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Composting Horse Manure Will Make an Excellent Garden

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Having animals like horses can be a lot of fun but after awhile you'll have quite a pile of manure, which not only looks unattractive but can be smelly as well. If you've had your horses for a few years, you can look inside the pile of manure and you may be surprised to find some very black "dirt". This means that you've been composting horse manure without even realizing it. Even without your help, your horse manure will compost on its own. However, when it composts on its own like this, you'll have a lot of unpleasant odors around the area as well as promoting flies and parasites that are harmful to your horse or horses. Not to mention, composting requires a lot of warm temperatures to be successful.

In large manure piles, the center may be composting, but not the sides because of the lack of warm temperature and mixture. Composting horse manure can eliminate a lot of these problems while giving you some excellent soil for your gardening needs. Many people pay a lot of money to buy horse manure for their gardens and you're lucky enough to have it there giving you the opportunity for composting horse manure for your own needs.

There are many reasons for composting horse manure besides the obvious, which is to reduce the odors and eliminate parasites. It is also a great way to lessen the size of your pile each year. You can also sell the compost soil you make by composting horse manure on your farm. Composted soil is a lot more sellable than straight smelly horse manure. People are going to be a lot more willing to pay good money for black rich dirt than they are for a pile of smelly messy manure. It's also much better fertilizer for your flower bed or vegetable garden.

The soil you'll get from composting horse manure will improve the aeration in your ground as well as retain water better. If you've ever tried to grow certain crops in hard soil, you'll know exactly what I mean. Compost from composting horse manure is soft and drains well while it retains the water. Another advantage of composting horse manure is the many nutrients you'll be spreading on your field or putting in your garden. Each year your soil will be better and better for growing crops. The benefits of composting horse manure are high and numerous. A composting pile consisting of horse manure and leaves, hay, sawdust, etc works well for your project and will give you some excellent soil for years to come.





Other Red Worm Composting Fattening related Articles

How To Build A Composting Toilet
Composting Leaves
Composting Horse Manure
Composting Plants
Sheet Composting

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Red Worm Composting Fattening News

Students taking part in classroom composting - Standard Freeholder


Students taking part in classroom composting
Standard Freeholder
Rose O'Dair feeds the composting worms in the "worm hotel" in the junior kindergarten and senior kindergarten mixed class at Gladstone Public School in Cornwall, Ontario. The vermicomposting was made possible by a grant by the TD Friends of The ...

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Eagle-Vail's got it 'growing on' - Vail Daily News


Eagle-Vail's got it 'growing on'
Vail Daily News
Greens include: Bruckman will follow the compost workshop with hands-on vermicompost bin building activity for $35. Sign up in advance to reserve and take home a vermicompost bin to compost in your own kitchen. Box includes: 1 pound red wiggler worms, ...

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Valley community calendar - Valley Courier


Valley community calendar
Valley Courier
Worm composting demonstrations will be at 1 pm Contact Jan at 587-5529. CREEDE — Friends of Creede Repertory Theatre invite residents to a 2012 membership party on Saturday, May 19, from 4-6 pm at The Antlers Restaurant & Lodge in Creede.

and more »

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Porter Library's new garden blossoming - The Free Lance-Star (blog)


The Free Lance-Star (blog)

Porter Library's new garden blossoming
The Free Lance-Star (blog)
Children also helped the library christen its new community garden with a bucket of compost worms, which will help keep the soil loose and healthy. Branch manager Martha Hutzel revealed the squirmy red worms, to mixed reactions.

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Gladstone Kindergarten students start vermicomposting in the classroom - OurHometown.ca


OurHometown.ca

Gladstone Kindergarten students start vermicomposting in the classroom
OurHometown.ca
The project includes a wooden worm hotel that came complete with a starting colony of approximately a ¼ pound of red wiggler worms. The students enjoy feeding the colony every 2 or 3 days with organic waste that they set aside after their healthy snack ...

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