well we know what your full of lol
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Boyce 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2008 3:52 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Horse Manure - Does It Have Any Uses


  If you grew up on a dairy farm and learned early in life that cow manure is 
  useful. That usefulness may have been born out of necessity, though. After 
  all,
  the manure from a herd of 50 cows has to go somewhere right? That's how I 
  learned that cow manure makes a great fertilizer. But we never had horses on
  our farm so I started wondering if horse manure is useful as a fertilizer 
  too.

  Although there is a wide range of weights among horses depending on the 
  breed, an average adult riding horse weighs approximately 900 - 1,100 
  pounds. A
  horse that size produces around 8 to 9 tons; or between 16,000 and 18,000 
  pounds of manure every year. That's a lot of horse manure.

  What is done with that manure? One option for disposal is to haul it to a 
  landfill site, but that is not an eco-friendly option and some landfills 
  will
  not accept horse manure.
  What?? Putting valuable fertiliser into landfill is just madness!

  The best option is to spread the horse manure on land so it decomposes 
  quickly, or to compost it and then use it to improve soil quality.

  One problem with using horse manure to fertilize ground is that many people 
  use sawdust or wood chips as bedding in horse stalls. When the stalls are 
  cleaned,
  the dirty sawdust or wood chips as well as the manure are removed. While the 
  horse manure itself is a good fertilizer, the sawdust and wood chips are not
  crop friendly. That's because when wood breaks down in the soil a nitrogen 
  deficiency occurs, which stunts the growth of crops. To combat this problem,
  a nitrogen fertilizer can be added to the soil after horse manure is spread 
  on it; or a nitrogen fertilizer can be added to the horse manure and sawdust
  or wood shavings mixture before being added to the soil.

  A great way to use horse manure is to add it to a compost pile. When adding 
  the manure to a compost pile, any sawdust and wood chips present in the 
  manure
  are okay. They are a good "brown" component to compost. It takes about six 
  months for the manure, sawdust or wood chips, and any other materials added
  to the compost pile to completely break down and become what many people 
  call "black gold."

  To make a compost pile with horse manure as one of the components, layer it 
  with green compost items. Many experts suggest alternating layers of brown 
  and
  green compost items because you need sources of both carbon (brown items) 
  and nitrogen (green items) in your compost pile. Brown items such as horse 
  manure,
  wood chips, and sawdust are great sources of carbon. A few good sources of 
  nitrogen (the green items) for a compost pile include: green leaves, fresh 
  grass
  clippings, the scraps from raw fruits and vegetables, and coffee grounds. 
  Yes, coffee grounds are brown, but for the purposes of compost they are 
  considered
  a green item because they provide the compost pile with nitrogen.

  Because the compost pile is a living thing, it needs water and air to 
  thrive. Your compost pile should be turned each week, adding water as needed 
  to keep
  the compost pile damp. You'll know the process of breaking down has 
  completed when the compost material is dark and crumbly and fresh smelling.

  Once the horse manure and other materials have turned into the "black gold" 
  I mentioned a little earlier in this article, it's finally time to put the 
  black
  gold to good use. While compost isn't officially considered a fertilizer, it 
  contains nutrients that are great for plants and soil. Some good ways to use
  your horse manure compost are: as mulch for garden plants and around 
  landscaping; as a soil improvement component for sandy soil; as a soil 
  improvement
  for clay soil; and as a material to help control erosion.



   

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