Tomatoville® Gardening Forums


Notices

A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old February 20, 2012   #16
SEAMSFASTER
Tomatovillian™
 
SEAMSFASTER's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: American Fork, Utah
Posts: 160
Default

Years ago I lived in the deep south and tried to garden in very sandy soil. After my first year of almost complete failure, I took the advice of other growers. I tilled in about 3" of VERY fresh, VERY hot, VERY stinky (enough ammonia to knock you out if you breathed deeply), straight chicken manure (almost no wood shaving or bedding debris of any kind).

I planted in that soil two weeks later and was amazed at the huge difference it made. I harvested 5-10 times as much per garden area that year. Yes, I burned and killed a few plants, maybe 2% of the total.

I certainly wouldn't do that in the heavy clay soil where I live now, but it sure did the trick in that virtually sterile sandy soil! Besides, none of the poultry farmers will sell fresh manure around here. Liability and health issues...
SEAMSFASTER is offline   Reply With Quote
Old February 26, 2012   #17
Tracydr
Tomatovillian™
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Laurinburg, North Carolina, zone 7
Posts: 3,207
Default

The best garden my parents ever had was when they went to the turkey farm and got a truckload of very stinky, fresh turkey manure and tilled it in to their garden. Planted right in it. I think they had about 1/6 of an acre, maybe a little larger. They had an awesome garden that year. Boulder, CO and we had sweet corn, okra and tomatoes to fill the freezer and basement for the entire winter!
Tracydr is offline   Reply With Quote
Old February 26, 2012   #18
stormymater
Tomatovillian™
 
stormymater's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Pleasure Island, NC 8a
Posts: 1,162
Default

Did an experiment on a plot of very acidic (pH 3.5 - 5.5) terribly sandy soil that had not been used to grow anything for over 40 years. Used straight chicken droppings ffrom a free range hen house - cleanout was once a year so aged & gooshy fresh , rabbit droppings from beneath rabbit hutches - again mix of old & just produced, & a mix of the two.

I amended the soil heavily with lime & used one of the three mixes above + pelleted Ca/Mg. The straight chicken manure outproduced the other two with no burning. I was impressed. Will begin shoveling the chicken poop into the wheel barrow out there soon as our little cold spell (what I guess is our winter this year) breaks.

Additional experiment for this year - bull poo from a lot where the bulls have been fed only beer wort & salt marsh hay - no freakin' aminopyralid to contend with.
stormymater is offline   Reply With Quote
Old February 26, 2012   #19
Tracydr
Tomatovillian™
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Laurinburg, North Carolina, zone 7
Posts: 3,207
Default

Last year I grew my tomatoes in straight horse poo, mix of old and new. Dirt wasn't really available because I have hard caliche and what I could find was crappy topsoil.
My garden grew fantastically. I mixed a bunch of pine straw in to keep it from compacting too much.
Tracydr is offline   Reply With Quote
Old February 29, 2012   #20
willyb
Tomatovillian™
 
willyb's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Sherwood Park Alberta Canada
Posts: 147
Default

6 weeks is lots of time to mellow the manure in your climate. No worrys
willyb is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:12 AM.


★ Tomatoville® is a registered trademark of Commerce Holdings, LLC ★ All Content ©2022 Commerce Holdings, LLC ★