My Thoughts on No-Till Have Changed

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Josh Sattin Farming

Josh Sattin Farming

Күн бұрын

A little bit of an update on how I am feeling about my no-till farming practices.
Is No-Till The New Organic -
• Is NO-TILL the new ORG...
Josh's Instagram @josh.sattin - / josh.sattin
Raleigh City Farm
Website - raleighcityfarm.org/
Instagram @raleighcityfarm - / raleighcityfarm
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Пікірлер: 429
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig 3 жыл бұрын
Josh your clarity is so cool - it really is about... the soil! The food, the flavours, the plot health and leaf lustre, ;lack of weed pressure - all good! Plus an interesting aside about no til being 'defined by negatives'. Food for thought. It's true and suggests that what are we doing to the soil, normally, is not good. Yet it has become accepted. Go you with no till!
@TheMissCrocodile
@TheMissCrocodile 3 жыл бұрын
Charles is in the house
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Charles! Good to see you in here too!
@peterclark6290
@peterclark6290 2 жыл бұрын
There is one scenario for tillage. When degraded land is first farmed it is OK to plough and harrow the crap out of it to try and open pathways for the first cover crop's roots: however a few thinking ducks have to be in a row beforehand, suitable seeds and variety, water, compost, and time. After that the farmer's contribution is to never ever for there are no valid reasons whatsoever to leave soil naked again. The joke: "You love your soil so much you never want to see it ever again." So growing market vegetables without other plants (or their remains) right next to it and in-between is a no no. The growing plants aren't necessarily competing, they are all in a fungal-supporting network that dislikes seeing you as well. A roller/crimper will do everything you need. Sell the rest, the hoe, the shovel, the rake... Your supreme and all-powerful boss is the earthworm for he is your only contact with the magic of the underworld, mwahahaha. Bit melodramatic but it covers the fundamental philosophy of Regen Ag.
@TheRipeTomatoFarms
@TheRipeTomatoFarms 3 жыл бұрын
Josh has it 100% correct. Once you actually get into no-till and no-dig farming (or even backyard gardening), you see that its even easier than traditional tilling and prepping for a crop. So here you have a practice that is less labor-intensive, less costly, works better, and is better for the land? That's what they call zero downsides.
@Bortismah
@Bortismah 3 жыл бұрын
Not really if you get wrong recommendations you are really fucked, why simple if don’t cut the straw in the right sizes you’ll get your crap full of fungus, if you’ll don’t do the right rotation you can get low in micronutrients and get low production and a few other things, in other words it’s like josh said you need to have contacts.
@Jesus-qv5sw
@Jesus-qv5sw 2 жыл бұрын
@@Bortismah Straw filled with funguses? Do you know the meaning of micorrizae?.
@Jesus-qv5sw
@Jesus-qv5sw 2 жыл бұрын
@@brad1367 IK, but there is a balance between ones and the other ones, it is not about wiping out all negative fungus, if you obliterate this ones, probably some species of negative bacterias would get overpopulated, or some insects.
@georgelee5244
@georgelee5244 2 жыл бұрын
Yes I found it to be so much less work it make it enjoyable to go out to the garden
@senryuuhoutaro3353
@senryuuhoutaro3353 2 жыл бұрын
@@georgelee5244 You must know that tilling destroys fungal networks especially mycorrhizae and lots of other ones. Mulching actually helps fungus, another decomposable material to feed fungus too? Mulch?
@BalticHomesteaders
@BalticHomesteaders 3 жыл бұрын
Your version of 'no till' Certainly inspired me. I have no farming experience and though a abrupt life change swapped a desk for a country homestead in a foreign country with a small plowed field. I put a stop to the tilling (inlaws thought I was crazy) and built a 'market garden' to grow all our veg in for our home pretty much replicating what you'd done using only our own resources. It was real hard work but now I look at what we've achieved and what we have for years to come it's amazing. Thank you so much for your videos and encouragement.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
You're welcome. That's awesome you tried out some of this stuff and are seeing the results. Thanks for watching!
@peterclark6290
@peterclark6290 2 жыл бұрын
There is one scenario for tillage. When degraded land is first farmed it is OK to plough and harrow the crap out of it to try and open pathways for the first cover crop's roots: however a few thinking ducks have to be in a row beforehand, suitable seeds and variety, water, compost, and time. After that the farmer's contribution is to never ever for there are no valid reasons whatsoever to leave soil naked again. The joke: "You love your soil so much you never want to see it ever again." So growing market vegetables without other plants (or their remains) right next to it and in-between is a no no. The growing plants aren't necessarily competing, they are all in a fungal-supporting network that dislikes seeing you as well. A roller/crimper will do everything you need. Sell the rest, the hoe, the shovel, the rake... Your supreme and all-powerful boss is the earthworm for he is your only contact with the magic of the underworld, mwahahaha. Bit melodramatic but it covers the fundamental philosophy of Regen Ag.
@AFramedHOAmstead
@AFramedHOAmstead 3 жыл бұрын
"Is this no till? LOL You must have been a great teacher. You got us through the first 30 days of the shutdown, and you continue to inspire me. Blessings to you
@mio.giardino
@mio.giardino 3 жыл бұрын
I was talking to an old timer and he was telling me about how he wanted to put in a garden and the place he picked had no bad weeds in it so he TILLED it up and planted it. Suddenly, he said, he got thistle like crazy. I told him that when he tilled he brought up the OLD seed in the ground and gave it a chance and it took it. I explained the low till method and tarping to him and he was wide eyed at the prospect of less work and fewer weeds. I hope he tries it out.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
That conversion is tough to have with people that have been doing this for a while and are set in their ways. Fortunately for me as a first generation farmer, I don't have the personal history. I can do what makes the most sense. Most often when I talk with non-farmers about this style of farming it makes a lot of sense to them.
@alph8654
@alph8654 3 жыл бұрын
@@JoshSattinFarming The first time i heard about no-dig gardening was from a Charles Dowding video. I saw nothing but good sense from the video and immediately changed to no-dig and have never looked back. Not getting any younger either and it is labor saving. that was about 4 years ago.
@dale1h64
@dale1h64 3 жыл бұрын
I wish everyone would say low-till cause that is what they are doing. It makes perfect sense!
@tylerehrlich1471
@tylerehrlich1471 3 жыл бұрын
This video was full of GREAT questions. "Is this no-till?" Soil health is where it all comes from!
@jeshurunfarm
@jeshurunfarm 3 жыл бұрын
It's all good thinking outside of the box, but I'm still unwrapping this box. Enjoying y'alls. Love and respect from Africa 🇿🇦
@jamjar5716
@jamjar5716 3 жыл бұрын
I caught that!😉
@jeshurunfarm
@jeshurunfarm 3 жыл бұрын
@@jm1178 ditto
@claireisacamel
@claireisacamel 3 жыл бұрын
I feel like no till makes gardening and growing more accessible for folks like me who can’t physically afford the back breaking work of tilling to prep a space. I can lay down cardboard, a layer of dead leaves and a few inches of compost & soil and get after it. World of difference!
@tessasilberbauer6219
@tessasilberbauer6219 3 жыл бұрын
Gods me too. My garden is expanding really really slowly (chronic pain) but the beds I started with cardboard + 10 cm compost are so different from the dug beds. After a year the "lazy" beds can be forked easily to a tine length, whereas the dug beds are still backbreaking to harvest parsnips eyc.
@tessasilberbauer6219
@tessasilberbauer6219 3 жыл бұрын
@Nipha Ahtlantashah it's one approach to no-till. A layer of cardboard is placed on the bed, the compost of spread over the cardboard, and slits cut in it wherever seedlings are planted so their roots can extend down. Its purpose is to act as a barrier to the grass and more hardy weeds that might be capable of growing through the bed otherwise, especially in land that hasn't been cultivated in a while. The cardboard breaks down within a year in my climate.
@dalegribble4308
@dalegribble4308 3 жыл бұрын
Nipha Ahtlantashah mulch
@claireisacamel
@claireisacamel 3 жыл бұрын
Nipha Ahtlantashah the cardboard just means I literally do no prep to the growing area (as far as grass removal, tarping, having animals work it, etc). If you lay down cardboard then several layers of soil you can plant the same day, which makes it slightly less labor intensive than grass removal, and less time intensive than killing the grass with uv blockers like tarps. 🤷‍♀️
@tessasilberbauer6219
@tessasilberbauer6219 3 жыл бұрын
@Nipha Ahtlantashah as I said it's one approach. Also, so-called organic standards differ, and here they can be contradictory as well. But honestly, being able to spend a year preparing soil before use sounds like a luxury to me. I'm disabled and unemployed and very, very lucky to have access to land at all and I couldn't wait 12+ months to get food on the table. Doing it this way was the best approach for me in this climate and with those constraints.
@alph8654
@alph8654 3 жыл бұрын
On the light side Josh - you always have good video's, yet you always get some thumbs down. I believe that is because "your trellis has made them jealous."
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Hahaha!
@cpnotill9264
@cpnotill9264 3 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@VanderlyndenJengold
@VanderlyndenJengold 3 жыл бұрын
People can 'thumb down' in error; I know I've caught myself doing it more than once - and those are just the times I've realised my error. I also notice that whilst a video can get 10 000 views only about 10-20% or less of those viewers bother to 'like'. I try and show my appreciation for someone's effort by liking their video.
@alph8654
@alph8654 3 жыл бұрын
@@VanderlyndenJengold When you thumbs down in error all you have to do is then hit the thumbs up button and it erases the thumbs down.
@parkerbender9189
@parkerbender9189 3 жыл бұрын
That's hilarious! Yeah I always think who in the hell can thumbs down that. His content is always so clear and concise l, and always good relevant information.
@TalkingThreadsMedia
@TalkingThreadsMedia 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Josh. For 2020, I implemented your system from A TRELLIS TO MAKE YOU JEALOUS. It is terrific! Earlier this year, my husband and I had some projects completed on our property. All seven men doing the work ended up photographing my garden to copy your trellis system. This is my fourth year of "no till" on 5300 sq ft of garden space. By December, the plants are dead and my garden is done. Add compost and wood chips over the top, smooth it out with a rake, hose it down, then cover with tarps. By early April, an area gets uncovered for the cool-weather crops. By mid May, the rest of the garden gets uncovered to plant everything else. Using "no till", compost, and tarps, results in the weed pressure being very low.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you have your system dialed in. Sounds great!
@TalkingThreadsMedia
@TalkingThreadsMedia 3 жыл бұрын
Your trellis system was a game-changer! Thanks!
@djangoLovers
@djangoLovers 3 жыл бұрын
Do not disturb the sponge of roots, they are the structure, the jungle of life.
@randyketcham3840
@randyketcham3840 3 жыл бұрын
Josh, the garden in the city really looks great. You should be proud of what you were able to accomplish with it. Nice work.
@shorty8256
@shorty8256 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video...I feel the same way, I started no till this past year and look forward to even greater results next year! All the best from NY!
@resilientfarmsanddesignstu1702
@resilientfarmsanddesignstu1702 2 жыл бұрын
Very informative Josh! Here’s our version of “no till.” We grow some vegetables to feed our family, our livestock, our neighbors and the community food pantry. We also grow emergency foods like potatoes. Our cash crops are all things that require little or no inputs or care once planted, things like garlic, as my wife and I both have other jobs and are not full-time farmers. With regards to garlic, I plant in the Fall. My Winter and early Spring cover crop for these plants is wild red false nettle / hen bit. It’s edible, medicinal, can be fed to livestock, makes a dense ground cover that doesn’t interfere with the growth of garlic, maintains soil humidity by preventing wind evaporation and makes an excellent green manure. Most importantly, it flowers very very early, before anything else, providing nectar for pollinators. It also prevents the Spring establishment of weeds allowing the Garlics to increase in size and height. Once the dandelions and other pollinators appear, we harvest it, use it in place for a green manure or for various other things and then side dress our garlics with aged duck manure compost (from the previous Spring). Once the garlics take off, we periodically throw down some straw. We have vary little weed issues for the rest of the growing season, nothing that can’t be handled quickly under the garlics. My take away is that, with regards to weed pressure, it’s what you do EARLY in the season and EARLY in the life cycle of weeds, that determines how the rest of your season will go.
@Cryptoculturedotcro
@Cryptoculturedotcro 3 жыл бұрын
Being "super dogmatic" about anything kills flexibility and the ability to improvise which usually bites one in the butt sooner or later. Thanks Josh!
@pietervanderwesthuizen2319
@pietervanderwesthuizen2319 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Josh. I asked a few of your harshest critics on no-till, what they were growing and how much of it. What I found was that most comments on no-till comes from people that have never farmed, the ones looking at the romantic idea of one day doing it. I always get comments about “Charles Dowding” or” Paul Gautschi”. Both of those guys adhere to an uncompromising and dogmatic ideology that they created, that now defines and limits them. I have a small section that I farm using a diverse number of practices, have been doing so for 20 years, in different locations. To all the commenters, START FARMING - GET EXPERIENCED - EVALUATE - THEN YOU ARE WELCOME TO COMMENT. Great to see your progress on the new farm.
@Jenura01
@Jenura01 3 жыл бұрын
Pieter Van Der Westhuizen really, everyone just needs to do the first one!
@CrimsonWing67
@CrimsonWing67 2 жыл бұрын
I find that tilling is required if the soil is initially poor, since you really need to break up the suboptimal soil and mix in compost throughout. Once enough nutrient and water holding matter builds up, ready for no-till. Personally, it worked best when I tilled to mix in compost, manure and leaf mulch and then give the newly tilled bed at least couple of months to re-establish ecosystem. The plants did much better than the no til from the beginning. However, continous tilling also didn't work well. So tilling once, and then no-till seems to work for me! I didn't till for a patch of land I have at the back easement because it has been right underneath bamboo trees for decades with leaves falling onto it (and shaded out completely from the bamboo so nothing grew in it) and it already has a brilliant soil for me to plant on right away once we got rid of the bamboos.
@IleneBarnes
@IleneBarnes 2 жыл бұрын
WOW, thank you sooo much!! I have a small garden and have been trying to till on the slope, but it's very difficult. I came upon your video and I realize that I have been doing part of it "no till". Your experience and and conclusions have confirmed what I have seen and witnessed in regards to just observing the soil. Thank you, and please continue to encourage the rest of us.
@MikaBotial
@MikaBotial 3 жыл бұрын
Watching this just as I go through the new Kiss the Ground documentary. I have no experience in farming, or even gardening but it's something I really want to learn and do- to grow food, and help fight for the climate. I'm only beginning to familiarize myself with a this and know I have a lot to learn but I know this is the right direction. Thanks for sharing!
@michaelplunkett8059
@michaelplunkett8059 2 жыл бұрын
Amazed how things change. My Dad was a composter before it was cool and every year, he would spread compost in December and my job in April was to use a shovel and go down 7 inches and turn it under. To mix it into the soil, break up any clay clods, introduce oxygen for aerobic bacteria and lastly, bring up trace minerals in lower soil for plant availability - or so he said. It was a backbreaker, always dreamed of a tiller.
@LivingQuiteSimply
@LivingQuiteSimply 3 жыл бұрын
Really good video! This was the first year we didn’t do a heavy mulch mostly due to time constraints, and the weeds were so overwhelming that we literally mowed it and gave up for the year. We’ve decided that even if it means we need to hire someone to help us get our garden mulched and ready for the year, it’s well worth the investment.
@nancylane4500
@nancylane4500 3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are awesome! I have recently purchased my old homestead (in eastern NC) and hope to use a lot of those methods to reclaim the overgrown garden spot here. Keep up the good work!
@daisygurl3601
@daisygurl3601 3 жыл бұрын
Well, that was a bit of a tease, but I’m not surprised that you’ve solidified your stance on no till. We do raised beds, containers and straw bale gardening and have very few weeds. It’s less work and more benefits. Win-win! Blessings...
@moonafarms1621
@moonafarms1621 2 жыл бұрын
interested to see the cost of hay when petrol/gas/diesel goes up 300% or so...
@cchurch5037
@cchurch5037 3 жыл бұрын
What you have achieved there in 1 year is brilliant 🤙
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@user-ki9ez8wx7f
@user-ki9ez8wx7f 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot brosky. You have cleared up a lot of misconceptions I had about "No till" farming
@oiavh
@oiavh 3 жыл бұрын
It almost sounded like you were rapping when asking 'is this no-till?' with the background music 😆 I like your approach. No dogmatisms.
@WanieB
@WanieB 3 жыл бұрын
Your farm is really looking great! I remembered seeing the video when you and friends were preparing the lot for farming, wow it's fantastic now. Great job!
@munemrizvi3719
@munemrizvi3719 3 жыл бұрын
Wow! The Intro, the music, and the end of the video is awesome. Really love how you showcase the Raleigh city farm.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video.
@PapaPiggie
@PapaPiggie 3 жыл бұрын
I have 3 gardens, all about 500 sq ft. I didn't till them for 6 years. One day I decided, I have to have a test case or my lack of weeds isn't valid. So I tilled up one of the three gardens. HOLY COW did it turn up buried weed seed. IT was a cover crop of weeds! At that time I was also buying used tillers, fixing them and reselling them. I put them all up for sale. A lot of people say but what about a new plot? Well if we are talking less than 1000 sq ft or maybe bigger, just lay cardboard over the grass and weeds, then pull them up. Best to pull them as it disturbs the soil microbes less than hoeing them up. But you say, I've got 1/4 acre planted, which isn't rare for an rural gardener. To break it up the first time find a local with a tractor and discs. Discs don't disturb the soil like a tiller. I did that once years ago, living very rural. I disced the area once a week for about 3 weeks and then planted. Never disced again.
@wingmasterable
@wingmasterable 3 жыл бұрын
I’m so glad to hear your feedback, it confirm what I always believed!
@PaintingVideos
@PaintingVideos 2 жыл бұрын
Taking your hands though the upper layer is till but it's good for 'no dig' gardens😃
@yellowdogfarm
@yellowdogfarm 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for sharing your farm and your experiences.
@ASCCoins
@ASCCoins 3 жыл бұрын
Hey Josh I think when you consider tilling it's about soil inversion and mixing subsoil into the rihizosphere. So a general raking, tilther and broadforking don't mix soil levels and are all acceptable with no till....however along those lines also comes the term no-dig in which you are now focused on little to no soil disturbance beyond a minimal hole for transplanting etc
@theadventuresofbrockinthai4325
@theadventuresofbrockinthai4325 2 жыл бұрын
You have a very nice looking farm. I'm an American living in Thailand and I am getting ready to build a house and farm on 4 acres. For the past hundred or so years they have grown rice on it like everyone else has. They do run a tractor over it every year or so and have a disk behind it and only till up the top 0ne or two feet but with using flood Irrigation it puts enough pressure on it that it becomes as hard as a rock. I have been watching people like you that don't want to till your soil and I get it but I feel I would have to do something at least the first year just to get it so I can put some type of good soil on top of it. Back when I got my degree in Agricultural Engineering we were geared to farming thousands of acres at a time. So we had the biggest equipment we could find. I have an old classmate that farm's 14,000 acres of alfalfa and works 9 months out of the year in the fields. The next 3 months he let's the mechanics tear down all the equipment and rebuild it. He goes to Mexico and relaxes. Lol The soil on this 4 acres is pretty much depleted of nutrients and they have to fertilizer the hell out of it and they are planting GMO rice every year. I only hope I can bring this soil back to life without to much work. Your kind of farming I have never done before so I will be asking a lot of questions in the future.
@MountainRoots
@MountainRoots 3 жыл бұрын
Howdy! KZbin recommended your channel and here I am. Good content man, we're transitioning to a "no-till" method ourselves. Thanks for sharing looking forward to watching more of your stuff. Subbing ya now! -Josh
@barbnitecki4407
@barbnitecki4407 3 жыл бұрын
Wow. Haven't been here since the first few videos. You've done an amazing job!
@helenpetersen7174
@helenpetersen7174 3 жыл бұрын
I have done tiny bits of it & love it. I have sandy soil, I think clay adds a little challenge as it never becomes better until U mix it with organic matter. So the purest of NO TILL method are just adding a whole new soil layer. :D Thanks for your video, and have a great day.
@michaelmcclafferty3346
@michaelmcclafferty3346 3 жыл бұрын
This is a spot on description of the no till or no dig method of growing food. Thanks. I use it on my allotment in north east Scotland and it’s brilliant. You do need to sensible and adapt it when you need to.
@edchannell2591
@edchannell2591 3 жыл бұрын
Saying "My thoughts on NoTill have Changed" as your title to the video is click bait since your opinion had not changed. I think your videos are exceptional and valuable. Why resort to a negative ploy?
@BigRigsLongWeekend
@BigRigsLongWeekend 6 ай бұрын
At one point he might have tilled or thought he needed to before he started his farm?
@kathleenwhite4917
@kathleenwhite4917 3 жыл бұрын
I've been using your ideas to plant a landscape. I was reminded how using cardboard under mulch or compost can smother weeds/grass/vines. I got inspired to buy a Treadlite broad fork and it is so much physically easier for me, a 60 yr old woman, to prepare my garden and to loosen soil for planting shrubs and flowers. I use straw to mulch longer growing veggies and it also cuts down the weed pressure. I keep straw on my garden all year long and have almost no weeds. I see people have problems with voles and other critters. My cats have lowered my critter pressure. I think the other point you make is that total elimination of weeds/pests/critters is not possible but it can be minimized. Keep learning and keep teaching.
@brentdeaner
@brentdeaner 3 жыл бұрын
Great video as usual. Keep them coming brother.
@JolleanSmith
@JolleanSmith 3 жыл бұрын
I feel ya on no till! We are on our second year of a square by square hybrid no till garden. We had to till one time and then once we had our garden formed we stopped tilling. Just completed our first video on it actually. We still till a large other area as we are expanding slowly and by far the no till beats the tilled garden in product quality and with NO synthetic chemicals. High fives for no till! :)
@alph8654
@alph8654 3 жыл бұрын
I love no-till and everything about it. Also as you said Josh, it is all about the soil. If we have good soil we will have good plants and good healthy food, which is what is is all about !!!
@EastxWestFarms
@EastxWestFarms 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks you Josh for this. I grew up with the notion that the invention of the plow was maybe as important for mankind as the invention of the wheel or leading how to use fire. Your differentiated view and pragmatic approach is refreshing in a time of sound bites and click baits. Thank you.
@OakKnobFarm
@OakKnobFarm 3 жыл бұрын
I've been moving towards no-till the last 2 years. So far my weed pressure is definitely dropping, and my soil is certainly improving. Thanks for all your advice @Josh Sattin
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
You're welcome. Thanks for watching and good luck with the farming!
@andy199121
@andy199121 3 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for leading the change 🙏🏼
@se5594
@se5594 Жыл бұрын
I had never heard about no-till gardening. I am SO excited to do this!!
@kristadaugherty
@kristadaugherty 3 жыл бұрын
This is the type of farm/garden I plan to establish. Thank you for sharing!
@maggiehammer9729
@maggiehammer9729 3 жыл бұрын
VERY GOOD!!! I moved from MN. to AR. HUGE gardening differences. Very good, introspective, information.
@Everydayimpeddling
@Everydayimpeddling 3 жыл бұрын
Great video! I no-till my garden and it’s awesome!
@michaelmorgan6154
@michaelmorgan6154 3 жыл бұрын
Great content really informative keep it up. Great to see you have not been wearing the sunnies. I like the way you present you're good at getting your message across👍🏻
@parkerbender9189
@parkerbender9189 3 жыл бұрын
Great video Josh, love the intro and the exit!
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@MrsWarriorRed33med
@MrsWarriorRed33med 2 жыл бұрын
Weeds don't stress me, because we have been lied to. They are food and medicine.
@ryancurtis4692
@ryancurtis4692 3 жыл бұрын
Been watching gardening/ farming videos for a couple yrs now and somehow just discovered ya. You have the best descriptions and videos! Thanks for the inspiration! Hoping to get a cat. tunnel for growing in frigid Wyoming!
@microhomesteadecology
@microhomesteadecology 2 жыл бұрын
I just prepped my beds for the season……nothing beats just layering more compost on top and getting down to business. Garden is so clean and tidy and like you I was noticing how black and alive my soil was as soon as I rehydrated it. It’s just an awesome way to grow. I’m never going back.
@giojared
@giojared 3 жыл бұрын
I do no till for the worms.... They are my buddies...the thought of blending them up makes me sad...
@JolleanSmith
@JolleanSmith 3 жыл бұрын
That is awesome. I do it for my frogs (and worms too!)
@tinaholbrook9719
@tinaholbrook9719 3 жыл бұрын
Yes! The abundance of earth worms when you don't till and when you cover the soil is off the charts! So awesome to have so many of those little dudes working for you ☺
@mobiusprolix8454
@mobiusprolix8454 3 жыл бұрын
I misspoke during your live session about your beans. I believe I asked how your progress bush beans did. Pretty sure I meant the provider bush beans. I had seen a video of yours where the "unnamed beans" had been encroached by other garden plants. Anyhow, I wasn't sure how they turned out and really was curious how the beans faired. Btw, your farm looks amazing! You have some really great strategies and helping hands. Cheers!
@pash9956
@pash9956 2 жыл бұрын
Been gardening on clay soil in the high desert. Every year I battle with bindweed, a very invasive vine which goes dormant in winter and in spring pops up everywhere. I will study it in my "experimental" zone. I am determined to go No Till. Makes so much sense.
@henryherbert
@henryherbert 2 жыл бұрын
I would recommend no till with some initial broadforking or light tilling at the beginning to break up that clay
@anniecochrane3359
@anniecochrane3359 3 жыл бұрын
Appreciate your orientation to gardening
@ceedee2570
@ceedee2570 3 ай бұрын
nice garden, the overhead views are great
@Staygoldfarms
@Staygoldfarms 3 жыл бұрын
100% agree on the no till practice. My weed pressure is very minimal. It took a few seasons to get our garden to its current scale which is just a 1/4 acre but I plan on expanding. We are also using well water which I prefer. City water kills soil structure unless you filter it properly. Cheers
@mikeburke1993
@mikeburke1993 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making videos. I plan to get into farming.
@spir5102
@spir5102 Жыл бұрын
America is the land of reductionism. I have been gardening for 50 years, and am just recently trying no dig. I've already learned that because I have such heavy clay soil, I either have to use a broadfork or a small tiller initially. After that, with organic amendments and other good soil practices, I shouldn't have to till after that first season. I think it's different for everybody, as you said, depending on the soil. Thanks for sharing your ideas and realizing there is no one perfect way.
@user-vx4qv1lw1e
@user-vx4qv1lw1e Жыл бұрын
Same here i have heavy clay soil. My pilot with growing two layers of potatoes no dig methode by adding mulch and compost on the second potato layer is a great success. It saves lots of money and work.
@gmaster716
@gmaster716 3 жыл бұрын
Whats good Josh? Nice video keep crushing it Its all in the soil...minerals are the key to flavor! Been og since 2002 , top dressing , compost teas, compost homemade Balance is key and not easy to achieve! Layers like the forest floor is where its at ! We can mimic mother nature but never replace her! The Soil web is fascinating!
@charlievanornum5901
@charlievanornum5901 3 жыл бұрын
Keep on, keeping on.
@ross6343
@ross6343 3 жыл бұрын
Good video Josh! My two cents worth follows. The Earth - Mother Gaia - is a "soil farmer" FIRST. The one lesson I've learned after 60+ years of growing is I can never have enough biologically active compost [humus] because the soil's microbiome determines soil fertility. The soil's microbiome feeds off of humus, makes humic acid, of which, about 70% is fulvic acid minerals - it's those fulvic acid minerals that plants need to grow - do the research. I agree with Josh's findings, the more biologically active the soil, the better the biomass taste - refer to previous sentence. I think there's a direct corollary between flavor profile and nutrient density. About this 'no-till movement' - it's like how the organic movement began - everyone clamoring to be the voice of authority. And frankly, given the current state of the environmental air and water quality, I don't know how anyone can claim the word 'organic' if growing in said environment - research on how pernicious glyphosate is in air and water. About weed pressure...what I observed on more then one occasion is, when pulled, I find earthworms in or near the roots...huummm. Lastly, learn how to keep the soils microbiome the happy campers and they'll do the growing for you. Stay safe - be well.
@peterturner1582
@peterturner1582 3 жыл бұрын
I have only started back into gardening for the past three years and it is no till all the way for me. I did till and amend the soil when I first started as the soil was rock hard clay but since then I just spread about 4 inches of compost at the start of my spring garden and plant directly into it. I don't find I need to rotate my crops either and I multi - crop which makes planning even easier and seems to keep most pests at bay. The bane of my existence is powdery mildew as I garden in the sub-tropics in Brisbane, Australia but apart from that everything is running smoothly. Charles Dowding is my hero and mentor.
@raminsatyahadi4642
@raminsatyahadi4642 3 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% with you. Thank you for this wonderful video!🙏
@susheela108
@susheela108 3 жыл бұрын
Confirms my belief. I read about this a few years ago, and I’ve never tilled. I have a small garden, a few raised beds. I rarely have weeds, only first in the spring, they get pulled. Never any all summer long. Love it, as I’m sure the worms appreciate not being ground up!
@gmarkfarnham8237
@gmarkfarnham8237 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks again for another educational video.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
You're welcome. Thanks for watching!
@NashvilleMonkey1000
@NashvilleMonkey1000 3 жыл бұрын
In the spring we broadcast radish seeds into areas of the yard and just scratched them in lightly. When harvesting the radishes from the sunniest spot where they grew the best, it turned out there was a brick patio under a half inch to a quarter inch of soil, I put it there many years ago and forgot how far it extended. Anyway, the radishes were just fine growing in between the bricks, although there were a few lines on them. Usually we set up new spots by making a deep narrow trench and fill it with organic matter, and the dirt from the trench makes a nice slightly raised garden bed, but we don't dig again unless it gets completely taken over by the lawn. We barely even put down the lightest mulch, as the growing plants themselves shade the soil in the garden bed, and by the time they are done growing, there is plenty of organic matter to cover it if needed.
@small-timegarden
@small-timegarden 3 жыл бұрын
The argument for/against no-till is similar to that of 'what does organic mean' Do what works for you
@jors800
@jors800 3 жыл бұрын
I agree. What amuses me: If a plant get sick or attacked by pests, you are not allowed to use chemicals (although the use thereof may cure the plant). If the person who planted the plant get sick, he don't hesitate to use pills (chemicals), or narcotics to dull pain.
@kevlar1482
@kevlar1482 2 жыл бұрын
@@jors800 Lmao. You're painting with a broad brush and getting most of it on yourself. Strong generalization.
@barliveflorida
@barliveflorida 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for getting the message out that good food is possible and to not get caught up in the hype of are you doing it right if the land is fertile and the food is good and clean your doing it right heal the land thanks for your part
@cliffpalermo
@cliffpalermo 3 жыл бұрын
To till or not to till your attitude is positive and your crop is good enjoy your input and videos thanks!
@celia8201
@celia8201 2 жыл бұрын
Well said. Well rounded, productive, positive, logical and solution based perspective. Just found you on this here interwebz. Really diggin' your videos and overall attitude/thought process so far. cheers man.
@michaelmarchand601
@michaelmarchand601 3 жыл бұрын
We did no till for a year on our farm, after we started tilling again(but still adding our compost, fertilizers, and mushroom substrates, our yields more than doubled if not tripled and disease and bug control was far better. We are on Maui in Hawaii with heavy clay soil so I understand no till can work great on sandy or silty soil, but our clay soils seem to do better with lots of oxygen from till and compost and fert which makes our biological systems regroup so fast as well as our climate.
@John-ii4si
@John-ii4si 11 ай бұрын
How do you fight blight IF it attacks?
@michaelbell362
@michaelbell362 3 жыл бұрын
Great episode
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@landrover4757
@landrover4757 2 жыл бұрын
I live 26 miles west of San Antonio, TX. We have Houston black clay soil. We are also in semi arid climate. No till works here but if you are starting out with Virgin soil here, you have to root plow deep (2 ft), then plow again, then disc, then you dump a crap load of compost down, till the he'll out of it, till it some more, then throw more compost on top, and then a foot or two layer of triple ground native hardwood wood chips, and if it does not rain a few inches, ya better have a means to irrigate it. I did 3 acres like this and I still have until fall to wait before I start planting. I did one acre this way 4 years ago and all that I have to do is keep laying this one acre year after year and I do so with leaves now. What was once hard pan clay is not 18 inches of black, fungul compost and soil mix and I can dig down to the depth easily by hand. In hard pan clay soils, no till works AFTER working the soil really heavy the first time. In sandy country and medium to light loam, no till works just fine. The plow, the disc, and the tiller in necessary when starting out in any hard pan clay soil.
@yearofthegarden
@yearofthegarden 3 жыл бұрын
Great opening of dialog. In my opinion No Till is one grain method, heavy broad casting and leaving debris. I am Know Till, I know when and how to till. I always build up, applying compost and fertilizer on top, mixing it with a stihl cultivator, raking, sometimes putting a fully composted mulch on top of that as a cap. The only time I deep till is in the beginning, mix the soil, exfoliating weed seeds, broad fork, add compost, deep till the compost down deep and do 2-3 solar tarp sessions to then move into a know till, permanent bed system.
@scottjohnson8576
@scottjohnson8576 2 жыл бұрын
I grow a big yard garden every year and continue to till my soil and fertilize at that time with high nitrogen for root and foliage growth and generally once again with potassium and phosphorus and maybe calcium nitrate for some plants. Our yield is always healthy. I enjoy working the garden and being out there daily to keep an eye on things. It keeps animals from visiting and I know as soon as a pest problem or what have you arises. To each his own. I tried the No till approach for about 3 years with a smaller garden many years ago and saw no real benefit except for less need to weed. The soil did improve by the 3rd year but proper fertilizing/watering and crop rotation works well also. If I wanted a weed free garden I’d simply use a weed mat.
@ZokcoPokco
@ZokcoPokco 2 жыл бұрын
I can watch your videos for hours
@notsure7874
@notsure7874 3 жыл бұрын
'Is THIS no-till?" - well I don't think anybody would argue that landscape cloth is no-till - they don't turn any dirt. I'm POSITIVE you can find people that'll say that Jang seeder or pulling a plant is tilling. That chicken ... Omg, how many takes did you have to shoot to get that right! I LOVE that! I also use my chickens to prep ground. Well I did before a fox killed the vast majority of them :/
@minivanmachoman
@minivanmachoman 2 жыл бұрын
Great video! I love what Gardener Scott says about weeds - "Weeds Happen".
@Thankful_.
@Thankful_. 2 жыл бұрын
It’s a win-win! And was great way to ♻️ cardboard! I layer newspaper, compost & dried grass clippings on top of my cardboard. This method has provided me w wonderful rich soil w a lot of worms. 🐛
@willm5814
@willm5814 2 жыл бұрын
I think your right stick to the 3 main concepts and you can’t go wrong
@anthonybeers
@anthonybeers Жыл бұрын
I think if you avoid plowing and only disturb the soil as much as needed to grow your crops it is no till. great video thanks
@edwardguzik4282
@edwardguzik4282 3 жыл бұрын
I learned so much from you, I also follow 3 other market growers on you tube. I ask myself what are they doing and can I use the same techniques to achieve success and the answer is yes. Take care my friend.
@tinaholbrook9719
@tinaholbrook9719 3 жыл бұрын
I've been doing no till and mulching with straw for 4 years, and I wouldn't do it any other way. Had My soil tested for nutrients last year, and every one of them were off the charts, and that's without adding compost/amendments last year. Going to try to get my with no compost again next year. Hoping all still goes well.
@texxwash3524
@texxwash3524 3 жыл бұрын
No till for 5 years now. Welcome to the new farm world. NewSouth Farms.👍🍍
@ChristopherPisz
@ChristopherPisz 2 жыл бұрын
I did science in my backyard and after a year have concluded that absolutely nothing is going to grow in my yard without double digging. The clay is as hard as concrete even after sitting underneath a foot of compost for a year. The number of rocks make it impossible for roots to take hold in anything under the compost layer and the only way to remove them all is to at dig them up. Finally, the heat is too much in Texas and dries compost out super quick, so I absolutely need the roots to take hold in some of the heavier soil underneath. Now, I am going to try and science an A vs B bed where they are double dug, but one is left alone while the other is double dug every season. We shall see how that goes. My theory is that not digging is great for preserving the life in the soil....if you have any life in the soil, but to get it, you have to loosen things up.
@Kyle-sr6jm
@Kyle-sr6jm 2 жыл бұрын
The goal should always be good soil. This till or no-till isn't a religion. Do what works to create a soil with strong biological activity.
@Hammer4999
@Hammer4999 2 жыл бұрын
I agree also. I don't have a "no till" religion. I simply want to grow good quantities of high quality food, and do it economically and sustainably. Healthy soil is important, but digging some holes in the ground won't lead to the end of the world.
@darthficus
@darthficus 2 жыл бұрын
I think you missed a super important point. If your soil sucks to start don't just drop some compost down and call it good no-till. First I would highly suggest tilling in compost to breakup the bad soil to get a good start on the whole process. If your soil is clay and you just start no-till, you won't get as good of results as amending the soil to give yourself a head start.
@billastell3753
@billastell3753 3 жыл бұрын
"No til" is wonderful where you don't have voles. Voles see mulch as a vole hotel with food all around them. I have voles and when they hear the tiller rev up they run for the hills. The closest I can get to "no til" is tarping. I like it and use it whenever I can.
@barbarathomas8495
@barbarathomas8495 3 жыл бұрын
Voles and mulch The destruction is never ending: mature fruit trees, large blueberry plants, raspberry beds ...things t bgg at need the mulch to do well become
@monicacruz4407
@monicacruz4407 2 жыл бұрын
I’m just agreeing with the positive comments. The simple take away, farm soil and the plants will be healthier, taste better and be more nutrient dense. Just build soil via organic matter, compost and compost tea, plus the root exudates of living plants, let the biology do its thing. Love the no nonsense delivery, super succinct 👌👏👍🥦😎
@virginiadolores9962
@virginiadolores9962 3 жыл бұрын
Im glad ive come accross this method it saved my Back
@clr977
@clr977 3 жыл бұрын
Every time I see your name, I think your related to Joel Salatin ☠️🤦🏽‍♂️ great video guy!
@hcr32slider
@hcr32slider 3 жыл бұрын
Its working really well for me.
@4RTigers
@4RTigers 3 жыл бұрын
I began no till this year thanks to Charles Dowding's inspiring videos. However, I took a wrong turn because my compost was cow manure compost (we raise beef cattle) that decomposed slowly (little to no heat). I have more clover seeds than I can imagine. My assessment is that quality compost is the key to this. I have begun intensive efforts to make my own compost using bins similar to Charles's. It will take some time but I'll get there. I appreciate Josh's videos as well!
@MFaith777
@MFaith777 3 жыл бұрын
How old was your cow manure? Because I’m planning to use 2 year old cow manure for my no dig beds as compost and want to plant directly into that, but am nervous! Thanks!!
@4RTigers
@4RTigers 3 жыл бұрын
@@MFaith777 mine is several years old. It is a combination of rotted hay, cow pee and poop. We feed hay on gravel pads then push the mixture off the pad in the summer and then just use it whenever we need it. It looks beautiful and has no smell at all. I bet yours will be fine as long as there is no pesticide residue. Good luck!
@meemo32086
@meemo32086 2 жыл бұрын
Keep at it!! You'll be rewarded beyond what you expect!
@TheRainHarvester
@TheRainHarvester 2 жыл бұрын
I had a clover problem in our backyard. I put chickens in a fence and they ate every last clover! Now I'm wishing i had more for them to eat. I tried seeding the yard with....clover!! 😆
@farmallcubtractor
@farmallcubtractor 3 жыл бұрын
At the end of the day each person has to do what works for them. i enjoy exploring how different people farm. I even try and implement some of their practices. but i am limited by certain restraints, so i keep going back to what works for me. I am a traditional farmer, IE tractors, plows, fertilizer. I do have several different plant beds where i use chickens and "organic as possible" farming practices. I've even started in the last couple of years mulching with straw for weed control. Farming and gardening is a process of development to do what works for yourself.. Thanks for what you do.!
@dutchman6644
@dutchman6644 3 жыл бұрын
Bindweed, or morning glory, seems to always appear and no amount of cardboard, tarps or even hand weeding seems to work. It always returns.
@JoshSattinFarming
@JoshSattinFarming 3 жыл бұрын
Always good to see what other farmers are doing and try them out yourself. Nobody has the perfect farming system. We should all be constantly trying to improve.
@two_hands7455
@two_hands7455 2 ай бұрын
This makes sense, we may have different soil types (rocky, sandy, clay, silt, loam, etc.), different local weather (and microclimates), different needs (budget, mobility or lack thereof, spare time and energy or lack thereof) and different interests(crops, food, luffa sponges, birdhouse gourds, 'broom corn'/sorghum, fragrances, aesthetics, water conservation, to encourage or fence out wildlife), different weeds and pests. Whether you have water infrastructure to water your crops or not. Farmers have different markets (any affordable local places to process meat or not), and if smaller (family) farms can frankly earn a living anymore. Some farmers farm part time around outside jobs, to earn money to financially support them, and probably also for the benefits. I enjoy learning about other gardening and farming methods too. In the 'end', I need what is practical. Granted, I'll probably end up with container gardens near the home if my mobility changes significantly worse as I get older. Although I'm hopeful as a gardener with a book called "Built From Broken" with a recommendation to use a stick (or broom handle), a step, and dumbbells.
@erikr6349
@erikr6349 3 жыл бұрын
I think the most important distinction of the methods you described: chickens, broad fork, tilter. Are all generally less invasive and less damaging than a tractor or roto-tiller. and while they might not be 100% no till, I would call them low-till for those who are insistent about vocabulary. Especially if just used once when creating a bed for the first time. Masanobu Fukuoka the one largely responsible for the no-till movement has used low-till methods like chickens, hand tools etc.
@Vscustomprinting
@Vscustomprinting 3 жыл бұрын
no chickens, mate. go vegan
@kevlar1482
@kevlar1482 2 жыл бұрын
@@Vscustomprinting No.
@Vscustomprinting
@Vscustomprinting 2 жыл бұрын
@@kevlar1482 so you want more unnecessary pandemics? What a stooge
@raymondjones3685
@raymondjones3685 2 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks
@freddyaraujo2512
@freddyaraujo2512 2 жыл бұрын
El mejor video que he visto. Muchas gracias por compartir.
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