Just drying it should stop any molds from taking foot.I'd like to think the sun will help sanitize the grounds a bit more to reduce the chances of mold as well but that's only speculation.
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Just drying it should stop any molds from taking foot.I'd like to think the sun will help sanitize the grounds a bit more to reduce the chances of mold as well but that's only speculation.
That is interesting! I wasn’t trying to be rude btw. I live in Wisconsin so we have the higher aroma cedar.
I love the smell but here it’s harmful.
I had no idea a cedar coop would be safe good to know!I'm not offended.I would always urge caution with cedar. But there's a difference between types of cedar and how you plan on using it in a set up. I would not use more aromatic types of cedar, nor fresh cedar (fresh chips, period, I'd avoid for multiple reasons), nor 100% cedar chips or shavings. But a cedar coop should be fine (especially if painted or otherwise sealed over) as the amount of surface area for aromatics to escape from is far less than shavings, for example.
It's like straw is generally safe to use around chickens. But it can also harbor mites and it can mold. So in some set ups it works really well and folks are happy with it. In others, it's a nightmare to manage and folks end up tearing it all out.
Also interested in what people use on floor with old concrete sweating. I’m using an old milk house attached to barn as a coop and notice the floor will sweat terribly with humid weather, like yesterday (NE Wisconsin). I just received my very first flock of 17 chicksOk, so I have an older barn, my chickens are in an enclosed section that use to be for calves. It’s sectioned off from the main barn but my issue is, concrete floor. It sweats, I use pine shavings/some straw. And when it gets wet or sweats I clean the coop and sprinkle barn lime.
does anyone else have this type of flooring, what do you use for bedding, cleaning advice. I’m so worried about coccidiosis.![]()
Maybe a dumb question, but is DE Diatomaceous Earth?I know some people say DE is useless, but I'm one who swears by it. I've never had a mite issue, touch wood, and I've had chickens for years. I dust about once weekly around perches, corners and nest boxes and include it in my hens dust bath with some wood ash. I keep a clean coop and wipe down areas routinelywith a cleaning vinegar solution, and only use the deep litter method in the winter, so that might contribute, but DE is something I wouldn't skip.
I’m in NE Wisconsin also!Also interested in what people use on floor with old concrete sweating. I’m using an old milk house attached to barn as a coop and notice the floor will sweat terribly with humid weather, like yesterday (NE Wisconsin). I just received my very first flock of 17 chickstoday but am worried with the wet sweating floor. I currently have the chicks in a brooder box within the coop (milk house) and have not put anything down on the main floor of the coop yet.
YesMaybe a dumb question, but is DE Diatomaceous Earth?
Maybe a dumb question, but is DE Diatomaceous Earth?