30 March, 09:00
Glad we have horses!
Nana cant ride anymore guess I am just gonna have to trade a cow for a horse drawn wagon!
With the price of beef maybe i can get more than just a wagon!
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZTdm...
Nana cant ride anymore guess I am just gonna have to trade a cow for a horse drawn wagon!
With the price of beef maybe i can get more than just a wagon!
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZTdm...
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BumbleBeeZ Patriot
@BumbleBeeZPatriot
30 March, 09:04
In response Angels Here -Z to her Publication
I've been trying to find a donkey or burro or mule for about a year now... Used to be, you'd find folks giving them away, but not now...
Donkeys are selling for $1k - $4k now, Pffft! Folks must be thinking of them as "alternative transportation."
I really need a little "manure factory" for my Victory Garden, LOL.
Meanwhile, until that happens, I'll be visiting my neighbor down the road to shovel out their barn for composting & pick meadow muffins out of their pastures for immediate use.
Goat berries tend to scatter out; chicken takes a while to build up; pig manure has to be composted for over a year...
A llama as a livestock guardian may be the best choice; llamas always put their poop in the same place each day, usually next to a gate. It doesn't burn plants, so that may be an option...
Donkeys are selling for $1k - $4k now, Pffft! Folks must be thinking of them as "alternative transportation."
I really need a little "manure factory" for my Victory Garden, LOL.
Meanwhile, until that happens, I'll be visiting my neighbor down the road to shovel out their barn for composting & pick meadow muffins out of their pastures for immediate use.
Goat berries tend to scatter out; chicken takes a while to build up; pig manure has to be composted for over a year...
A llama as a livestock guardian may be the best choice; llamas always put their poop in the same place each day, usually next to a gate. It doesn't burn plants, so that may be an option...
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30 March, 09:30
In response BumbleBeeZ Patriot to her Publication
Horses and Donkeys do the same, not all the time but generally they have certain places in the field they go to poop cause they dont want to eat the grass there.
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BumbleBeeZ Patriot
@BumbleBeeZPatriot
30 March, 09:36
In response Angels Here -Z to her Publication
All the horses I've ever raised were of the club that preferred to spread it far & wide, without regard... But I guess the bigger space they have, the less worried they get about contaminating it.
Most folks I know with horses have a set of old bedsprings that they hitch to the pickup & drive the pasture with to scatter it. Once scattered, the horses aren't bothered by it...
I'm eaten up with shit covet now every time I pass a place with visible horse piles, LOL.
WAY too focused on excrement these days.
Most folks I know with horses have a set of old bedsprings that they hitch to the pickup & drive the pasture with to scatter it. Once scattered, the horses aren't bothered by it...
I'm eaten up with shit covet now every time I pass a place with visible horse piles, LOL.
WAY too focused on excrement these days.
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BumbleBeeZ Patriot
@BumbleBeeZPatriot
30 March, 10:52
In response Yester Vue to his Publication
Bingo!
This is why a lot of homesteaders don't make it... They buy a place with green everywhere & then discover it was all fertilizer... and don't know how to restore the soil.
If you don't have an active & thriving variety of microbial buddies in there, your soil is in trouble.
I don't fertilize; I feed my "microherd."
This is why a lot of homesteaders don't make it... They buy a place with green everywhere & then discover it was all fertilizer... and don't know how to restore the soil.
If you don't have an active & thriving variety of microbial buddies in there, your soil is in trouble.
I don't fertilize; I feed my "microherd."
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