The land should not be very strong in nitrogen (or stable manure), else the plants will run too much to vine and be too late.
Along the Ohio, a heap of stable manure, or light soil that does not become packed and water-logged, placed about the base of the plants, will carry over many of the tea roses.
Excessive use of stable manure, usually rich in nitrogen, should be avoided, as tending to make too rank growth of foliage and berries of a soft texture.
We will suppose the Cucumbers are to be grown in a two-light frame, for which will be required four good cartloads of stable manure.
The chief objection to the use of stable manure, however, even when well rotted, is that it induces a free growth of foliage instead of promoting an early development of fruit.
Constant dressings of farmyard orstable manure result in the formation of humus, which, as it becomes sour, has to be sweetened by the solvent influence of lime.
The phosphoric acid content of stable manure is too low for all soils, and the reënforcement by means of acid phosphate would be good practice even if there were no preservative effect.
Stable manure that is free from the seeds of pernicious weeds makes an excellent dressing.
Shakspeare ridicules Simple as a Bohemian Tartar; both of which terms were applied to gipsies.
But all criminal acts committed within the limits of a county, or within a line drawn from one headland to the next, are specially liable to be tried by the common law courts.
A sort of serpentine winding of a cable or other rope, that it may occupy a small space in the ship.
The zig-zags or tortuous trenches in the approach of a besieger.
Keep on working in stable manure or rotten straw, or any other coarse vegetable matter, when the soil is moist enough for its decay.
If your land needs fertilization, stable manure or a "complete fertilizer" of the dealers would be the proper thing to use.
The land should not be very rich in nitrogen (or stable manure), else the plants will run too much to vine and be too late.
The leading source of humus in most gardens is stable manure.
Such lands may be very greatly benefited by stable manure, even though that manure may have lost a large part of fertility by being baptized under the eaves of the barn.
It enhances the value of farm-yard or stable manure, as compared with artificial manures.
You have noticed how a pile of stable manure steams in cold weather.
We can increase the amount of organic matter in the soil by plowing in stable manure, leaves and other organic refuse of the farm, or we can plow under crops of clover, grass, grain or other crops grown for that purpose.
This organic matter may be added in the form of stable manure, but more satisfactory results will be obtained where leguminous crops are included in the preparatory treatment.
For fertilizer, stable manure will do when nothing else is available, but a commercial fertilizer, rich in potash and phosphoric acid, is much to be preferred for this crop.
Potash is to be had most cheaply, perhaps, in the manner suggested heretofore: by the use of kainit as a preserver of stable manure.
An analysis of the onion shows that it carries away fertility in just about the proportions furnished by stable manure.
It is very lasting in its action, and with the kainit makes a complete manure, especially in connection with the winter coat of stable manure.
Where large quantities ofstable manure are in a fermenting state, there should be little difficulty in selecting material to form a bed at any time.
The spawn in these caves is introduced into the little beds in flakes taken from an old bed, or, still better, from a heap of stable manure in which it occurs naturally.
The following standard fertilizers may be used: stable manure, nitrate of soda, muriate of potash, and bone meal.
If stable manure is used in fertilizing the plots, it must be well rotted and then carefully spaded into the plots.
Commercial fertilizer may also be used on the plots the following spring, but no stable manure.
Stable manure is still the favorite article with the masses of gardeners.
All this plant food, and perhaps one half more, can be drawn in a single load, while it will take ten such loads of stable manure to supply the same amount of plant food.
But from most soils there is a handsome profit possible from a very small application of stable manure.
The farmer who skillfully employs as a fertilizer a peat containing a good proportion of nitrogen, may thus expect to get from it results similar to what would come from the corresponding quantity of nitrogen in guano or stable manure.
Stable manure is obviously that fertilizer whose effects are most universally observed and appreciated, and by setting analyses of the two side by side, we may see at a glance, what are the excellencies and what the deficiencies of peat.
We adopt, as a general fact, the conclusion that peat is inferior in fertilizing power to stable manure.
By stable manure we mean, usually, that of the horse, and that of horned cattle.
This has a great effect on the richness of the excrements, but they are still a very good fertilizer, and should be protected from loss in the same way as stable manure.
Mulching consists in spreading a layer of stable manure, about 3 in.
For old gardens liquid manure is preferable to stable manure, and if lime or chalk be added it will keep in good heart for years without becoming too rich.
Make the soil firm about the roots and give a mulching of stable manure.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stable manure" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.