Manure for nitrogen

   / Manure for nitrogen #11  
Chicken manure is very high in nitrogen and can burn plants but never had any problem with horse manure just weeds.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #12  
Holly Cow - if I had something that nice - I'd only be running flower petals thru it. Andy - do you have any idea how old it is?

Early 50's I think. Steel must have been scarce, or they were just cheap. Finally thought I'd found a decent pc in it where the main wheel bearings (long worn out and gone) mounted, only to find what I thought was 1/4" was really two 1/8" pcs welded on the edges together....unbelievable.....would have thought the labor to do that would be more than if they'd just bought 1/4" plate ! The cross pieces underneath were simply folded sheet metal....most of which had rusted away long ago. I replaced with actual steel channel. I guarantee ya the thing weighed several hundred pounds more when it left my shop compared to the day it rolled out the Oliver factory.

By the way....I didn't need it, just rebuilt it for fun. Sold it to a horse farm in Georgia, they drove all the way up here and got it.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #13  
Hair is a source of nitrogen, people have cheated at Ag Shows using it in soil to grow monster tomatoes (that I have heard are almost inedible).
Your local barber may donate some off the floor.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #14  
One man's weed is another man's horse forage. I question if you are going to get anything that you don't want. You are looking to get a horse pasture, not a vegetable garden; the only thing that's in the horse manure is going to be what they have already eaten.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #15  
So we have an 18 acre horse farm. So I have plenty of horse manure. I have an area I need to till up to get rid of the clover that has taken over and plant some grass. I know I need to get soil tested but the fact clover took over everything means I have to add nitrogen.


Clover does not mean you need nitrogen. Clover absorbs nitrogen from the air and stores it in nodules on its roots. When the clover dies, it releases the nitrogen into the soil, where other plants, such as grass are able to utilize it. Around here, clover is a very desirable legume.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen
  • Thread Starter
#16  
So we have an 18 acre horse farm. So I have plenty of horse manure. I have an area I need to till up to get rid of the clover that has taken over and plant some grass. I know I need to get soil tested but the fact clover took over everything means I have to add nitrogen.

Clover does not mean you need nitrogen. Clover absorbs nitrogen from the air and stores it in nodules on its roots. When the clover dies, it releases the nitrogen into the soil, where other plants, such as grass are able to utilize it. Around here, clover is a very desirable legume.

The pasture mix I planted was something like 3% clover. It absolutely took over one section and choked all else out. Yes I realize it fixes nitrogen but everything I have read says if it dominates you are light on nitrogen.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #17  
The pasture mix I planted was something like 3% clover. It absolutely took over one section and choked all else out. Yes I realize it fixes nitrogen but everything I have read says if it dominates you are light on nitrogen.
You probably should talk to your Extension office, and get a soil test as you stated in your first post. You also might want to check this bulletin out about problems in horses caused by one type of clover which is common in forage mixes, ( alsike clover ) as it may apply to you. Purdue Forage Information
 
   / Manure for nitrogen
  • Thread Starter
#18  
You probably should talk to your Extension office, and get a soil test as you stated in your first post. You also might want to check this bulletin out about problems in horses caused by one type of clover which is common in forage mixes, ( alsike clover ) as it may apply to you. Purdue Forage Information

Interesting. I値l have to check the mixture. I have actually talked to the guy that wrote that article about proper forage to plant. We also had one yellow weed growing predominatly in our property and had trouble killing it. He pointed me in the right direction. Finally hit with roundup and 24d and then tilled it under. Little bastard is coming back in some areas.

EDIT- Does not look like we have that kind of clover.
 
   / Manure for nitrogen #19  
My experience with fresh and year old horse manure in shavings is that it is not fully decomposed. Even though the pile may be steaming when you spread it, it still has a way to go. Once it is mixed in after spreading, it sucks the nitrogen out of the soil to finish decomposing. In the garden you see this in leafy vegetables (tomatoes) without fruit. We always have 3 piles going, - fresh, -working on 2 years, - working on 3 years. After 3 years it is nice, dark compost.

We usually throw some pumpkin seeds or squash on the newer pile and they grow fine. No weeding needed.
We'll stick potatoes in the two and 3 yr old piles and they grow fine.When we till in the fall, the manure goes onto the garden.


- using herbicide anywhere ? Why? Just adding a poison to the dirt that kills beneficial bugs and birds. - Control weeds by mowing before they flower, Works well.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

JCB 270T T4 SKID STEER (A52705)
JCB 270T T4 SKID...
2018 JCB Truss Jib Telescopic Hydraulic Boom (A53421)
2018 JCB Truss Jib...
2025 GIYI GY-ZWB Hydraulic Backhoe Arm with Tooth Bucket Mini Skid Steer Attachment (A55787)
2025 GIYI GY-ZWB...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2019 Dodge Durango AWD SUV (A55758)
2019 Dodge Durango...
 
Top