you can grow some species of mushrooms off sterilized spent grain namely oysters which are very good eatin'. Anyone with a pressure cooker and some quart size canning jars can do it, instructions are just a search away...
I've tried to compost it-thrown on top of the pile...but the deer eat it in a couple of days.
I was going to toss it on top of my hops bed, but knowing the deer like the grains, I don't want to draw their attention to my hops.
Another composter here, that stuff is like gold in there.
I have been composting mine and they do take a long time. Also the flies LOVE to make woopie and lay eggs. I started turning mine as soon as i added them. Mix them up with the leaves and stuff and it makes a big difference. Keeps the flies down also.Gah?
I wish I could say the same. I put about 4 batches worth into my compost, and after a few weeks it started to stink like a corpse. I looked into it, and....
It turns out spent grains are a 'green' (which means a higher nitrogen to carbon ratio), so my composted had wayyyyyy to many greens. I had to add like 10+ newspapers, 15 cardboard boxes etc to bring the ratio in line. The story ends good now, since I have a crapload of what will be black gold by june!!
Grain is lousy for a dogs digestive system...regardless of how much they like it.
I have been composting mine and they do take a long time. Also the flies LOVE to make woopie and lay eggs. I started turning mine as soon as i added them. Mix them up with the leaves and stuff and it makes a big difference. Keeps the flies down also.
another composter here... I used to have a loose compost pile out back.... 2 foot tall and about 4 feet wide, almost all spent grain... last winter a day after a good 8 inch snow, I noticed every rabbit in the state seemed to be feeding on it... So, in the interest of sparing summer gardens a larger population, I built a 4 ft cubed box for compost.... the rabbit population seems to have moved elsewhere.
Not sure about Minnesota laws, but in PA it's legal to shoot/eat any "pest" rabbit on your property. I'm not saying you should bait them, but if they ever come back to your garden...
Not sure about Minnesota laws, but in PA it's legal to shoot/eat any "pest" rabbit on your property. I'm not saying you should bait them, but if they ever come back to your garden...