There are many kinds of manure and various samples of the same type of manure may not
be equal. This demonstrates the principle of what goes in comes out. Plants concentrate
proteins and mineral nutrients in their seed so animals fed on seed (like chickens)
excrete manure nearly as high in minerals and with a C/N like seed meals (around 8:1).
Alfalfa hay is a legume with a C/N around 12:1. Rabbits fed almost exclusively on alfalfa
pellets make a rich manure with a similar C/N. Spring grass and high quality hay and other
leafy greens have a C/N nearly as good as alfalfa. Livestock fed the best hay supplemented
with grain and silage make fairly rich manure. Pity the unfortunate livestock trying to
survive as "strawburners" eating overly mature grass hay from depleted fields.
Their manure will be as poor as the food and soil they are trying to live on.
When evaluating manure, also consider the nature and quantity of bedding mixed into it.
Our local boarding stables keep their lazy horses on fir sawdust. The idle
"riding" horses are usually fed very strawy local grass hay with just enough
supplemental alfalfa and grain to maintain a minimal healthy condition. The "horse
manure" I've hauled from these stables seems more sawdust than manure. It must have a
C/N of 50 or 60:1 because by itself it will barely heat up.
Manure mixed with straw is usually richer stuff. Often this type comes from dairies.
Modern breeds of milk cows must be fed seed meals and other concentrates to temporarily
sustain them against depletion from unnaturally high milk production.
After rabbit and chicken, horse manure from well-fed animals like race horses or true,
working animals may come next. Certainly it is right up there with the best cow manure.
Before the era of chemical fertilizer, market gardeners on the outskirts of large cities
took wagon loads of produce to market and returned with an equivalent weight of
"street sweepings." What they most prized was called "short manure,"
or horse manure without any bedding. Manure and bedding mixtures were referred to as
"long manure" and weren't considered nearly as valuable.
Finally, remember that over half the excretion of animals is urine. And far too little
value is placed on urine. As early as 1900 it was well known that if you fed one ton (dry
weight) of hay and measured the resulting manure after thorough drying, only 800 pounds
was left. What happened to the other 1,200 pounds of dry material? Some, of course, went
to grow the animal. Some was enzymatically "burned" as energy fuel and its
wastes given off as CO2 and H2O. Most of it was excreted in liquid form. After all, what
is digestion but an enzymatic conversion of dry material into a water solution so it can
be circulated through the bloodstream to be used and discarded as needed. Urine also
contains numerous complex organic substances and cellular breakdown products that improve
the health of the soil ecology.
However, urine is not easy to capture. It tends to leach into the ground or run off
when it should be absorbed into bedding. Chicken manure and the excrements of other fowl
are particularly valuable in this respect because the liquids and solids of their waste
are uniformly mixed so nothing is lost. When Howard worked out his system of making
superior compost at Indore, he took full measure of the value of urine and paid great care
to its capture and use.