I support you because you're doing something real instead of just virtual help And comments.... people are just commenting sitting on chair with coke bottle and pizza boxes... 🙌🏻
I had a lot of crappy things to say about chicken manure. Like It stinks to be damned, but i recently acquired two pickup truck load of the infamous stuff to grow better vegetables. So i am interested to learn how to properly use the manure to success in my organic garden. Thanks for posting. It looks you have made a model for others to manage chciken for compost Congrats.
Thank you! It was NOT profitable for us because we couldn't make and sell at a low enough price. Must have a HUGE facility to process enough to bring down the price. We had to charge $.50 per pound and it cost us $.35-$.40 per pound to make. We mixed 50%/50% chicken barn manure (manure, urine, rice hulls) to hardwood medium ground mulch. Put into heaps at miniumum 4 feet (1metre) high x 4 ft deep. Water it to about 50% water--a moist sponge but not dripping or oozing when you squeeze it. Turn, mix, and water every day until you get a temperature inside the heap (use soil thermometer, 3feet long) of 150 degrees F. After that, you can turn it every other day. Make sure you keep enough water in it. If the temperature does not reach 150-160 degrees F, then you have either too much or not enough water. After 4 -5 months the temperature will drop and stay steady at ambient temperature. We then sifted it with a rock cleaner. We bagged the siftings which looked like spent coffee grounds and smelled just like freshly turned soil. No bad smell. It was beautiful! Can make manure tea to water plants, use 1 hand full when transplanting vegetables like tomatoes. Feed corn by side-dressing with the same amount you would use of ammonium nitrate. Use in houseplants--no smell! Done correctly, this will not burn your plants if used properly. I put the large pieces sifted from the rock washer in landscaping as mulch. Important you have a covered facility for your heaps so you can control the water. I wish you very good luck! Sincerely, Dianna
Chickens have never had antibiotics put into their feed. When they are first born, they are given a feed which contains ionophores which are a living species. Unfortunately, the FDA in all their bureaucratic "wisdom" has labeled ionophores as an antibiotic, which they are NOT. These ionophores are present in a lot of places naturally--guts, in particular. They keep the chickens from getting a condition known as enteritis which eats out the chickens' guts until the chicken dies. It is horrible! When the industry gave into pressure from animal welfare groups and withdrew the ionophores from the first two weeks of their feed, we had millions of chickens die from this horrible death all for the sake of marketing to uneducated people. The chickens have these only in the first two weeks of their food, after that--the next 2 - 3 weeks, their food is corn and grain. So, by the time the poo is used or composted, those ionophores are long gone or absorbed into their natural habitats and are not harmful to humans.
If only every company could so easily turn it’s toxic byproducts into something they no longer had to pay to dispose of by regulated methods but instead get people to buy from them with nearly no effort? If they were doing amazing work, this would have been part of their business from the start. How many thousands of tons of manure did they bury or dispose of illegally before this ?
Good evening mam, I have a question. I got a small grocery bag of chicken manure from my local farmer in june. Since it is fresh manure I dried it in hot sun for 2 days to get rid off the smell. Is it safe now to compost it? I am afraid that I might see smoke from the compost bin. By the way I live in a condo with small balcony. Is it safe to do chicken compost in a container, since it is small amount?
I am pakistani Sindh province i have 300000 layer poultry farms i use the manure with water directly flood irrigation in crops there fore it is request to you give us some knowledge ideas composting technology thanks
Hi all, well documented, just some info, there is an enzyme available which converts chicken manure into compost in 7 hours, the enzymes break down the ammonia NH3 in Nitrogen & Hydrogen, the Nitrogen level increases as it bonds in the compost with the secretions from enzymes... all this happens in 5 to 7 seconds, I have no more smelly coops & selling compost as fertilizer due to the high NPK levels.
chris niem totally impossible to make compost in 7 seconds or even 7 hours, it won't even happen in 7 days, 7 weeks maybe but very good and complete finished chicken-manure compost may take up to 7 moths. You never made or seen real compost i guess.
maituub maybe you misunderstood, the product is already on the market, being sold, chicken; Cattle & pig farmers already using this product all over Asia, so a little humor for you: to fully understand compost you have to know your sh!t, it seems you know Jack sh!t ;*)
Can't you tell us what the name is of that enzyme u use? You said: "the enzymes break down the ammonia NH3 in N2 & H2, the N2 level increases as it bonds in the compost with the secretions from enzymes" That would be a bad thing, a loss, so no it is not NH3 to N2 but most likely the NH3 is turned into NO3. if N get lost out of soil or compost its NO3 that get denitrified into N2. Anyway chicken shit turnover into finished & usable compost can't happen in 5 to 7 seconds nor in 7 hours. Oh and btw i'm a chemist in fertilizer quality control and a 20 year master composter teaching my villagers how to do backyard composting the right way, so i do know my shit.
maituub I will say this again, it is already in use, you keep saying it is impossible, please can you get real, read the info again, I talk about 2 stages, compost which is 7 hours & ammonia smell which is removed in 5 to 7 seconds, the product in called Lavizyme, for a chemist of 20 years experience, you just indicated an error in your understanding of advanced microbial metabolism, so you telling me the Dutch, scientist who has developed this over 7 years, should then stop all he is doing, close his advanced laboratory, tell his million plus customers who has been using his product for over a year, to please stop because a chemist says so?!? Are you for real?
maituub which part of "it is already been used & working" don't you understand? I'm so annoyed by your comments, the product is already on the market, commercial farmers are already using it, have you any idea how dumb you sound, by keep saying it is impossible yet it is a proven product?!? the microbial count (enzymes) 8×10 to the power of 10, kills cockroaches in under 10 seconds, under my chicken coups, also remove the smell directly after spraying leaving a rich sweet aroma.. please mr chemist explain to us how a 100% organic product can do that, a little hint...no chemicals involved, also explain how there is absolutly no fungal growth & a rich soil smell in only 7 hours? Also explain to me why the buyers of my compost keep coming back to buy more of my "impossible" 7 hour compost, no root burn & icreased plant growth?!? Do you also tell people on a bright sunny day that there is no sun, just because you are are right?
We have 120,000 chickens each flock. They don't want to go out of the barn, and if they did I'm afraid the coyotes, hawks, eagles, and owls would get them!
@@WPRanchLLC I guess that's what happens when the flock is not used to natural feeding habits. I am interested in getting chickens supplemented on compost at a commercial scale. only ever seen done at homestead small scale level. I guess some of the management practices are not practical as the flock gets bigger.
Bear in mind, our chickens for backyards and heirloom chickens are breeds which are meant to feed in natural manners. The breeds used for large production are generally a "Cobb" breed which love to eat and drink and just mosey around and get big quickly. Plus, they don't have to worry about predators, they are warm, dry, and kept cool with fans. Much like if we sat in front of the TV with all the food and drink we wanted right at arms' length. :)
Hlw i am Indian I have a lot of poultry litter and I want to do business around my body,How will I use it, but I have less money plzzzzzzzzzzzzzz help me any one
It was NOT profitable for us because we couldn't make and sell at a low enough price. Must have a HUGE facility to process enough to bring down the price. We had to charge $.50 per pound and it cost us $.35-$.40 per pound to make. We mixed 50%/50% chicken barn manure (manure, urine, rice hulls) to hardwood medium ground mulch. Put into heaps at miniumum 4 feet (1metre) high x 4 ft deep. Water it to about 50% water--a moist sponge but not dripping or oozing when you squeeze it. Turn, mix, and water every day until you get a temperature inside the heap (use soil thermometer, 3feet long) of 150 degrees F. After that, you can turn it every other day. Make sure you keep enough water in it. If the temperature does not reach 150-160 degrees F, then you have either too much or not enough water. After 4 -5 months the temperature will drop and stay steady at ambient temperature. We then sifted it with a rock cleaner. We bagged the siftings which looked like spent coffee grounds and smelled just like freshly turned soil. No bad smell. It was beautiful! Can make manure tea to water plants, use 1 hand full when transplanting vegetables like tomatoes. Feed corn by side-dressing with the same amount you would use of ammonium nitrate. Use in houseplants--no smell! Done correctly, this will not burn your plants if used properly. I put the large pieces sifted from the rock washer in landscaping as mulch. Important you have a covered facility for your heaps so you can control the water. I wish you very good luck! Sincerely, Dianna
I support you because you're doing something real instead of just virtual help And comments.... people are just commenting sitting on chair with coke bottle and pizza boxes... 🙌🏻
I had a lot of crappy things to say about chicken manure. Like It stinks to be damned, but i recently acquired two pickup truck load of the infamous stuff to grow better vegetables. So i am interested to learn how to properly use the manure to success in my organic garden. Thanks for posting. It looks you have made a model for others to manage chciken for compost Congrats.
Is chicken manure working? How you are composting it?
Thank you! It was NOT profitable for us because we couldn't make and sell at a low enough price. Must have a HUGE facility to process enough to bring down the price. We had to charge $.50 per pound and it cost us $.35-$.40 per pound to make. We mixed 50%/50% chicken barn manure (manure, urine, rice hulls) to hardwood medium ground mulch. Put into heaps at miniumum 4 feet (1metre) high x 4 ft deep. Water it to about 50% water--a moist sponge but not dripping or oozing when you squeeze it. Turn, mix, and water every day until you get a temperature inside the heap (use soil thermometer, 3feet long) of 150 degrees F. After that, you can turn it every other day. Make sure you keep enough water in it. If the temperature does not reach 150-160 degrees F, then you have either too much or not enough water. After 4 -5 months the temperature will drop and stay steady at ambient temperature. We then sifted it with a rock cleaner. We bagged the siftings which looked like spent coffee grounds and smelled just like freshly turned soil. No bad smell. It was beautiful! Can make manure tea to water plants, use 1 hand full when transplanting vegetables like tomatoes. Feed corn by side-dressing with the same amount you would use of ammonium nitrate. Use in houseplants--no smell! Done correctly, this will not burn your plants if used properly. I put the large pieces sifted from the rock washer in landscaping as mulch. Important you have a covered facility for your heaps so you can control the water. I wish you very good luck! Sincerely, Dianna
isnt there a way to sell soil amendment products in soil friendly bags that dont end up in land fills?
Compost Facility: 1560 N. 8th St. Paducah, KY, 2.5 yards (pick up truck load) is $5.00
What medications are used in the chicken houses that might be found in their waste?
NONE. NONE. NONE. WE DO NOT USE MEDICINES NOR ANTIBIOTICS.
@@WPRanchLLC YOU may not but that really wasn't my point/question
Chickens have never had antibiotics put into their feed. When they are first born, they are given a feed which contains ionophores which are a living species. Unfortunately, the FDA in all their bureaucratic "wisdom" has labeled ionophores as an antibiotic, which they are NOT. These ionophores are present in a lot of places naturally--guts, in particular. They keep the chickens from getting a condition known as enteritis which eats out the chickens' guts until the chicken dies. It is horrible! When the industry gave into pressure from animal welfare groups and withdrew the ionophores from the first two weeks of their feed, we had millions of chickens die from this horrible death all for the sake of marketing to uneducated people. The chickens have these only in the first two weeks of their food, after that--the next 2 - 3 weeks, their food is corn and grain. So, by the time the poo is used or composted, those ionophores are long gone or absorbed into their natural habitats and are not harmful to humans.
@@WPRanchLLC I'm not in the USA. A lot of the world is not in the USA
Amazing work they do!
If only every company could so easily turn it’s toxic byproducts into something they no longer had to pay to dispose of by regulated methods but instead get people to buy from them with nearly no effort? If they were doing amazing work, this would have been part of their business from the start. How many thousands of tons of manure did they bury or dispose of illegally before this ?
Good evening mam,
I have a question. I got a small grocery bag of chicken manure from my local farmer in june. Since it is fresh manure I dried it in hot sun for 2 days to get rid off the smell.
Is it safe now to compost it? I am afraid that I might see smoke from the compost bin.
By the way I live in a condo with small balcony. Is it safe to do chicken compost in a container, since it is small amount?
MIXED WELL WITH OTHER COMPOSTABLES AND WATER, IT SHOULD BE FINE. JUST KEEP AN EYE ON IT. WE NEVER HAD A PROBLEM WITH COMBUSTION.
Do you need organic fertilizer fermentation tank? It will take 7 to 12 days to turn the animal manure into fertilizer.
Year to 12 days? Is it possible?
good job
I am pakistani Sindh province i have 300000 layer poultry farms i use the manure with water directly flood irrigation in crops there fore it is request to you give us some knowledge ideas composting technology thanks
I reuse the bags by filling them with topsoil and planting saplings, grape vines and plants in them.
How do you suggest to control the odour of chicken litter during the process of production of the compost?
YOU DO NOT CONTROL IT. LEARN TO LOVE IT. AFTER 3 -4 MONTHS IT WON'T HAVE A SMELL.
@@WPRanchLLC The smell?
Turn it back
Hi sir am from Kerala india,
May I know the mechanary cost and process.
Broiler farm chicken mannure
It contains coirpith and chicken mannure
The link doesn't work.
Hi all, well documented, just some info, there is an enzyme available which converts chicken manure into compost in 7 hours, the enzymes break down the ammonia NH3 in Nitrogen & Hydrogen, the Nitrogen level increases as it bonds in the compost with the secretions from enzymes... all this happens in 5 to 7 seconds, I have no more smelly coops & selling compost as fertilizer due to the high NPK levels.
chris niem totally impossible to make compost in 7 seconds or even 7 hours, it won't even happen in 7 days, 7 weeks maybe but very good and complete finished chicken-manure compost may take up to 7 moths. You never made or seen real compost i guess.
maituub maybe you misunderstood, the product is already on the market, being sold, chicken; Cattle & pig farmers already using this product all over Asia, so a little humor for you: to fully understand compost you have to know your sh!t, it seems you know Jack sh!t ;*)
Can't you tell us what the name is of that enzyme u use?
You said: "the enzymes break down the ammonia NH3 in N2 & H2, the N2 level increases as it bonds in the compost with the secretions from enzymes"
That would be a bad thing, a loss, so no it is not NH3 to N2 but most likely the NH3 is turned into NO3. if N get lost out of soil or compost its NO3 that get denitrified into N2.
Anyway chicken shit turnover into finished & usable compost can't happen in 5 to 7 seconds nor in 7 hours. Oh and btw i'm a chemist in fertilizer quality control and a 20 year master composter teaching my villagers how to do backyard composting the right way, so i do know my shit.
maituub I will say this again, it is already in use, you keep saying it is impossible, please can you get real, read the info again, I talk about 2 stages, compost which is 7 hours & ammonia smell which is removed in 5 to 7 seconds, the product in called Lavizyme, for a chemist of 20 years experience, you just indicated an error in your understanding of advanced microbial metabolism, so you telling me the Dutch, scientist who has developed this over 7 years, should then stop all he is doing, close his advanced laboratory, tell his million plus customers who has been using his product for over a year, to please stop because a chemist says so?!? Are you for real?
maituub which part of "it is already been used & working" don't you understand? I'm so annoyed by your comments, the product is already on the market, commercial farmers are already using it, have you any idea how dumb you sound, by keep saying it is impossible yet it is a proven product?!? the microbial count (enzymes) 8×10 to the power of 10, kills cockroaches in under 10 seconds, under my chicken coups, also remove the smell directly after spraying leaving a rich sweet aroma.. please mr chemist explain to us how a 100% organic product can do that, a little hint...no chemicals involved, also explain how there is absolutly no fungal growth & a rich soil smell in only 7 hours? Also explain to me why the buyers of my compost keep coming back to buy more of my "impossible" 7 hour compost, no root burn & icreased plant growth?!? Do you also tell people on a bright sunny day that there is no sun, just because you are are right?
What shall be ratio of manure and wood chips
50% - 50%, PLUS WATER TO DAMP SPONGE CONSISTENCY--NOT GOOEY OR DRIPPING, BUT HOLDS TOGETHER.
This should work in New Zealand as well. We have too much cattle waste.
if your chicken compost stinks it's cause your doing it wrong. it needs carbon to offset the nitrogen smell.
its a good idea to use chicken manure so you are welcome in RWANDA to apply that technology
Thats what ive been saying for years if you don't treat your soil your wasting your time. Chicken manure is the best after one year of composting.
Are you still in business? Neither the email or website addresses seem to be good?
i am exporter of composting chicken manure
you what to this product
please reply on this comment
They could use there chickens to turn the compost and it would also provide some free food for the chickens from mycelium and bugs.
We have 120,000 chickens each flock. They don't want to go out of the barn, and if they did I'm afraid the coyotes, hawks, eagles, and owls would get them!
+Dianna J Ya right, they have never seen the light of day...who are you trying to kid? Just more bs ...jmo!
+June D Actually, June, they do see the light of day. Clearly, you're speaking from an ignorant, uninformed position.
@@WPRanchLLC I guess that's what happens when the flock is not used to natural feeding habits. I am interested in getting chickens supplemented on compost at a commercial scale. only ever seen done at homestead small scale level. I guess some of the management practices are not practical as the flock gets bigger.
Bear in mind, our chickens for backyards and heirloom chickens are breeds which are meant to feed in natural manners. The breeds used for large production are generally a "Cobb" breed which love to eat and drink and just mosey around and get big quickly. Plus, they don't have to worry about predators, they are warm, dry, and kept cool with fans. Much like if we sat in front of the TV with all the food and drink we wanted right at arms' length. :)
wooow,,,,,,i wont to inteduseing to u new Technics............hope tooo soon
nice
Hlw i am Indian I have a lot of poultry litter and I want to do business around my body,How will I use it, but I have less money plzzzzzzzzzzzzzz help me any one
Where you from in India?
It was NOT profitable for us because we couldn't make and sell at a low enough price. Must have a HUGE facility to process enough to bring down the price. We had to charge $.50 per pound and it cost us $.35-$.40 per pound to make. We mixed 50%/50% chicken barn manure (manure, urine, rice hulls) to hardwood medium ground mulch. Put into heaps at miniumum 4 feet (1metre) high x 4 ft deep. Water it to about 50% water--a moist sponge but not dripping or oozing when you squeeze it. Turn, mix, and water every day until you get a temperature inside the heap (use soil thermometer, 3feet long) of 150 degrees F. After that, you can turn it every other day. Make sure you keep enough water in it. If the temperature does not reach 150-160 degrees F, then you have either too much or not enough water. After 4 -5 months the temperature will drop and stay steady at ambient temperature. We then sifted it with a rock cleaner. We bagged the siftings which looked like spent coffee grounds and smelled just like freshly turned soil. No bad smell. It was beautiful! Can make manure tea to water plants, use 1 hand full when transplanting vegetables like tomatoes. Feed corn by side-dressing with the same amount you would use of ammonium nitrate. Use in houseplants--no smell! Done correctly, this will not burn your plants if used properly. I put the large pieces sifted from the rock washer in landscaping as mulch. Important you have a covered facility for your heaps so you can control the water. I wish you very good luck! Sincerely, Dianna
i am indian
👍