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January
19, 2012, Columbus, OH – Saturated field conditions last fall and early
this winter have made it difficult for livestock producers in Ohio and the
Midwest to apply manure. As a result, most farmers are beginning to run
out of manure storage room right now.
With
colder weather in the forecast, applying excess manure on frozen ground is
likely to be the only way producers will be able to get rid of it, according
to Ohio State University Extension experts. But, they cautioned,
producers need to be diligent about following proper application methods
to minimize impact on water quality and maximize absorption in
the soil for optimal fertility.
“Now is
not the time to shirk on proper application methods,” Amanda Meddles, OSU Extension program coordinator for environmental management, wrote in the
university’s Crop Observation and Recommendation Network
(C.O.R.N.) newsletter. “Constant changes in weather are typical of winters
in Ohio and neighboring states, which increases the potential for
manure to move with surface run-off. Run-off can lead to polluting water
resources, including streams, waterways and wells. This not only impacts
water quality, but the nutrients are lost and not available for the
next year’s crop.”
Meddles,
along with OSU Extension educators Glen Arnold and Jon
Rausch, reminded producers that winter manure application should be done
only as a last resort – because the potential for run-off increases
substantially when manure is spread in the winter months. And, they
insisted, only enough manure should be applied to frozen or
snow-covered ground to address storage limitations.
In
Ohio, the following are criteria that must be met in order for producers
to begin spreading manure on frozen or snow-covered fields:
Application
rates are limited to 10 wet tons per acre for solid manure with more than
50 percent moisture, and five wet tons for manure with less than 50 percent moisture. For liquid manure, the application rate is limited to
5,000 gallons per acre.
Applications are
to be made on land with at least 90 percent surface residue cover,
including good-quality hay or pasture field, all corn grain residue
remaining after harvest, all wheat residue cover remaining after
harvest, or a well-established cover crop.
Manure
must not be applied on more than 20 contiguous acres; each 20-acre block
should be separated by a break of at least 200 feet.
Farmers
should use fields that are farthest from streams, ditches, waterways,
surface inlets and other water sources, and which are the least likely to
have manure move in a concentrated flow toward and into water
resources.
The
application setback distance must be increased to a minimum of 200 feet
from environmentally sensitive areas and areas of concentrated flow, such
as grassed waterways, surfaced drainage ditches, streams, surface
inlets and water bodies.
For
Ohio Department of Agriculture permitted facilities and certified livestock
managers (CLMs), setbacks should be 300 feet from wells and residences.
Manure
applied on frozen or snow-covered ground should not exceed the nitrogen
need of the next growing crop; the crop removal rate for P2O5 for the next
crop (not to exceed 250 pounds per acre); or the crop K2O needs (not
to exceed 500 pounds per acre).
For
fields with slopes greater than six per cent, manure should be applied in
alternating strips 60- to 200-feet wide, generally on the contour; or in
the case of contour strips, on alternating strips at the rates
identified above.
More
information on winter manure application can be obtained through local
Soil and Water Conservation Districts, Natural Resources Conservation Service,
and OSU Extension offices. Additional resources regarding manure
management are available at http://oema.osu.edu.
In some
states, manure application on frozen or snow-covered ground is prohibited,
so producers are advised to check local regulations.
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