[12:30] Such valuable information! Can’t wait for the next video! Who else is still watching this in 2024? 😆
@kishorgandhale1424Ай бұрын
Thanx from india
@taruveeravenkatamaruthisum9282 ай бұрын
Thanks for video
@amandahowe3422 ай бұрын
I wish we could see the slides he's talking about while he's talking about them
@Climax20252 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@Gutsquasher3 ай бұрын
I appreciate these videos quite a bit, especially including the fact sheet in the description
@flyoverurbangarden43153 ай бұрын
Excellent video.
@KokoraLife3 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Thank you.💚
@gefginn36993 ай бұрын
When listing goals...... you didn't remember to include pollenator - beneficial species. Please don't forget the bees. 🐝
@moroteseoinage3 ай бұрын
do all these hippie gardeners know that costco sells vegetable?
@jhoanpaolac11664 ай бұрын
love this presentation 100%
@iunderscoream5 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks from Alberta
@denisecawthorne81375 ай бұрын
These farmers talk about putting carbon back in the soil and that's why being carbon free is ridiculous and a lie. We need carbon to survive on this earth.
@AskAlice1125 ай бұрын
Well soil health is irrelevant when the atmosphere is poisoned by weather modification and seeds are genetically modified.
@PyxisGuru5 ай бұрын
Been following this science for the better part of a decade. So glad to see its progress. Im not a farmer, but I want to help this iniative!
@grownfolksperspective29885 ай бұрын
One guy mentioned to make sure that you don't have runoff from your land. For less than an acre, how do you keep from having runoff?
@Greg_Glassman5 ай бұрын
What size sieve is that?
@organicfarmingandmanymoreb59937 ай бұрын
thank you
@MrK-wu7ci7 ай бұрын
The world's population can feed itself. Cheers.
@mesihozizalicaj7 ай бұрын
💚🍀
@ericmartinson72057 ай бұрын
I love that you are building soil and teaching the generations how our food reaches us. But the government has no place, anyway at anytime has any voice of anyone or anyone else
@spykespark84777 ай бұрын
Video like this they should be shown in schools, colleges and universities everywhere. UN organisations such as FAO should spread video like this. You tube should recomed this to every person 😊. Thank you.
@rtw_157 ай бұрын
What field ended up with the best yield?
@b_uppy7 ай бұрын
In the picture at 0:45 the field on the right looks more flooded, because of the water levels on the road. Is this a real example? Typically conventionally plowed fields have lower water permeability and you're just saying it's conventionally managed because you confused the pics?? Good management means avoiding bare soil/fallow field practices that decrease air and water permeability...
@SoilHealthInstitute7 ай бұрын
The field on the left has standing water (which looks white from the reflection of the sky in this photo). The field on the right with living plants and covered soil does not have standing water, illustrating the impact of management practices.
@b_uppy7 ай бұрын
If you look along the road on the right where the road converges in the distance it still looks like it's flooded, it's just with plantings too. It's the lighter areas where the plant life is lower to the ground that the water looks present. Looks more like the water is sheeting over the road from a higher area on the right to the lower area on the left, which would explain why it's is less brown, (a big positive) thus less erosion because the greenery retained soil, AND slowed water speed. Think the picture does tell a positive story, but a different one than narrated. I do believe in the positive impact of avoiding by soilby always having them covered with living plants.. Still think photos got mixed up.
@christiner.nelson35437 ай бұрын
Such good advice.
@elenafueyo7678 ай бұрын
Cargill promotor de esto??????!!!!! imposible
@navarra-qf2ds8 ай бұрын
this is not what I was expecting. thanks anyways
@Stevexnycautomotive8 ай бұрын
Carbon tax is just another nail in the farmers coffin.
@alliebowker20389 ай бұрын
im watch this caz school work so i kinda being foced to watch this
@johnnmartens30679 ай бұрын
I started with a single cover crop winter rye and it did alright but when I mixed in hairy vetch and winter pea it super charged the growth this fall I want to add more diversity it definitely dose way better when you have different plant species living together
@heyphilphil9 ай бұрын
I've been farming since i was 17...41 now. All this is great. cover crops...organic matter. very important. what's not talked about is re-mineralization. If you've been farming an area for more then 5+ years and not putting those major macro and micro nutrients back....back more living compost isn't gonna help. The biology is crucial but if the minerals arnt there for them to chelate and turn those minerals into a bioavailable forms that thevplants can't take up. The clay sand and silt should have enough minerals to sustain plant growth with enough organic material. but if you keep farming out all those minerals year after year without putting it back....all the organic matter in the world isn't gonna help. organic matter , keeping living roots in the ground using cover crops but adding back the minerals is the other part that's needed.
@HyHwua9 ай бұрын
I watched the video for college geography class. It was very informative.
@arrrozcigala10 ай бұрын
Obrigado pelo vídeo 🇵🇹
@rahmanpratomo468111 ай бұрын
Traditional farming communities in Korea developed a system called JADAM, which has been proven to be used to make the land more alive. Namely maximizing the use of plants that have certain ingredients that are adapted to local conditions, livestock manure, mineral salt water, and other materials that are easily available nearby, then connected and integrated with the food chain system between plants, animals and humans, including the use of microorganisms. . I have started applying it to several areas of land that have been damaged, because the humus has been lost due to mining activities on the island of Kalimantan, where the condition of the soil is very similar to the condition of dry desert soil and is almost rocky. This effort is showing very good results and if this is tried to be applied on the African continent and other desert lands, it seems that it will slowly improve naturally and bring benefits that move very quickly. Greetings from me in Indonesia and it would be very good if the JADAM system which was pioneered by agricultural experts in Korea is implemented. Please see this method which has been widely broadcast on many KZbin channels, as a reference. Good luck and greetings to a healthy and green earth.
@j.r.mythical123811 ай бұрын
Cheers!
@FreeThinkersZa11 ай бұрын
I saw the most interesting video, the farmer was planting lemon grass in clumps between his sapling fruit trees then cutting it down for mulch. Brilliant supply of mulch that can be applied anywhere. Lemon grass is a lovely commercial crop in some countries.
@lillotta11 ай бұрын
Do you know EM (effective microorganisms)? kzbin.info/aero/PLTw5RpTJ7C1EBNDLTNBOqDPsG4Zfm4ah4&feature=shared
@kcjilly2515 Жыл бұрын
I’m curious about the honey figs. It seems like all the folks I subscribe to ( including myself) have run into hindrances of sorts. It’s normal, but everyone has gotten behind and trying to keep up has really been tough lately. Once again, enjoyed it, thanks Travis.
@Alexander-rq9he Жыл бұрын
It’s odd to see the mass production of wheat when that’s what causes our own “living soil” (gut microbiome) to go haywire and cause so many diseases that are killing us. Go against nature and you pay.
@gregwood1979 Жыл бұрын
the farming on land also has a direct impact on the health of the oceans that surround the area...as an oyster farmer you fight with the health of your animals and water quality issues your entire career.by cleaning up land farming practices you will also help fisherman increase their productivity, with less disease and mortality issues.
@oldmanfigs Жыл бұрын
In the eighties…they said save the trees! And introduced plastic bags…now it’s obvious that California is the worst offender when it comes to maintaining a clean environment. Why listen to brain washed and sanctimonious people?
@thechaosgardener Жыл бұрын
I still can’t believe some cities still dump arborist mulch in the dump
@HighGradeTexan Жыл бұрын
WEED NERDS KNOW ALL ABOUT IT !
@imprivsoaugustinei1910 Жыл бұрын
{<>( any one got a nickel 5₵ ofea any nations origin <<<<weather>>>> failed state orea agriculture paradise thriving , to improve worldicus sacred agriculture? )<>}<>#IHMCSPQR
@imprivsoaugustinei1910 Жыл бұрын
{<>( yes, omen ofea Gaodeus )<>}
@imprivsoaugustinei1910 Жыл бұрын
{<>( january 21 2024adesc/ +31 days grace since white sun year one stone runic monolithe ofea czsaire people cosmic alignment. preparing for { [ x ] } #1 garden in worldicus. Laste red sun, the bubble bees apiary enjoyed the center reference point for sacred agriculture, plantariume czsariume kealeixaiii universe one worldicus, closed solar system ande lunar bodie. jtb , Improviser Augustine I )<>}<>#IHMCSPQR (predictably planting on or about +80 days grace fromf now thisea day , are we ready in northern realms ofea god )<>}<>( me novice no is short answer, thisea garden, although plotted isea not ready forea planting )<>}
@imprivsoaugustinei1910 Жыл бұрын
{<>( yae, i plane to plant this garden, (withe me legionary engineer skill set) for the master, ifea it fails ill have no money for self-preservation, isreal ofea itea not hakum ofea the people ofea czsaire )<>}
@imprivsoaugustinei1910 Жыл бұрын
{<>( yae it will most likely be attacked by pirates defying habeas corpus, carnal flesh mongering lawes knowne ande unkownea worlde, hades ionic aggressions ofea the alive )<>}
@eastcoastnews9529 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos
@eastcoastnews9529 Жыл бұрын
Fumigation hurts testosterone levels on humans . 🙏🏻