by waaytoomuchintothis » Fri May 02, 2014 4:05 pm
I'm not a very good Buddhist, either, pal. I will say that the prilled urea lime that is used as a fast "green up" for lawns commonly (Home Depot balled grey or brown stuff), is a great digestor for organic material that is buried to return to the destiny of nature. The other form of lime (white lime like the baselines on a ball field), works fine, but leaves a white stain in the ground.
Watch out for dead opossums, Lynne. They are about 50% fat, and when they break down, they stink like spoiled offal. You have to have enough alkali material to balance the acidity of the rotting fat. And bury it deep. At least four feet under the lime to keep the clean up crew from digging it up. I learned from burying ground hogs that I shot, that nature has a crew of very dedicated diggers ready to expose mistakes.