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Composting Horse Manure Presentation at 2004 Rocky Mountain Horse Expo Kathy Corwin Doesken, CSU. Whether you have one horse. . . or many horses. You Need to Manage Your Manure!. Maximize the agronomic and economic benefits of manure while reducing adverse environmental consequences
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Composting Horse Manure Presentation at 2004 Rocky Mountain Horse Expo Kathy Corwin Doesken, CSU
You Need to Manage Your Manure! • Maximize the agronomic and economic benefits of manure while reducing adverse environmental consequences • Minimize manure problems with flies, odor, dust, parasite reinfection, spread of insect–borne diseases, fire danger, AND improve the view
What can I do with manure beside apply it to farm land? • Make compost!
Why Try Composting? • Reduces volume of manure about 50% • Minimizes pathogen, weed, odor, and insect problems • Stabilizes nitrogen and phosphorus compounds which avoids water pollution • Produces a useful and saleable soil amendment • Retain control of your waste stream
Manure is a resource! This costs you money and wastes a valuable resource. Consider other options.
What You Need to Compost • Manure, waste feed, bedding • Convenient and environmentally appropriate site (away from wells, water) • Source of water to wet compost • Equipment or hand tools • Knowledge of composting principles
METHODS OF COMPOSTING • Active windrows: this presentation • Passive windrows: CSU fact sheet* • Worms : CSU fact sheet* • Bins *some fact sheets here today; online: www.ext.colostate.edu
Composting is the managed,biological, oxidation process that converts heterogeneousorganic matter into a more homogeneous, fine-particledhumus-like material. from FIELD GUIDE TO ON-FARM COMPOSTING
MANAGED: what YOU do! • Provide carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) in 30:1 ratio • Provide oxygen for oxidation process at 5-20% • Provide water to keep moisture at 50%
BIOLOGICAL:what microorganisms (MO’s) do • Many species of bacteria and fungi metabolize the C and N to grow and multiply, using oxygen and water in the process • Composting is farming MO’s, which are present in the soil!
OXIDATION • “In the presence of air” • Used by MO in respiration • Oxygen is in pore space in compost windrow • Use bulking material and turn to maintain pore space for air
Leaves make ideal bulking material for horse manure; so does most bedding
Heterogeneous Organic Matter • Horse manure • Bedding • Waste hay • Spoiled feed or grain • Leaves and grass clippings • Kitchen scraps
Heterogenous material: leaves and manure very visible
Homogeneous (homo=same) Organic Matter, Fine-Particled, Humus-Like Material • COMPOST!!!!!!!!
Choose a site • Mowed area, smooth, slightly sloping • Near manure source • Near water tap BUT at least 100ft, from “waters of the state” or wells • Control run-on and run-off • Table for area needed in fact sheet on active windrows
BUILDING THE WINDROW • Layer manure loosely with bulking material, adding water to 50% • Work end view into rectangular shape like loaf of bread, top flattened • Add new material at one end only
Add plenty of water until pile is as damp as a wrung-out sponge. Composting organisms need moisture to work.
MONITOR WINDROW • Check temperature with compost thermometer (www.reotemp.com) or your hand • Heat is an indicator of biological activity of microorganisms • Observe heating cycle: temperatures increase then decrease several times • After a decrease, turn windrow to aerate; add water if needed
Height and width of windrow depends on equipment! HOT AREA 4-6’ tall - 6 - 10 feet wide (?) END VIEW OF COMPOST WINDROW
The temperature will rise to over 140º in a newly built pile, which will kill most weed seeds and pathogens.
Continued Monitoring… • After turning, monitor heat cycle again • Turn when temperature decreases • Check water; Add if necessary • Repeat turnings until temperature ceases to rise (about 4 turning cycles)
Variations on Windrow Composting Bins Passive Aeration Worms
CURING PHASE • When temperatures cease rising, mesophilic (mid-temperature) MO’s take over to finish process • Keep windrow moist, less than 50% • Takes 1-2 months • Compost becomes homogenous, dark
Why cure? • Assures highest quality product • pH shifts to neutral • Soil MO’s recolonize compost, impart disease suppressing qualities to compost • If too much C left, use of this compost as a soil amendment may cause a temporary N deficiency, just the opposite of what you want!
When is my compost done? • After heating cycles stop • After curing • Check for homogenous, fine-particled humus-like appearance • Earthy smell • Maturity tests: Solvita test* (do-it-yourself ), experience, confirmation by testing at a soil lab *www.woodsend.org
How can compost be used? • As a soil amendment to increase soil organic matter, fertility, water holding capacity • Use as topdressing for pastures,lawns, gardens, shrubs, trees • Make compost tea (new area) • Stall bedding • Sell to landscapers
REFERENCES • Visit our website at www.manuremanagement.info • Composting* from Rodale press (good place to start, good reference, at the library) • On-Farm Composting,* NRCS (order CSU) • Visit www.CSUag.com • Go to Cooperative Extension, Publications, Fact Sheets! *sample copy on display
How to learn more about composting? • Organize a workshop, arrange mentoring: contact us
Dr. Jessica Davis, extension manure management specialist: Jessica.Davis@ColoState.EDU970-491-1913Kathy.Doesken@ColoState.EDU970-491-6984Soil and Crop Sciences Department, CSU