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e-Alert
April 6, 2026
Wet weather manure spreading reminders – Do you need more storage?
Kirsten Workman and Jason Oliver
March 2026 has been wet, hovering around 150 percent of normal precipitation for much of New York (Figure 1). While this has some manure storages approaching or exceeding their full operational capacity, it is critical to follow the prohibited spreading conditions in the CAFO permit, the Revised Winter And Wet Weather Manure Spreading Guidance and the spreading plans in your CNMP as it may have also created saturated soil conditions across much of the state (Figure 2). Care should be taken when deciding if, when and where to make manure applications. You can monitor forecasts to identify days in the near term that may have conditions with lower risk using the Runoff Risk Forecast for New York State. Monitoring fields and tile outlets for runoff during and after applications is also advised.
Despite fall and winter weather that was more normal for New York than some recent years, a late 2025 crop harvest and a wet March have some producers feeling tight on manure storage capacity. (See the maps below from the Northeast Region Climate Center (NRCC) showing departures from normal for both total precipitation and snowfall from October 2025 – March 2026 in Figure 3). While there is no requirement for minimum days of storage, PRO-DAIRY specialists advise that having at least six-months of storage capacity between farm-located and satellite storages is a risk management strategy that allows for sound (and CAFO compliant) manure application decision-making. Anytime you add cows, don’t properly agitate and/or remove settled solids, add bunker silo storage and runoff, change parlor water usage or make other changes on the farm – you are impacting manure storage capacity. So, if you are feeling pinched this year, it could be a good time to re-evaluate storage volumes and management with your planner.
Before transferring manure to fields, check soil conditions, tile outlets and weather and runoff forecasts to see if prohibited or high-risk conditions are present or if heavy or persistent rain is in the forecast. The CAFO Permit requires that, “Farm personnel shall manage application rates and timing so as to prevent runoff from leaving crop fields during any application event,” and prohibits manure applications on saturated or frozen-saturated soils or when applied at a rate that causes the soil to become saturated at the time of that application. When winter or wet weather conditions[i] exist, manure applications must follow the revised winter and wet weather guidance.
For permitted CAFO farms, the overtopping of a manure storage is a permit violation and requires the storage be re-evaluated by a Professional Engineer before it can be put back into service. Additionally, any emergency applications of nutrients must be made in accordance with the farm’s Emergency Action Plan and monitored for runoff. Discharges to surface waters; applications above the single manure application rate discussed in Part III.A.8.b of the ECL CAFO general permit (GP-0-22-001); and any storage overtopping must be reported to the Department within 24 hours verbally and in writing within five days. If nutrients must be applied, they should be injected or incorporated if possible to minimize offsite movement. 
If a CAFO finds itself in an emergency situation, the farm should discuss with their AEM certified planner other interim solutions that may be available to the farm to alleviate the emergency.
Farms that do not operate under the CAFO permit should also heed these strategies for manure management and application, as no farm is allowed to create a water quality violation as a result of a manure application.
Resources
 
 For questions, please contact:
  • Your farm’s CNMP planner for help identifying low risk fields, adjusting rates and setbacks, re-evaluating manure storage capacity, or farm or field-specific questions.
  • Kirsten Workman, PRO-DAIRY Nutrient Management & Environmental Sustainability Specialist, 607-255-4890 or kw566@cornell.edu,
  • Jason Oliver, PRO-DAIRY Dairy Environmental Systems Engineer, 607-793-8484, jpo53@cornell.edu 
PRO-DAIRY NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT
 
[i] Wet weather spreading conditions means significant precipitation (e.g., greater than 0.25 inches of rain within 24 hours when soils are approaching saturation or greater than one inch of rain independent of soil moisture content)  and/or snowmelt events (e.g., greater than 40°F for six hours or more) is forecasted within the next 48 hours. Winter spreading conditions means soil is frozen (4”+), snow covered (4”+), or encumbered by significant surface icing. As defined by the NYSDEC CAFO General Permit (GP-0-22-001)
This alert is released in partnership with Northeast Dairy Producers Association
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