Can you use rabbit poop as fertilizer




















Rabbit manure is an excellent manure to use in the garden. It can be used fresh, has higher nutrient levels than other manures, and does not burn plant roots. Nutrient-rich — rabbit manure is very nutrient-rich, it has four times more nutrients than cow or horse manure and is twice as rich as chicken manure.

Versatile — manure pellets can be used as a fertiliser in vegetable gardens, ornamental gardens and flower beds. They can also be used to top-dress lawns, and as a nitrogen source for composting to get a compost pile going.

Fertilisers provide plants with the essential nutrient which they need to grow. More specifically, rabbit manure contains higher levels of nitrogen and phosphorus than cow, sheep, chicken, horse and goat manure. The nutrient levels of various manures are shown in the table, with rabbit manure as the first entry for comparison.

Rabbit: Poultry manure is listed in the above table with various percentages of water because fresh poultry manure is wet, but when dried it reduces in volume and increases in nutrient concentration.

Note that rabbit manure analysis varies, and some sources state lower nutrient levels of approximately 1. Since it contains nutrients, it also beneficial to soil microorganisms, and earthworms also love rabbit manure. While digging a hole for a transplant, add in some rabbit poop to enrich the soil and create ideal growing conditions for the plant.

Rabbit poop will give roots an immediate dose of fertilizer to start working with. To make rabbit manure tea, soak 2 cups of rabbit poop in a large bucket with 5 gallons of water.

Keep the tea covered and only uncover it once a day for stirring. Flies love rabbit compost tea, so be sure to brew your batch as far away from your house as possible.

It will take 3 to 5 days for the manure to completely breakdown. Note that the droppings will not dissolve completely and you will still have plenty of solute settling at the bottom. Continue brewing the tea in a warm, sunny location for best results. Rabbit manure can be added into a vermicompost bin or a worm farm with red wigglers. However, the high concentration of nitrogen combined with rabbit urine that naturally gets mixed with the pellets can be poisonous to worms when fed directly.

To make rabbit manure safer for worms, expose the droppings to a temperature between to degrees F for a few days. To test the manure, transfer some of the droppings into a tub with a few worms. Cover the tub with a lid and leave it undisturbed for at least 15 minutes. If the worms are sticking to the walls of the tub when you open it, the manure will have to age before it is ready to be fed to the worms.

Rabbit manure has a high proportion of nitrogen compared to carbon. Balance out this ratio by combining the manure with materials that are high in carbon, such as straw and wood chips. Once the mixture is ready, add thin layers of prepared manure over your worm beds along with materials rich in carbon. Rabbit manure is a highly versatile organic fertilizer. You can spread it on your garden soil, add it directly into your potting soil for container gardening or make home potting soil with it.

However, all animal manures come with their own set of precautions. The following will address how much rabbit manure you need in your garden. Make sure the rabbit poop pellets do not directly touch the plants.

You can add rabbit manure to potting soil to improve its drainage and fertility. Each pot will need no more than handfuls of rabbit manure. Combine the pellets and the soil before planting. Can you use it around perennials? Always have rabbits in my yard.

Sometimes they stay in one spot eating my lawn and their poo just piles up so thought I could scoop it up and through it around my flowers.

I captured a renegade rabbit in my backyard 3 yrs ago. Have been using the pellets pretty much as you suggest. My question is can I use the pellets in a screened pot for my aquatic plants? My feeling is it would release too much nutrients to the pond and cause an algae outbreak. What are your thoughts?

I would get with someone that knows more about those plants specifically. Even though rabbit poop is rich in nutrients it still contains nitrite and nitrate. When it breaks down in the water it will mix the bad chemicals into the water and it will kill your fish. Yes but the hay could cause weeds aka hay in the garden. I had that happen with some lasagna gardening. How much rabbit manure is too mucb? Can I mix qujte a bit in my soil or should I only scatter a limited amount on the surface?

We use pine shavings as bedding. Adding the old bedding with the rabbit manure should be fine right? Is rabbit poo good for making Hydrangeas Blue. I want to prepare the soil NOW. How about Dahlias? What is the ratio of coco coir to rabbit poop for a red wriggler worm bin? Does it need to be composed first? Actually, for worms… put an old tire on the ground, put first some dry strawinsid the tire and an inch on the bottom..

I would be more than surprised! I used rabbit poop to plant tomatoes in my garden. The plants initially flourished very well but later the leaves started crumbling and becoming smaller.

The flowers started withering and falling. May I know what could be the possible cause? Use a hoe to break the soil and add a generous portion of rabbit manure compost to the mix. The only thing to keep in mind here is that this compost is rich in nitrogen. So make sure your plants need this much nitrogen before you add it to the soil or potting mix. Otherwise, you might end up with more leaves and stems than flowers as is the case with some flowering perennials.

Agricultural experts recommend that you age the compost for at least 4 months before you apply it to veggie patches.

This applies to plants with edible roots such as carrots, beets, and lettuce. They come in contact with the compost in the soil which increases the chance of the pathogens ending up on your kitchen table. Always wash your veggies well and use a few drops of vinegar in the water to remove all traces of the fertilizer from the food. Also, make sure to apply the compost to the soil and only the soil. Avoid sprinkling it on the leaves, stem, or flowers of the plant. This could burn the leaves and ruin the flowers.

Not to mention that the bacteria in the manure could start a fungal infestation on the leaves.



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