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Coon Droppings

Farming and rural life discussion forum. Cooking, hunting, gardening, fishing, critters, etc.
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Barnyard
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Coon Droppings

Postby Barnyard » Mon Dec 26, 2011 2:08 pm

One of my hay lofts still has about a foot of hay/straw laying on the floor. This has been there since we bought the place eight years ago. The floor needs replacement in sevearl areas so I have not bothered with it. I am now getting around to cleaning this out so the floor can be replaced. The hay/straw is full of coon droppings. Can this be spread on the garden or should I dispose of it another way?
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Jim Becker
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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby Jim Becker » Mon Dec 26, 2011 2:59 pm

I don't know, but this site gives you something to think about.
http://www.raccoonfacts.net/raccoon_droppings/raccoon_droppings.html

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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby beaconlight » Mon Dec 26, 2011 4:32 pm

We had raccoons in the attic. It was a crawl space over the 2nd floor. I dropped moth flakes in after removing the cover of the roof vent fan. They left and I covered the vents on the side the entered and left through with hardware cloth. They never returned.
I would imagine you could compost and use the hay and droppings in the garden but I would wear a good breathing mask while doing so.
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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby Former Member » Mon Dec 26, 2011 6:07 pm

I would burn the hay and droppings in the fire pit, before spreading the ashes on the garden, after reading what Jim linked to.

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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby ricky racer » Mon Dec 26, 2011 9:01 pm

I think that you should probably wear a mask when you handle the stuff so you aren't breathing in all the dust while pitch forking it onto a wagon, what ever you do with it.
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Barnyard
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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby Barnyard » Mon Dec 26, 2011 9:38 pm

Thanks guys. I did a little more digging and found these tidbits:

Don't use raccoon feces as a garden fertilizer
Use a shovel or rigid scoop to gently lift feces and any other contaminated material and place it into a heavy-duty plastic bag.
Close the plastic bag tightly and discard it in your garbage can.


I already had the gloves and mask part of it ready to use. Now I'll just bag it and send it to the landfill.
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krose
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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby krose » Fri Mar 23, 2012 8:07 am

After reading that article, I would not use it either.

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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby Stanton » Fri Mar 23, 2012 9:45 am

Good rule of thumb would be to use droppings/manure from only domesticated livestock (i.e. horse, cow, chicken) and never wild animals. Of course, with any manure, you should probably compost it or let it sit awhile to "tone down" before casting on your garden.

Hope your guests are not repeat squatters. With your dogs, I doubt they'd come around for long. :D
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2 Farmall 404's
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Re: Coon Droppings

Postby Barnyard » Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:13 am

I am happy to report that the loft has been cleaned and all waste has been deposited in our local landfill. The pile consisted of the coon droppings, parts of shingles and wood from the roof that had collapsed several years ago, and bit of hay that had been there well before we bought the place. In all I filled about 25 large trash bags. Now it's time replace a large area the floor in the loft as well as the floor of the two tack rooms immediately below the loft. Those areas rotted away over the years because of the missig roof section. Just another project in my log journey to bring BOB back to life

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