I have a question about composting manure and bedding. I have a smallish coop, so I use a fair amount of Stall Dry. Does anyone know whether this product contains chemicals that would survive composting and be harmful to plants in the garden? Thanks for any reply.
Mark
Gosh that sounds good carugoman! I'd do it tomorrow if I thought they weren't poisonous, as there's probably several pounds on an old oak here. Wish I knew someone who could identify.
I saw that magazine at Border's too jeaucamom! And have you seen the pics of Hillary getting out of cars with no underwear?!!!! Don't know what this world is coming to!!
Well, from the astrophysics point of view, there is no new matter that wasn't present at the Big Bang. Matter just changes to a different form. We are all made of stardust. When Ladybird left her previous form, she just went on to a different form(s). Some parts of her became one thing...
Actually there are three components to bird waste. There's the most solid part which is feces, the whitish creamy-colored pasty part which are the urates, and a bit of clear or yellowish fluid which is urine. In fact, all birds HAVE to have urine because it serves the crucial role of flushing...
i'm seeing less algae since I started using apple cider vinegar and a clove of peeled garlic in the waterer (things I do for the digestion/circulation/immune system of the chickens, but I think it keeps down algae/bacterial growth too, which is also good for the health of the chickens, right...
Between the Interpol, FBI and CIA checks to buy lye , and the high cost of bulk oils, I figured I'd leave it up to the pro! Can't wait to try your soaps!
Mark
Just want to introduce one thought I'm not sure you had; I'm certainly not trying to start a heated debate of any sort. I don't think anyone is advocating finding the most vengeful, painful, torturous way of disposing of a predator. I can at least say I certainly wasn't. However, in some...
I haven't done this, but if I was mad enough I might (and what has happened to you guys qualifies). Trap it in the Hav-a-heart trap, then submerge the whole thing in water and drown it.
'dun' and not 'Dunn'. It's an English word that means a color combination of drab or grey contrasted with some other color. It's not a proper name and doesn't apply to specific breed. So in fact, the rooster in the pic IS 'red-dun' regardless of what breed he is.
Just a word to the wise on the cabbage head. I guess it's 'theoretically' possible for the string to get twisted around a neck. I always set up 'tetherball' when I'm out there or closeby to keep an eye out. :-)