by yotmon » Mon Jun 17, 2013 10:49 pm
I used to collect sheep droppings and place them into an onion netting sack, soak in a barrel of water agitating it daily until it was a strong liquid manure. Then would dilute it to the colour of weak tea and feed it to all my fruit/veg. Really good stuff and didn't cost a penny. At the moment I'm growing a few lettuce and all I'm feeding them is my own watered down urine, they are doing well on it.
Just googled this -
Human urine is one of the fastest-acting, most excellent sources of nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium and trace elements for plants, delivered in a form that’s perfect for assimilation.
Urine is 95 per cent water, 2.5 per cent of which is urea, and a further 2.5 per cent of which is a mixture of minerals, salts, hormones and enzymes. It is a blood byproduct but despite containing some bodily waste is non-toxic.
In 1975, Dr A. H. Free published his book Urinalysis in Clinical Laboratory Practice, presenting a few of the critical nutrients found in urine, including urea nitrogen, urea, creatinin nitrogen, creatinin, uric acid nitrogen, ammonia nitrogen, amino nitrogen, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, chloride, inorganic sulphate and inorganic phosphate. During a pee, a healthy adult will release 11g nitrogen/urea, 1g phosphorus/super-phosphate and 2.5g potassium. Patrick Makhosi, a soil scientist with Uganda's Kawanda Agricultural Research Organisation, confirms the efficacy of human urine as a fertiliser. He says that applying urine to growing vegetables once every week for at least two months will more than double the yield.
Yotmon.
"Success is going from failure to failure without a loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill