Front Range Frenzy Home : Horse Information : Manure Management
"Horse Manure Management"
What to Do With All That Manure
Manure management is important to the health of your horse.
"You need a strategy for using or disposing of the manure."
Find out your options for managing manure.
You can't do anything about the amount of manure your horse produces. Therefore, practicing appropriate manure management is essential, from the largest to the smallest of farms. Manure management is important for the health of the horse and your family, avoiding controversy with neighbors, and to comply with state and county regulations. Horse owners have a responsibility to manage their horse's byproduct.
You will need a strategy for using it or disposing of the manure. Horse manure is a valuable resource. A large percentage of nutrients fed to your horse will pass directly through into the manure. These nutrients can be returned to the soil and made available to pasture, lawns, landscaping, crops, and gardens.
An average 1,000-pound horse will produce 9 tons of manure a year or 50 pounds per day, not including bedding. You get about 2 cubic feet per day of manure and bed waste or 730 cubic feet per year from one horse. How the manure is stored and treated will have an impact on its value. A composition of manure and bedding is rich in nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium.
The Importance of Manure Management
Stalls and small exercise areas or paddocks will need manure removed regularly to prevent surface water contamination and to assist with parasite control and fly breeding. Stable flies breed in moist horse manure. An important factor in keeping the fly population down is manure management.
