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The Rural Voice, 1995-10, Page 12LE FIG TF FOR PROFITABILITY Put superior strength Bruce Tile to work for you Call: 519-392-6929 Toll free 1-800-265-3080 Evenings 335-6169 or 357-1819 BRUCE TILE RR 3 WALKERTON, ONT. NOG 2V0 8 THE RURAL VOICE Scrap Book Turning manure into a profit centre Farmers are starting to rediscover the value of manure - but few have turned it into a cash generator the way Bob Noten- bomer of Etzikom, Alberta has. When Notenbomer decided to convert his chicken barn into a hog barn, he had a serious problem of what to do with the manure on his 20 -acre farm. He could have followed the normal trend and installed slatted floors, a lagoon and pump and bought a manure wagon but "We went away from it because of the strong smell." Instead, for $120,000, about the same as he'd have spent to convert to liquid manure, he installed a manure composting system. The hogs are bedded in 23 centimetres of sawdust. Each morning the manure is scraped out with a skid -steer loader and taken to a composting pile. The manure is turned daily by a machine mounted on a raised cement wall 2.4 metres high and 2.7 metres wide and 73 metres long. Each day the manure is moved about 1.8 metres along the long cement pit. By the time it gets to the other end, four weeks later, it is an odorless soil. The 75 per cent manure and 25 per cent sawdust mix reaches 150 degrees Celsius during the com- posting process. Even Noten- bomer's dead hogs get tossed in the pile. "It gets very, very hot," he says. When he converted the chicken barn into a 300 -sow operation he wanted pens to be "pig -friendly" with a way of recycling the waste, Notenbomer said. He gets about eight cubic metres (10.5 cubic yards) of soil each day and sells it for about $30 a cubic yard. Because the sterile soil is about three per cent nitrogen, it is in demand as a potting soil mix.0 -Source: Western Producer New use for veggie oil: cleaning water? Vegetable oils may be the answer to cleaning groundwater contaminated by nitrogen fertilizers, including cattle manure, new research shows. U.S. department of agriculture researchers in Colorado say water can be cleansed by injecting the oil under pressure into the base of existing wells. The oil is insoluble with water and forms a plume of tiny droplets that become trapped among the soil particles to form an organic filter. "When groundwater is pumped from the wells it would have to pass through this oil filter", said William Hunter, a microbiologist with the USDA. "The oil provides a carbon source for enhancing the population of natural microorganisms that 'eat' the nitrogen, converting it into harmless nitrogen gas." Apart from cattle manure, applying too much fertilizer and excessive irrigation are common causes of groundwater contamination. "Both corn and soybean oil rapidly stimulate bacterial denitrification," said Hunter. "This even works at nitrate concentrations that are 200 times higher than the maximum permissible level for drinking water." The Colorado research involved laboratory col- umns of packed soil. Columns that received only a single oil treatment continued to work for more than a year. The researchers used their research to estimate that 1.42 litres of soybean oil could remove 10 parts per million of nitrate -nitrogen from 37,854 litres of contaminated water. The researchers said other vegetable oils could also be used.0 — Source: Western Producer