814-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 12, 1992 Novel Idea Launches ‘Entrei PooPet Sculptures For Lawn, Garden, Potted Plants LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff BIRD-IN-HAND (Lancaster Co.) Manure is smelly, dirty, and ugly unless John Rothman gets his hands on it. The New Jersey businessman turns manure into cute, clean, whisimical figur ines that have a function in addi tion to decorum—provide fertiliz er to lawn, garden, and potted plants. Rothman, who has a pharmacol ogy background, left his job as for mer senior director of clincal drug development for a major pharma ceutical company, with the idea of turning manure into a profitable business. About three months ago, Roth man got the idea for self-fertilizing sculptures when he watched an artist sculpting with manure in Cape Cod. Rothman decided if he could make the sculptures cheap enough and sell them forabout $lO each, the organic little creatures would appeal to upscale clientel who are interested in earth- .«,oeans for eyes,. .ie and cottage cheese white wash, PooPets are advertized to be the safe, natural, organic, biodegradeable, the finest fer tilizer available. John Rothman presses manure ~Bhk a Rooßet. Rothman, a former director of a pharmatuclal com pany, said his idea for making the manure figurines is simi lar to making bricks from manure. friendly products. Rothman’s original idea was an oversimplification of the process needed to turn manure into a viable product, but through hard work, determination, and the help of Sam Fisher of Gap, Rothman has launched a line of PooPets under the imprint of Tewksbury Gardens. The chemical aspect of the fig urines allows them to retain their form while the fertilizer is leeched out from high humidity or as it is watered or rained upon. Although the fertilizer leeches out, the fiber retains the shape of the figure that is of stone-like texture. Rothman, who lives in New Jersey, chose Lancaster County as the appropriate place to launch a business based on manure, because he questioned, “What area has more manure than Lancaster County?” What Rothman did not reali/.e until he began experimenting with the project is that all manure is not created equal. The manure of a remanureshiD’ Sam Fisher, production manager, and John Rothman, president of Tewksbu jr dens that manufactures manure figurines, hold one of the seif-fertilizing sculpture, a turtle, which serves as a planter. cow depends on the metabolic state of the animal, the environ ment, and the feed. Manure from a lactating cow is too messy, too fibrous. Manure from a non lactating cow that is fed grain, not hay, has possibilities after it is pro cessed in a cement mixer. The cement mixer kneads and mixes the manure while drying it. The drying process also helps rid the manure of insects that feed on manure, The idea for using a cement mixer originated with Sam Fisher of Gap. “Sam has added as much to this project as I have,” Rothman said. Consequently, Rothman appointed Fisher production manager. Although it is a part-time position for Fisher, he shares Rothman’s enthusiasm for the project Fisher said that as soon as he had read an ad Rothman had placed in Lancaster Farming requesting peo ple to mold figurines, he under stood the concept. “I grew up working in my father’s greenhouse so I as soon as I read the ad, I figured he was using the concept of diffusion through water for slow fertilization. When fertilizer is released in a controlled method over a period of time, it doesn’t bum the plant.” Fisher’s background in con struction also proved beneficial, for he immediately thought of using a cement mixer to knead and dry the manure. When the manure is the proper consistency, it is placed in covered buckets until it ready to be formed into molds. The molds that Rothman first used were not suitable. “As the fig urines dried, they became smaller and smaller,” he said. A turtle that takes 3'/i pounds of manure to mold dries to a weight of .8 pound. Rothman’s wife, a trained stu dio artist who had no background in mold making, began experi menting with mold making. “Our basement now looks like the North Pole with plaster of Paris every where,” Rothman said. Her efforts have produced usable molds to shape turtle, quail, rabbit, and frog. By using the molds, Rothman estimates that he can form a PooPet in three to seven minutes. Beans are used for eyes and a mix ture of cottage cheese and lime is (Turn to Pag* B 15) The manure Is prepared for sculpting by Sam Fisher, who -..•■tinayi tlllzatlon. Water over PooPet, which will last for years if kept outdoors, forever if kept indoors. A ***** \ II