Ameraucana Forum
The Official Ameraucana Forum => Housing, Health & Hatching => Topic started by: Russ Blair on June 16, 2015, 10:05:54 am
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Is anybody else's pens a mess with all this rain lately? I have decided I need to raise the pens. The big question is yellow sand or small gravel to help keep them dryer??
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A few years ago my brother put stone (I think pea stone or some other small drainage type stone) in a few pheasant pens. It didn't work out well. I don't remember all the particulars, but I think he shoveled it out.
I've always gone with yellow sand. Mound it high in the center of the pens so you don't have water setting after a big rain. You can take a small rototiller in the pens and work it up a couple times a year.
I know I've mentioned putting roofing over pens/outdoor runs and my goal is to have them all covered 100% this year. I'll include some polycarbonate translucent panels because the heat and the sunlight reduces the [Bird flu] virus (http://naturalnews.com/049905_bird_flu_factory_farming_chicken_health.html). For years I've said when the birds get both cold and wet they get sick and I read a bird flu article that said hot, dry weather kills the virus (http://harvestpublicmedia.org/content/vilsack-bird-flu-spread-human-movement#.VYA1txFRGcx). Whether it is something new like bird flu, some type of CRD or other virus/disease it just seems to make sense. I remember reading an article, years ago, about an area in Africa that they claimed had the ideal climate for chickens...both warm and dry for the most part.