February 11, 2009 1:53 PM

What Smell? Farmers Cozy Up To Manure

(AP)  High fertilizer costs have left some Iowa farmers coddling up to a previously shunned byproduct of the business - manure.

There's no indication that Iowans have taken to the smell of manure that hovers around hog lots, but a recent survey from the Agricultural Law Center at Drake University shows that farmers are placing a higher value on the commodity.

Farmers said that's because manure is a much cheaper alternative to commercial fertilizer. As Dwight Dial of Lake City sees it, people are willing to endure the smell for the savings.

"One year you're smelly and stinky and they really didn't want you there," said Dial, who grows corn, soybeans and raises hogs near the central Iowa town. "And the next year, oh my. We have access to your hog manure to save us money."

Matt Russell, a food policy project coordinator with the Agricultural Law Center, said the survey of 61 farmers from across the state offered a window into the decision-making of farmers who have been faced with higher input costs than in previous years.

"The value of manure to farmers has definitely increased," Russell said. "It's primarily related to commercial inputs and farming costs. The cost of nitrogen has gone up so the cost of commercial fertilizer has gone up and you can get some of the same nutrients from manure for a fraction of the cost."

Russell said the survey shows evidence that dollars and cents have helped to ease tensions in one of Iowa's perpetual fights.

The odors coming from hog producers are often the target of criticism from neighboring towns and farmers alike who don't appreciate the waft from large stockpiles of manure. The survey indicates that farmers, at least, are seeing some value in the manure now, Russell said.

"We have gone, because of fertilizer prices, from a situation where the person who owned manure was maybe even paying to get rid of it, to now, someone is paying them for manure," he said.

Paul Mugge, who farms near Sutherland in northwestern Iowa, said he has never been anti-manure, but he understands why more people are taking a second whiff of it now.

"It's never been a scourge to me at all. I've always used it. I need every bit of manure I have," Mugge said. "For most people, now I think it's about economics. Chemical fertilizer got so expensive this year that we're all looking for alternatives."

Mugge and Dial, the Lake City farmer, both said they expect manure will lose some of its charm if fertilizer costs fall in years ahead. For now, though, farmers are smelling only savings.

"When commercial fertilizer becomes cheaper, hog manure will stink again," Dial said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by octavianfdlr December 13, 2008 5:20 AM EST
Cat manure certainly works in my yard. So does dog manure.

By the by, did you know that we make much of our nitrogen fertilizer from fossil fuels? Every person who complains about the addition of manure to the soil ("land disposal") is actually complaining that we are not putting enough carbon dioxide into the air...

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by davek455 December 12, 2008 1:58 PM EST
did you know that SpellCheck on Lotus Notes suggests that I replace s.h.i.t with Shiite?
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by rf35 December 12, 2008 12:43 PM EST
Sounds like a bunch of ***** to me.
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by inketolstoy December 11, 2008 6:31 PM EST
"the closer you get to DC the more stupid one becomes."

I have a hypothesis that most politician brains will not grow good vegetables despite the fact that their make-up is very similar to that of walkshe''s rabbit fertlizer.
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by usclimey December 11, 2008 5:32 PM EST
Posted by walkshe

Interesting!! Do you have any idea whether cat poop would do the same thing? We have seven and it would sure cut down on litter costs if we could use it on the yard. Thanks
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by walkshe December 11, 2008 5:23 PM EST
Manure, along with other organics, enrich the soil for a longer term, versus the yearly need for chemical fertilizers. I raise show rabbits - rabbit manure is actually one of the best organic fertilizers you can get. No need to compost prior to use and it comes in a handy pelleted form. My garden soil went from dead brown-gray powder to rich dark brown earth over a period of 5 years of adding rabbit manure. Sometimes, the old ways ARE best.
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by arnoldbowers December 11, 2008 5:08 PM EST
i read just yesterday about the state of Maryland and its chicken manure being a ourcaste and want some way toprotect their water from the hugh piles of manure. I see the people in Iowa are a lot more intellegent than any one in Maryland or the government authority of Maryland the closer you get to DC the more stupid one becomes. Frank
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