Guineas am down to
eight. I am on BYC but wanted another source of discussion. I like
groups because I don't have to launch a website to contribute. My place
is in the High Desert of Southern California. San Diego county very
near the Mexican border. 1.5 miles from paved road and 2 miles from the
border. Closest decent feed store is thirty miles away Closest Grocery
store is sixty miles away.
Just a couple of things I might be able to contribute.
White poo is Chickens form of Urine. Their systems are geared for water
conservation so the urine is dry and excreted with the poop.
Space for chickens in a coop: Some books say 2 square feet some say 4.
I think its not necessarily set in stone. The Guineas need more. It
also depends on how long they are cooped up together, What breeds you
have, And how well your coop is designed, Fresh air, roosting space
access to the outside. But if you take it logically the more space
you can give them the better. In the cold they will want to group
together closely for warmth.
What to put on the floor: I have dirt floors of hard packed Decomposed
granite. This is the ""soil"" of my desert. I read the oil and lime
post and whole heartedly agree. I use Rice hulls for litter. I like
them because they do not pack together in one mass like shavings do.
Mosture goes right through them so I can feel free to dump out the water
right in the coop. (remember I have dirt floors) Within minutes the
coop floor is reasonably dry. They are more expensive than shavings
but they go farther. And can be used in the compost pile as well. I
used them for my horse for a couple of years when I boarded at a stable
that had very poor drainage in her open air 24 x 24 corral. She had a
low spot and it filled up with pee and poo and made a slurry mess in the
wintertime. We got it drained and I started adding rice hulls. It
took five bags initially but even when it rained my horse had a dry
place to lay down. After the initial addition of hulls I only had to
add a bag once a week. When the corral cleaners came to clean they
weren't scooping out the rice hulls either. After that experience I was
sold. Now with the Guineas the poo just disappears in and all you see
are rice hulls. I n the brooder (after they reach the age you can take
away the newspaper or shelf liner) you can simply vaccuum them out with
a shop vac. When and if I get chickens at this point I will give rice
hulls a try in the nest boxes as well.
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