Electroculture RESULTS Are Here! - Direct Side By Side Comparison - 3 Month Experiment

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Garden Like a Viking

Garden Like a Viking

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 985
@oldporkchops
@oldporkchops Жыл бұрын
After years of using chemical fertilizers, thinking that plants needed to be fed like a drug addict on a regular basis, I practiced Nate's method and have seen the results first-hand this season. Yes, there are pests but my veggies are much more healthy and luscious, and for the pests that remain either a blast from the garden hose (for aphids on okra leaves) or JHS will do the trick (even on quarter inch thick tomato worms). Nate's methods work if you are willing to put in the work to make the solutions and spray them regularly. Just today, I threw away the MasterBlend indoor hydroponic plants that I had growing in the purely chemical solution under grow lights. I've seen the light and never again will I go back to using chemical fertilizers. Thanks for your education, Nate!
@dovh49
@dovh49 Жыл бұрын
lol, I just started doing hydroponics indoors. Mainly to get year round lettuce. Not ideal. But it would be nice to have year round lettuce. I'm working on a garden outdoors too. Slowly increasing it every year as we get better at gardening as a family.
@smas3256
@smas3256 Жыл бұрын
@@dovh49 Lettuce all year great idea like a micro green garden under lights. I can't find Nate's video on microgreens. Maybe he can leave a link.
@oldporkchops
@oldporkchops Жыл бұрын
@GardenLikeAViking, if necessary, we now need to handle the symphalans problem in our gardens. The roots of some plants were stunted this season. Shall we try the potato slice trap?
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
​@@oldporkchops actually I'm working on a video that shows what I've done and its worked well enough to allow the plants to really take off now... essentially you have to remove all mulches and expose bare soil... then mix 4 oz JWA and 1oz JS per gallon of water and completely soak the affected area so it gets deep into the soil... you will see the earthworms come to the surface and wiggle around because they are highly irritated but don't worry they'll be fine and go back down... a week later I saw zero symphylans and plants started growing again... but I can't say yet if this is absolutely definitive as much more testing is needed but I can say for sure stuff is growing great there now
@oldporkchops
@oldporkchops Жыл бұрын
@@gardenlikeaviking Got it. Thanks for letting me know. I do not have JS as the sulphur is currently out of my budget, but in your area, are the symphylans hard shelled? If so, most hard shelled insects (earthworms are soft shelled) will not react well to just JWA. The soap itself will cause the hard shelled insects to gum up and die quite quickly. Try JWA or regular soap on ants and watch them die before your eyes.
@coldspring624
@coldspring624 Жыл бұрын
What many do not realize is your galvanized metal cages out perform copper when it comes to conducting in the ground. But nothing beats understanding the food web. A very wise conclusion my friend. By the way your garden is really kickin it. Your gardening prowess is on full display.
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
I thought about that cage as well, but then he showed the compost bin so it's interesting to know. Wouldn't you think the extra conductivity with these "Antenna" would help the living soil?
@AlsanPine
@AlsanPine Жыл бұрын
of course, conduction rates are essentially irrelevant in these distances and flow levels. in fact, one of the reasons this theory is recognized as bs is the use of science fact in a totally wrong way. another one is the coil and coil direction.
@aaronplatz3032
@aaronplatz3032 5 ай бұрын
No they do not. Or grounding equipment would be made of galvanized steel not copper or clad with copper. Sorry but your statement is inncorrect. I assume that you did not come to this conclusion by yourself. But you're just reciting something that someone else told you so don't take offense to what I've said and just point the finger back at the person who told you this and they can point finger back at the person who told them and so on and so on that's on. Try experimenting on your own deductive reasoning and common sense.
@coewhat
@coewhat 2 ай бұрын
@@aaronplatz3032 I find that gold and silver conduct the best, but the animals keep stealing them after I install them, every time
@ShootingtheSoil
@ShootingtheSoil Жыл бұрын
Thanks Nate! That's what I'd thought you would find! When you realize there are more microorganisms in a square inch of soil than people on the planet... how can anything really compare with that massive force of nature!
@jasonvu7
@jasonvu7 Жыл бұрын
My dad is a retired agricultural teacher. He’s done experiments on electro culture and using structured water. He still gets amazing results from both.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
thats great to hear my friend can you please send me pictures of these results and the types of antenna he uses?
@ryanbr7398
@ryanbr7398 10 ай бұрын
Please tell us more 🙏
@minamozaffari3894
@minamozaffari3894 9 ай бұрын
What was the experiments and results. Pls tell more
@KB-2222
@KB-2222 9 ай бұрын
Update?
@jc98103
@jc98103 7 ай бұрын
Are people just saying its working? It needs to be tested on two clones from the same plant. One with copper one without.
@tynachuke5289
@tynachuke5289 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Nate, for being 'SIMPLY ' honest - a world where simplicity is no longer simply available. Thanks a million
@carlschnackel3051
@carlschnackel3051 8 ай бұрын
And honesty is in short supply.
@ursulawinners
@ursulawinners Жыл бұрын
😊I’ve been hearing about this experiment for months… what a fun surprise to tune in and hear the results. 🙌🏼 thank you Nate for your tenacity!
@DustySplinters
@DustySplinters Жыл бұрын
So far my tests with electroculture are not showing any definitive results as well. You are absolutely correct... it is all about the soil and the covering. Keep roots in the ground always and a cover on the soil be it live and growing or as a mulch on top. Never let your soil get baked by the sun or soaked and depleted by the heavy rains.
@kalebvargo3068
@kalebvargo3068 7 ай бұрын
So what if you grew in controlled soil? Is such a thing possible? The sooner people grow their own food and supply their families the sooner the people can take back there lives
@DustySplinters
@DustySplinters 7 ай бұрын
@@kalebvargo3068 controlled soil? Never mentioned controlled soil. I also agree that everyone should be growing something, anything even if it to supplement their food needs. Not everyone has 2 acres per person to be 100% sustainable.
@carfvallrightsreservedwith6649
@carfvallrightsreservedwith6649 Жыл бұрын
Read a agriculture report from some University in Texas that demonstrated that today's soil is 70% lower in nutrients than it was 40 years ago. Their conclusion was the use of modern fertilizers which are produced from petroleum. The micro nutrients are being removef without being replenished. I remember in high school in health class the recommendation of 3 servings of fruits & vegetables per day, now it's 9. That correlates derictly to the 70% decrease. As a result the produce has only 30% nutritional value of the past. To me it explains the sudden rise of illnesses.
@stevenfeil7079
@stevenfeil7079 4 ай бұрын
Nitrogen is nitrogen... period.
@grace52775
@grace52775 3 ай бұрын
And, obesity even in people who eat a clean diet. We're eating ourselves into starvation.
@ashleycampbell8767
@ashleycampbell8767 2 ай бұрын
@@stevenfeil7079that is not true at all. Different types of nitrogen are metabolized differently. Also, soluble nitrogen added to soil burns off carbon.
@DiscerningTruth17
@DiscerningTruth17 8 ай бұрын
What I use electroculture for is for healing for sickly plants. Once they are better, I move my copper triangle and place on/over another plant that is not fairing as good as the rest. Works well for me. As for overall.....compost tea and compost blend is like gold to our plants
@theeastman9136
@theeastman9136 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for demonstrating this; it puts my mind at ease and confirms my belief that soil life is the real source of plant health. By the way, your garden is amazing.
@BoMcGillacutty
@BoMcGillacutty Жыл бұрын
That anyone would even suspect "electroculture" was real is hilarious testament to the foolishness of ppl.
@rawkingkong
@rawkingkong Жыл бұрын
​@@BoMcGillacuttyI really wanted to say this but I was holding back. I have only been gardening 3 years and I didn't even look into it after hearing about it ha
@nicholassorg5406
@nicholassorg5406 Жыл бұрын
Damn Nate, your garden is INCREDIBLE!
@paulc652
@paulc652 10 ай бұрын
You are an amazing gardener, thank you so much for sharing and reminding me how important it is to start with a thick layer of compost in preparation of growing food.
@toddburgess6792
@toddburgess6792 11 ай бұрын
My results with my makeshift antenna windings have proven quite successful this year. I used sticks 4 to 6 feet long and wrapped wire in no particular direction. I had no pests, at all. No bugs eating any leaves, just little spiders who kept things cleaned up, except for some spider "ropes", no issues. The produce has been of normal quantity, as good or better tasting than previous seasons without any pesticides and only some occasional grass-clipping tea as fertilizer. I am sold. It works for me, and costs nearly nothing.
@rodschmidt8952
@rodschmidt8952 3 ай бұрын
Maybe bugs don't like copper?
@chantel410
@chantel410 3 ай бұрын
My Grandmother did this her father did something like this she always had a very large garden on a 3 acre plot a an acre plus was designated to it she never had to buy fruits or veggies and didn’t get cancer till she was 70’s and was taking a bunch of meds
@ThousandYardStare
@ThousandYardStare 2 ай бұрын
I have had exactly the same results this year after installing the electroculture last year. No pests in the garden or greenhouse at all - not one. All the plants are doing great. I will shoot a video in the next few days and upload it to my channel. I have added some quartz sand to the paths and growing beds in an attempt to get the current to travel better through the soil due to the natural piezoelectric effect of the quartz sand - that seems to have made the system better than it was last year.
@robertherzberg7420
@robertherzberg7420 2 ай бұрын
Experiments need to have a control
@honeyisthebestdog
@honeyisthebestdog 18 күн бұрын
​@@rodschmidt8952 fungi don't like it, for sure. It's so strange that people have gardens that improve and say it's bc of metal spikes, without any scientific evidence to back it up. Smdh
@CP-fe6jr
@CP-fe6jr Жыл бұрын
here in the UK the BBC has a long running radio programme called "Gardeners' Question time". I has been continuously broadcasting weekly since before I was born (I'm 73 now). I remember a long running panellist whose stock answer to many of the questions posed was "well, I think the answer lies in the soil". QED.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
wow that's a long running broadcast with very good answer!!
@fortheloveofwater_
@fortheloveofwater_ 4 ай бұрын
So nice to hear of gardens question time when it isn’t really expected, fellow Brit over here I am not doubting the existence of the synergistic qualities that are healthy garden in tune with all of the surrounding atmospheric and environmental sequences, could result in… But antennas and Forms of harvesting this atmospheric electronic energy has to be tested further efficacy so programs like this are incredibly useful. However I will not doubt the potential of using copper in the garden such as with copper tools which I think do actually improve plant health especially when using them to make incisions And pruning.😊
@warrenmaker798
@warrenmaker798 Жыл бұрын
"Let us focus on the fundamentals of gardening" ! Never a truer word spoken.
@MerwinARTist
@MerwinARTist Жыл бұрын
I had a lady come over about a month ago encouraging me to use copper antennas .. but I haven't been convinced it would amount to much .. so glad to hear what you have to say about this. I've been using your methods .. been a great garden year so far .. feeding the soil makes the most sense .. not some magic trick!
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
Give it a try, Nate has different soil and climate than you, you never know until you try.
@trish6091
@trish6091 Жыл бұрын
This was a fun one! Thanks for giving an update. It would be interesting to see videos where you debunk/confirm various growing tricks and trends from time to time like Mythbusters, Garden Like a Viking style. 💛
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
that is a fantastic idea my friend thank you!!... I'll work on some ideas for that type of thing but let me know if you have any ideas already!
@DarkFabulist
@DarkFabulist 3 ай бұрын
Should the coil not be high, not close to the soil? Saw one video with coils on tall bamboo with copper going down into the soil.
@freebirdg6873
@freebirdg6873 Жыл бұрын
I love your garden its beautiful so full of life. I wanted to tell you my tomatoes that were accidental poisoned came through not as abundant as they usually are but with love and using your fertilizer recipes they pulled thru. Thank you for alll your knowledge and help my friend you rock. 🙏🏼❤️
@VoltageNut
@VoltageNut Жыл бұрын
I expected this result, but was not 100% sure. Thanks for doing this experiment.
@mollybradshaw9336
@mollybradshaw9336 Жыл бұрын
Nor me, but tried it and my plants have gone mental! Normally I have to babysit them and be vigilant for disease, but stuck some copper wire as recommended and BINGO!
@MushroomMagpie
@MushroomMagpie Жыл бұрын
I don't agree with how he did his experiment. I use tall poles, with more wraps, and drive them deep as i can into the ground. You can feel the energy arohnd them and my plants are huge this year, despite the crap weather here.
@juliebovenkamp5433
@juliebovenkamp5433 Жыл бұрын
Your garden looks AMAZING!! Love the lushness of everything! Happy happy plants make happy gardeners! :) Thank you for the electroculture update/review!
@Shyeena
@Shyeena 7 ай бұрын
Depending on height of antenna,Copper antennas provide growth up to 240 sq ft. Ome must be wrapped clockwise, place open cone due north. The other, counter clockwise, also cone open due north. Copper ground in must be sunk about a ft. The Spiral is up your wood is also very important !
@smas3256
@smas3256 Жыл бұрын
Your garden should be in a gardening magazine. Nate I want to thank you for the encouragement you gave to us on grow lights. Video walk through the store w. prices was unique and appreciated. We started most veggie and flowers under full spectrum, heat mat, fan. Zone 6b. We canned 6 quarts of Roma Tomatoes today and so many more on those vines. Experimented. Roma tomatoes started too early are small. Roma's started later are large. Who know plants were so intelligent? Thank you we planted extra peppers to make paprika. . I dried some in my oven. Yum. All we had on hand was Bell Pepper seeds.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
happy to hear it my friend and yes the Romas just began yielding ripe fruit a couple days ago here!
@ryansearles6078
@ryansearles6078 Жыл бұрын
Hi my friend - very glad to see a fellow zone 6b grower and follower of the channel. I just started a garden this year and have been a bit overwhelmed at times. Would love to connect more and share advice/experience if that’s something you’d be potentially interested in!
@susanshelit
@susanshelit Жыл бұрын
Somehow I had this idea that you had a massive plot of land but looking at the last minute, your garden is only slightly bigger than mine. That is really good to know because that means that I can also grow a lot of food.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
yes my friend so much bounty can be grown in a relatively small space when using nutrient rich soil and planting intensively!
@Elementaldomain
@Elementaldomain 6 ай бұрын
There is a family in Los Angeles that gets 2,000 pounds each season out of 640 s.f. Their videos are on YT, saw them years ago.
@connecticutwormsgardens
@connecticutwormsgardens 3 ай бұрын
My property consists of 1/6 of an acre. Of which much is consumed by my house. And do that a double-wide driveway and a garage and, well, you can figure out what is left for planting. However, I have enough food to feed many people and donate every kind of crop I grow because it's too much even after preserving. No inch of land is unused. If it is green then it will be eaten. Yes it's a lot more work when things are crowded. No neat pathways to go through and overcrowding can lead to a lot of problems not being spotted right away. So it definitely takes more time but what a better way to spend your time then improving the food that you're going to eat?
@unknowninvisibility
@unknowninvisibility 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for being an open-minded skeptic. That's what we need more of in the world. I also appreciate you taking the time to do a study and helping to disprove wook anecdotes.
@michyoung644
@michyoung644 Жыл бұрын
Your garden is spectacular Nate! Thank you for the experiment results, excellent analysis of what REALLY matters.
@coloradoprofessionalinspec720
@coloradoprofessionalinspec720 Жыл бұрын
People love magic easy solutions. Nobody likes to do the hard work that it takes to work with nature and follow the laws of nature. There's nothing wrong with nature it's the way our system was designed. It's just so cool when you figure out how to work in concert with nature. Great video.
@oneconsc3333
@oneconsc3333 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking of doing this but, I think placing one copper pipe in the yard/grass somewhere and then running thin copper wire to ALL the copper antennas will be a good idea..... not sure but that's what came to me🙏🏻💜🇨🇦
@viewsfrombelow5636
@viewsfrombelow5636 4 ай бұрын
your garden is insanely beautiful. unreal results man! Great work!
@williamslater-vf5ym
@williamslater-vf5ym Жыл бұрын
Sweet ive been waiting for this! Will edit: Pretty much what I figured. If electroculture actually worked it would have been used for thousands of years, but it isnt.
@gillyxzx
@gillyxzx Жыл бұрын
Thanks for info Nate. I think this would be better served for those people growing in pots, who can't plant in to the ground for whatever reasons, as that is when the soil/plant is not 'grounded' directly. The only true way to test this, is to have 3 of the same plants in separate pots, one pot full of what the plant needs, then two pots with almost 'barren' soil, one with electroculture and one without, then compare the results at the end of the season. This would then need to be repeated for several years for a true comparison. You could then determine whether or not the electroculture has any real benefit on plants in barren soil, and then compare that to the plants that have been in the 'good' soil. This should give a better indication of how beneficial electroculture is by itself. The big claim around electroculture is that you don't need any fertilizer or pesticides etc. however, it may actually be the case that because of how healthy your soil is Nate, then you're probably already performing at optimal levels which has little to no room for improvement, even with the magic of electlroculture being introduced? I love the channel Nate, you are a real tonic on a miserable day my friend, and a wealth of gardening knowledge that I just can't get enough of 😊 keep up the incredible work. Take care Nate, and God bless 🙏❤️
@swadarma7
@swadarma7 Жыл бұрын
Greetings from Romania! I expected such a result. Earth science knows better than people's pseudo science. Your garden is gorgeous!
@nicolaerasoi5063
@nicolaerasoi5063 Жыл бұрын
Buna de unde in Rominia? Faimosul actor francez😄
@pampotgieter7611
@pampotgieter7611 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for addressing peoples questions on Electroculture. An interesting subject. Thank you for letting us have a glimpse at your vibrant and lush plants. Lots of signs of the coming of Spring 🌼🌼 I wish there was a way to get a bag of your special brand fertilizer...... You most probably won't be exporting........😢 Any time soon. I am so thrilled! For about 3 years of wanting to get a Moringa tree. I got a phone call from the owner of a local Nursery, to say the Moringa tree should be here next week. YAY! So happy! I bought the seeds from a seed company, None germinated 😢 Thank you! We appreciate all you share, by putting in practice as best as we can. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
you've got to be getting excited as the growing season is approaching!!!... probably not able to ship internationally but we shall see!
@momcomputer6461
@momcomputer6461 Жыл бұрын
I love that you did this experiment for us to dispel the myth once and for all. I still can't help feeling there is energy in the air all around us. Apparently it's for something else, not electroculture! The soil food web is King! (I knew that, but the idea of harnessing the atmospheric energy was enticing! - thoughts of NikolaTesla). Also, I was disposing of tomato seeds onto rough land - in the weeds - no compost pile and noticed I have tomatoes growing like crazy! When a see wants to grow, it will. Your gardens are beautiful! You must be taking tips from "Garden Like a Viking"! 🤣 💖
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
yes I too believe there's energy in the air no doubt!!... but its not being harnessed by this form of EC... instead its already being harnessed by the astonishing capabilities of the plants!!
@KB-2222
@KB-2222 9 ай бұрын
Aether is there. It was taken off the periodic table in the early 1900s and who knows maybe those "5g" towers are really making it so it can't be harvested?
@KB-2222
@KB-2222 9 ай бұрын
​@@gardenlikeavikingright?
@mbuakiwakongo2680
@mbuakiwakongo2680 9 ай бұрын
I'm from Brazil and I really liked the whole explanation and the results, I'm going to apply it here in my small garden and soon I'll also apply it in the Kingdom of Congo Africa too. I just subscribed to the channel to learn more about family farming culture. Your garden is so beautiful🌱🍅👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 congratulations
@Gary-lu4op
@Gary-lu4op Жыл бұрын
Hey Nate, I'm quite skeptical on the Electro culture, but still doing a little research. From what I've found, the antennas really need to be quite tall for this to work in the PASSIVE format you're testing in your garden. Your antennas are far too short from my research. If I give this a try I will be using a 20 foot antenna, maybe try a taller one?
@johnmeyers6971
@johnmeyers6971 Жыл бұрын
I use a straight 8 ft antenna 1/2 inch thick and I find the plants nearest easily outperform the plants furthest from the antenna.
@waldorules7725
@waldorules7725 Ай бұрын
OMGEEEE!! Beautiful garden!!! I’m getting ready to try the electro culture! 👏🏻👏🏻😄
@stonecreek1929
@stonecreek1929 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Nate!! agree… its hard to improve your plants when they are flourishing!! I still believe the electric aspect of any garden comes from nature in the way of thunderstorms and lightening… thanks for all you do and for keeping us informed! ❤
@Wheelman1966
@Wheelman1966 6 ай бұрын
Great video. Your garden and plants are beautiful. I built a few Electroculture antennas. Several small ones and one that is about 10 feet tall in the garden. I was skeptical when building and have since come to the same conclusions that you voiced here. With the right conditions your garden will thrive. I've been gardening here my entire life. Some years are just better than others. I have the nutrients down fairly well, though I'm continuously learning. For us it's mainly contingent on the weather. Arizona has very hot summers and if the monsoons aren't good, no amount of copper in the ground is going to do much of anything. I'm keeping my antennas. They look cool and are a good conversation starter.
@Elementaldomain
@Elementaldomain 6 ай бұрын
I live in the California High Desert. Oh gosh, 30 years ago we ran copper wire across the ground in square foot grids then placed crystals on them. Grew small plants in the squares. We felt the silica in the ground added to the effect. We enjoyed doing it immensely and also set our water jugs on the grids. I think I might try this again.
@FreeDom-dh5mf
@FreeDom-dh5mf 10 ай бұрын
I think a really good experiment might be to try it on a new garden plot that has not had any soil enrichment, yet. I imagine that might show what electroculture might do in a place where it is the only treatment being used for the experiment. I might try it next year as I'm thinking of starting a small new garden. would love to see if it helps the plants just by itself, if at all. ... If it fails to help, I'll be using your methods. you have a beautiful garden and I think the love you give it is the most important things of all.
@Jules-rk1sp
@Jules-rk1sp 8 ай бұрын
I am starting a garden here in Utah this coming season and I have very dry clay soil that needs to be broken up a bit. I think I’m going to try this method before anything so I’ll let you know :)
@beckbarei6630
@beckbarei6630 Жыл бұрын
Finally vindicated - I saw you on Insta and jumped right over to prove I'm right! Thank you so much for debunking this nonsense. Copper is one of the most toxic things to mine and a wire of it is not going to help plants grow. A friend that just started gardening, is adamant that this is a key thing. As a botanist, I couldn't think of a reason why "electroculture" would do anything. She grew lettuce for the first time but would not shut up about "electroculture." Yes, to compost tea, manure and all of the other growing techniques on this feed actually work. Awesome video!!! ... But I bet my friend will still believe it even after seeing this.
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
Your zeal against electroculture matches the fanaticism for electroculture. The fact is some people have done the same experiment, but it gave them positive results. Different soil, different climate, different care, different plants. Too many variables to have a single person confirm or debunk electroculture. As for the "science" on it (I haven't read anything on it, this is just what I think), see atmospheric electricity. E.g. ionosphere has so much electricity that skyscrapers generate electricity from it (that's why they are called skyscrapers) Bronze is conductive, and every life form (e.g. plants) has an electromagnetic field. By extension, all life has some electromagnetic properties, so I guess the soil becomes healthier this way. After all, dry soil has barely any electromagnetism. Also on the experiments, I would assume thicker copper is required, and also gotta drill it deep into the soil. If someone doesn't debunk the huge copper pyramid experiments of electroculture (which always prove to give higher yield, instead of these meme antennas), I myself cannot be convinced.
@OpenMindGarden
@OpenMindGarden Жыл бұрын
“Feed the life in the soil and they will feed you” very nicely said point at the end. Without good, balanced soil life, plants will never reach their peak. I personally think copper coils by themselves won’t lead to significant difference in plant growth as you’ve shown us. However, I do think that stimulating plants with electric/magnetic fields can increase plant growth since it’s been shown in the scientific literature (usually a magnitude of 10-30% increase) . I’m currently testing Yannick Van Doorne’s antennas and will be sharing a 1 month update soon and then a 2-month update.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
yes my friend that is exactly why I said "this type" of EC doesn't do anything... because maybe the kind where you actually pass a current through it does do something but I cannot speak to that I can only speak to what I've observed to be true!... thank you my friend and let us know your results of the YVD antennas please!
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
~Yannick seems to be the leading expert in Electroculture, and I've seen videos of his posted that were 12 years old I believe.` iut's hard to know what is true and how to achieve those resuls.
@erichokhold8459
@erichokhold8459 Жыл бұрын
this jerkoff used potted plants not plants in the earth. his experiments are null and void. of course you aren't tapping into earth's energy with a LAYER OF PLASTIC BETWEEN THE PLANTS AND THE GROUND. but yall aint ready for that
@truthonly7699
@truthonly7699 Жыл бұрын
i was just about to run some tests, now i will not bother, thank you, i love the way you garden, feed the soil feed your soul
@masonlifestyle3003
@masonlifestyle3003 Жыл бұрын
...i feel good about using electroculture in my garden for the ensemble of benefits... charging the soil, introducing more copper in the soil (keeping slugs away), attracting insects and animals like possums and wild rabbits, rare types of dragonflies, humming birds... ALL things that simply NEVER came to it prior to introducing electroculture... bottom line there is a science to it and it goes back hundreds of years and was used industrially to help central communities reap abundance of foods ... and yes there is ton of information related to it... i believe that incorporating it to the garden has brought great ambient energy in the perimeter in a good way along with frequency music (Schuman's resonance mainly) i like to have on all day... it is great that you gave it a simple shot at it mate!... your gardening style is already creating great abundance so i think it harder to notice a difference...also you would technically need a 7 to 10 meter antenna in the middle of the garden to tap into the higher voltage atmospheric energy to boost that whole perimeter....have copper wire running to all corners along the ground and connected to your cattle panels and into the ground ...that is a little work but the next years crops would most likely be mind-blowing in my opinion... STILL ...great try at it...and love the L.A.B. video you made using it for my indoor tiny hydroponic setup i am building for winter growing cheers! :)
@connecticutwormsgardens
@connecticutwormsgardens 3 ай бұрын
Gardening does not require copper nor electricity. People have been growing food for as long as people have been alive which is a long freaking time. How long have people been using copper antennas? All the wildlife you describe visits my garden daily. Multiple times a day in fact and some of them have become a problem. No copper no antennas no electricity. Just healthy soil and avoidance of anything artificial. No sprays no chemicals no chemical base fertilizers. You might think that your antennas are the answer. One look at my garden will show what it can be like without any of it
@susanbernier9399
@susanbernier9399 2 ай бұрын
Thanks! Just wanted to let you know that utube is deleting your likes 👍🏻 I watched it while reading your very informative post 💕🇨🇦
@garthwunsch7320
@garthwunsch7320 Жыл бұрын
Since I trust you, the results of your experiment just saved me a huge amount of time sorting out info from other electroculture experimenters using click bait titles and usually little real effort or results in their videos. Well done my friend!
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
dont trust others, trust only yourself. Do the experiments in your garden. It does work for some. If you ask me, use thick copper (1/2 inches) and drill it deep into the soil. Or go copper pyramid autism to objectively validate whether electroculture works
@taylorreindl8007
@taylorreindl8007 Жыл бұрын
The garden is looking amazing. Here in northern Colorado the bugs are viciously eating everything in the garden
@TheMississauga333
@TheMississauga333 Жыл бұрын
i had put in my soil mulched up leaves and manure last fall and some jadam liquid , thats all i had , and this year just after i planted i added qty four, 8 ft tall copper winding going clockwise from the bottom up , i live in canada, .around a 1x1 wood post. i have to say it was a sea of green, i do agree totally build your soil, but i dont think my leaves and manure account for the crazy growth i had, others who have visited who have better soil than me and they are amazed, my soil wasnt great for certain , my post are paid for so for the future i will leave them in there and continue to build the soil, thanks
@ltuerk
@ltuerk Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your commitment and time to this question, Nate. I agree with your final conclusions♥️♥️♥️
@sundrop3911
@sundrop3911 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, I never got around to doing this experiment. I could only find 8 gauge wire which wasn't easy to bend, so I thought next year I would be more prepared with wire I could bend. I trust your opinion on the results, but you also obviously have very healthy soil to start off with. My soil isn't bad, but I am working on improving it. What you said is absolutely correct about taking care of the soil and the plants will take care of you. I'm planning on composting in place inside a couple containers next year just to see faster results of the impact on my plants. I will still garden in the ground while amending the soil. Thank you for doing this experiment for us and giving your honest feedback.
@stephenluckett3974
@stephenluckett3974 11 ай бұрын
You can pick up 18 gauze copper wire at home depot or lowes, I used it for my houseplants. I noticed in this video here that he used no stick to wrap the copper around (don't know if this matters) and then placed the antenna in the ground. The antenna should point up. I have watched several successful electroculture videos which they show antennas facing into the sky which is probably what attracts the energy to the copper wire and then travels down to the soil.
@stephenluckett3974
@stephenluckett3974 11 ай бұрын
In addition, I always use organic methods for growing anything and even if I use electroculture I would still use no chemicals on the garden. His soil looked amazing
@shellbells339
@shellbells339 Жыл бұрын
Those antennas actually cover a 3ft radius. I unintentionally created some type of force field within my raised garden beds that must have put off some type of frequency that discouraged pests. I also didnt have to use fertilizer this year. Its been crazy. My beds especially beans are still producing from the very first planting in May. LOL
@ISAACOLUSEUN-k3b
@ISAACOLUSEUN-k3b 7 ай бұрын
Thank you! The guy is not doing it right. You’re supposed to place the sticks 3-10ft apart, depending on the copper coil thickness to create the force field
@shellbells339
@shellbells339 7 ай бұрын
​​@@ISAACOLUSEUN-k3bI also placed my coils on the south side of my garden beds as it was instructed to do. My garden was a hot mess and I was just about to call it quits bc of the damage to my seedlings. The coils was a last ditch effort and in a matter of a week.. paPOW. Just amazing. Im trying to save a maple tree now. 😂🙏🤞
@cakoll71
@cakoll71 5 ай бұрын
@@ISAACOLUSEUN-k3b. Show us your video!🙃🙃🙂😉
@Peter-cd3us
@Peter-cd3us 4 ай бұрын
@@shellbells339 I have had good results with my electroculture method. Like everything in life you can misdirect people by simply not paying attention to the important details. Nate has made many mistakes when following the electroculture details. I expect to be hearing from @unknowninvisibility about what I just said! Lol.
@coryavila01
@coryavila01 Жыл бұрын
Your garden is absolutely gorgeous!! City boy here in Los Angeles. When I was 10 my mom sent me away to live on a farm for a month that summer. Horses, chickens, hogs... it was quite an experience! The wife had a small garden. One thing that has always stuck with me was how amazing a fresh carrot tasted right out of the ground!! I hated vegys at that age, but when I tasted that fresh carrot, all I wanted was another one. To this day, I think about those carrots whenever I buy a bunch at the store. They're never as good, but I still buy them regularly hoping to get a fresh batch.
@bretthunt2510
@bretthunt2510 Жыл бұрын
Nice Experiment. This year I am experimenting using scoria rocks to heat up the soil so I can potentially get a bigger sweet potato harvest
@bill8582
@bill8582 5 ай бұрын
Last year I planted some squash along a fence in my back yard, they did amazing. This year I heard about electroculture, so I thought I'd give it a try. The weather here in north central Texas, has not cooperated, my first batch of seedlings got washed out of the containers when I left them on the porch, and it came a storm, so I started over, probably too late in the season, but I am not giving up. Got a bunch of seedlings coming up, and the few that I have put in the ground, with the antennas don't seem to be blowing up, like some people claim, so I'm not sure, but I will leave them there, but I am not convinced that it works. I think your garden is doing well because you have taken care of the soil.
@lolitabonita08
@lolitabonita08 Жыл бұрын
Note...the tomato cages act like antennas, the metal fences and any metal wire act like antennas, so u have antennas all over the place so the small antennas are just helping out the bit antennas...One thing i noticed is that they keep water longer, larger leafs, no disease or very little...and does not work in all plants.
@beamsinvestigations1986
@beamsinvestigations1986 Жыл бұрын
Correct... I would not be put off by this; I have used/still use copper spirals myself and say that they do have some positive effects.
@busyrand
@busyrand Жыл бұрын
Yup and trees act like wooden antennas. The stalk of the plants act like green stalk antennas... When you stand upright around the plants, your body funnels static electricity into the ground like an antenna...
@lolitabonita08
@lolitabonita08 Жыл бұрын
exactly, that is why is recommended to walk bare foot to ground the body and to hug a tree to get their electrical charge and to ground ourselves.@@busyrand
@trenomas1
@trenomas1 Жыл бұрын
Oh dear god thank you! Simplicity is all you need.
@nikitavanhoose405
@nikitavanhoose405 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I have like 10 heirloom Kellogg's Breakfast tomatoe plants. I put electroculture on two of them and see no real difference between the other 8. If I were splitting hairs, one of my biggest, healthiest, most productive plants is actually one of the ones furthest from the antennas lol. One of my Kellogs Breakfast tomatoes is the largest Ive ever grown. This thing is the diameter somewhere between a saucer and plate, closer to a plate. The thing probably weighs around 3 to 3 and a half pounds. I also did Mortgage Lifer, Hillbilly Potato Leaf, Gold Medal, Supersonic and one other tomatoe that I cant remember at the moment. My Ambrosia corn did very good and very sweet and tasty and I just planted some more for fall. We have eaten a ton of new potatoes and enough squash to float a boat. We did zucchini, straight neck and crooked neck and we have a bunch of butternut were just about ready to harvest. We will harvest both red and white sweet potatoes right before the first frost. We have about 9 or 10 Mountain Sweet watermelons that are almost fully ripe. We have 6 sweet banana pepper plants, that have produced so much we cant keep up with them, and about 4 bell pepper plants loaded down with peppers about tennisball size that were waiting on. The bell peppers are Joes Big Blocky Red. We have 4 Brussel sprout plants that are balling up sprouts nicely and all 4 are almost waist high. We also just put in some cabbage and Kerobie for the fall season. We also already enjoyed a bunch of Bountiful bush green beans and are planting more for fall. We grew the largest garden with the most stuff ever this year and it will probably be even bigger next year.
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
I bought this variety from Seed Savers... I assume you really like it if you have 10 of them?
@radrickdavis
@radrickdavis Жыл бұрын
Waited a long time for this video. I really like these topic specific videos, or even garden updates more than the general Q&A ones.
@jabulani400
@jabulani400 Жыл бұрын
I have at least 20 years experience in gardening. I see good results with electro culture but the most important thing is as you said: good soil, good kompost, water, sun, simply the normal things plants need and luck 🤞 (My antenas are bigger and no obstacles like power poles and metal fence as in your video)
@unknowninvisibility
@unknowninvisibility 5 ай бұрын
Yet the proponent of these techniques claims that none of the other inputs are needed. Have you documented any studies or experiments performed that can quantify your results in any way
@markWilliams-bw7uj
@markWilliams-bw7uj 4 ай бұрын
Yeah mine are 15’ tall not 10” LoL
@JackWest-kt6xh
@JackWest-kt6xh 2 ай бұрын
same, over in NW Montana here, and our antennae are either 8' or 12' depending on what I'm cutting on sawmill. anyway, copper is old electrical runs. I've been putting them randomly in the forest near whitepine and birch I want to save. seems to help... been doing it a few years now.
@JuliaHerych
@JuliaHerych Жыл бұрын
Love watching your garden. So happy for the soil you’ve built! Inspiring by your results to try harder so my garden produce the food too.❤
@Divlnorum
@Divlnorum Жыл бұрын
Your channel is fantastic, I've replicated some of your recipes to great effect. At 0:52 the copper coil appears to still have varnish on, but I might be mistaken. I've had amazing results with electroculture with my cannabis plants, and that's all I grow. The first thing that impressed me was that my plants have been bug free and very healthy for the entire duration. I also noticed that by adding more coils of copper I was able to increase the length of laggard plants of the same strain. And I've been running tests for 2 months. Could it be that electroculture only works on some plants but not on others? Thanks Nate!
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
Different soil, different climate, different plant species, too many variables all in all. If it works for you, keep doing it, that's for sure. Chemtrails and other happenings will make producing harder.
@johnfoster6144
@johnfoster6144 2 ай бұрын
I have been tossing fruit and overgrown vegetables that I don't want to use, along with rotting weeds that I pulled, into a couple of piles near my blackberries. I did not actually set out to create compost but it began to occur anyway. I have blackberries that are, in some cases 8ft. tall and producing all summer...WOW, you are spot on about the soil regenerating due to fungal growth. I have been developing compost but not near my garden. You have given me an idea about smaller spread-out compost bins. Thanks! I am going to try a compost trench row down the middle of my 4ft. wide beds.
@JohnSmith-pd4mf
@JohnSmith-pd4mf Жыл бұрын
I get what you’re saying and it makes sense but I’d love to see someone do a large sample test with proper controls in place. My gut feeling says the electro culture can compliment the solid foundations you’re talking about but the foundations are most important. Thanks for doing the experiment!
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
if that were the case then I would've seen at least SOME kind of effect... but there was just literally ZERO effect whatsoever in any way... so a larger experiment doesn't seem necessary because I had about a dozen of these altogether and not a single one made the slightest difference
@cecilysu
@cecilysu 10 ай бұрын
Why do you make a hook 🪝 at the top of your antennas? I think the hook 🪝 part is meant to go into the soil and the spiral 🌀 is meant to stick into the air
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
@@gardenlikeaviking Thicker copper wire, and taller (so you can plant it at least 1 ft) would be a more valid experiment. Another experiment is having a big copper pyramid frame, and plant within. And compare with an aluminium pyramid frame. Almost no pyramid electroculture experiments exist on the internet (economical cost), and all of them promote "works 100%" Btw thanks for your videos, they are great. I hope you and your garden remain as healthy :)
@jordyhumby
@jordyhumby 3 ай бұрын
Thanks and great garden! I agree a lush soil with microbial life is most important!
@ManofLetters
@ManofLetters Жыл бұрын
1) tomato cages act as electroculture 2) You should use clones so your genetics all match and soil with the exact some contents to get a better judgement! this is all from teh book idk if it actually works or not but it would be dope if we could see that kind of experiment: )
@drivingsideways2319
@drivingsideways2319 8 ай бұрын
I have 4 cannabis plants all germinated at the same time everything the same except one has electroculture and it's twice the size of the rest
@vlarralv
@vlarralv Жыл бұрын
Finally! Thank you! I'll stop stripping wires now!
@saintmaxmedia2423
@saintmaxmedia2423 Жыл бұрын
I agree, soil food web is the key. Thank you Nate. Eva
@dnt7805
@dnt7805 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for all your effort. FEED THE SOIL
@DuyNguyen-lo2mm
@DuyNguyen-lo2mm 4 ай бұрын
your garden is amazing!!
@nikitavanhoose405
@nikitavanhoose405 Жыл бұрын
Funny thing is, Im seeing user names that are now acting like they knew it all along and predicted this result, who were on here defending electroculture 3 months ago on the original video, swearing up and down that they use it and it's amazing and game changing lol. Everybody is rich and successful and smart and have done and seen it all, when their anonymous and think no one's paying attention, or taking score lol. I would say that probably 85 to 90 % of the people on the internet swearing that electroculture is great, probably don't even grow anything, or they were just wishing that it would work
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
~Wait... People really flip flopped like that from "It's the best" to "It sucks, I knew it!!?" Seriously...? WTf is wrong with people. 😆!` My dad has been touting Electroculture for months saying it's the best and that I'm wasitng money on buying high quality soil amendments and that Electroculture is much better...` I told him about this video and he said "Well, you should be following the actual electroculture people, not someone who followed them, did it and failed." .........` I trust the person(Garden Viking) who is doing what I know to be true (I come from a health background, so when I read about "Living Soil" that was exactly what I knew I NEEDED to do, as the body, and the soil both contain a vat amount of microorganisms that must be fueled properly). I told him it's a fair point, but why should I trust videos from people that I don't know if they are legit or not`, when I can see the results from someone who knows what htey are doing, and if someone who knows what they are doing, cannot get results.... Why would I, someone with no experience get them, and why would following the "Actual people who get results" yield differently than someone who "did the experiment following people who have results."
@misternordberg3675
@misternordberg3675 Жыл бұрын
Or they're bots.
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
~Yea, i'ts possible the ones who have had "succes" are just bots.@@misternordberg3675
@lolitabonita08
@lolitabonita08 Жыл бұрын
well, for those who still using it, for those who have the correct knowledge, for those who have an open mind and apply different methods it works...In this case....his garden have a loooot of antennas in the form of metal panels, metal cages, wire, chichen wire and so on... sadly no everythone have the intelligence or the desire to study electroculture for 10 years or more to know how this technique works... You and anyone like you keep doing what u doing because for us, the electroculture followers, works very well.
@AlvinKazu
@AlvinKazu Жыл бұрын
@@lolitabonita08So make some videos on it, and do a video on why the experiments in this video weren't correct.
@coolbreeze8572
@coolbreeze8572 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite youtubers! Thanks viking! Love ypur videos
@jjd13579
@jjd13579 6 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your willingness to both test a hypothesis, and also to call BS when gardening woo turns out to be pointless!
@lolitabonita08
@lolitabonita08 Жыл бұрын
I forgot...those antennas (not the tinny ones) have a range of 6 meters or more depending on the size...so there you have it my friends...
@Pink-Gin
@Pink-Gin Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you didn't fudge the results. I'll now subscribe because your garden is amazing.
@mirabehn-stormysynapse
@mirabehn-stormysynapse Жыл бұрын
I was considering a similar experiment. Thank you for doing this! You have a different approach to this than I had. My question is more about nitrogen fixation, than magically doing anything. Where I live we get a lot of lightning. I care about fertilizer reduction.This is why I was considering the experiment. I wonder if it would encourage nitrogen fixation in the soil? The ideal crop choice for the experiment would be a non legume that requires a lot of nitrogen to grow. Similar conditions but with and without the electrically stimulated ground, and also farther from one another to ensure no ‘contamination’ of the control crop. What do you think of the idea and method that I’m planning? Also what kind of squash is that you are growing? Wishing you the best, Mira
@HumanElectroculture
@HumanElectroculture 2 ай бұрын
Nice results. We experience the same great improvements compared to gardening without electroculture. And some people say it doesn't work 😅 Congratulations 👏
@CliverMcguiver
@CliverMcguiver Жыл бұрын
I have a tomato seed that I have been growing for 11 years. I got the seed for free from a farmers market - when I tried to pay for it they said it is rotten, I said I know..Got it for free...This tomato has very round leaves with no jagged edges on the leaves. The fruit is 2.25 to 2.75 lbs. I planted 4 of these seeds and I put in an antenna. with the 12 gag wire was wrapped around a 1" piece of dowelling 20 wraps C/C . The 2 plants next to the coil did better then the 2 just feet away. all treated the same. BUT IT HAS TO BE REPRODUCED. A friend of mine that I met on the tarmac at CCY - he has a lot of test equipment. The tail or the top of the coil will gather different frequencies depending on the length. So we intend to measure the Frequency and trying different length of frequency. THE WORLD IS MADE FROM DIFFERENT FREQUENCY'S. Where is that place that plant thrive,. I am fascinated by how a seed like a petunia seed can grow so large. I have a big light set up at home and will be trying this with 4 plant that we are allowed to grow in Canada... Calgary Alberta, the Texas twin...
@mgguygardening
@mgguygardening Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. I've been watching some of the gardeners tauting electroculture and just can't believe people fall for this. I'm glad you took the time to properly test it and prove that it doesn't work.
@randysmith6493
@randysmith6493 10 ай бұрын
You do a nice job in the garden, well done. Problem : Aluminum conducts electricity just like copper. You have been using those aluminum supports which if electrical potential is a real thing, then you have been doing electruculture beforehand with the aluminum for years without knowing it.
@kevindavis3841
@kevindavis3841 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the update my friend! The only thing that surprised me in this video was your preditator. I got rid of my beloved cat. She thought raised beds were kitty potties. Aside from copious amounts of pee and poop she was digging up plants. Much love 🙏🏻
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
thank you for the consistent support my friend I appreciate you!!... yes this cat (Shiva) also digs in all the beds and totally destroys the little seedlings and I have to replant constantly and places fencing everywhere lol... but she keeps out all the chipmunks and mice and thats worth its weight in gold!!
@robertburns2223
@robertburns2223 7 ай бұрын
Aloha how goes it? Dude outstanding garden. My friend what electro culture has done is getting people excited about gardening 👩‍🌾
@kjata77
@kjata77 4 ай бұрын
Sticking a copper antenna into the soil is probably not going to do anything... that's not real electro-culture, it's adding a decoration to the garden, js. A person needs to have a wire grid IN the soil amongst other things. There are a lot of fake electro-culture 'plans' on the Internet, like this one but that is why we experiment :) It does work but is more complex.
@ninacanadian
@ninacanadian 3 ай бұрын
You saved me time - thanks. I was deciding whether to ask my mom or my dad if this is legit. You confirm my instinct. Garden art - well said
@MsGreenmermaid
@MsGreenmermaid 3 ай бұрын
How comes this is never mentioned in any other single video? I feel I read comments and find someone who says 'Ye but you need to calibrate it to the moon when the stars are aligned in sign of Taurus or it won't work' 🤯🤯🤯
@kjata77
@kjata77 3 ай бұрын
@@MsGreenmermaid LOL, I feel ya, my friend. Without writing a book here and No, I am 0% sarcastic so plz don't take my words harshly. Electro-culture is harvesting the God given natural flowing free energy (that's a 2 word phrase which can draw a YT suspension, lol) from our domed Earth, which works on the basis of electro-static/electro-magnetic forces... [universal] gravity is 100% fake. Anyone has to understand that before proceeding. Electro-culture requires a copper wire grid embedded under the soil, you should NEVER need to till the soil, just add amendment layers on top of what is there. Surrounding a garden with particular limestone or other conductive rock/stone is also important to maximize the effect. Soil health is always 100% most important as electro-culture is not a miracle worker for lazy "gardeners" but a natural amendment which can & will super boost crop size/health/harvest/etc. if done fully & properly. If your plants just die, electro-culture is useless to you (NOT 'you' but anyone). Aquaponics might be a mrore feasible method. Electro-culture multiplies the harvest and plants where modern tactics are "just add more fertilizer and water". Electro-culture WORKS 100% but research it at your local library, not on YT... from my experience. the only trusted food source you have is what you grow or raise/hunt... then 'harvest' yourself, js.
@Paul4Krista20
@Paul4Krista20 2 ай бұрын
I believe there is still a good bit of electromagnetic activity in our modern skies to still reach these antennas even if it’s not much, doubt it is completely futile and could still be doing something with the frequency of the entire local field at some level? 🤷
@BamboozledUS
@BamboozledUS Ай бұрын
You are looking SO healthy! An excellent example of growing your food in healthy soil.
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Ай бұрын
thank you my friend!!
@HadassahHaman
@HadassahHaman Жыл бұрын
Thank you! And I agree...Extra gimmicks tricks etc.... are so unnecessary. Nature has given us the tools. Thank you. ❤
@donthegardener8670
@donthegardener8670 8 ай бұрын
Love your, in the garden experiments! When it comes to winding. Plant tendrils do grab much faster and tighter to trellising when trained. For directions look no-farther than your kitchen sink's drain. Water spins counter-clock-wise (North of equator) and clock-wise. (South of equator) It saves on tying and string. When storm season comes I sleep better! ;-)
@MushroomMagpie
@MushroomMagpie Жыл бұрын
I don't agree with how you did this experiment. I use taller poles, with more wraps of wire, and drive them deep as i can into the ground. You can feel the energy arohnd them and my plants are huge this year, despite the crap weather here.
@maryraymond8375
@maryraymond8375 4 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. He needs taller stakes! Ridiculous! Bad experiment!
@waynefrick1
@waynefrick1 7 ай бұрын
I know exactly who is pushing this and have begun to seriously doubt his confident, I-know-everything-about-everything, you've-been-lied-to-about-everything, and they're-keeping-all-this-from-you assertions. I have a degree in biology which hard,y makes me an expert in this or anything else, but I really appreciate your reasonable, variable-controlled, "let's try it and see" approach here. I really wanted to believe it works, but the results are the results, and I can accept them. Thank you for producing this.
@theyellowarchitect4504
@theyellowarchitect4504 5 ай бұрын
There are many who had positive results though. Different soil, different climate, different seeds/plants. N is too low to conclude electroculture doesnt work. There is definitely something into this.
@kimikujawa1204
@kimikujawa1204 Жыл бұрын
Wow thanks!! I was just about to try this! Luckily i only bought a $4 coil to test first, and since i enjoy crafting, will just use it to wire wrap some crystals. I also wish to add a little about me that I feel backs up what you concluded...... I am a country MI native who now lives in urban AZ (where stuff typically does NOT "just grow" like it did back home), and although I've always worked with plants (mostly flowers, herbs, and succs), i have recently delved into food gardening *aka vegetable gardening. An endeavor that mostly stemmed from my sheer disgust with our food industry and desire to feed my 3 small children food with actual nourishment and energy contained within it. That being said, i did not expect everything to be so overwhelmingly complicated! Yikes!! I'm a strong believer that all this tech, which is supposed to make our lives easier, is in fact doing the exact opposite. It is making everything so dang complicated and time consuming, gardening included. Therefore, when i decided to start a compost bin, and with all the different methods, ideas, and opinions out there when i was merely looking for cheap and simple, it quickly became very overwhelming for me. I then thought back to when i was a little kid visiting my Grams cabin in the northern woods of Michigan...... she had a bountiful garden even with the extremely short growing season, she collected kitchen scraps, and she was anything but complicated, what did my Gramsy do? Unfortunately she's passed on, but i do recall what she was doing one day while i busied myself collecting as many daddy-long-legs as i could find, she was simply burying her kitchen scraps. So, having collected a freezer full of scraps and trash bags filled with shredded brown paper bags in that time i had spent sifting through the endless internet articles and videos on "simple" composting techniques (none of which were simple AT ALL mind you), I decided to dig a hole, throw everything in, and check on it after about a year or when Spring rolled back around. Well, i truly wish i could pin a photo on here, because Squash started growing around my compost hole and it hasn't stopped since! I mean gorgeous and effortless and did i mention delicious!?! I have a garden bed maybe 10 feet away in my backyard. The squash plants in there have been through the ringer this summer. Non-stop squash bugs & aphids & more squash bugs (lots and lots of squash bugs) to battle, but not my self- seeders by my SUPER SIMPLE (for real simple) scrap hole that i made, mostly just out of frustration. Anyways, didn't intend to get so long winded, so I'll conclude this monologue with a great big THANK YOU!! I'm Honored to have found this channel and Grateful for your Down to Earth, Simple, Natural, Nature-inspired advice. May your harvest always be Bountiful my friend♡
@carboncopy411
@carboncopy411 Жыл бұрын
9:13 you called this a mammoth squash plant? Ive been trying to find patty pan squash forEVER! Mom called them patty pan squash, i never knew the real name. It might have been paddy
@mysticmeadow9116
@mysticmeadow9116 Жыл бұрын
@potoopotato I got some organic patty pan squash at a local farmer market. I saved the seeds. You might want to give that a try. 🌱
@gardenlikeaviking
@gardenlikeaviking Жыл бұрын
yes my friend look for the White Scallop Squash from Baker Creek Seeds... those are the exact variety you saw here
@thatguy431
@thatguy431 5 ай бұрын
your garden is an absolute unit dude! 😍😍
@Humbulla93
@Humbulla93 Жыл бұрын
there´s an experiment where you place the seeds in a high frequency electric field, this unlocks the full genetic potential of the plants. The purpose of this study was to accelerate germination of plant seeds with application of a high frequency alternating electric field. In the present study we show that low-intensity (0.05-1 Vpp/cm) and high frequency (10-100 MHz) alternating electric fields accelerate seed germination. We found that 1 Vpp/cm (peak to peak voltage/cm), 100 MHz alternating electric field application for 10 h significantly shortened germination time of arugula, Japanese mustard spinach, and pea seeds, respectively. In arugula and Japanese mustard spinach seeds at 24 h incubation and pea seeds at 32 h incubation after beginning of the application, the germination rates of the electric field applied plant seeds were enhanced 1.5-2.2 times compared to the untreated seeds, respectively. After 72 h of the incubation, the 1 Vpp/cm, 100 MHz alternating electric field for 10 h significantly increased 1.4 folds of culm lengths in the arugula, the Japanese mustard spinach, and the pea seeds compared with those of the untreated seeds.
@connecticutwormsgardens
@connecticutwormsgardens 3 ай бұрын
@Humbulla93 is it really worth all the extra equipment, time, and money to cause seeds to germinate a couple days sooner? Soak your seeds in compost tea or worm tea and they will also germinate quicker and once they do germinate the plant will be the healthiest you can imagine. Gardening isn't science, it's about soil nutrition which equals plant nutrition. No electricity required
@susanbernier9399
@susanbernier9399 2 ай бұрын
Interesting study thank you!💕🇨🇦
@Humbulla93
@Humbulla93 2 ай бұрын
@@connecticutwormsgardens that equipment could be built yourself with little expenditure, of course compost teas are great, but that technology "repairs" the DNA back in it's prehistoric form. Because with each generation you lose a bit of information, limiting the plants/animal potential. The plants also express a higher tolerance to drought, UV stress and pests. This technology was also used on cultivated trouts and they got larger by 30-40% iirc. And typical trout farm diseases haven't occurred in the treated fish.
@Humbulla93
@Humbulla93 2 ай бұрын
@@susanbernier9399 happy to share knowledge, as lots of these frequency research is considered fringe science due to political motivation, but I digress. Greetings back to beautiful Canada from croatia 🇭🇷, the country with 1250 islands (fun fact same number as India, but we're much much smaller country than India)
@susanbernier9399
@susanbernier9399 2 ай бұрын
@@Humbulla93 💯 agree! Your home country sounds beautiful!
@misaventuras6995
@misaventuras6995 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to do that experiment and sharing results. Back to basics!
@mizp1111
@mizp1111 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for so engagingly showing us what’s real, simple, and beautiful. The Creator has given us everything we need to succeed and even shown us how, if one only observes nature. You have distilled these principles in a manner that’s succinct and approachable. Can’t wait to pre-order your book!
@mizp1111
@mizp1111 Жыл бұрын
P.S. Nate, perhaps you need a moderator to help you delete/block these freaks pretending to be you on Telegram
@bryanarie258
@bryanarie258 Жыл бұрын
Your garden is looking great!!
@alanstewart100
@alanstewart100 11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your willingness to share your information. There are lots of voices out there giving advice. Most of us have a finite amount of time, energy and resources. We need to be listening to the voice of experience. It is wonderful to have advice from you that is proven.
@fakhourikakeesh5527
@fakhourikakeesh5527 Жыл бұрын
nice to see a genuine experiment, my understanding from a brief look a while ago was using current through a 2 coils to help break down the soil between them faster which i was thinking of doing myself i wont be doing this static coil idea but would be interesting to see a compost experiment with a voltage running through 1
@EremEdition
@EremEdition 5 ай бұрын
This is an example of a high quality KZbin video. Great presentation beginning to end.
@melsibley5191
@melsibley5191 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Nath , I was just looking for this follow up video yesterday
@giteducalme
@giteducalme 5 ай бұрын
My goodness, your garden is incredible, bravo. 👌 None of my plants grow like yours.
@myfitstoreuk5608
@myfitstoreuk5608 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Im glad thise were your findings! Its sure time to drop gimmicks and just focus on fundamentals for sure! 💪🏻
@JimMeakim
@JimMeakim Жыл бұрын
Let's go back in time, hundreds, even thousands of years, what made people begin to think about electricity and plants. After a storm, ancient man noticed how much greener things appeared. How many copper antennas did they have? The answer is none. (personally, I believe the greener appearance is more due to fresh rain water washing pollen and dust off the plants and the light from the sun being filtered through rain and clouds.) I have been doing my own experiments with this because I have been very critical of it on the gardening pages I follow. The responses I get are "Have you tried it?" So, now I am. But seriously, if the principles of electroculture are even half true, most of us are all ready doing it, without knowing it!! While everyone loves copper, ALL metal conducts electricity! Your metal trellises, the metal tomatoe cages, the T fence posts, the fencing surrounding the gardens, all conduct electricity. My garden is already FULL of metal, has been for years! I've added coils with stuff I had laying around. I'm a pretty good gardener, so if electroculture has any validity, I'm gonna be a Master Garedner!!! LOL
@blueminutes4686
@blueminutes4686 6 ай бұрын
Stunning garden! So lush. Oh, to be that cat!
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