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Sep 28, 2013 4:55 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Arlene
Grantville, GA (Zone 8a)
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Okay, I am finally getting my garden weeded and most of it is grass that, unfortunately, has gone to seed. I usually dump in the woods but I have piles and piles I would like to compost but I'm afraid to because of all the weed seeds. My son suggested I toss it in with the chickens first. Anyone have any suggestions?
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Avatar for Patti1957
Sep 28, 2013 5:06 PM CST

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I wouldn't compost grass that has gone to seed unless you hot compost so that it heats up to kill the seeds.
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Sep 28, 2013 5:10 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Arlene
Grantville, GA (Zone 8a)
Greenhouse Region: Georgia Garden Sages Organic Gardener Beekeeper Vegetable Grower
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Yeah, That's kinda what I thought. We have compost tumbler but I really don't think it gets hot enough. DH does something wrong?
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Sep 28, 2013 5:12 PM CST
Name: Porkpal
Richmond, TX (Zone 9a)
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I'll bet the chickens will love it.
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Sep 28, 2013 5:13 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Arlene
Grantville, GA (Zone 8a)
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Think the chickens can eat most of the grass seed? Then compost it?
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Sep 28, 2013 7:00 PM CST
Name: Rita
North Shore, Long Island, NY
Zone 6B
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The chickens at least will be happy if nothing else.
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Sep 28, 2013 8:58 PM CST
Name: Porkpal
Richmond, TX (Zone 9a)
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The chickens may eat the grass etc in its entirety.
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Sep 28, 2013 11:07 PM CST
Name: Rick R.
Minneapolis,MN, USA z4b,Dfb/a
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It's no one's fault that the compost tumbler doesn't get hot enough. The volume just isn't there to build up and retain the heat. The general rule is that you need at least a cubic yard of organic matter (3ft wide x 3ft long x 3ft tall) continuously to keep enough heat to kill seed and bad diseases. That's pretty hard to do in any commercial set up. But if your goal is just to make good compost, high temperature is not necessary.
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Sep 29, 2013 6:34 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Arlene
Grantville, GA (Zone 8a)
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Rick, thanks. DH does make some really nice compost for me but I have noticed some seeds just don't get killed, like cucumber, melon.
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Sep 29, 2013 7:06 AM CST
Baltimore County, MD (Zone 7a)
A bit of this and a bit of that
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I don't think composting alone will kill grass seeds - it certainly hasn't in my experience. I keep two compost piles - one that I will use in my veggie garden and another that I won't and just let break down in place, and the second one is where all the seedy weeds end up. That pile is constantly covered with grass (and morning glories), which has sprouted from the compost. Of course, that doesn't get as hot as a tumbler, but I still wouldn't trust it.

Looks like chickens are a different story. This PDF cites a study where chickens were more effective than any other livestock or composting method at killing weed seeds: http://www.uwex.edu/ces/crops/... but they didn't use grass. Since they kill all the other weeds effectively, you're probably going to be fine if you feed the grass to your chickens and then compost their manure before you use it.
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Sep 29, 2013 7:21 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Arlene
Grantville, GA (Zone 8a)
Greenhouse Region: Georgia Garden Sages Organic Gardener Beekeeper Vegetable Grower
Seed Starter Cut Flowers Composter Keeper of Poultry Keeps Goats Avid Green Pages Reviewer
Wow, I didn't know that. Good article.

So I guess the chickens will get the grass. We add their manure to a huge pile of horse manure we let sit, turning a few times. I haven't gotten many weeds from the horse manure. Usually the wheat straw sprouts a fair amount of wheat but it's easy enough to pull or if I remember, I put paper under then if they sprout, they die pretty quickly.
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Oct 2, 2013 11:36 AM CST
Name: Jean
Hot Springs Vlg, AR, DeLand, F
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bitbit said:I don't think composting alone will kill grass seeds - it certainly hasn't in my experience. I keep two compost piles - one that I will use in my veggie garden and another that I won't and just let break down in place, and the second one is where all the seedy weeds end up. That pile is constantly covered with grass (and morning glories), which has sprouted from the compost. Of course, that doesn't get as hot as a tumbler, but I still wouldn't trust it.

Looks like chickens are a different story. This PDF cites a study where chickens were more effective than any other livestock or composting method at killing weed seeds: http://www.uwex.edu/ces/crops/... but they didn't use grass. Since they kill all the other weeds effectively, you're probably going to be fine if you feed the grass to your chickens and then compost their manure before you use it.


I have two piles also. The last thing I want is to replant weeds in my garden!
Any day you wake up on the sunny side of the grass is a good day.

"The moving hand writes and having writ moves on. Neither all thy piety nor all thy wit can lure it back to cancel half a line nor all thy tears wash out a word of it." The Rubiyat by Omar Khayyam
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