Madras Agricultural Journal
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Research Article | Open Access | Peer Review

Notes

Volume : 2
Issue: Mar-mar
Pages: 162 - 168
Published: May 19, 2025
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Abstract


In the village of Eppothuvendran, a black soil dry village between Ettiyapuram and Tuticorin, I came across an excellent practice of making compost. There was a depression in the ground some distance from the village where silt from the adjoining lands accumulates in the rainy season. This silt was at the time of my visit heing removed. It was still quite wet. A layer about 9" thick was spread on the ground in a neat rectangular area. On this, a layer of ordinary cattle manure about 4" thick was evenly spread. This was again covered with a layer of wet silt on which cattle manure was again spread. Alternate layers of silt and cattle manure were then built up. One compost stack which was being built was about 5 feet high. I enquired the reason why this system was adpoted in preference to the usual system of keeping the cattle manure in a pit and periodically covering it with silt and was given the very sound explantion that there was no silt available near the village and as the manure was mixed with silt in the proportions of about one to three, this saved considerably in carting, especially as the manure was to be used in lands distant from the village.

DOI
Pages
162 - 168
Creative Commons
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Madras Agricultural Students' Union in Madras Agricultural Journal (MAJ). This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited by the user.

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