- Maneka Sanjay Gandhi

Cow dung is one of India’s treasures. We could have the richest healthiest soils in the world and grow twice as much as we do. Our population is growing. By the time I finish writing this article, there will be 30,000 more babies in India. But, because of our overuse of chemicals, pesticides and bad water management, our soils are growing weaker  and unable to grow crops even at the same level that we grew them ten years ago. This is a recipe for total disaster. Is it in the future? Look at the price of grain and vegetables – if there was enough, would prices be going up?

We need to do a quick re-evaluation of how to grow our crops. One of our biggest assets is cow dung. This again is on the decline because thousands of cattle are going to slaughter every day. From being a free asset, it now sells for Rs. 6 a kilo.

Cow dung consists of three basic elements critical to plant health: nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. Nitrogen allows plants to produce the proteins needed to build living tissue for green stems, strong roots, and lots of leaves. Phosphorus helps move energy throughout the plant, especially important in maturing plants. Potassium aids plants in adapting sugars needed in growth and is especially helpful in root crops.  While we ignore our own “ghar ki murgi” we buy huge amounts of chemical NPK fertilizer which is nothing but a chemical rehash of the same three elements.

Cow dung also contains large amounts of humus, a wonderful soil amender. Humus is simply the bulky, fibrous material that comes from plant fibres and animal remains and is valuable in several ways: it enriches clay soils; supplies food for soil flora and fauna; preserves moisture during dry spells while ensuring good drainage during wet times; and it is a storehouse for nitrogen in the soil. In short, humus acts like a reservoir, allowing nutrients to work.

Fresh cow manure has the highest nitrogen content.  Manure left to age 6 to 12 months is lower in nitrogen but has less chance of burning tender roots.

Very few people realise that the world is heading for an acute shortage of phosphorous in soil fertility. (Rock phosphate is a near monopoly of US Rocky mountains and China and both realise the commercial significance of their phosphorous mineral wealth). It is going to be an international crisis akin to the petroleum shortages.  Cow dung contains up to 0.2% phosphorous and that alone justifies its recycling in to soil. The economic importance of cow dung could be as a source of phosphorous alone.  The content in cow dung manure is 1 to 3 kgs per ton of cow dung manure. Even more important; phosphate in chemical fertilisers, being water soluble, get washed away in irrigation water. The phosphate in cow dung fertiliser binds itself to the roots of the plants and does not get wasted  by getting washed away.

However phosphorus reaches the cow through the feed it takes. Soils that are organically rich are able to supply fodder and grasses that are rich in phosphorous. So, ultimately we have to close the loop and shift to organic cow dung fertilisers for our soils to ensure continuous phosphorous sustainability.

This is an ideal fertilizer according to farmers:  Mix 10 kg fresh cow dung, 2 kg groundnut cake and 2 kg neem cake and add 100 litres of water. Stir well for 15 minutes daily for 15 days.  To apply to plants, take 1 litre of the fermented solution and dilute with 10 litres of water.  Pour around the base of the plant; a simple and easy to use technology. Women can prepare the fertilizer themselves and sell it if they like.  Since there are no additives or toxic chemicals in this preparation, it is very suitable for organic farming practices.  Better still, its cost of preparation is low compared to an equal quantity of inorganic fertilizer or plant protection chemicals.

Cow dung makes much better garden plants as well.  Add it to the kitchen waste you throw out: onion and banana peels etc. Composting manure at home is a simple process that can be completed in as little as a week.

Buy a compost bin. Put 2.5 kg. of sand to the bottom of your compost bin or pit. Cover the sand with a 2.5 kg. layer of normal soil. Cover the soil with a 4.5 kg. layer of cow dung manure. Cover the manure with kitchen waste. Cover the compost with soil. Cover the compost bin with a suitable lid or black garden plastic, and after seven days dump the contents of the bin into a single pile on the ground. Use the rake to thoroughly mix the contents of the manure compost pile. Break apart large chunks with the rake to further disperse the ingredients together. Leave the cow manure compost uncovered for a day before putting it onto your garden bed.

I guarantee that you will have much bigger, healthier plants. Cow manure can be used more directly to fertilize individual plants. A scoop of cow manure inserted into the base of a pot for squash or pumpkins, for example, gives them a nutritional boost for growing. You can also use cow manure spread around the base of established plants, particularly in sandy or nutrient-poor soils. This will provide nutrients over a longer period of time.

As our population increases and land holdings get smaller and smaller, cattle manure is the only answer.

This is the way it should be done: Cattle are sent to grazing areas during the day and penned at night. Manure that accumulates in the pens is dug out towards the end of the dry season. It is allowed to cure for up to three months and then spread on the fields in September/October.  One cow or buffalo gives about 1.5 tonnes of manure per year.

The most important significance of cow dung and cow urine is to maintain the organic microbial and mineral micronutrient richness of soil. Many researchers have studied the value of cattle manure as a fertilizer compared with mineral fertilizers. Can manure restore and maintain soil productivity in nutrient-depleted sands? Yes it can; manure application to granitic sands overcomes or prevents deficiencies of micronutrients. Cattle manure contains an average of 1.04 percent Nitrogen, 0.15 percent Potassium and 0.78 percent phosphorus and 32 other micronutrients. The Nitrogen release is low and spread over time. Manure applications result in increases in pH, waterholding capacity, hydraulic conductivity and infiltration rates. The soil conditioning ability of cow manure due to the amount of quality organic matter, that no fertilizer can match, is reason enough to use it. The soil amending properties of this great natural fertilizer are unbelievable.

Cowdung sustains all life.  Beetles, larvae, worms, bacteria, fungi love it. Birds eat the seeds, insects, larvae and worms in it, and some of the dung itself. Mice and other rodents tear it apart looking for nutritious morsels. Reptiles stake out hunting territories around it. Land tortoises eat it for easy calories and B vitamins. Cow dung is a mountain of food delights for all creatures. It provides moisture, sustenance and shelter for a long list of creatures that form the chain of life itself.  Examine a cow dung pat: in a  five-minute period you will see  butterflies, wasps, bees, beetles, moths, flies, hornets, dragonflies, lacewings , mantis, ants. Ecologically, dung is a big deal. Fungi suck enzyme-dissolved carbohydrates from it into the soil. Beetles feed on it and in the process loosen, fertilize and aerate the soil.

Remember that the sacred Egyptian scarab, a symbol of rebirth, is a dung beetle.

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