Pig shit

grizlbr

Active Member
Well as I remember from the farm pig crap smells to high heaven and must be thoroughly composted before turned into the soil. Major source for E.coli 0157. So if you have any problem with urine as a nitrogen source stay away from pig excrement! Be sure to wash your hands any time you touch the soil the smell will be the give away. And it was my chore to slop the hogs.
 

HTP

Active Member
Pig shit and chicken shit ae GREAT. They might smell but you can bag it. I would also ike to copy paste some odd ideas into your head from wiki.

Urine
People excrete far more of certain water-soluble plant nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium) in urine than in feces.[4] Human urine can be used directly as fertilizer or it can be put onto compost. Adding a healthy person's urine to compost usually will increase temperatures and therefore increase its ability to destroy pathogens and unwanted seeds. Urine from a person with no obvious symptoms of infection is generally much more sanitary than fresh feces. Unlike feces, urine doesn't attract disease-spreading flies (such as house flies or blow flies), and it doesn't contain the most hardy of pathogens, such as parasitic worm eggs. Urine usually does not stink for long, particularly when it is fresh, diluted, or put on sorbents.[citation needed]Urine is primarily composed of water and urea. Although metabolites of urea are nitrogen fertilizers, it is easy to over-fertilize with urine, or to utilize urine containing pharmaceutical (or other) content, creating too much ammonia for plants to absorb, acidic conditions, or other phytotoxicity.[5]
"Humanure"
"Humanure" is a portmanteau neologism designating human excrement (feces and urine) that is recycled via composting for agricultural or other purposes. The term was first used in a 1994 book by Joseph Jenkins[20] that advocates the use of this organic soil amendment.[21]
Humanure is not sewage that has been processed by waste-treatment facilities, which may include waste from industrial and other sources; rather, it is the combination of feces and urine with paper and additional carbon material (such as sawdust). A humanure system, such as a compost toilet, does not require water or electricity, and when properly managed does not smell. A compost toilet collects human excrement which is then added to a hot compost heap together with sawdust and straw or other carbon rich materials, where pathogens are destroyed. A composting toilet processes the waste in situ. Because the term "humanure" has no authoritative definition it is subject to misuse; news reporters occasionally fail to correctly distinguish between humanure and "sewer sludge" or "biosolids".[22]
By disposing of feces and urine through composting, the nutrients contained in them are returned to the soil. This aids in preventing soil degradation. Human fecal matter and urine have high percentages of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, carbon, and calcium. It is equal to many fertilizers and manures purchased in garden stores. Humanure aids in the conservation of fresh water by avoiding the usage of potable water required by the typical flush toilet. It further prevents the pollution of ground water by controlling the fecal matter decomposition before entering the system. When properly managed, there should be no ground contamination from leachate.
As a substitute for a flush water process, it reduces the energy consumption and, hence, greenhouse gas emissions associated with the transportation and processing of water and waste water.
Humanure may be deemed safe for humans to use on crops if handled in accordance with local health regulations, and composted properly. This means that thermophilic decomposition of the humanure must heat it sufficiently to destroy harmful pathogens, or enough time must have elapsed since fresh material was added that biological activity has killed any pathogens. To be safe for crops, a curing stage is often needed to allow a second mesophilic phase to reduce potential phytotoxins.
Humanure is different from night soil, which is raw human waste spread on crops. While aiding the return of nutrients in fecal matter to the soil, it can carry and spread a number of human pathogens. Humanure kills these pathogens both by the extreme heat of the composting and the extended amount of time (1 to 2 years) that it is allowed to decompose.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
Well as I remember from the farm pig crap smells to high heaven and must be thoroughly composted before turned into the soil. Major source for E.coli 0157. So if you have any problem with urine as a nitrogen source stay away from pig excrement! Be sure to wash your hands any time you touch the soil the smell will be the give away. And it was my chore to slop the hogs.
"For example, a study in the UK found 0157 in 15.7% of cattle (dairy and beef), 2.2% of sheep, 0.4% of pigs and none in chickens (1000 of each examined) (15). The strains in pigs were non-toxigenic."
 

D3monic

Well-Known Member
I was doing work in a farm field 2 months ago. The land owner also had commercial hog farm. He was nice enough to start plowing the pig shit/piss into the field while we where out there working. Stunk to high heaven. I had to drive through it to get out of the field. I have washed my truck a dozen times yet to this day if it rains or the truck gets wet it smells of "fertilizer"
 

HTP

Active Member
Chicken shit is better, but hotter. Rabbit shit is really good. And if I can remember right, I think guinea pig is best?
 
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