Re: Planting perennials


I read in a gardening magazine recently (Organic Gardening?) that llama
compost was wonderful.  It said that since llamas have several stomachs the
food is processed really well and weed seed is not viable when it comes out
of the llama.  It is also very good for growing poopies, just ask Peggy. :)

-----Original Message-----
From: Nancy Plain <lamamama@bright.net>
To: perennials@mallorn.com <perennials@mallorn.com>
Date: Friday, March 06, 1998 3:54 PM
Subject: Re: Planting perennials


>Speaking of manure & compost...has anyone had any experience with llama
>manure & compost?  We just got llamas & have started a large pile of manure
>& straw.  Will that be good to add to a compost...or use straight?  I'm new
>at compost...let me know.
>
>Nancy
>lamamama@bright.net
>
>----------
>> From: Grdnlvr <Grdnlvr@aol.com>
>> To: perennials@mallorn.com
>> Subject: Re: Planting perennials
>> Date: Friday, March 06, 1998 11:22 AM
>>
>> We usually amend the soil with a mix that includes compost (or compro if
>you
>> don't have compost), manure and peat.   Then we add a fertilizer that has
>> green sand, poultry manure and minerals in it to the hole (or you can add
>bone
>> meal) that you dig.  Our perennials are coming back with a vengeance. We
>are
>> also zone 7 in N. VA.
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@mallorn.com with the
>> message text UNSUBSCRIBE PERENNIALS
>---------------------------------------------------------------------
>To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@mallorn.com with the
>message text UNSUBSCRIBE PERENNIALS

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@mallorn.com with the
message text UNSUBSCRIBE PERENNIALS



Other Mailing lists | Author Index | Date Index | Subject Index | Thread Index