Congrats on the USDA appointment! Make America Healthy Again!
@KarenWahlenberg-pv7xzАй бұрын
Make farming great again
@livingrasa108Ай бұрын
Yes, you will be great helping to MAKE AMERICA HEALTHY AGAIN! I so appreciate you and the whole team who are for the people.....
@MimsysGardenАй бұрын
I can’t describe just how excited I am about the future for the repair/regeneration of America’s food system!! 🙌🏼💚🇺🇸
@kathyreasonover2513Ай бұрын
Grats on your new position. Thank you for your knowledge and willing to share it. Help make food great again.
@HARRYBEES-c9uАй бұрын
Thank You Joel for being a LUNATIC
@farmlikealunaticАй бұрын
You can be a lunatic too!
@sseibonnevillemanАй бұрын
Good luck with the new job! As a small time hobby farmer I’m super excited to see what you can do!
@jamiesharpe1532Ай бұрын
Loving the longer form videos
@Farmer4TruthАй бұрын
MAKE AMERICANS HOMESTEADERS AGAIN! 👏
@barrypetejr5655Ай бұрын
Been using winter rye in my garden spots for years.....buckwheat between my garden rows in summer....... depending on weather sometimes I buckwheat an 100square foot spot till it in and then plant bean varieties...which are also nitrogen fixers......and every fall I have copious amounts of chopped leaves that I till in before planting winter rye. The clay after a decade is much more fluffy now than chunky......
@joshuarees4342Ай бұрын
Thank you! 😀
@that9blife465Ай бұрын
My main garden bed is 36" tall. Made from 2×12×8 boards. In the shape of a, n. Filled half way with cuttings from my property. 1/4 the way is free mulch from county 1/4 is mushroom compost and soil blend. Let me tell yall, guarding is fun when you do it that way
@Tommy-h4bАй бұрын
Thank you very much for the video
@sjaron23Ай бұрын
Very clever terminology.
@HavenHillRanchАй бұрын
Never heard of hügelkultur before, very interesting! Looks like I've got a new project to test out!
@GetawaymomentsАй бұрын
Please show us Joel's garden beds. Interested in his design.
@mounirmounir1041Ай бұрын
Beautiful
@Steve-yf5idАй бұрын
Do you have pictures of your raised beds
@baneverything5580Ай бұрын
I had a large flock of around 50 little Banham chickens that were totally free range on the Sabine River in NW Louisiana that roosted in trees. Their downfall was that they defended each other and a pack of dogs got them all one morning. Instead of flying up in the trees they tried to save each other from 5 dogs and they caught them all. Before this I only lost a couple of them at night to something that ate their brain.
@cookiewilcox5082Ай бұрын
CONGRATULATIONS, on being invited to work with Thomas Massey and President Trump to Make America Healthy Again. 🇺🇸
@KukenKalasАй бұрын
Would it be possible to have piglets and chicken share a greenhouse in winter? Or would the pigs eat the chicken?
@mihacurkАй бұрын
Delends on the pigs, but I think I’ve seen somewhere that you just need to provide a space for chickens to escape the pigs.
@ProdigyBuildingMCАй бұрын
Came here to learn about Joel, accepted a role in Trumps administration. What is regenerative farming?
@jessschultz7972Ай бұрын
Same
@sseibonnevillemanАй бұрын
Rotational Grazing in short. Moving your livestock regularly to mimic what bison did on the plains of the west. It’s great for soil health and very natural.
@beckyforbis4858Ай бұрын
Once you understand it, you’ll be mind blown. Watch a few of Joel’s videos and you’ll be wanting to start gardening or farming.
@Farmer4TruthАй бұрын
Follow Joel and you will find out!
@loriacton5710Ай бұрын
Me too
@peace-c2r25 күн бұрын
Doesn't it matter whether the woodchips are from conifers or deciduous trees, since the former will acidify and the latter will be more basic? Or once unrecognizable, as you say they're then ready for use, it doesn't matter, especially if of mixed source. OFC, blueberries & strawberries will like it more acidic, but most veges like it more basic -- can't this be said, generally?