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meggy2 Posted - Feb 20 2012 : 3:52:51 PM
I have LOTS of chicken poo that I have been putting in a wire cage over the winter. How can I use it in my garden this spring. Can I just till it in or do I have to compost it somehow first? Is there a threat of e-coli in my veggies if I use it? Please help this rookie.
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wandaj Posted - May 24 2012 : 11:15:09 AM
Thanks Barb, looking forward to a reply.
FieldsofThyme Posted - Mar 14 2012 : 11:35:37 AM
We compost our chicken poo for a year or more, turning it often. When it's black, we use it on our garden, especially around the new fruit trees and bushes.

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soapmommy60543 Posted - Mar 09 2012 : 1:42:24 PM
We have pet bunnies. When we clean out their litterboxes, the litter and "beans" go into a kettle, then out to the garden. Straight onto the soil. BUT you do have to be careful because this stuff is sooooo high in Nitrogen that it can burn your plants. In the summer, we make sure to sprinkle the droppings sparingly around whatever is getting a boost that day - our trees, the flowerbeds, the vegies in the garden. Also, anything leftover goes into the compost pile. In the winter, the whole kettle of bunny beans goes straight out onto the dirt. It gets worked into the soil with a good dose of compost in the spring.

What's really nice is the "cycle" of it all - we use the bunny beans to fertilize our garden, which feeds us and the bunnies. They, in return, make fertilizer for us. Plus they are so stinking cute!

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meggy2 Posted - Mar 04 2012 : 3:36:00 PM
Wanda:
I have a friend with 5 alpacas and she has people out for teas at her farm. She has a beautiful flower and vegetable garden, the best I've ever seen, and she uses her alpaca poo to fertilize it. She's in Florida right now, but when she comes back, I'll ask her how whe uses it and how long she composts.
wandaj Posted - Mar 04 2012 : 11:32:23 AM
What about alpaca poo? I heard it was good for compost. Has any one ever used it yet?
meggy2 Posted - Feb 28 2012 : 3:18:03 PM
Kris:
THanks for the info my DH thought we could use it in the garden this spring and till it in before planting.
Barb
kristin sherrill Posted - Feb 27 2012 : 7:19:51 PM
We have lots of chicken houses around here. They are cleaned out every 6-8 weeks. All that manure and feathers and chicken parts goes directly onto hay fields and corn and other fields. I think when the chickens scratch around and keep it composted themselves it's ok but not directly ON the plants. Maybe worked into the soil. I use my chicken poo and straw and scraps that they have composted for me on my gardens. But it's been really composted good by the chickens. I hope I am making sense. I also use my goat poo around the plants.

Kris

Happiness is simple.
meggy2 Posted - Feb 24 2012 : 2:27:00 PM
Thanks for the info. The bottom layer is straw and poo. Maybe I will use that. My DH is building a compost cooker out of a 55 gal drum. I understand it helps it to cook faster this way.
mudpony farmgirl Posted - Feb 24 2012 : 08:14:26 AM
Barb-
From what I understand it needs to compost for awhile to be beneficial to the soil, but maybe the bottom layer would be okay to use by now?
meggy2 Posted - Feb 22 2012 : 4:17:06 PM
Laurie: Thanks for the info.
laurentany Posted - Feb 21 2012 : 06:58:10 AM
As far as I know chicken poo has to compost for 1 year before you can use it in your garden. I am no expert, but this is what I do- just to be safe. Rabbit poo is the only poo I know of that can go right into the garden beds and does not need to be composted. Even horse manure needs to compost for at least 6 months. Good Luck!

~Laurie
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