Add plenty of well-rotted organic matter, such as farmyard manure or spent mushroom compost.
The chickens are in the farmyard.
Manure is manure is manure. Humanure, cow manure, horse manure, it's all poo. Compost manure is just manure that's been composted (left to rot and break down). Most manure starts off hot, literally, it heats up as it begins to break down. You don't want to put that on your plants, because it's too strong. You want to compost it first. Let it sit for a year and then use it. The only "cold" manures that I know of are rabbit and worms. You can take it straight from their enclosures and put it directly in your garden. Bird droppings might be cold too, but I'm not positive on that.
Farmyard means the same in Urdu as it does in English
Farmyard manure creates heat energy from decomposition of leaves. There is also physical change because the leaves' structure is broken down. The main factors for producing good manure are: water, which is already part of the manure; heat, which is generated by the decomposing leaves; and air, which is needed to aid the decomposition, because decomposition is a very slow form of "burning". Quite a high temperature can be generated in a manure heap or a compost heap.
Farmyard Follies - 1920 was released on: USA: 13 September 1920
Farmyard Follies - 1928 was released on: USA: 24 December 1928
Manure is fresh crap from an animal who is an herbivore. Compost is manure that has aged and will no longer harm the plants you put it on. Fresh Manure will "burn" your plants but once it has sat for a few years all that is left is the nutrition that plants need to grow. Manure is natural fertilizer, as is compost. There are also chemical and inorganic fertilizers. All manures can, with care, be used as fertilizers. Many fertilizers, though, are industrially-produced chemical compounds that have no resemblance whatsoever to manure.
manure = Dung manure = Dünger manure = Mist
fowl
what is the anytonm for manure
Slender man is haunting you