MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 57,995
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Evidently both of you know your $hi*.:laughing:
:thumbsup:
Evidently both of you know your $hi*.:laughing:
I'd bet the compositing process killed most of those weed seeds. If the heat didn't kill them, they'd sprout and then the turning of the pile several times would kill them. All I remember is they were long, steaming piles on cold mornings. I'd briefly accelerate from 40 to 120 to get past it while holding my breath. :ashamed:
I've mentioned this before... a nursery I visited used composted horse manure for their potting medium. He got it from a farmer who only uses hardwood chips for bedding material. To prepare it he addEd mass quantities of 10-10-10 to burn the seeds out, turning it periodically with his tractor mounted tiller. I don't know how he kept his organic certification, and he must burn the nitrogen out along with the seeds.Apparently the heat kills the weed seeds, but Im not 100% convinced.
You obviously missed the part about getting it hot enough to burn out the weed seeds.Wood chips are carbon, they need nitrogen to compost out... Once composted, the nitrogen is then released, so you don't loose it.
Like was said, horses pass more seeds ect. through that cows do, so cow poop is better for gardens ect. than horse poop.
SR
I didn't miss anything, I was just commenting on the carbon/N relationship.You obviously missed the part about getting it hot enough to burn out the weed seeds.
Good point about the wood chips though, perhaps that counteracted it.
Im not quite sure how we drifted to the **** pile.........