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WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!!
It's 1:15 A.M.
Whatcha doing, roosting for the night with the birds???????![]()
....well then, goodnight in that case.
So, I am torn between going where I KNOW it is, and supporting my local mom n pop shop....and waiting.
On compost, I'm more like RaZ in that I don't follow the conventional rules. A lot of ours gets turned in immediately. The thing is raw material isn't what burns plants, an overabundance of it is what burns them. Spread it out, mix it in. Nova, I wouldn't get rid of your rabbit and duck stuff. Mix it all together with your chicken stuff, the materials you rake up around your yard, shredded paper if you need more carbon. It's all great nutrition for your garden, why waste it?
When I clean the coop today everything is going to get dumped in the garden. I agree with Olive, as long as it is worked into the garden soil thoroughly, it will decompose fine and won't burn your plants.
Your chicken's manure may carry all kinds of nasties with it. The most notable being that dreaded E.coli the media likes to report on so much. Things to remember though:
1) Most backyard compost piles don't get hot enough to kill E.coli (and a host of other nasties) anyway.
2) Most veggies are not in direct contact with the soil.
3) Your chickens only have one exit. Every time you bring an egg into the house, you're carting in microscopic bits of feces and everything inside of it. How many of you with kids let them collect the eggs? How many of them then touch their faces, mouthes, surfaces in your house, etc? Are they dead yet?![]()
All of the recalls and reports on food borne illness have people particularly on edge about their food these days. Give your immune systems some credit, the very fact that you're living with and your children are growing up with livestock and garden-fresh veggies predisposes you to having a stronger one than most people. Studies show farm kids are less likely to be ill and suffer from asthma than city kids. The quantity and variety of pathogens they're exposed to day-in and day-out is a good thing.
The pigeon that I lost the other day is back!
What yarn shop to you go to?![]()
No you are not reading it right. It an attempt at humor that evidently fell short. I was implying that a senior moment had me agreeing and a second flare up of senility made me forget what we were even talking about.
Just came back from TSC where I succumbed to the call of some ISA brown pullets. When the saleswoman got them out of the stock tank she asked if it was okay if one was a week old. I said sure but make them all week olds.