Bulletin #2510, Guidelines for Using Manure on Vegetable Gardens

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Updated and revised by Richard Kersbergen, Extension Professor and Cooperating Professor in Animal and Veterinary Sciences.
Originally Developed by Mahmoud El-Begearmi, Extension Professor.
Reviewed by Beth Calder, Extension Professor and Assistant Professor of Food Science; and David Handley, Extension Professor and Cooperating Professor of Horticulture.

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Publicity about E. coli outbreaks has made people more aware of the risk of food-borne illness. As a result, many people are asking about the safety of using manure on vegetable gardens.

Animal manure can contain bacteria such as Listeria, Salmonella, and E. coli 0157:H7, as well as roundworms and tapeworms. These tiny organisms are called pathogens because they may cause disease. Pathogens can pass from animal manure to humans through direct contact between contaminated manure and fresh fruit and vegetables.


Note: some people may be more at risk for food-borne illness and should not eat uncooked vegetables from manured gardens. Those who should be most careful include pregnant women, the elderly, very young children, and those with health issues such as cancer, kidney failure, chronic liver disease, diabetes, or AIDS.


thermometer in compost reads 140 degrees F; photo by Edwin Remsberg, USDATo reduce the risk of disease transmission, food safety experts suggest that you follow these safe gardening practices:

  • Use composted manure. Composting manure with your yard and garden waste help reduce the risk of contaminating your garden vegetables with pathogens. Ensuring that your compost pile reaches a temperature of 140°F will further reduce the risk. For more information on home composting, contact your University of Maine Cooperative Extension County Office. Commercially processed manure, available in garden centers, should indicate on the package if it is pathogen-free.
  • Never use cat, dog, or pig manure in vegetable gardens or compost piles. Parasites that may be in these types of manure are more likely to survive and infect people than those in other types of manure. It is also important to keep your pets out of your vegetable garden.
  • Use water that meets safe drinking standards to irrigate your vegetables (for water testing information, contact your UMaine Extension County Office). This is most important within one month of harvest. If you use any water that is not drinkable (potable), such as water from old dug wells or rain barrels, to irrigate your garden, it is best to use drip (trickle) irrigation to both conserve water and minimize the contamination of leafy vegetables that can occur with overhead irrigation. Information on simple trickle irrigation techniques is available at your UMaine Extension county office.

If you do intend to use raw manure as a soil amendment or fertilizer source on your garden, follow these guidelines:

  • Apply raw manure at least 120 days before harvesting a crop that has the potential for soil contact (leafy greens, root crops, etc). The USDA National Organic Program (NOP) standards allow a 90-day period between manure application and harvest for crops that don’t have direct contact potential with soil.
  • For some gardeners in Maine, the best time to apply raw manure to your garden may be in the fall after harvest; incorporate it into the soil and plant a cover crop to hold nutrients over the winter. This should be done before October 1 for good cover crop establishment.
  • Never use raw manure as a sidedress to growing plants. Manure that is incorporated and distributed throughout the soil has a much lower risk of passing pathogens to the growing crop.
  • Consider the source if you still want to use raw manures in your garden. Are the animals in the herd or flock healthy? Is there a parasite problem that requires regular deworming? Does the farm use antibiotics as a regular component of their feeding program?

In the Kitchen

  • Make sure your hands are clean when handling produce. Regularly wash your hands with soap and water, especially when picking produce and bringing it into the kitchen for direct consumption or processing.
  • Use proper hand-washing techniques, such as washing for 20 seconds with hot, soapy water and thoroughly scrubbing fingernails, hands, and between fingers. Dry hands thoroughly with a clean towel or single-use paper towels. Always wash hands after using the bathroom, changing diapers, and handling animals.
  • Wash and peel your garden vegetables. All produce should be washed very well before you eat it. The risk of contamination is greatest for crops like radishes, carrots, and leafy vegetables such as lettuce, where the edible parts touch the soil. Washing with clean water and peeling will remove most of the pathogens that can cause illness. Fully cooking the vegetables will kill any remaining pathogens.
  • Always wash with clean, potable water. Do not use soaps or chlorine washes to wash produce. Vegetable wash products are not necessary, and have not been found to be any more effective than clean water.* When washing or rinsing vegetables, don’t use water that is colder than the produce by 10°F or more.

*Crowe, Kristi, Alfred Bushway and Mahmoud El-Begearmi, 2004. Bulletin #4336, Best Ways to Wash Fruits and Vegetables. Food Safety Facts. Orono, ME: University of Maine Cooperative Extension.

This information is adapted from Guidelines for Using Manure on Vegetable Gardens with the permission of Washington State University Extension.


Information in this publication is provided purely for educational purposes. No responsibility is assumed for any problems associated with the use of products or services mentioned. No endorsement of products or companies is intended, nor is criticism of unnamed products or companies implied.

© 2008

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