are manures hot?

aeviaanah

Well-Known Member
i made a mix a couple months ago consisting of mainly steer manure and chicken manure. other ingredients included perlite, vermiculite, and peat moss. someone on RIU once told me this is a 'hot' mix. i think what they were talking about is....that it is hard on the plants because the soil warms up. can anyone clarify this? i am having plant problems with two different strains. not sure if it is soil related or something else. would this mix be high in nutrients? i have fed a couple times? possibly i am over fertilizing. what do you think?
 

georgi345

Active Member
"hot" means that the substance in question is super-abundantly rich in nutrients (most commonly N, in your case particularly from the chicken manure at 1.1-.8-.5) to the point where it is likely to burn your plants which, from your pic, it looks as though is beginning to happen.
:(

an all water diet until new growth shows no continued signs of burn might help here...

if it gets really bad then you'll probably want to flush and/or transplant.

ohsogreen gives a great breakdown of various manure n-p-k values here ==> https://www.rollitup.org/1108755-post3.html

cheers and good luck!
-g
:leaf:
 

NOWitall

Active Member
aye

too many nutes in there.

chicken and steer manure both need to be composted for like 6 weeks before you can use em, even then you got to cut em with something and rebalance nute content

and manure, which i consider a fertalizer, should never be used as the primary component of a growing soil.

although my dad tuaght me a meathod the old timers used. where you dug a hole with a post hole digger, about 2-3 feet deep, fill with 1inch manure, 1 inch hay,1 inch soil. repeat untill hole is full. ive never tried it, but he swore by it.
i wouldnt mind trying, but diggin a hole around here is like trying to fuck a hole in a brick wall, you just end up sore, and bleeding from places blood shouldnt come from.

somewhere in RIU there a big page of soil recipes
 
Top