manure?

ram21r

Member
So my outdoor grow for the season is over and i want to get my manure into the ground now so it has time to saturate in and ph down a lil. Was thinking about changing types of manures for next grow. Does all manure work the same because my feed milll has this mushrooom manure that the say is the "bees knees" and was wondering what others oppions is on this? Thanks in advance.
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
I find that pure composted cow patties taken off the cow feild works for everything. So take the older ones not the new ones. I sported a plastic carrying tub with carrying handles on both ends and a flat shovel. I tied a rope to one end of the tub so I could sled it through the cow feild. This manure still has to be debuged and further processed.
 

Smidge34

Well-Known Member
I really like barnyard horse manure that's been pissed on lol. All it needs is two weeks to cook in a pile and your good. You do want to make sure they aren't currently worming their horses if you like earthworms.

Rabbit manure is good also and ready to use from the get go.
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
So my outdoor grow for the season is over and i want to get my manure into the ground now so it has time to saturate in and ph down a lil. Was thinking about changing types of manures for next grow. Does all manure work the same because my feed milll has this mushrooom manure that the say is the "bees knees" and was wondering what others oppions is on this? Thanks in advance.
the best way to answer that is this, uncomposted you ONLY want "pebbles" meaning alpaca, llama, rabbit, deer, etc.
Plops need to be composted. Horse, cow, chicken, bird, etc.
Statistically speaking the highest nutrients are found in rabbit, followed by alpaca/llama manures.
 

Dan Drews

Well-Known Member
Despite my avatar, I do have to recommend against using bear scat. Animals that eat meat (bears eat anything and everything) potentially excrete parasites and diseases that could be harmful to us humans.

That's about all the shit I know.
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
View attachment 3542110

Stole this information from http://www.plantea.com/manure.htm. Simple, concise poop on poop. Check it out.

EDIT.. Not quite sure what Diary Cows are, maybe it's lonely cows that have no one to speak to about their inner most hopes, feelings, and disappointments. Must not be California cows.
dairy cows are the black an white (probably more colors and breeds as well) cows used only for milking....
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
dairy cows are the black an white (probably more colors and breeds as well) cows used only for milking....
and I wouldnt necessarily want their shit these days, chemicals fkn loaded into their feed I am sure
 

Smidge34

Well-Known Member
the best way to answer that is this, uncomposted you ONLY want "pebbles" meaning alpaca, llama, rabbit, deer, etc.
Plops need to be composted. Horse, cow, chicken, bird, etc.
Statistically speaking the highest nutrients are found in rabbit, followed by alpaca/llama manures.
Yep, but I put horse "apples" somewhere in between pebbles and piles and that's why they don't need much composting.
 

Dan Drews

Well-Known Member
dairy cows are the black an white (probably more colors and breeds as well) cows used only for milking....
The chart says Diary Cows, NOT Dairy Cows, hence the attempt at bovine humor. It may be hard for the lysdexic to see the difference.
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
Yeah my eyes and mind dont mind the misspelled shit, out of order shit, etc. I just read it all the same. You wrote diary, I read dairy :)
 

Dan Drews

Well-Known Member
Yeah my eyes and mind dont mind the misspelled shit, out of order shit, etc. I just read it all the same. You wrote diary, I read dairy :)
Yep, I'm pretty sure I read it at least 3 times and posted it before I noticed it said 'Diary Cows'. Another one I see all the time is when weather services warn us about 'gutsy' winds instead of gusty winds.
My guess is there aren't too many 'stoners' in proofreading jobs.:eyesmoke:
 
Top