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A Steaming Pile

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  • A Steaming Pile

    I've been doing a happy dance for the last few weeks as a wonderful person with two horses has begged me to remove all the horse muck from her paddocks so we now go once a week and fill up our trailer and bring it back to heap up here. The horses are grass and hay fed only, and live outside so the muck is picked off the field and only has a little hay mixed in with it.

    But becaue it is fresh(ish) can I -

    Put unrotted manure around dormant fruit trees and bushes on the grounds that it'll be rotted by the time the plants becomes active again?

    Heap it on the veg beds as they become emptied, again even though it isn't very rotted, ready for the spring? I hope this is a yes, becaue I have ...

    And indeed how long does it take to break down as reading the internet suggests anything from 6 weeks to many, many months. I've never had access to anything but the bagged or the occasional load of very well rotted stuff before. Hence my ignorance
    Le Sarramea https://jgsgardening.blogspot.com/

  • #2
    I think horse manure is less potent than many manures. There is a vid on you tube of a guy growing carrots on heaps of fresh horse manure. So I guess its pretty safe.
    photo album of my garden in my profile http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/gra...my+garden.html

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    • #3
      From looking on the web, horse poo is quite weak in comparison to others. It should be broken down 3-4 months, so if you applied it now and do not plant till spring you should be fine. Just dig it in and wash your veg
      I grow 70% for us and 30% for the snails, then the neighbours eats them

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      • #4
        just be sure that no nasty selective weed killers have been used on the paddock.. We don't want another disenfrenchisee

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        • #5
          Thanks guys!

          No nothing nasty used on it, AP Lovely story in fact. The grass was knee high just before the horses were due to arrive so the neighbouring farmer offered to cut it for hay and bale it. Fair enough my friend thought - solves her problem, he does the work so he gets the hay. As he left with the hay he let her know that he'd drop the first round back for her when she arrived with the horses and then, as she didn't have storage space, to just let him know as and when she'd be needing the rest. I love it here!!
          Le Sarramea https://jgsgardening.blogspot.com/

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