flowerbug
Sustainability Master
So I'm trying to convince my boyfriend that we should buy a house and I think I almost have him. We where originally wanting to wait until we could get the house out of town like we wanted but I'm getting impatient. And the 3 houses I'm looking at are in a town over and alow livestock except pigs (one person messed it up for everyone they let the pigs get too stinky and someone complained.)
that's really easy to do. we have neighbors to the east of us that have them and any time the wind shifts you can smell 'em. i do not mind horses, cows, sheep and light chicken runs, but once you get above a certain population of chickens, ducks, turkeys and pigs they all just have too much of a stench to them. a very low number done on a good rotation would probably be acceptable to people, but i'm pretty sure most farmers would not consider it economical... the other neighbors to the SE of us had chickens in very tight quarters they raised for meat and if the wind shifted to come from that direction it did really stink bad. pack people in like that and we'd stink bad too. just not right IMO as stink in general means that nutrients are being lost (evaporative and likely any extra water soaking into the groundwater will have way too many nutrients too). this is also why i think that clovers and other nitrogen fixing plants need to be used in moderation as excess nutrients are just going to be leaching away instead of being used by the soil community.
the ideas of carrying capacity have a lot to do also with the soil type you have and your local geology and water table and such.
it's really all worthy of a lot of thought and study as is waste handling in general from the perspective of a septic system but also the idea of polluting perfectly good water with wastes just to carry them away. perhaps it makes a lot more sense to use a dry compost system and to not have to treat that much water or to then have to deal with treating all that water to get the wastes back out again... in the bigger cities is is also just plain wrong to combine human or organic wastes with any kind of industrial wastes. all those metals and chemicals are often exactly what a farmer would not want to apply to any fields. so wrong... and then there are issues of pharmaceuticals/hormones and even radioisotopes and other chemotherapeutic agents that you really don't want in the waste system at all...
um, sorry, i can wander a bit..., but all these things are kinda all mashed together in the end (or out the end...)...
what happened in our neighborhood when i was growing up was the neighboring dairy farmer decided to get about 150 pigs one year and after that he was told rather bluntly that, no, that wasn't going to happen again... we were all used to the small dairy farm and the smells of that and i'm ok with those. horse and cow, ok... sileage ok. pig, um, nope, just not good... it really stunk bad...