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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Long Beards & Spurs
turkey pop in southern wayne co
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<blockquote data-quote="hbg1" data-source="post: 4762733" data-attributes="member: 17222"><p>I am not disagreeing with anything that has been said to this point, however I have no doubts the chicken house are mostly responsible for the decline. I'm not sure that Twra realizes it but the chicken litter from these houses is spread on hay fields and pastures as fertilizer. That is commonly known but what may not be commonly known is this litter is either classified as green or yellow. The green litter is good and free of certain bacteria's but the yellow is contaminated. There are no regulations on either to my knowledge. It doesn't take a genius to figure out the correlation to the declining turkey populations. The easy solution isn't to stamp out chicken house but to regulate the litter that is spread. Will anyone step up is the question.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hbg1, post: 4762733, member: 17222"] I am not disagreeing with anything that has been said to this point, however I have no doubts the chicken house are mostly responsible for the decline. I’m not sure that Twra realizes it but the chicken litter from these houses is spread on hay fields and pastures as fertilizer. That is commonly known but what may not be commonly known is this litter is either classified as green or yellow. The green litter is good and free of certain bacteria’s but the yellow is contaminated. There are no regulations on either to my knowledge. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out the correlation to the declining turkey populations. The easy solution isn’t to stamp out chicken house but to regulate the litter that is spread. Will anyone step up is the question. [/QUOTE]
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