Animal wastes are now seen as one contributor to environmental degradation because of the methane it releases into the atmosphere. For those people who raise chickens in their backyard, their primary concern is how to make chicken coops that could very well be safe in terms of handling chicken wastes and not contribute to global warming.
Probably one of the best fertilizers in the world that is generated by animals is the chicken manure and gardeners prefer it for their vegetables. With chicken manure, the vegetables are bigger, healthier, and fresher. You do not need to have a green thumb in order to produce quality grown vegetables and surely, you can be the envy of your neighbors with your harvests.
What is with the chicken manure then that makes the plants grow healthier? According to studies, chicken manure contains 1.8 nitrogen, 0.8 potash, and 1.5 phosphate percent per total weight of the manure.
So how could we make use of chicken manure if we are raising chickens on a coop? We can do it in simple ways.
1. We just need to put straw or grass underneath the coops where chicken droppings fall and put scraps of leftover vegetables in it to make a compost heap.
2. Every now and then we must put the same materials into the heap and mix it well with a shovel.
3. After few days when everything is soiled down you can use the compost as an organic fertilizer.
This is just one way of using manure from your chicken coop in making compost. Chicken manure contains high amount of nitrogen and other minerals but once it begins to rot and the juice becomes nitrified and accumulates into the soil, the leachate that is now toxic penetrates the ground and can contaminate ground water along with our water supplies. This is why large poultry facilities are bane to our environment.
There are many uses of compost from chicken manure. It can be utilized as organic fertilizers by ornamental plants and plants in your garden. So when you are environmentally aware of the consequence brought by chicken wastes you will able to manage wastes from your chicken coops accordingly. In this manner you become more responsible in knowing that you do help the environment through proper management.
So if you have a chicken coop in your backyard and know how to fully utilize the manure it produces, who needs large commercial poultry farms for the productions of commercial eggs? We do not actually need these poultry raisers if everyone has their chicken coops, and chickens to raise. In this way, we help ourselves become independent while decreasing pollutants that are harming our atmosphere and our environment.

1. No fancy tools required.
2. Easy to build plans.
3. Save money by building your own coop.
4. Print off as many plans as required.