MAKE THE MOST OF THE MANURE
Recycling animal waste for fertilization, composting, spreading and nitrogen loss and groundwater runoff.
Treat your garden to a helping of nutrient-rich,
natural fertilizer by learning how to ...
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Are you aware that livestock animals in the United States
produce as much as two billion tons of manure a
year? And did you also know that the fertilizer value,
alone, of all this "waste" is close to $10
billion? And that figure doesn't even take into account the
worth of the approximately 500 million tons
of humus-building organic matter that's also
contained in the excrement!
Unfortunately, a lot of the potential agricultural
value of manure is lost or wasted ... by either
careless handling and storage or inefficient distribution.
However, with proper management, it's possible to
put back into the soil about 70% of the nitrogen
... 75% of the phosphorus ... and close to 80%
of the potassium found in livestock feed!
A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Farmers have known about the earth-enriching potential
of manure for nearly as long as humanity has known
about agriculture. Probably the oldest surviving reference
to the use of animal leavings in horticulture is
found in Mesopotamian clay tablets dating back to about
2000 B.C. Somewhat later, Marcus Terentius Varro-a Roman
scholar and writer of the first century B.C.-noted
that he considered thrush leavings to be the most potent
of all manures ... and later still, in the first
century A.D., Lucius Columella concurred with his
predecessor about the superior quality of this
songbird's droppings. In his book De Re Rustica
("On Farming"), Columella went on to note the excellence
of pigeon and chicken manure, as well.
Today, gardening experts generally agree that of
all the widely available animal wastes, those
of poultry are the richest. But these modern-day
commentators often differ about which manure is
second best: Some say horse, while others claim
cow.
RICH OR POOR, HOT OR COLD?
Before we take a closer look at which natural fertilizer
does rate next after poultry droppings, it's
important to understand just what distinguishes a fine
"brand" of manure from an ordinary one. Basically,
a potent variety will be rich (high in nutrients)
and hot (quick to rot). The economic value
of a particular kind will depend upon the amount
of nitrogen it contains (phosphorus and potassium
content are important as well) ... and upon the
fermentation it's undergone.
The nitrogen found in a specific animal's waste will vary
with the critter's diet ... age ... and
workload. For example, since seeds are generally
high in nitrogen and grasses low, grain-eaters tend to
produce richer manure than do hay-munchers. And mature
beasts, whose bodies are fully grown and thus require fewer
nutrients, excrete more nitrogen than do rapidly growing
youngsters. Finally, livestock that's raised for meat will
require less nitrogen than will animals reared for milk ...
so steer dung, for instance, is more potent than droppings
from dairy cows.
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