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?? horse manure for my garden!
I got some horse manure off of someone from craigslist in my area =P and I was wondering what the "soil to manure ratio" woud be for that? Also, I am planning on planting veggies and flowers in my garden, so does anyone have any advice for that in regards to the poo? I'm in zone 7 so what are everyone's suggestions on what I should plant? Thanks
Sounds great! but be sure to put the horse manure into your *compost pile* first. Unless it's fully composted, the horse manure will contain weed and other plant seeds and may also be too rich in nitrogen, thus 1) sending up competition for your plants and 2) stifling the plants you *do* want due to the excess nitrogen.
But once it's composted and the compost is added to the soil, you'll be a very happy gardener.
Cynthia H.
Sunset Zone 17, USDA Zone 9
But once it's composted and the compost is added to the soil, you'll be a very happy gardener.
Cynthia H.
Sunset Zone 17, USDA Zone 9
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Do you have any idea how long that manure was piled up before you got it? If it has fresh manure in it you'll want to compost it for several months. If it's last year's pile it can go right on the garden.
Any kind of good mature compost can be put down on the garden up to several inches thick and tilled in or left on the surface.
Any kind of good mature compost can be put down on the garden up to several inches thick and tilled in or left on the surface.
I found a former colleague of mine who has horses and subsequently a large pile of manure. I dug from the bottom and piled it in my raised beds. The more the merrier since it's all composted. I even made a bed in the fall with just the composted manure with layers of seaweed (lasagna style). I don't think too much compost will hurt the plants any.
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Thanks for bringing that up applestar. The original poster may want to ask the manure donor what they are feeding the horses and whether any herbicides were used, and if so which.
I need to write down the name of that nasty persistent one, I can never remember it when I need it.
Edit: Picloram, clopyralid and others in that class.
https://orange.ces.ncsu.edu/files/library/68/Herbicide%20Carryover.pdf
I need to write down the name of that nasty persistent one, I can never remember it when I need it.
Edit: Picloram, clopyralid and others in that class.
https://orange.ces.ncsu.edu/files/library/68/Herbicide%20Carryover.pdf
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[img]https://i1268.photobucket.com/albums/jj565/ericmgilson/2012-02-28_12-27-35_704.jpg[/img]
[img]https://i1268.photobucket.com/albums/jj565/ericmgilson/2012-02-28_12-27-25_657.jpg[/img]
I just got this paid them 5 bucks to put it in the trialer
The person said it has been stilling for 2 months or so. 95% is fine like sawdust and dense.
[img]https://i1268.photobucket.com/albums/jj565/ericmgilson/2012-02-28_12-27-25_657.jpg[/img]
I just got this paid them 5 bucks to put it in the trialer
The person said it has been stilling for 2 months or so. 95% is fine like sawdust and dense.
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Thanks for your feedback so far everyone. All ten horses were fed grains, grass, produce, etc. in their own grazing area; no herbicides. Thank goodness. =) The owner said that he and his wife use it as well for their gardening. He also mentioned that it had been sitting for awhile and was already mostly composted. My boyfriend is helping me further compost it in a large space at his mom's house. Yours looks great GardenGnome.
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Lol I got 2 trialer full my wife said holy s#%t.
I said yup I have one spot 15 by 25 then another maybe 15 by 15 then one last one the biggest maybe 40 by 40. So I need all the poo I can get.
Only cost me some starter plants and 20 bucks.
maybe ill put some in my wifes 15 by 10 sunflower patch she's going to do.
I said yup I have one spot 15 by 25 then another maybe 15 by 15 then one last one the biggest maybe 40 by 40. So I need all the poo I can get.
Only cost me some starter plants and 20 bucks.
maybe ill put some in my wifes 15 by 10 sunflower patch she's going to do.
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Just be darn sure the stuff is well composted. I've used it for many years and had been very careful about hot composting first. However, a few years ago I jumped the gun by using some horse manure directly from the source that looked like mature compost. In retrospect, it was a huge mistake. I introduced a plethora of weed seeds and now, every year, I spend many hours reflecting on the error of my ways!
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