Quick facts
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A 1,000-pound horse eats about 2 percent of its body weight and produces 10 tons of manure a year.
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Always follow state guidelines for storing manure.
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Good composting locks in the nutrients, speeds up the breakdown, and kills weed seeds and fly larvae.
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Don’t spread manure on pastures with more than one horse per two acres.
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All barns should have a manure management plan.
Managing manure is key to responsible horse ownership regardless of how many horses you own or manage. Farmers consider manure a valuable nutrient resource for soils.
Production and characteristics
The average 1,000-pound horse eats about 2 percent of its body weight and drinks 10 to 12 gallons of water daily. This will vary with individual metabolism, activity level, and the weather.
On average, that same 1,000-pound horse will pass 55 pounds of manure (feces and urine combined) each day. This adds up to more than 10 tons each year.
Of that 55 pounds of fresh manure excreted daily, there is roughly 0.2 pounds of nitrogen, 0.05 pounds of phosphorus, and 0.12 pounds of potassium (K). These are just averages, though, and depend on your horse's activity levels and feed. Plus, bedding may influence the nutrients in the manure, as well. It is always a good idea to regularly test your manure so that you know what you are working with.
Storage
Normally, manure storage consists of:
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Short-term stockpiling
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Permanent stockpiling
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Composting
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Spreading the manure
Stockpiling is making a pile of solid manure and leaving it alone. You may or may not add manure to it. Stockpiling can occur on a temporary or permanent site.
Temporary site
You must remove and use temporary stockpiles within a year of storage. This allows the site to recover and for plants to grow back. You can then start another temporary stockpile at a new site. Moving to new sites prevents excess nutrient build-up in the soil. Choose these sites carefully and consider soil type and groundwater separation.
Permanent site
Permanent stockpiling occurs at the same site each year. These sites consist of an impervious surface such as concrete or asphalt. Make sure to research existing state guidelines for stockpiling manure before establishing or constructing a manure stockpile. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) outlines these guidelines in "Manure Stockpiling Technical Guidelines.”
You must actively manage composting from the time you make the pile.
Dumpster service
Due to rental and hauling costs, a dumpster may be more practical for barns that spend a lot of time handling manure. Dumpsters are convenient. You can fill the dumpster with manure and switch dumpster when full. Make sure to weigh the convenience must against the added dumpster cost.
The type of storage facility most appropriate for your barn will vary by the following.
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The number of horses
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Manure end use
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Available equipment
Barns with less than 15 horses or that often pasture horses will produce a limited amount of manure. In this case, small, temporary bins or wire continuous bins work well. They are relatively compact and inexpensive to install.
Barns with 15 or more horses, produce a great amount of manure. Facility design and construction can be costly, but it can save labor and costs long-term. The principles are alike to smaller facilities but the following are key.
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Access to larger equipment
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Sturdier designs
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Impervious footing
Prior to construction, contact your local county feedlot officer or MPCA feedlot contact to determine other regulatory requirements. The Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) or USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in your county may assist you with designing and building a storage site or facility that meets your needs. Individual SWCD and NRCS offices have specific criteria required for offering technical assistance.
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Design unit for 6 months (or more) of storage.
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Ensure the front is wide enough for easy equipment access.
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Include bucking walls for equipment to push against for easier collection.
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Prevent surface water, spring melt and storm water from running into the pile.
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Consider a cover, roof or tarp to prevent excess moisture from building up.
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Use a durable floor material.
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Place in a convenient location from the barn.
Composting
Composting is managed, accelerated breakdown of organic materials by microbes (i.e. bacteria, fungus and molds). The goal of the composting process is to provide these microbes with a good environment that encourages quick and efficient manure breakdown. Effective composting does the following.
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Locks in nutrients
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Speeds up the breakdown process
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Reduces the size of the pile
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Kills weed seeds and fly larvae
A manure pile will eventually breakdown if left alone but will lose nutrients and become infested with unwanted organisms.
Start with a good compost site
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Choose a convenient location
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Make sure the site won’t flood with water
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Make sure the location meets the manure stockpile site requirements
The larger the pile, the easier it is to keep the composting process going.
The storage area doesn’t need walls, but walls will help contain the compost and allow air flow. You can use pallets, chicken wire, straw bales and slatted boards for walls.
You can use piles that aren’t turned if you allow air flow through perforated pipes. This air can be passive or forced with blowers. You can apply design guidelines for larger manure storage sites for smaller compost bins as well.
Get compost ingredients
Horse manure compost piles need these key elements.
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Carbon: wood shavings, straw, sawdust, manure
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Nitrogen: urine, manure, fresh plant material (lawn clippings, freshly pulled weeds), ammonium sulfate
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Air: ⅔ of the pile volume should be air. Use large woodchips to fluff. Sift when done.
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Water: moisture like a wrung out sponge, wet but not dripping
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Mix well: microbes have better access to materials with more evenly mixed materials
You can compost:
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Manure
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Garden waste
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Some kitchen waste: vegetables, fruit, coffee grounds, unbleached coffee filters, tea bags, eggshells, bread, etc
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Lawn clippings
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Leaves
Don’t compost:
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Diseased plants*
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Animal mortalities**
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Dog or cat feces**
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Fats**
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Meat**
When composting animal mortalities, always follow best practices for composting mortalities. Never try composting a horse carcass within your manure pile. For more information, visit the Constructing and managing a horse carcass compost pile page.
* Many fungi and spores are not killed in the composting process. Adding them can spread the disease further.
** Experienced composters can compost these, but correct temperatures MUST be met.
Blend compost materials well
Mixing the compost gives the microbes access to the nutrients they need. Add water during mixing until it reaches the moisture level of a wrung out sponge. It’s hard to add water throughout the pile outside the mixing process.
Cook
Check the temperatures and remix the pile as needed. A correct mixture pile heats between 140 and 160 F and holds that temperature for 3 weeks. Use a temperature probe, which you can purchase from a farm store, to check the temperature. Turn the pile if temperatures exceed 160 F or when temperatures begin to decline.
A lower temperature usually means missing ingredients. Often these piles need more nitrogen or water. Remix after adding the needed ingredients.
The composting process is nearly complete when it doesn’t heat after mixing and you can’t recognize the original ingredients.
You may not be able to attain desired temperatures during winter in Minnesota. Stockpile manure over winter and resume composting in the spring.
Let cool
Compost curing occurs in the last 1 to 2 months during which time the temperature will reduce to ambient levels. The finished product will look like something between potting soil and large, dark brown wood chips depending on the material size. Finer material composts more quickly.
Use
You can use finished compost for the following.
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Amending soil in a garden
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Tree mulching
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Potting soil
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Fertilizer for the yard, pasture or hay fields
Never spread more than ½ inch of compost at one time when spreading compost on a yard, pasture or hay field.
Using manure
Whether composted or not, you will eventually need to move and use the manure. You can use manure onsite by spreading it as a fertilizer on an open area, pasture or field.
You can also haul manure offsite for fertilizing or composting. Use caution when spreading manure on pastures grazed by horses. Don’t spread manure on pastures if there are more than 1 horse per 2 acres. Spreading manure in heavily stocked pastures could result in increased parasite exposure.
Spreading manure for fertilizer is a great way to use it. But, you must use caution to prevent excess nutrient buildup. To determine how much manure to spread on a field:
- Determine the nutrient content of the manure.
- Several private labs can perform this test.
- Test the field’s soil to determine how much manure the intended crop needs.
- Only spread enough manure to produce a viable and maximum yielding crop.
Contact your local County Extension Office for help in computing the manure nutrient content and soil and crop needs. More detailed information can be attained through the MPCA fact sheet "Land Application of Manure: Minimum State Requirements.”
Develop a manure management plan
All horse facilities should have a manure management plan, which includes:
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Estimating yearly animal manure production
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Estimating yearly nutrient production
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Plans for collecting, handling and storing
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Emergency action plan that quickly deals with accidental manure spills or other environmental emergencies
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If you plan to apply the manure to the land, include the following in addition to the above:
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Estimating yearly crop nutrient use potential
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Rotating crops
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Available land for application throughout the year
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- American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, Standard D384.2, March 2005, Revised 2014)
- Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. "Manure Stockpiling Technical Guidelines."
- Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. "Land Application of Manure: Minimum State Requirements."
Additional information
- University of Minnesota. Manure Management and Air Quality.
- Hamilton, D.W. "Composting Systems for Small Horse Farms." Oklahoma State University Cooperative Extension Service.
- Rynk, R. On-Farm Composting Handbook. Natural Resource, Agriculture, and Engineering Service (NRAES) NRAES-54. Midwest Plan Services.
- Wegner, T. and Halback, T. 2000. "Manure and Pasture Management for Recreational Horse Owners." University of Minnesota Extension.
- Wheeler, E. Horse Facilities Handbook. Midwest Plan Services.
Reviewed in 2021