A blog that focuses on our unique program that teaches natural horsemanship, heritage breed conservation, soil and water conservation, and even folk, roots, and Americana music. This blog discusses our efforts to prevent the extinction of the Corolla Spanish Mustang. Choctaw Colonial Spanish Horse, Marsh Tacky, and the remnants of the Grand Canyon Colonial Spanish Horse strain.
Friday, November 10, 2017
Carbon, Compost, and Very Clean Hands
Only those of you who have raised hogs are going to understand the incredible significance of what I am about to write. However, the simple fact is my hands do not stink.
As I put the finishing touches on the horse lot for today's day of clinics and demonstrations for the Livestock Breed Conservancy I spent a great deal of time in the pens of our Ossabaw hogs. I moved some of the hogs from one pen to another and moved several pieces of heavy wood inside the pens. It has been raining for the last several days. I found myself smeared with mud and wet hog manure.
When got home I washed my hands and thought about how futile it was to do so. I come from many generations of hog farmers. As a child and as a teenager I raised hogs of my own. I know how hog manure seems to seep deeply into the pores of your hands leaving an aroma that last a day or two even when hand washing with soap is followed up with a rinse in rubbing alcohol.
And I did not even scrub my hands particularly well. In fact, I am typing with some finger nails that are visibly dirty.
And my hands do not stink.
We tear up cardboard into fairly small pieces and add it to the pens every week. We put moldy round bales not fit for horse consumption into the pens. We also put a lot of scraps of untreated umber in the pens. Makes for a very messy looking pen until we have a few days of rain. When the pens get muddy the cardboard starts to break down fast and the wood chunks work their way down into the soil.
The infusion of carbon into the mixture eradicates the otherwise strong odors of hog production. It also creates super compost that becomes ever more useful after spending a few months in our large vermiculture container.
The end result is a more diverse microbe collection than would be found in vermicompost using only horse manure....
And, my hands stay very clean.
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1 comment:
Honest - having no experience with pigs or hogs - I'm guessing that most pig "farmers" believe all you do is throw them in a pen & feed them - and then the animals get the reputation for "stinking"!
Like any living creature - if they get the right care and are allowed to have an actual life - how much better off they & everyone else are!
Far cry from whats done to livestock of all kinds in these industrialized "farms"! Your way is so much better and respectful of the animals.
Maggie
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