Good afternoon composters and chicken gurus,
I've always added chicken manure and their bedding to compost bin, it heats up really well when mixed in and speeds up composting immensely.
I have a chicken run open to the elements which is around 10x10 feet which i add straw to prevent mud building up and becoming smelly, it works well but every month or so i have to replenish the straw, problem is straw is relatively expensive this year (£7 a bale)
However, i have a unlimited supply of wood chips, my friend is a tree surgeon and offered as much wood chip as I can utilise.
My aim is to swap from straw to wood chip as a deep bed mulch and move the run around my allotment every year and allow the wood chips to compost to create a no dig system.
Has anyone tried this?
My main plan is convert as much wood chip as i can, as quickly as possible to a wonderful compost to grow in the following year
I'm going to fill the wood chip deep bed litter system to about 18 inch to 2 feet deep and inoculate it with lignin decomposing mushroom mycelium such as oyster mushroom or wine cap, a very vigourous primary decomposer.
The chickens mix this in, turn the chips adding droppings on the way. As the wood degrades, it adds a little warmth for winter and increases living vertibrates/invertibrates to assist decomposition and provide chicken food.
I'm certain this will work but not sure if I've given a reasonable time frame of a year to compost all this wood chip to leave in-situ to create a no dig system.
I believe there maybe a short lived nitrogen deficit at the soil to wood chip layer as the microorganisms are growing and breaking down the wood before its released again when they die.
I've read that theres potentially a risk with the wood chips and chickens and certain fungal spores, I'm hoping that my inoculated mushroom mycelium will out compete any invading risky fungal attack
Anybody any thoughts
Thanks
Darren
I've always added chicken manure and their bedding to compost bin, it heats up really well when mixed in and speeds up composting immensely.
I have a chicken run open to the elements which is around 10x10 feet which i add straw to prevent mud building up and becoming smelly, it works well but every month or so i have to replenish the straw, problem is straw is relatively expensive this year (£7 a bale)
However, i have a unlimited supply of wood chips, my friend is a tree surgeon and offered as much wood chip as I can utilise.
My aim is to swap from straw to wood chip as a deep bed mulch and move the run around my allotment every year and allow the wood chips to compost to create a no dig system.
Has anyone tried this?
My main plan is convert as much wood chip as i can, as quickly as possible to a wonderful compost to grow in the following year
I'm going to fill the wood chip deep bed litter system to about 18 inch to 2 feet deep and inoculate it with lignin decomposing mushroom mycelium such as oyster mushroom or wine cap, a very vigourous primary decomposer.
The chickens mix this in, turn the chips adding droppings on the way. As the wood degrades, it adds a little warmth for winter and increases living vertibrates/invertibrates to assist decomposition and provide chicken food.
I'm certain this will work but not sure if I've given a reasonable time frame of a year to compost all this wood chip to leave in-situ to create a no dig system.
I believe there maybe a short lived nitrogen deficit at the soil to wood chip layer as the microorganisms are growing and breaking down the wood before its released again when they die.
I've read that theres potentially a risk with the wood chips and chickens and certain fungal spores, I'm hoping that my inoculated mushroom mycelium will out compete any invading risky fungal attack
Anybody any thoughts
Thanks
Darren
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