Holy smokes. Information overload. That was very, very informative. Thank you so much for sharing this. Outstanding work.
@victorm72742 жыл бұрын
9:10 I have 4 horses . I don’t have any machinery. I put the manure in a windrow as high as a wheel barrel would allow and just let it sit there without turning it. 7 months later I had to move it to a different location . To my surprise it turn out to be the best compost I’ve ever seen. 👍🏼
@ryanboldt7751 Жыл бұрын
I live in the Chicago suburbs and I started my own compost heap, just to get rid of kitchen scraps, coffee, tea, some leaves in the fall, and some grass clippings here and there, and just have less garbage. I just didn’t wanna pay to have garbage hauled away, so I started to just pile it together. I’ve never really paid attention to it, I’ve never tried to manage it. I just dump it all in there and overtime. The worms eat it up and it turns into soil and it grows fantastic things. I really do zero management, and I’m not even intentional about the percentages of what kind of material. If you leave it sit long enough, the worms will just turn it into dirt and it’s fantastic.
@mickboyce3862 жыл бұрын
One of the best compost video's I've seen
@pawelkapica53632 жыл бұрын
I come from Germany which is very densely populated and a 12 thousand acre farm just blows my mind.
@tannenbaumgirl3100 Жыл бұрын
These kind of farms are everywhere here...especially in the northern half of the US.
@beamerben2 жыл бұрын
The nitrogen content of beets is not affected by their moisture level. The dried out ones are still high in nitrogen, they just need to be hydrated to host the microbes.
@spectrixx2 жыл бұрын
In this context, what is a beet?
@beamerben2 жыл бұрын
@@spectrixx I assume it is the vegetable which has probably been processed to extract the sugars. The pulp or whatever form likely dries out quickly before much microbial activity can take place making it stable for storage until it is rehydrated in the compost.
@tannenbaumgirl3100 Жыл бұрын
My concern would be in herbicides used to grow the crop and residual traces of herbicides...even minor tracesxwill stunt vegetables.
@dannyschumaker2 жыл бұрын
I wish I had a farm. Its hard work but man I just know id LOVE it
@racebiketuner2 жыл бұрын
Then I would encourage you to start! You can have pretty good mini-farm on an urban lot. Even if you live in a condo with a north-facing balcony, you can still grow a lot.
@doncook35842 жыл бұрын
Ah self employment. You might get rain seeds might germinate you might not have bugs fungus drought fire or hail destroy your crop, your harvest might come off with no equipment breakdowns and the price you will get might be more than your cost to produce and you have little or no control over all these perils. All this after you buy all the equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Working for a salary with benefits has significantly less risk
@johac76372 жыл бұрын
Would be nice if someone would be showing/doing this in the Arizona Desert. Seeing that most of these efforts are already dealing with soil, not poor dirt like Arizona.
@sherimatukonis6016 Жыл бұрын
I only have 0.14 acres... I can do a chicken coop & run. At least 5 fruit trees and 5 4'x15' beds and perennial fruit veg & herbs scattered around outside the beds. And that's only using half the space (the other half is reserved for dogs to run/play)
@jasonschannel9017 Жыл бұрын
Then get started! Fimd a way.
@tannenbaumgirl3100 Жыл бұрын
Straw and Hay is good as long as no herbicides were used to grow it...even traces of carryover herbicides will stunt any vegetables grown in it.
@reneflores37112 жыл бұрын
I love composting
@johac76372 жыл бұрын
I heard the term " inoculants" I compost any and every organics I can get my PU and dump trailer to, and try to have a 15 cu yd pile going at all times. This is trying to upgrade my Arizona desert dirt, .5 % organics in virgin soil. So wanting info on the inoculant. See if it may assist in breakdown, our rains come in monsoon buckets. I also drop irr. the pile.
@marcruel9401 Жыл бұрын
Greg Judy let’s the cows spread their manure. Unroll hay on the pasture. Cow’s eat, fertilize, leave uneaten is seed and carbon.
@whitshane3511 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Listening to all of the effort these guys are doing just to get the manure on the field...
@watchthe1369 Жыл бұрын
Getting away from the synthetics and their energy intensive production to the mulch/ compost that has a naturally powered process that serves the same purpose as the synthetics.
@saphire82 Жыл бұрын
When he says if you put the compost in a ziplock and it’s doesn’t smell like ammonia, you can spread it. Ok so when I get compost from the city and put it in my van, my car smells like ammonia really bad. Does this mean it’s not ready to use?
@NDSUExtension Жыл бұрын
Determining “doneness” of a compost product requires several factors, which are all discussed in the complete compost workshop playlist found here: kzbin.info/aero/PLnn8HanJ32l6uhwdS9m-G1z8Bq1U0aJzF. Long story short, an ammonia smell means the product still has excess nitrogen (N) in it and it’s not yet done or mature. We want the compost to smell earthy. That product will still have useful properties and nutrients, but the nitrogen parts of it will either be unavailable for plant use or may tie up other nutrient in the soil where it is applied. There are commercially available test kits you can purchase: solvita.com/product/solvita-compost-maturity-test-kit-6-pk/ as well as commercial labs that specifically run tests on compost: woodsend.com/#. Knowing the management of the compost (carbon to nitrogen ratio, temperatures, turning, etc.) is another way to help determine if it’s done and ready to use.
@estebancorral5151 Жыл бұрын
Yes. It means that the nitrogen has been out gased as ammonia. This means that some of nitrogen meant for soil nutrition has been lost. However, there is still some left to be used.
@YigaLove-bc6ek Жыл бұрын
l came from Ethiopia you give more information about make fertilizer $l want start this work
@Jane-HINDA17 күн бұрын
If you need any machines about the composting, we can provide.
@kendi642 жыл бұрын
8:44 I hope more people/businesses incorporate more composting methods
@johnberry11076 ай бұрын
The System counts, heh? Manure is the medicine. Thank you.
@lentusbhopal5119 Жыл бұрын
It's very nice
@johac76372 жыл бұрын
❓ Question, where did this waste product go historically, it didn't just go away.
@estebancorral5151 Жыл бұрын
It slowly decomposed in nature. The problem is that humans activities haves increased waste in the environment.
@tf727410 ай бұрын
Crazy comments from non farmers...there used to be a 100 farmers for every 10,000 people. Now it's 1 for every 10,000. So farms were small, your small manure was always spread...either by hand with a wagon or later by machine. There is no - agriculture was better 100 years ago. It wasn't. There are shortcuts made in processing (fillers, painting strawberries, water injected meat). Buy local or better yet, try farming yourself on a very small scale. If you're a "better farming 100 years ago" person, make sure you have a shovel, pitch fork and wheelbarrow and give it a go.
@fincaecologicalapilaricagu59992 жыл бұрын
J.M. Director 🇨🇷🇨🇷🇨🇷🧀
@azharulislam59872 жыл бұрын
Very good
@Melicoy2 жыл бұрын
nice thanks
@johnwright64032 ай бұрын
Incorporate biochar
@michaelfoort2592 Жыл бұрын
These farmers are such a positive force...hard to believe they are Trump folks as a whole.
@bradical27236 ай бұрын
Anyone hardworking and with a brain is for trump... says more about you than it does about them
@willankhatter4 ай бұрын
@@bradical2723😂😂😂it's a cult
@tf727410 ай бұрын
Crazy comments from non farmers...there used to be a 100 farmers for every 10,000 people. Now it's 1 for every 10,000. So farms were small, your small manure was always spread...either by hand with a wagon or later by machine. There is no - agriculture was better 100 years ago. It wasn't. There are shortcuts made in processing (fillers, painting strawberries, water injected meat). Buy local or better yet, try farming yourself on a very small scale. If you're a "better farming 100 years ago" person, make sure you have a shovel, pitch fork and wheelbarrow and give it a go.
@RandomsFandom4 ай бұрын
All you have to do is spread all the poo and pee on the field, and then add some micorhizzae to help build beneficial fungus
@willankhatter4 ай бұрын
Ohh, look at you, giving advice to people who are actually doing stuff 🚮
@RandomsFandom4 ай бұрын
@@willankhatter doing it wrong. Saving the urine in a pond created a cesspool
@willankhatter4 ай бұрын
@@RandomsFandom you don't know sh!t buddy, calm down
@SJA-ox3hs2 жыл бұрын
That compost is great with all that dewormer, and chemicals from the cows manure. That’s the way to do it, feed lot the cows and spread the manure, why don’t you just graze the cattle and plant the crops after the cattle has passed. I see it’s less work spreading manure than letting the cows do it.
@MakinEmAtNight26 Жыл бұрын
So I should plant grass for them to graze, then let them graze, and then plant my crops? 😂
@whitshane3511 Жыл бұрын
@@MakinEmAtNight26 Kind of, yes. See Gabe Brown.
@MakinEmAtNight26 Жыл бұрын
@@whitshane3511 so in April when the frost goes out I should plant a grazing crop, let it grow for a month or so then let the cattle graze it and spread manure. Then around august I somehow have time to plant 100+ day corn that will somehow finish before the ground freezes in November? I’d have better luck crappin in my hand and clapping
@whitshane3511 Жыл бұрын
@@MakinEmAtNight26 Who suggested that? Gabe Brown doesn’t do that.
@michaelfoort2592 Жыл бұрын
Not clear what you're trying to say...the composting process destroys chemical residues...it's really an amazing process
@OmmerSyssel2 жыл бұрын
Gigantic waste of valuable energy resources! Put the manure through a biogas plant and make use of the heat capacity, instead of wasting it to open air! Compost will still be useful, and other process waste from slaughter houses etc will be recycled in a very valuable way too.
@victorm72742 жыл бұрын
9:10 I have 4 horses . I don’t have any machinery. I put the manure in a windrow as high as a wheel barrel would allow and just let it sit there without turning it. 7 months later I had to move it to a different location . To my surprise it turn out to be the best compost I’ve ever seen. 👍🏼
@estebancorral5151 Жыл бұрын
You do have machinery, the horses and the microbes in the compost. They are biological ones.
@victorm72742 жыл бұрын
9:10 I have 4 horses . I don’t have any machinery. I put the manure in a windrow as high as a wheel barrel would allow and just let it sit there without turning it. 7 months later I had to move it to a different location . To my surprise it turn out to be the best compost I’ve ever seen. 👍🏼
@1982MCI2 жыл бұрын
If you would turn it a couple times then you’ll have the compost in half the time at least. Mix in Green materials such as grass clippings or plant waste, etc and it will build more heat and you need to make sure you water it also which will help expedite the composting process.