Luckymax
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Very excited to be here. 3rd time growing. I'm in NE GA. I have unlimited access to safe, aged horse manure that's been composted with veggies from an organic farm. Please, give me all of your advice. <3
My advice is don't use it.Very excited to be here. 3rd time growing. I'm in NE GA. I have unlimited access to safe, aged horse manure that's been composted with veggies from an organic farm. Please, give me all of your advice. <3
Would it make a difference if I was the one collecting and mixing all of it? We use zero chemicals out here, for what it's worth. Our local university has several extension offices to get it tested. I'm trying to get as close to my desired medium via natural applications and native soil.My advice is don't use it.
Also running landraces mostly. Long term goal here is to have plants adapted to the climate and region. Tons of RnD going into the next few years.My advice is don't use it.
are you using in containers...or in the ground?Very excited to be here. 3rd time growing. I'm in NE GA. I have unlimited access to safe, aged horse manure that's been composted with veggies from an organic farm. Please, give me all of your advice. <3
Ground ideally, but I'm going to run some some pots for variablesare you using in containers...or in the ground?
Ground ideally, but I'm going to run some some pots for variables
My one pile is 4 years old and I have 3 windrows 6ft high by 6ft wide by 100ft.long that have been sitting for 3 years with vegetables mixed in. We age the manure with everything culled from the vegetable fields of our organic farm. It's pretty nice stuff. It even gets tilled back into the fields and the farm is usda certified. We try to take care of everything in a sustainable and organic way. I have a tractor so I can turn and move the pile as needed.You have to decompose the manure under straw for a winter. And it will be hot with nitrogen and phosphorus. It can be used of course. But you're still mixing in soil. So it's just easier to use a soil with wormcastings. But if you're so inclined mixing hot composted manure with food scrap manure should work. But most people don't use manure.
Then yeah. You should be able to grow with it. Without any issues. Just have to water it and see what it does. Then experiment with amendments and mixtures. Like perlite or sphagnum and such.My one pile is 4 years old and I have 3 windrows 6ft high by 6ft wide by 100ft.long that have been sitting for 3 years with vegetables mixed in. We age the manure with everything culled from the vegetable fields of our organic farm. It's pretty nice stuff. It even gets tilled back into the fields and the farm is usda certified. We try to take care of everything in a sustainable and organic way. I have a tractor so I can turn and move the pile as needed.