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idogcow

Bone meal....make your own?

idogcow
18 years ago

Hey,

I hate throwing stuff away, even bones, so I was wondering...I have a heavy-duty wood chipper. If I were to run the bones from mealtime through it (pork, chicken, etc), would I have bone meal? Or is bone meal something more than ground-up bones?

Thanks

James

Comments (37)

  • mountain_curmudgeon
    18 years ago

    More powdered than ground-up. After running them through a chipper, you'll have to grind them like flour to gain any short term benefit from them, in my opinion. Bones take a long time to decompose. Think dinosaurs.

  • squeeze
    18 years ago

    actually bonemeal is made using a steaming process that includes caustic soda, also part of the process of rendering slaughterhouse wastes like making animal glue - an industrial process, not just grinding up

    Bill

  • paquebot
    18 years ago

    From experience, I find that bones WILL decompose quickly. In the past 30 years or so, my gardens have consumed over 100 deer rib cages. They hang all winter for the birds to pick clean. (Five hanging in the lilacs right now!) They are run through a shredder or bagging mower a few times and composted, originally in a pile but a tumbler the past 9 years. You'd think that my garden would be white with bits of bone by now but it isn't. 43 years worth of chicken, turkey, squirrel, rabbit, 'coon, 'possum, pigeons, pig, cow, and any other edible critter's bones have all gone back to the ground. The only thing that shows up now and then are round steak bones. Otherwise everything vanishes in a few years as long as the stuff is in small bits. I've even smashed deer leg bones into small pieces with a hatchet and composted them. The slightly acidic soil takes care of them in the end.

    Martin

  • southerngurl
    18 years ago

    Speaking of bone meal, my dog just ate like 2 lbs of it. I called the company and they said it would be ok, just might constipate her.

  • veggiecanner
    16 years ago

    All our bones are burnt in the wood furnace. Then they go out with the wood ashes and are spread on the snow all winter.

  • Demeter
    16 years ago

    Not quite on target, but ... I have a heavy duty "blender" - a VitaMixer, actually. It can pulverize bones - I've used it on chicken and turkey bones aplenty, though I haven't tried it on beef bones. I figure pulverizing the bones in water = bone meal soup. I put it in my compost, since it's mixed in with leftover bits of meat and fat and marrow, and it heats up the compost very nicely, but I could also put it under plants that like bone meal, I guess.

  • peter_6
    16 years ago

    I'm with veggiecanner. After we have made stock with our meat bones (which you all do, I assume) we put the bones on our log fire. When we empty the grate we crush any bones that have held their shape by hand. Then the bones and wood-ash go on the compost heap. It's truly said that if you aren't recycling your'e throwing it all away. Regards, Peter.

  • takadi
    15 years ago

    So would it be a better choice to burn the bones or bake them? Would any bones do?

  • peter_6
    15 years ago

    idogcow: we make our own bonemeal by throwing bones on the fire back. All the bones from the meat we eat, from leg of lamb to ox tail, are simmered all day to make stock. Then, in the winter only of course, the bones are burned. When we take the wood ash from the fireplace in spring, any bones that haven't disintegrated are easily crushed by hand. So the bonemeal goes onto the compost pile or the soil with the wood ash -- progressively and in small quantities of course. This may be a problem for people with high pH, because wood ash tends to send it higher. But I like the idea because I regard anything that only provides one use as second class. Regards, Peter.

  • takadi
    15 years ago

    Peter, so do you actually store the bones and use it for fireplace fuel in the winter?

  • kathyp
    15 years ago

    OK - for all you bone burners - what does that smell like? I live in the city, and my neighbors would have a fit if they smelled burning bone - how bad is it? I would love to be able to do this, but only if it won't offend the neighbors.

    Thanks,
    K

  • paulns
    15 years ago

    "I regard anything that only provides one use as second class."

    Well said, Peter, I'll be sure to repeat it.

  • takadi
    15 years ago

    So I decided to make some of my own bone meal. I baked some chicken and pork bones on 400 for an hour and half until most of it became charred (quite smoky though). Then I crushed it in a mortar and pestle, which was surprisingly easy to do.

    Afterwards, I decided to rinse the crushed bones with water. The liquid that came out was a bright orange yellow, almost like urine. Does anyone know what this liquid is composed of?

  • californian
    15 years ago

    If you ran your oven for an hour and a half to make a small quantity of bone meal you did more harm to the environment than good. I can see throwing the bones in a fireplace where you would be making a fire anyway, but to use an oven seems very wasteful.

  • takadi
    15 years ago

    I made quite a large batch of bones, so hopefully it isn't that bad.

    Also I figured electricity is pretty efficient compared to fire and the heat of the oven is insulated so not much energy has to be consumed

  • peter_6
    15 years ago

    takadi: about burning bones on the fire, I should explain that we leave the ashes in the grate all winter (this is to reduce the draft and slow down burning) and clear them out in the spring. Regards, Peter.

  • organicguy
    15 years ago

    I don't know if burning the bones, or baking them at high heat will change the available nurtient content or not, you will be hard pressed to make enough to do a lot of good for your garden. If you don't want to waste them, I would suggest letting them dry in the son for a few week, break them up as best you can and throw them into the garden. Let nature take it's course.

    Ron
    The Garden Guy
    http://www.TheGardenGuy.org
    New Articles and almost daily journal entries!!

  • gjcore
    15 years ago

    I'm not a major meat eater. But I've been burying chicken and turkey bones in my garden, about 12 inches under, and they seem to disappear within 6 months.

  • yukkuri_kame
    13 years ago

    I have always wondered about this topic. Thanks for all the ideas.

    As for simply burying bones in the garden, I figure that slow composting is not necessarily a negative.

    Remember a story about a permaculturist who added a huge batch of some sort of sea shells to a field. An old farmer laughed at him, saying the shells wouldn't break down for 100 years. The permie thought, "Great! I'll have minerals for the next 100 years!" Just a different mindset.

  • hoodat
    13 years ago

    I just dig a hole in the garden and bury the bones after the dog cleans them. Eventually they break down. I'm too old to be in a hurry.

  • phytolacca
    13 years ago

    "I don't know if burning the bones, or baking them at high heat will change the available nurtient content or not,"

    It will. Bones have quite a lot of nitrogen in the protein that acts as "rebar" in the mineral matrix. Charring the bones burns the protein and releases the nitrogen to the atmosphere if taken too far.

  • hoodat
    13 years ago

    >actually bonemeal is made using a steaming process that >includes caustic soda, also part of the process of >rendering slaughterhouse wastes like making animal glue - >an industrial process, not just grinding up
    >Bill

    I'm old enough to remember when bone meal was made of ground bones right from the packing plant without any cleaning or steaming. It was terrific stuff but OMG did it stink.

  • jimwoodman
    11 years ago

    Is it OK to get bone meal from my butcher? thanks

  • soos621
    11 years ago

    Hey everyone,

    I read this thread and was very intrigued, if you're looking for bone meal for your outside garden burying the small (or broken up) bones is best without burning. The process of burning the bones is like what Phytolacca posted. Fire usually breaks apart molecules and proteins.

    On the note of the whole forum, which has kind of been askew, is that you should dry the animal bones out either via sun or just hung up, if you wanna throw some extra heat (by putting them next to the wood stove for example) should be fine. After that you can break up the bones into a powder with a mortar and pestle, or whatever way you like, but the more its broken down the better it will be. If you're into indoor gardening or container gardening you want this to be as fine as possible so the plants can access the nutrients.

    Other than that you could put into compost as well.

    Something to add as well, would you be able to dry and store the blood of the meat to make blood meal? I'm assuming blood meal is just dried blood. but if you were to mix your powdered blood and bone meal together you'de have a nice fertilizer of like 12-12-1 add that with some vermicompost or compost and you're plants will probably love it, of course to harvest that much blood and bone is a lot of meat so if you wanna make your own stick with organically raised chickens, plus eggs and eggshells and all that jazz.

    Sorry if i threw things off a bit.

    have a great one.

  • GrowCookKate
    10 years ago

    I've had luck with poultry. When I make stock, I allow it to simmer for more than 8 hours. If you cook your bones long enough in liquid, they'll crumble beautifully into meal. And then it's either straight into the garden, the compost bin, or back into a freezer bag because you haven't gotten a compost bin yet. (And the last would be myself!)
    Now, for pork bones or beef bones, I've not attempted. I, too, live in a city in an apartment. Though my landlord has been more than pleased with my gardening, I imagine they wouldn't be too pleasant towards hanging bones.
    ...Unless I could find something artsy to do with ox tail rings. Then it could be decorative art over the winter.


    Best of luck in these chilly months!

    Kate

  • GreeneGarden
    10 years ago

    A chipper would only handle small or medium sized bones. You might break the chipper with any larger bones.

    I put my large bones into an outdoor solar dehydrator for over a year. Between the heating and freezing and thawing, they become brittle. Then I run them through a hammer mill.

    Actually I eat the smaller bones - chicken, duck, rabbit, etc.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Garden For Nutrition

  • peter_6
    10 years ago

    1. To avoid wasting bones one needs to make stock. Simmer the bones in water, with a small dash of vinegar, all day long. Decant, and make soup with the stock. (I can't imagine soup made without it.)

    2. Throw the bones on a wood fire. (This presents a seasonal limitation.) When you clean out the wood ash in Spring, the bones are part of it; many will have disintegrated, those that haven't will do so when crushed by hand. Result, a dual soil amendment

    So, like all truly organic processes, there are multiple uses for any "waste" ; think dead leaves and yogurt pots, to name but two.

    Regards, Peter.

  • greenthumbzdude
    10 years ago

    you can make bone sauce with your leftover bones.....repels critters from eating your place like deer......look up permaculture and bone sauce recipe

  • chickencoupe
    10 years ago

    I make stock.

    Then, I dry them via numerous ways.

    Next, I take some and grind them down via the metal cheese grater box thingy. These are used when planting heavy feeders in the garden. No idea if it helps. I think it does.

    That which I don't want to bother with gets put into the compost.

    Most bones go to the dogs in raw fashion with fat and meat trimming when I prepare the raw meats. Great for their teeth. Probably the most useful application of bones.

    I have coons and skunks so I don't put regular bones in the compost. I am familiar. They really do degrade well if the local clime has an abundance of soil-borne life forms. Artificial soil isn't going to decompose anything in the same manner as nature.

  • FincaAmrta
    10 years ago

    I have been saving the bones I give to my dogs for at least 10 years hoping to find some way to make them into bonemeal. I am going to try and steam them over wet sand in a half 55 gallon metal drum over a fire and see what happens. I have so many of them . . . they will fill up the barrel. If anyone has tried this method . . . please let me know. If this doesn't work I am going to just burn them in the fire and use the ash with the burnt bone in my compost.

  • peter_6
    10 years ago

    If you're not going to waste bones you make stock - right. Boil them all day, with a little bit of vinegar, and the soup you make with the stock will be far better for it. Now what? Throw the bones on the wood fire, and when you clear out the wood-ash, and by hand crush the bones that haven't disintegrated into powder or powderish. So here you nave bone meal plus all the minerals that were in the wood. Regards, Peter.

  • ilovehogs
    9 years ago

    I am new to this site and enjoyed reading everyone's experience. Quite a nice batch of information. I collect bones and make a batch of stock in the oven overnight at 210 degrees F. Sometimes I throw the bones in the gardens or grind them to use as a base for dog treats. When my beloved hogs return from the butcher, I pressure cook their heads, remove all soft edible parts to can for the dogs and cats, and throw the bones to the chickens to peck off the stuff that I could not remove. The chickens will strip them clean and also eat some of the bone, great for egg shell integrity. After pressure cooking the bones are pretty soft, so I can just throw them in the garden once the chickens have their fill. I will also put feathers in my garden after processing a batch of broilers, turkeys and/or ducks. These break down amazingly quickly. I save all my egg shells for the garden. Some shells I compost, some I throw directly in the garden and others I save for transplanting my tomatoes....I understand that the calcium can help in preventing blossom end rot. All that said, the thing that offers the most obvious, dramatic, and instant benefit to my plants in bunny poop, which is composted prior to leaving the bunny and can be applied straight away to the garden..

  • mickivers
    8 years ago

    I am a greyhound rearer and trainer and once each week I cook 10 kilos of beef neck bones in my pressure cooker for three hours, once you reach full pressure (10 mins) very little gas is required, once the stew is finished I pull the bone portion out and crush them with the back of a small axe, they just virtually fall apart, then add them back into the pot, I do this hoping to maximise my dogs calcium intake.

  • rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Mick, are you in Australia?

  • mickivers
    8 years ago

    Yes, in Gosford N.S.W

  • Cpgl Perryman
    6 years ago

    AS ASSOCIATED WITH TONS OF THIS PRODUCT I WOULD SAY HEAT CLOGGING ARE YOUR MAIN ISSUES PLUS THEY WILL NEED TO BE PUT THROUGH THE SAME PROCESS TO OVER AND OVER AGAIN TO HAVE A SMALL ENOUGH particle SIZE PLUS IF THE BONES ARE ULTRA DRY THEY WILL TURN TO DUST