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Cleaning out coop
Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 11:42 am
by labradors
Having just dug up the spuds, I now have a clean area of garden and was thinking of emptying out the coop and spreading the mixture of pine shavings, lawn clippings and dehydrated

over the bed. No problem with that, as I wouldn't be planting anything until next year, but then there is the garlic that needs to go in.
Has anyone planted garlic under such a mixture? I obviously don't want to kill my precious garlic, but don't know if it would be putting roots down in the fall and it might be a wonderful soil amendment/mulch.
I'd appreciate any thoughts.
Linda
Re: Cleaning out coop
Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 7:26 pm
by Ontario Chick
I personally wouldn't put any manure accept rabbit droppings directly on the garden.
Poultry manure should be composted for at least a year and if you have an organic garden the time is 3 years.
That said, I know many people do that and have no problem, and in your case I would suggest to plant the garlic first and then use the clean out stuff as a top dressing, no more the 4 inches deep.
That way if you feel things aren't going the way you thought they would, you still have a chance to scrape the stuff off in the spring. :)
Re: Cleaning out coop
Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 8:09 pm
by Killerbunny
I put turkey

and tea on the corn patch. Poop in the fall and tea when growing.
Re: Cleaning out coop
Posted: Tue Aug 29, 2017 8:09 pm
by ross
Llama beans are another organic matter you can put directly " plop plop fizz fizz " on your garden & even on your plants in your house right from fresh . No smell either . Luck
Re: Cleaning out coop
Posted: Wed Aug 30, 2017 11:50 am
by labradors
Thanks for all the suggestions. I do try to grow organically AND have realized that it would probably turn out to be a problem to leave smelly

around. My friend buried some chicken

at the bottom of her new strawberry bed, and raccoons dug everything up! I have dogs who like to help themselves to raw

- yuck! So that would be too much of an invitation

Anxious as I am to use my "gold" fertilizer on my veggies, I'll have to compost it - and wait
Too funny about the Llama beans! Being a gardener, I read that as Lima Beans (which also add nutrients to the soil BTW). I thought you'd gone off at a tangent Ross, but instead, you taught me something that I didn't know :). Must rush out and add some Llamas to my pack/flock. I wonder what the collective noun is for those guys?
Linda