One is just as good as the other, and really it depends on what you're using the manure for!
NO. Cattle eat grass and plants, not manure.
Any kind of manure, particularly those from herbivorous animals such as cattle, horses, sheep, chickens, goats, llamas, bison, elk, deer, etc.
Yes, but it is better if it has aged and ask the farmer what drenches he gave the sheep and watch out for weed seeds if it is fresh manure.
No and yes, azaleas may or may not like sheep manure. The acidic soil-loving, flowering shrub in question responds better to sheep manure that is aged before application. Sheep manure serves as a fertilizer high in organic matter, potassium and sulfur even though it possibly suffers from weed seeds that will be detected and removed during aging.
Beef by far is better than mutton or lamb
1000 pounds of sheep produce 40 pounds of manure a day. The production of manure in sheep depends on their breeding, feeding levels, and the specie's
manure
Both species have a powerful grouping instinct, sheep more than cattle. This is because they feel that they have better defense against a predator by grouping together, and feel less vulnerable if they are with other cattle or sheep than if they were alone.
No, peat moss is not sheep manure since it is partially decayed vegetation, primarily sphagnum moss.
No. Cattle and sheep are two different species.
Sheep and cattle are slaughtered for their meat and if they have a disease.:)
Cattle ranchers raise cattle, and sheep/goat farmers raise sheep and goats.