Manure?

desertlady

Attractive To Bees
Joined
Jan 16, 2012
Messages
933
Reaction score
91
Points
64
Location
Safford, Arizona zone 8
After this fall comes I usually pull out all the dead plants out of my garden and start throwing in compose and chicken poop. I was wondering what animal waste do well in my garden ? My neighbor got horses, cattle and goats. Ive got chickens. I was thinking mix all of them ? is thats too much ?? :/
 

Carol Dee

Garden Master
Joined
Apr 28, 2011
Messages
13,161
Reaction score
21,324
Points
437
Location
Long Grove, IA
We had a problem with horse manure once. Lots of Weed Seed that must not get digested. Anyway.... lots of weed.
 

catjac1975

Garden Master
Joined
Jul 22, 2010
Messages
9,021
Reaction score
9,149
Points
397
Location
Mattapoisett, Massachusetts
We use chicken and horse and have a beautiful garden. We put raw horse manure with bedding in the fall and till it in in the spring. I guess there is a lot of weed seed but, I think there would be weeds anyway.
 

Ridgerunner

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2009
Messages
8,229
Reaction score
10,064
Points
397
Location
Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
One way for nature to spread sees is for animals to eat them and only digest a few. They drop the weed and grass seeds wherever they wander. You can get a whole lot of weed and grass seeds with cow and horse manure. I'm not familiar with goat manure but I'd suspect they would be guilty too. Just look them in the face. Don't they look guilty?

My neighbor gives me two front-end-loader buckets full of partially rotted cow manure most years. It does have a whole lot of seeds but I still consider it gold.

If you want to reduce the weed and grass seeds, hot compost it.
 

thistlebloom

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 1, 2010
Messages
16,473
Reaction score
17,411
Points
457
Location
North Idaho 48th parallel
Everybody can correct me if I'm wrong on this one, but I thought ruminants did not pass weed seeds. Since they regurgitate and rechew their forage, weed seeds don't survive. I also thought the rumen in their gut had something to do with that.

I agree with Cat, you're always going to get weeds anyway from somewhere, even the wind blows them in, so why not take whatever manure you can get and have great soil.
 

Dave2000

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jun 15, 2010
Messages
227
Reaction score
21
Points
146
Location
Cincinnati, OH Zone 6a
Add in this order: Chicken, cow, goat, horse. Stop when your field is full of poo ;) Avoid goat and horse if possible, their digestive tracts don't digest seeds as well.
 

Smiles Jr.

Garden Addicted
Joined
Jan 18, 2010
Messages
1,330
Reaction score
575
Points
267
Location
PlayStation Farm, Rural Indiana
I use cow, chicken, and rabbit manure only. I have had bad results with horse, goat, and donkey manures and weeds. Luckily I have a buddy who has 100 to 150 rabbits and each year I get a couple of truck loads for my compost piles. He also has cows and delivers a small dump truck full of poop every summer. My paltry poultry contribution isn't much but it also goes on the compost piles along with grass clippings, kitchen waste, and lots of ground up branches and leaves in the fall. I used to have a restaurant supply me with coffee grounds and egg shells but that became too much work so I quit. I just recently came upon an endless supply of chopped straw so that will be another ingredient in my compost.

One thing that I insist on, with my compost, is that it be at least two years old before I use it. About once a year I use the loader on the tractor to tune the piles over but I'm not very good at remembering to turn it. Most of the time it's three years old, black powder, and odorless by the time I spread it. I have not purchased any fertilizer in about 15 years. I love compost.
 
Top