KEEPING MANURE UNDER COVER. 



G5 



management as compared with the other two methods of keeping 

 tue manure in compact heaps, one exposed, the other under cover. 

 The following is the table : 



CONTENTS OF THE MASS OF MANURE, SPREAD OUT IN FARM- YARD, AXD EXPOSED 

 TO RAIN, ETC. 



It is not necessary to make many remarks on this table. The 

 facts speak for themselves. It will be seen that there is consid- 

 erable loss even by letting the manure lie spread out until spring ; 

 but, ssrious as this loss is, it is small compared to the loss sus- 

 tained by allowing the manure to lie exposed in the yard during 

 the summer. 



In tho five tons of fresh manure, we have, November 8, 64.3 

 Ibs. of nitrogen ; April 30, we Lave 46 Ibs. ; August 23, only 25 

 Ibs. This is a great loss of the most valuable constituent of the 

 manure. Of soluble mineral matt; r, the next most valuable ingre- 

 dient, we have in the five tons of fresh manure, November 3, 154 

 Ibs. ; April 30, 87 Ibs. ; and August 23, only 39 Ibs. Of soluble 

 nitrogen, the most active and valuable part of the manure, we 

 have, November 3, nearly 15 Ibs. ; April 30, not quite 7 Ibs. ; 

 August 23, 3| Ibs. ; and November 15, not quite If Ibs. 



Dr. Veelcker made still another experiment. He took 1,613 

 Ibs. of well-rotted dung (mixed manure from horses, cows, and 

 pijs,) and kept it in a heap, exposed to the weather, from Decem- 

 ber 6' to April 30, August 23, and November 15, weighing it and 

 analyzing it at these different dates. I think it is not necessary to 

 give the results in detail. From the 5th of December to the 30th 

 of April, there was no loss of nitrogen in the heap, and compar- 

 atively little loss of soluble mineral matters ; but from April 30 to 

 August 23, there was considerable loss in both these valuable ID- 

 gredients, which were washed out of the heap by rain. 



