I use coffee grounds as bedding for my chicken coop. It cuts down on the poop smell, makes scooping more like cat litter and helps keep bugs out.

Once or twice a week I go by Starbucks and pick up used coffee grounds because they bag them separate from their other trash.

I put them out on a tarp to dry for a couple of days and then sift out the chunks (and leaves that landed in the mean time). I use a sifter that I got from Murdoch's that sits in a 5gallon buck which works really well.

Then I pour the fine sifted grounds in the coop. I used to mash up the leftover chunks and repeat the drying/sifting process, but as much coffee as Starbucks puts out, it's not an efficient use of my time I now just dump the chunks into the pen and let the girls scratch through it for enrichment.

https://video.nostr.build/790566eb00dc2aa88d7af4f6332302f9aaafbe8fd726a7b145c44ca662c448ab.mp4

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Sweet trick

Clever

Smart.

Great idea.

the #carbon in the grounds is a great way to cut the #nitrogen in the bird droppings. running it though some #worms would make it amazing.

I was under the understanding that coffee grounds were also a high nitrogen source. They are considered a "green" when building compost.

This was my understanding as well, that while it is literally brown, it is "green" in composting terms.

I stand corrected, I've always considered it a "brown" in compost terms.