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#1
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Good afternoon ,does anyone know of a dairy farm in the leeds area who
would let us collect some cow manure,i want to try a method of using i heard about where you fill a hessian sack and dump it in a barrel for a week and use the liquid as a tomato feed,dairy farms around leeds seem to be fewer and fewer these days,tia |
#2
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On Thu, 25 Mar 2010 07:33:01 -0700 (PDT), bob
gently dipped his quill in the best Quink that money could buy: Good afternoon ,does anyone know of a dairy farm in the leeds area who would let us collect some cow manure,i want to try a method of using i heard about where you fill a hessian sack and dump it in a barrel for a week and use the liquid as a tomato feed,dairy farms around leeds seem to be fewer and fewer these days,tia The modern dairy farms produce very little quality manure but could fill the London Underground with slurry ! Look for a farm that housed beef cattle over the winter, indoors. Ask local butcher ? To be honest, there is a plethora of "feeds" for tomatoes which would be better. Mike P the 1st |
#3
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![]() "bob" wrote in message ... Good afternoon ,does anyone know of a dairy farm in the leeds area who would let us collect some cow manure,i want to try a method of using i heard about where you fill a hessian sack and dump it in a barrel for a week and use the liquid as a tomato feed,dairy farms around leeds seem to be fewer and fewer these days,tia Drive out into the countryside until you see some cows or sheep in a field (sheep muck works just as well) park your car, nip over the fence and collect it from the ground. I well remember as a child our Sunday afternoon trip out in the car with my grandfather to collect sheep droppings for exactly this purpose. You do have to dilute the resulting *tea* though, and it's better started when the weather is a bit warmer. Oh and it takes more than a week of dunking to get it brewing to the correct stinkiness. TBH, I've never known it done with cow pats but hey, why not try? Tina |
#4
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Bigal |
#5
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![]() "bob" wrote in message ... Good afternoon ,does anyone know of a dairy farm in the leeds area who would let us collect some cow manure,i want to try a method of using i heard about where you fill a hessian sack and dump it in a barrel for a week and use the liquid as a tomato feed,dairy farms around leeds seem to be fewer and fewer these days,tia Animal manures can give your plants big problems if the animals have been grazing where weedkiller has been applied. You'd be better off growing your own comfrey, cutting the leaves and putting them in a bucket of water. When the slurry gets really stinky it's ready to dilute and use. someone |
#6
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![]() "someone" wrote in message ... "bob" wrote in message ... Good afternoon ,does anyone know of a dairy farm in the leeds area who would let us collect some cow manure,i want to try a method of using i heard about where you fill a hessian sack and dump it in a barrel for a week and use the liquid as a tomato feed,dairy farms around leeds seem to be fewer and fewer these days,tia Animal manures can give your plants big problems if the animals have been grazing where weedkiller has been applied. You'd be better off growing your own comfrey, cutting the leaves and putting them in a bucket of water. When the slurry gets really stinky it's ready to dilute and use. If you are wary of animal manure to make this delicious brew, you can also use nettles if you haven't any comfrey. But..you do have to wait until it stinks the place out whatever you use.. Tina |
#7
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Is that allowed?
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#8
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![]() "Stu Suds" wrote in message ... Bigal;881413 Wrote: ... or walk on to some common land and collect sheep manure Bigal Is that allowed? Yes, of course it is. Who will stop you? The sheep manure police?? g If there were any sheep manure police my grandfather would have been in prison. Tina |
#9
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On Sat, 27 Mar 2010 17:29:06 -0000, "Christina Websell"
gently dipped his quill in the best Quink that money could buy: "Stu Suds" wrote in message ... Bigal;881413 Wrote: ... or walk on to some common land and collect sheep manure Bigal Is that allowed? Yes, of course it is. Who will stop you? The sheep manure police?? g If there were any sheep manure police my grandfather would have been in prison. Tina Just another two penny worth. In my past dealings with sheep, it was obvious that they were put on this earth to die at every opportunity. If they did not get eaten by maggots at their rear ends, get a massive dose of mastitis, suffer foot rot or lung worm, they would endevour to roll onto their backs to die slowly. It was a continuous routine of worming elixirs and antibotics. No chance of organic poo these days :-) Mike P the 1st |
#10
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![]() "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-03-27 17:29:06 +0000, "Christina Websell" said: "Stu Suds" wrote in message ... Bigal;881413 Wrote: ... or walk on to some common land and collect sheep manure Bigal Is that allowed? Yes, of course it is. Who will stop you? The sheep manure police?? g If there were any sheep manure police my grandfather would have been in prison. Tina But he lived in more sensible times. I am telling you the sober truth when I say that a Devon woman got into some kind of trouble for allowing her dog to take home a stick it had picked up in some privately owned woodland. Honestly. This is stupid. However if you go out into the countryside to pick up sheep muck or a cow pat to make liquid manure it's unlikely you''ll get arrested. - Unless.. there are manure police watching for this very thing, if so you are in real trouble. |
#11
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On 27 Mar, 20:11, "Christina Websell"
wrote: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-03-27 17:29:06 +0000, "Christina Websell" said: "Stu Suds" wrote in message ... Bigal;881413 Wrote: ... or walk on to some common land and collect sheep manure Bigal Is that allowed? Yes, of course it is. *Who will stop you? *The sheep manure police?? g If there were any sheep manure police my grandfather would have been in prison. Tina But he lived in more sensible times. *I am telling you the sober truth when I say that a Devon woman got into some kind of trouble for allowing her dog to take home a stick it had picked up in some privately owned woodland. *Honestly. This is stupid. * However if you go out into the countryside to pick up sheep muck or a cow pat to make liquid manure it's unlikely you''ll get arrested. - Unless.. there are manure police watching for this very thing, if so you are in real trouble.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sounds like a job for the Constabulary Rural Animal Patrol squad better known as the CRAP squad David |
#12
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![]() "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-03-27 20:11:57 +0000, "Christina Websell" said: "Sacha" wrote in message ... On 2010-03-27 17:29:06 +0000, "Christina Websell" said: "Stu Suds" wrote in message ... Bigal;881413 Wrote: ... or walk on to some common land and collect sheep manure Bigal Is that allowed? Yes, of course it is. Who will stop you? The sheep manure police?? g If there were any sheep manure police my grandfather would have been in prison. Tina But he lived in more sensible times. I am telling you the sober truth when I say that a Devon woman got into some kind of trouble for allowing her dog to take home a stick it had picked up in some privately owned woodland. Honestly. This is stupid. However if you go out into the countryside to pick up sheep muck or a cow pat to make liquid manure it's unlikely you''ll get arrested. - Unless.. there are manure police watching for this very thing, if so you are in real trouble. What the above example is saying - and I agree it's stupid - is that you can take nothing from private land without the owner's permission. How does the would-be dung gatherer know the land owner doesn't want to keep that dung for his own composting/fertilising use? -- They don't, but unless the farmer is able to count every little sheep pellet or cow pat passed by a flock of 200 sheep/60 cows or so on a daily basis, and notice there's a few missing, they'll never know, will they? ;-) Tina |
#13
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Christina Websell wrote:
"someone" wrote in message ... "bob" wrote in message ... If you are wary of animal manure to make this delicious brew, you can also use nettles if you haven't any comfrey. But..you do have to wait until it stinks the place out whatever you use.. Tina Yep, I make comfrey and nettle fertilizer. Just make sure it's diluted ![]() -- Pete C London. UK. |
#14
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![]() (pruned where others should have before me) I don't know of a public park or public access estate, which permits dogs to be off the lead; quite reasonably now such bodies are forced to insured for public safety liability, (or fulfill the conditions to receive public funding for wildlife conservation). Almost daily, I see doting irresponsible dog owners ignoring the notices and permitting exactly the kind of dog behaviour which made such restrictions necessary :-(. Janet I don't really think a dog carrying a stick back to its owners car is an out of control dog. It was widely ridiculed as a bit of a Jobsworth action. It could well be that the warden thought it a good chance to make an example of someone but if he needed that, someone allowing their dog to foul without poop-scooping would have been much more to the point. A dog taking a stick home was a pretty silly thing to get upset about, whatever example needed to be set. -- Sacha No such thing as an untrained dog on a lead. It is the person at the other end who is untrained. Mike -- Base for a Botanic visit to the Isle of Wight? www.shanklinmanormews.co.uk |
#15
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Sacha wrote:
Would you know if someone came into your garden and picked 12 of your daffodils? And if you didn't, would it matter or would it be an invasion of your private land? I'd be impressed if anyone could find 12 daffodils on my land! :-( I think we're up to 6 so far ... Loads and loads of bluebell greenery, though |
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