Sprinkled atop soil as a side-dressing, dried blood usually provokes a powerful and
immediate growth response. Blood meal is so potent that it is capable of burning plants;
when applied you must avoid getting it on leaves or stems. Although principally a source
of nitrogen, I reason that there are other nutritional substances like growth hormones or
complex organic "phytamins" in blood meal. British glasshouse lettuce growers
widely agree that lettuce sidedressed with blood meal about three weeks before harvest has
a better "finish," a much longer shelf-life, and a reduced tendency to
"brown butt" compared to lettuce similarly fertilized with urea or chemical
nitrate sources.
Feathers are the birds' equivalent of hair on animals and have similar properties. See
Hair
Fish and shellfish waste. These proteinaceous, high-nitrogen and trace-mineral-rich
materials are readily available at little or no cost in pickup load lots from canneries
and sea food processors. However, in compost piles, large quantities of these materials
readily putrefy, make the pile go anaerobic, emit horrid odors, and worse, attract vermin
and flies. To avoid these problems, fresh seafood wastes must be immediately mixed with
large quantities of dry, high C/N material. There probably are only a few homestead
composters able to utilize a ton or two of wet fish waste at one time.
Oregonians pride themselves for being tolerant, slow-to-take-offense neighbors. Along
the Oregon coast, small-scale market gardeners will thinly spread shrimp or crab waste
atop a field and promptly till it in. Once incorporated in the soil, the odor rapidly
dissipates. In less than one week.
Fish meal is a much better alternative for use around the home. Of course, you have to
have no concern for cost and have your mind fixed only on using the finest possible
materials to produce the nutritionally finest food when electing to substitute fish meal
for animal manures or oil cakes. Fish meal is much more potent than cottonseed meal. Its
typical nutrient analysis runs 9-6-4. However, figured per pound of nutrients they
contain, seed meals are a much less expensive way to buy NPK. Fish meal is also mildly
odoriferous. The smell is nothing like wet seafood waste, but it can attract cats, dogs,
and vermin.
What may make fish meal worth the trouble and expense is that sea water is the ultimate
depository of all water-soluble nutrients that were once in the soil. Animals and plants
living in the sea enjoy complete, balanced nutrition. Weston Price's classic book,
Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, attributes nearly perfect health to humans who made
seafoods a significant portion of their diets. Back in the 1930s--before processed foods
were universally available in the most remote locations-people living on isolated sea
coasts tended to live long, have magnificent health, and perfect teeth. See also: Kelp
meal.
Garbage. Most forms of kitchen waste make excellent compost. But Americans foolishly
send megatons of kitchen garbage to landfills or overburden sewage treatment plants by
grinding garbage in a disposal. The average C/N of garbage is rather low so its presence
in a compost heap facilitates the decomposition of less potent materials. Kitchen garbage
can also be recycled in other ways such as vermicomposting (worm boxes) and burying it in
the garden in trenches or post holes. These alternative composting methods will be
discussed in some detail later.