Without a doubt, goat manure is THE best form of adding nutrients to the soil of a vegetable garden, without burning the root systems. An elderly farmer I once knew suggested it. The method of adding it during the preparation time while turning the soil has worked for our family since 1976. You just need to go clean someone's goat house if you don't have a herd!
Yes, it is a great fertilizer to your grass. but it is better if you put it on your lawn when its dry and not fresh because it works better that way.
yes, it has natural organic materials that any soil will thrive on. but your neighbours will hate you.
Chicken manure, even desiccated, is hotter (higher nitrogen content) than horse manure. While it can help plants grow bigger faster, it can also burn young plants and kill them.
It's okay for somethings but it's quite acidic. It's not okay for vegetables, it's okay for flowers though.
It makes good fertilizer but if used in a veggie garden you will get surprise weeds.
People sell it to use in their gardens.
Horse manure is a good fertilizer, however, their are other animal manure that is better, such as cow manure. Horse manure works fine too though.but the best to use is elephant manure.
No if you put a ligh layer over the pasture then no, this is actually extremly benificial to the grass (for horse manure is great fertilizer).
Too much green grass?
Any time really, you just have to wait a while. Horse manure is not like cow manure. You can't use it for soil right away.
Yes and yes. The horse manure should be well rotted before use as fresh manure can burn stems and roots. Only if there is E.coli,which is unlikely, in the manure is there any risk.
The dominant odor of horse manure is ammonia.
Horse manure needs to be composted for about one year before it is safe to place around plants. You compost manure in mush the same way you would anything else. Once it reaches the consistency of dirt then it's safe to use. Most people seem to have their own 'recipes' for composts.
I know you soak horse manure in water...then use the liquid as a natural fertilizer...but how long?
horse dung IS manure
Many people used composted horse manure to grow gardens.
Yes; and they grow naturally in horse manure anyway.
You could sift your horse to a nearby area with dirt and shift your horse daily to a grassed area for 1 and a half hours and then back to the dirt area. Then it minimises the chance of your grassed area dying it and will reduce the killed grass. Also fertilise your grass daily and put horse manure on the affected areas.