Deep-littering with sawdust?

Frans

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For the past few winters I’ve kept my ponies on a straw, deep-litter system which worked fantastically. The bed stayed dry and smell-free very quickly, there was very little waste and the ponies had a good thick warm bed to sleep on. This year I have had to change to sawdust and I’m not brave enough to try deep littering in the same way. Does it work as well as straw? Any tips?
 
Sawdust as opposed to woodshavings? Sawdust can be heating and damage hooves.

Its bigger than sawdust and smaller than shavings. Its a mix of different woods and supposedly for horses. I'm on a learning curve having always used straw before!
 
I deep litter on fine shavings (can't remember what they're called) and works fine for me, I just dig out the wet patch (tends to wee in the same place) every so often when I can see it is wet and no longer absorbing to avoid it spreading around the bed too much.
 
Do they work much better/differently?

i am a new convert to pellets, i use to deep litter on shavings but by boy was so wet it would be soaked within a 4 days. He doeskin stick to one place so was working out so expensive.

I now deep litter on pellets, its amazing, really absorbent, i put 5 new bags down on the weekend at £4.00, its all still dry and i have banked it up again to air, hoping 2 more bags next weekend and once ive got it sussed it will work out cheaper :D

But as i said my boy is crazy wet! for a normal horse i recon after the initial outlay you prob will only need 1 -2 bags a week so much much cheaper
 
As above! Yeah I think they are pretty good for deep littering. I personally remove a forkful of wee each day as current horse on them is very wet but previously I've deep littered really successfully. You do need a good deep bed though I think for it to work.
 
As above! Yeah I think they are pretty good for deep littering. I personally remove a forkful of wee each day as current horse on them is very wet but previously I've deep littered really successfully. You do need a good deep bed though I think for it to work.

When you remove the wee do you just take the top stuff off?
i go to remove the bottom as i expect it to have soaked through and its all still dry :/ im use to the wet being at the bottom but am i right in thinking its on the top?
im still getting to grips with it!
 
When I was a child all our horses, hunters included, were deep littered on sawdust from willow trees. It worked really well, take poo out every time you walk past and just rake a bit in from the banks to cover skanky bits, or take a bit of them out if you wish. Once a week put the bed up, take the wet out and then put down again later. I suppose that is not proper deep litter but it worked really well.
 
When you remove the wee do you just take the top stuff off?
i go to remove the bottom as i expect it to have soaked through and its all still dry :/ im use to the wet being at the bottom but am i right in thinking its on the top?
im still getting to grips with it!

I know exactly where it is so scrape back a bit on top and remove the wet (even then not all just literally a fork full) then replace bedding.
Recently I had a horse on box rest and deep littered completely because he needed a deep bed and wee'd in random places. He was in for 3 weeks along with a pony friend in the same box. No wet ever became visible and it was really weird to muck out. There was still a dry layer compacted on the base that the wet had yet to reach!
 
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