Horse Stable Manure Management
Manure handling is a necessary evil of stable management with horse owners naturally preferring to ride rather than clean stalls. Making sure that stall cleaning and other manure handling chores are done efficiently can lead to more time spent with the horse. It is important to recognize that horses produce large amounts of manure that quickly accumulates! About 12 tons of manure and soiled bedding will be removed annually from each horse stall housing a fulltime occupant. Careful consideration of how this material is moved and stored is needed for efficient manure management. Getting the manure out of a stall is only the beginning. A complete manure management system involves collection storage temporary or longterm and disposal or utilization. This publication provides information to stable managers on horse manure characteristics and options for its movement and storage. Associated issues such as odor control fly breeding and environmental impact are addressed in relation to horse facilities.
composting. Some stables have developed markets to distribute or sell the stall waste. Whether in a suburban or rural setting proper manure management is based on simple principles that will virtually eliminate environmental pollution impacts and nuisances such as odor and flies.
Manure includes both the solid and liquid portions of waste. Horse manure is about 60 percent solids and 40 percent urine. On average a horse produces 0 5 ounce of feces and 0 3 fluid ounce of urine
per pound of body weight every day. A 1000pound horse produces about 31 pounds of feces and 2 4 gallons of urine daily which totals around 51 pounds of total raw waste per day Figure 1.
Soiled bedding removed with the manure during stall cleaning may account for another 8 to 15 pounds per day of waste. The volume of soiled bedding removed equals almost twice the volume of manure removed but varies widely depending on management practices. So for each stall about 60 to 70 pounds of total waste material is removed daily. This results in about 12 tons of