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Arable Farming
Cropping
The £ value of fym
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<blockquote data-quote="rob1" data-source="post: 2527018" data-attributes="member: 332"><p>Having been collecting muck from various sources for a good few years I wonder if its best to turn it into an almost powder as per [USER=1517]@Joe Boy[/USER] or just try and get it to heat up to kill any weed seeds and let the bugs/worms do the work after spreading, if the intention is to feed the soil life isnt it better to give them the work to do . I have a few areas in fields where we used to tip muck from the dairy and even after 20years the soil is so much better and often goes flat, surely the N cant be still there after this time, we now tip in different places each year and when we ploughed the soil came up blue and awful, the crops never did that well yet now we DD they always are greener and seem to not suffer from compaction despite the loader going back and forwards when I turn the heap a couple of times</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rob1, post: 2527018, member: 332"] Having been collecting muck from various sources for a good few years I wonder if its best to turn it into an almost powder as per [USER=1517]@Joe Boy[/USER] or just try and get it to heat up to kill any weed seeds and let the bugs/worms do the work after spreading, if the intention is to feed the soil life isnt it better to give them the work to do . I have a few areas in fields where we used to tip muck from the dairy and even after 20years the soil is so much better and often goes flat, surely the N cant be still there after this time, we now tip in different places each year and when we ploughed the soil came up blue and awful, the crops never did that well yet now we DD they always are greener and seem to not suffer from compaction despite the loader going back and forwards when I turn the heap a couple of times [/QUOTE]
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Arable Farming
Cropping
The £ value of fym
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