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#16
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Horse or Cattle manure???
"B & J" expounded:
At one time my parents used fresh horse manure as a heat source in a hot bed to start seedlings in the spring. A foot and a half deep rectangular hole was dug in the ground in the fall, and it was covered with a south facing wooden structure with an old window on hinges used as a cover. In the spring (middle of March-zone 3) a foot of manure was placed in the bottom of the hole followed by a six inch layer of straw. The seeds were planted in trays and placed on top of the straw. Enough heat was generated by the decomposing manure to keep the structure frost free. On extremely cold nights a horse blanket was put on top of the structure. It was the poor man's way of making a green house. I saw manure-heated greenhouses over in England, and these weren't poor-man's outfits! It was neat, I'll bet Mike Gilmore (I think that's his name), the guy who is renovating that beautiful garden over in England who posts here occasionally has the same thing with his greenhouses. P.S. Well rotted cow manure works great, but I prefer sheep or rabbit manure. Absolutely. I've got lots of rabbit poop available right next door, my neighbor raises rabbits and is very involved in 4H. -- Ann, Gardening in zone 6a Just south of Boston, MA ******************************** |
#17
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Horse or Cattle manure???
Thanks for the help. Yup, I think I will stay with the cattle manure.
The horse manure will have to be brought in and we have cattle. Lori On Sat, 15 Mar 2003 22:58:13 GMT, wrote: Which one is better for my flowers? Lori |
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