On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 Ophelia" wrote:
>"Master Bruce" wrote:
>On Mon, 11 Jan 20 "Ophelia" wrote:
>>"Master Bruce" wrote:
>>On Sun, 10 Jan 2021 Ophelia wrote:
>>>"S Viemeister" wrote:
>>>On 10/01/2021 Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>>>> On Sunday, January 10, 2021 Sheldon wrote:
>>>>> In most parts of NYC one can buy most anything from the roadway and
>>>>> sidewalk in front of their house, and venders hawking their wares in
>>>>> every alleyway between buildings... there's a steady stream of push
>>>>> carts and horse drawn carts with venders selling most everything,
>>>>> legal and illegal.
>>>>
>>>> By all means, let's all move to NYC so we can step in the shit from the
>>>> horse-drawn carts.
Don't laugh, lots of big city people headed outside early trying to be
first to collect the horse manure for their gardens. Back then there
were no stores selling any sort of fertilizer. My mom would snd me
out with a bucket and shovel to keep her garden supplied.
>>>Horse drawn carts? I remember them from my childhood - which was a
>>>_long_ time ago.
>>>
>>>===
>>>
>>> LOL same here:))))
>>
>>I remember a ragpicker (old-clothes-man?) with horse and cart going
>>through our street. But even back then he was considered something
>>from bygone days.
>>
>>====
>>
>> Yes, it was mostly the 'rag and bone man':) I have to say though, I
>>remember that when his horse made a mess, he shovelled it up. For his
>>garden I believe:)
>
>These days he could sell it :)
>
>===
>
>Gosh! Who knew:)) LOL there are a lot of horses on the fields around us.
>Are you saying I could follow them around and make a living <g>
You'd be surprised, even here in farm country where lots of livestock
is raised and the downstate race tracks winter their horses here in
gorgeous heated barns... they sell the horse manure. No one wants cow
flop and pig shit because the stench never disappates, the cow flop
contains too many weed seeds. We have a source of free racehorse
manure. Race horses are fed a special diet and put out to pasture in
fields where nothing harmful is growing but still we compost for a
year to kill any seeds... proper composting generates heat that cooks
the seeds and insect eggs. Our neighbor who stores his haying
equipment in our barn supplies the farmers with cordage for their wood
stoves and he's given more manure than he can ever use in a lifetime.
He no longer has a vegetable garden, with all his haying and wood
cutting he doesn't have time... we supply him with lots of fresh
veggies from our garden. He and his son take care of us too, with the
last big snow they came here with his huge tractor and moved most of
our snow with his front loader bucket.