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msjay2u

compost/chicken & goat poop/nitrogen

msjay2u
15 years ago

Hi all. I am new to this forum. I searched for what I was looking for but did not quite find it. I did find that you guys appear to be a VERY friendly group though and I like that. I mostly participate on the farm life forum, and the garden junk forum. I am new to farming (less than 1 year). I am originally a city girl but tired of all the additives in food and the landfills getting filled with recyclables. I am starting slow and working up to something big (I hope). My first project was a worm compost bin but it failed. I followed all the instructions to the letter but the amount of fruit flies and mites drove me crazy!! I let it sit and eventually it composted but it did not go like I thought it would. Now that I have chickens I have to get rid of the poop so I am trying a larger bin. Okay so here are my concerns:

I have an outdoor and very large Rubbermaid compost bin and it is about half full of poop, pine bedding a little pine straw. I do put in some food but the chickens and goats get most of the scraps.

I had a brilliant idea to add some red wriggler worms to my compost bin so that it could speed up the process and I can have compost by the spring because they thrive in rotting vegetation, compost, and manure. I thought they would be a perfect addition. There was a lady selling them on craigslist for $22 per lbs. I wrote her an email and in it I stated that the bin is full of mostly manure and pine bedding with a little food thrown in and this is how she replied:

I would be very careful with chicken manure, as it can heat up fast and cook your worms, depending on what kind of bin you are setting up. I don't know how well pine bedding would decompose and that combo could be too acidic.

Talking about a bubble buster!! I posted this on the farm life forum but no real response so I called the local AG extension office today. I told them I have 6 chickens and been putting the poop and bedding in the bin with some food. she said she has some concerns with this and that she was going to get me in contact with a compost specialist. She said the high content of nitrogen can be very dangerous. So the "specialist" emailed me and asked me specific questions. I have not heard back from her as of yet. Now they have me worried. Is this the makings of a bomb? I can see it now. NYer tries to be a farmer and blows up her barn by accident with chicken poop. Worms were flying everywhere. But the good news is she saved some money on her insurance. LOL

I thought that red wrigglers can survive in manure and in conditions normal worms would not survive in so I thought the heat was already taken into consideration. I guess not.

Next question is that it is time to clean out the goat pen. I noticed the straw is loaded with poop. I was wondering if I could spread some cardboard at the base of the trees and put a good bit of the straw mixed with goat manure around it about 2-3' out maybe 6" high, atleast. The goal being that the cardboard would stop the weeds from growing and the poop would feed the trees and the straw would be gotten rid of (I usually burn it) and by the winter it will have all decomposed and ready to get a new batch for next year. The straw would probably look ugly so I could put a layer of regular mulch on top of it to dress it up a bit.

Well I think you guys would be the GW experts on the subject and I look forward to your feedback. Please feel free to ask questions to clarify any issues. My writing is not always the easiest to understand.

Thank you!!

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