I do something similar but we have 5x10 PVC coops. Fill the whole bottom with char and let them crap for months. Load the char into 55 gal drums, add piss, coffee grounds and compost. Stir and soak awhile. So far so good trees look healthy.
@danielwalker71697 ай бұрын
Definitely gonna have to give this a try! Thanks for all the knowledge, love how you guys work together. Will be on the lookout for that tasty Rollinia! Mahalo from lower Puna!
@Sssanbo7 ай бұрын
How do you crush your char?
@wanjohiwamaina37922 ай бұрын
Waiting for this answer too
@wanjohiwamaina37922 ай бұрын
How do you crush the char into smaller pieces?
@dudeleboski26927 ай бұрын
What do you guys do about insecticide? Have you tried Diatomaceous earth diluted with a drop of dish soap and spraying it. ?
@OffGridHawaii7 ай бұрын
We don’t really do anything. I’ve heard of using those things but haven’t really tried it.
@minhducnguyen92767 ай бұрын
The biochar would absorb the insecticide. So it's actually benefits for the soil. If you are concerned about insecticide coming from the feed material, most insecticide are organic chemicals and will break down at high temperature during the pyrolysis process.
@tworkstuffs7 ай бұрын
This is great and I have most of these ingredients just lying around. 😁 Cant wait to test with my fruit trees. Can this be spread on top of the soil if the tree is already planted? What percentage would you apply in a veggie garden? Thanks much gor this video! 👍
@OffGridHawaii7 ай бұрын
Yes, just cover it with mulch. It can also be injected into soil by making a 1-2 ft deep holes 1 inch in diameter and filling them with the biochar.
@tworkstuffs7 ай бұрын
Nice. I appreciate the reply. What about using this on veggies? How would you measure it out?
@OffGridHawaii7 ай бұрын
You can use it at the same ratio 5-10% definitely do more research about how it works with the veggie crops you want to grow.
@tworkstuffs7 ай бұрын
Will do! Thanks a bunch!
@thomasreto29977 ай бұрын
Pretty cool. I wanna use some guava wood to make it. Gotta dry it under house. Also it isn't a hardwood Any wood you recommend.
@OffGridHawaii7 ай бұрын
We use mostly ohia
@staticchair7 ай бұрын
excellent transmission. thx
@KawoaDogClub7 ай бұрын
Super helpful!
@annchee13292 ай бұрын
Can one still use this Biochar on existing or older trees ?
@OffGridHawaiiАй бұрын
Yes, of course 😊
@MistressOP6 ай бұрын
for a second I thought you were making biochar from chicken manure lol like some of the Uni's where pushing in the south. good vid.
@OffGridHawaii6 ай бұрын
I’ve heard of that. Seems like a waste of fertilizer 🤔
@MistressOP6 ай бұрын
@@OffGridHawaii basically it's nuts. Biogas should have been what they were pushing. But leave it to southern univ to push for the chem / big pharma solutions lol. I know a lot of people don't want compost from these big producers anymore because of forever chems they barely pay attention to. ruined a lot of land.
@minhducnguyen92765 ай бұрын
@@OffGridHawaii It's not a bad idea as it's seem depending on the context. Manure from Industrial farming contains a significant amount of heavy metal, antibiotic residue and even steroid making them unsuitable for composting. Burning chicken manure into biochar destroy these residues and makes the heavy metal hard to dissolve meaning they won't leach into the soil. You will lose a majority of the nitrogen but the phosphate and potassium component will remain the same.
@MistressOP12 күн бұрын
@@minhducnguyen9276 The solution would be not to create that from the land though. If you have something that bad as many places are. Some of that land should be covered to other land uses and out of human food production. As it's cancerous as hell. Even 10 years out of food production and slowly convert into prarie or something else means mushrooms and what have you that can break down problems and bring that land back into normal balance and possible production again. There's other things it can do. For example willow farms where people turn the willow baskets and other stuff like that. There's a lot of land that needs to be looked at from the fast and loose Ag policy of the go big or go home ag.
@222mmax7 ай бұрын
Thank you God bless you Maranatha
@dudeleboski26926 ай бұрын
Mike, what is bio char?
@OffGridHawaii6 ай бұрын
Biochar is made by burning wood in low oxygen.
@amyleader51472 ай бұрын
I bow my head to my four prong rake❤
@jamesfolsom79947 ай бұрын
Awesome video!
@taylortseu29607 ай бұрын
Could you use Alaska fish emulsion instead of the fish hydrolysate powder? Reason being that it is cheaper😅
@OffGridHawaii7 ай бұрын
I don’t think it would work as a fungal food because the fats and oils are removed with emulsion, but it would still have the benefit of adding different nutrients.
@taylortseu29607 ай бұрын
Thanks for your expertise - great videos!
@Soilfoodwebwarrior7 ай бұрын
Love the video. I agree with you that bio char does not function the same in all soils. In tropical areas the nutrient holding capacity is key, as it was used in south America in the tera preta. In denser clay soils i still think it can be useful but for different reasons. I still use on my dense soils in a similar fashion as you but i think the bio char is helpful to adsorb toxins, not hold nutrients or beneficial microbes. Activated charcoal is known to adsorb toxins, heavy metals etc and used in emergency rooms for anti poison procedures. Used in conjunction with manures and compost it can bind to heavy metals and chemicals making them less bio available to our plants.
@AdvExplorer7 ай бұрын
I like to add my urine to the biochar to make it wet and full of minerals!