_MizElz_
Well-Known Member
Ellie has been on straw for pretty much the entire time I have owned her. She's always had a massive bed - 18 inches minimum in the middle, with 3'6 banks, and I've never deep littered her - she's always mucked out properly each day.
Last Sunday, I moved her onto Bedrap - chopped rape straw. Our YO wants everyone to move onto it eventually, and I wanted to get her new bed established before going back to work. I really, really like the bedding - it's taken me 10 bales to start her off, but she now has about 8 inches on the floor and 3ft high banks. I'm also following the manufacturer's guidance and deep littering - as much as it goes against all my principles - and it seems to be working, as her bed is staying beautifully clean. All the wet seems to sink and solidify at the bottom, unlike shavings where you find it gets churned into the clean stuff.
The only problem is, her legs seem to fill a lot more when she is stood in on this bedding. On straw, I've never had a problem, not even when she was in 24/7 over the winter. They're not filling massively - and a 15 minute walk out is enough to reduce the swelling completely - but I just wondered whether this is a common problem, and if there is anything I could do to reduce it?
Last Sunday, I moved her onto Bedrap - chopped rape straw. Our YO wants everyone to move onto it eventually, and I wanted to get her new bed established before going back to work. I really, really like the bedding - it's taken me 10 bales to start her off, but she now has about 8 inches on the floor and 3ft high banks. I'm also following the manufacturer's guidance and deep littering - as much as it goes against all my principles - and it seems to be working, as her bed is staying beautifully clean. All the wet seems to sink and solidify at the bottom, unlike shavings where you find it gets churned into the clean stuff.
The only problem is, her legs seem to fill a lot more when she is stood in on this bedding. On straw, I've never had a problem, not even when she was in 24/7 over the winter. They're not filling massively - and a 15 minute walk out is enough to reduce the swelling completely - but I just wondered whether this is a common problem, and if there is anything I could do to reduce it?