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Its a good ammendment, but you don't want it to be more than 10-15% by volume of your soil.
-------------------- "So it goes."
-Kurt Vonnegut
BlueBerry_Swisher said:I want French fries. No, I want a penis French. Thank you. I'm so excited. I can not contain myself. Now I eat chocolate. It is so good. I'm trying to rub it all over myself. And then lick. Now I need a hot shower. The end.
Great nutrient value. Its just bad news in large quantities.
-------------------- "So it goes."
-Kurt Vonnegut
BlueBerry_Swisher said:I want French fries. No, I want a penis French. Thank you. I'm so excited. I can not contain myself. Now I eat chocolate. It is so good. I'm trying to rub it all over myself. And then lick. Now I need a hot shower. The end.
I try to stay away from mixing too much manure esp animal manure into my soil. I prefer feeding a tea. Relatively fresh horse poo will have a substantial weight of microbes (10%?) the rest is basically partially undigested alfalfa/grass/hay or whatever the horses are eating. I see great benefit from stripping this of the microlife and putting that concentrate into the soil and using amendments like green manure (plant derived compost) and worm castings which contain humus.
I think it's a more efficient way to use manures but with organics everyone's results are a bit different. Some growers use alfalfa meal and such in their soil to provide nutrients (often composted before using) so there's definitely worth while nutrition. I may actually start using alfalfa meal in teas or composted into soil, it seems to be a very worth while investment (50lbs for under 10bucks).