Idea- same setup as what you have, but after the jump into the goodie bin, there's a declination and an opening and the worms can fall out onto the ground. Place with the chickens and then it's an auto feeder.
@evansforsyth8993 Жыл бұрын
At a remote fisheries research station, in Manitoba, we did something similar. Dead fish were put on top of chicken wire. The maggots fell down into tubs. We fed hundreds of hatchery pickerel that way. It was incredibly productive. The only downsides were the smell (minor issue), and we had to put down a bear that became a nuisance. One of my best memories was collecting the spawning pickerel eggs and milt. Best summer job EVER!
@patrickbutler1715 Жыл бұрын
I had thought this too but chickens being smart things would just sit there pigging out and the other chickens lower on the pecking order would miss out...if you added a windmill style gizmo with cup that flicked them around that could be fun
@Anonymous-km5pj Жыл бұрын
@@patrickbutler1715 lol... endless possibilities for creative/inventive constructive types.... God bless
@fatalfngrz6831 Жыл бұрын
@@patrickbutler1715 would make sense then to put up a couple extras to give them all options
@ronarmstrong835 Жыл бұрын
Make some drawings and I bet people would make them.
@jacquelinepessoa7563 Жыл бұрын
I love the simple setup of your black soldier fly bin. Thanks for sharing. Fermentation made simple. 1) Put rain or dechlorinated water in a 5 gallons food grade bucket. 2) Put your whole grains in the bucket of water. The water level must be several inches above the grains for absorption. Cover the bucket with a lid that has holes/ or slightly lift the lid for ventilation. ~ I ferment enough grains for an entire week, and I ferment a new batch in the middle of the week. 3) Sock the grains for three days and stir throughout so that all the grains are fully absorbed. 4) After the fermentation process, store the grains with the liquid in the refrigerator so that it will not spoil. 5) Each day drain the water off a portion and serve it to the chickens. ~Each morning I put a portion of the fermented grains with the chicken feed plus a dash of the DE. The wet grains slightly soften the feed and the chickens love it.
@PolarBearXx9 ай бұрын
What is the point of this I've never heared this I own 10 chickens please explain
@4D2M0T Жыл бұрын
I accidentally made an earwig farm by stacking some old roof tiles, now I use them all the time, every month or so I pick up the pile of 4 tiles and brush off the earwigs into a container and place the tiles back down, I have 5 traps/nests around the garden keeping them off my veggies without Poison and best my chickens love them 😀
@mkin622 жыл бұрын
thank you for your "stupid simple" methods. one thing I've learned in my 59 yrs is that there's a whole lot of people that love to make things difficult/complicated. I'm all about the simplest, easiest, fastest and cheapest way of doing everything, while getting the same or better results than any of the complicated methods. lol that's how I roll. when you're raising/homeschooling 8 children on a shoestring budget you learn these things lol. I'm very happy I found your channel
@spicytruth87212 жыл бұрын
I’m proud of you for being a mother who homeschools and homestead. If no one has told you, you’re doing a great job
@mena679 Жыл бұрын
Agree 👍
@paulmasters8666 Жыл бұрын
Your children are the future of this country.
@panpiper Жыл бұрын
Thank you for you service.
@chriswillock2177 Жыл бұрын
I honestly think some people build these elaborate systems just because they like to tinker and that's fine but some of us have to much to do to spend time tinkering on little projects. Running farms and acreages is nothing but constant work.
@Bards07 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this, two years later this is still the most simple way that I've seen to harvest fly larvae
@mickyb11112 жыл бұрын
I love how genuine this guy is literally only watched 2 videos this one and the one on how to get tall ryegrass in your pastures and I’m subbed now
@mnt5542 жыл бұрын
you're not the one who thinks like that :) and yes I'm subbed and tryıng to watch all the videos :))
@KLR-32 жыл бұрын
yea me too. Those are the exact videos I watched and subscribed for.
@mayshomesteadchronicles Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Jeff! Really appreciate you sharing this. I’ve always wanted to do this but like you, felt like it was a tad tedious/expensive for the supplies. Gonna have to get one of these setup this year
@Anonymous-km5pj Жыл бұрын
planted rye in a back 40 plot last year, bastardo rats got all the sprouts, will watch vid. God bless
@esperago Жыл бұрын
Can you post the link to the ryegrass video? I'm not seeing it on his listing.
@kevinjohn38732 жыл бұрын
Our black soldier flies breed in an old bath that we use as a scrap/compost bin. It is elevated about a foot off the ground and there's no plug in the drain hole(for drainage): the liquid from this drain goes straight in a bucket and from there goes onto the garden. The fermented seed process is "super stupid simple 🤗 I have two dozen chickens( 2 rosters included) and feed them around five cups of fermented grain per day (without fermenting, I was feeding them up to eight-nine cups) along with garden timings and their crops are always full. Fermenting process: Five cups of grain/cracked corn, wheat, sorghum, a little black sunflower seed, etc in a bucket and cover X2 with water. To start I did this three days in a row and started feeding the first lot on the third day. Nb; drain the liquid from the first batch and reuse in the fourth batch( this liquid is the culture for the lactic acid process to continue your ferment). After you've established the culture, you can cut the batches back to only two, (giving you a forty eight hour ferment) and continually strain and reuse the liquid in the next batch topping up with fresh water to maintain the level of the first batch. I'm in Western Queensland; Australia and our climate never gets really cold; if you're in a colder region, you may need to have three batches to allow for fermentation. It's not rocket science, just give it a go🙏👍
@gizellebichard23132 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this! I ferment my chicken feed and often wondered if I could reuse the liquid. I didn't want it to go to waste so I've just been diluting it and feeding the plants. I'm going to try this instead. I'm sure you do this anyway but I have 3 buckets with holes drilled in the bottom and they fit into 3 buckets without holes. To drain, I simply lift out the inside bucket with the grains and all the water falls into the outside bucket.
@ERone43 Жыл бұрын
Starting with KNF LAB would be a nice way to speed all this up and keep the “mother” concept going
@DMAneoth2 жыл бұрын
We had a Big back yard (really big); in the big city, had a garden covering about half the yard. We had lots of chickens (76 at the highest count). We bought lots of feed and other things (like crushed oyster shells) but supplemented that in other ways. We let the birds roam through the garden during the day. The garden plants were helped by many bugs being eaten plus the birds did eat certain plants but not too much. The bird poop helped too. We also got old veggies from a local market since they would otherwise toss them out when they are too old to sell. Some stores refused that option saying corporate would never allow it. Seemed silly to me - but whatever…
@DBHawk Жыл бұрын
Excellent “simple” presentation! Loved it! For years, I’ve been feeding maggots to my chickens right from one of my compost heaps that will grow thousands and thousands of maggots in the warm weather. But I love this bucket method. Never thought of it before lol thank you for this info Jeff!
@katykayy Жыл бұрын
Oh my goodness I just tried to watch a video just before this one and had to stop because it was so complicated!!!! Thank you, I prefer stupidly simple!
@nogames8982 Жыл бұрын
I hope you did find the easiest way to ferment feed. Again, people try to make it so damn hard and it doesn't have to be. Get a food grade 5 gallon bucket from tractor supply. Put in equal parts feed and water and leave some space at the top of the bucket so it can expand. Stir it all around real good add a dash of apple cider vinegar if you want to, but you don't have to. Stir it every day for three days. Then start feeding it. When the bucket gets a little low, add water and feed again it will ferment overnight because of what was left in the bucket to begin with. It is a never ending bucket. And you only need one bucket. A couple times a year. I completely rinse out the bucket and start new but you don't have to. Keep it stirred and you will do fine. it should be about the consistency of oatmeal. You don't need to leave water on top etc. etc. It is the easiest thing ever.
@aronbalabs9389 Жыл бұрын
"equal parts feed and water.." What feed can be fermented? Kitchen scraps?
@nogames8982 Жыл бұрын
@@aronbalabs9389 I wouldn't put kitchen scraps in there. Just toss them to the chickens and let them eat it. I have fermented all kinds of chicken feed, including a grower, which is what I feed all my chickens all the time now. In the past I fermented layer feed. I have fermented, pellets or granules. also feed that is more whole ingredients. it's really good for this time of year when it is so damn hot. The chickens get more moisture from their feed.
@deb22859 ай бұрын
I have been doing this for 3 yrs... I make a big bucket of feed and water ... and my chickens go to it before dry feed... I started noticing my chickens would eat feed ( dry) if I spilled water in it. Thus started me soaking it.
@tadhoney5489 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this project super easy. I hadn’t given this project a go because you have to spend money getting the sifting equipment,containers and crap that takes money. We’re old and having to tighten the already tightened belt like every one else. Again thank you for making it simple. You just gained a Follower
@georgetteetourneaux33506 ай бұрын
Great video! HEY another guy said to just put some wide slits in the bin filled with scraps. A few drainage holes in the bottom. He claims the larvae crawl up the side and fall out for the chickens to harvest all by themselves.
@ReasieRoo Жыл бұрын
We saw the video about the grasses, now, this one. Wow! THANK YOU!!! Yes... we just subscribed. Why isn’t anyone else posting these GREAT ideas. We’re very glad we found yours!!!
@kjanssen77 Жыл бұрын
I have been researching so many of these and yours is far and away the simplest.
@christinespierling5952 Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@katjafarbenfroh8646 Жыл бұрын
very good! We don`t have those fat ones, but the chicken like it. Thank you! And it`s natural food . The fermented wheat is wonderful I make that since I heard that on " chickenlandia" years ago. The chicken get so much nutrition out of it.
@karanmk53 Жыл бұрын
Thank You for this information and very simple way to grow larve. Yeah, it drives me crazy to see all those complicated ways that are out there and supposed to be simple. Your way is just what I’ve been looking for
@JessicaScott072012 Жыл бұрын
This is awesome! I have been drawing out plans for a BSF farm and this is perfectly simple and effective!!
@onepunch9203 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tip. My chicks are about 8 weeks old now and I'm sure they'd love this idea. QUESTION: How do you keep the raccoons/skunks/possums etc., from tearing apart your grub farm every night?
@youtubeKathy Жыл бұрын
didn't you see the rock? 😄
@onepunch9203 Жыл бұрын
@@youtubeKathy Yes. 🙂 Do you know how determined wild animals are?
@buqui6790 Жыл бұрын
dogs, at least a big one to bite and a small one to make noise.
@AmandaDragmire Жыл бұрын
raccoons , skunks, and possums are an issue for me too. my solution is i put out a trap every night with easy foods. easy foods like a handfull of cat food will be choice over a more difficult to get at souce. but i keep my soilder fly bin in the coop.
@Chicagogrl Жыл бұрын
I never considered closing the loop on this circle of life by collecting larvae for my hens instead of trapping the flies and throwing them away. Great idea.
@79klkw Жыл бұрын
I have a similar chicken run! I have 2 coops, because I have a few rooster, head rooster(a bantam), runs our tiny coop, with his little ladies, and then the bachelors and a few younger hens, live in the other. I can't wait to try this, thanx for adding this video!
@rodaguirre34182 жыл бұрын
I think we can say super smart simple. Love Jeff’s approach to nature. Much respect.
@niabiii Жыл бұрын
Yes, work smart so you don't have to work hard!
@kathrynletchford5114 Жыл бұрын
I have no respect for someone who doesn't provide shade for their animals....
@KamPower-tx4uw4 ай бұрын
@@kathrynletchford5114burrrrhurrrrr
@Lorittax3 Жыл бұрын
I literally use the food from my quails poop trays. I don't like to try to pick out the good bits of food they fling out. I also don't want to waste the food. So I literally gather a big pile of it, poop and all, and put it in a bin like you do with your food remnants. I mix in some wood shavings or dead leaves and I get tons of larvae. Like you I don't give a crap about what kind they are. The chickens love eating any of them. Lol Thank you for making a stupid simple set up and showing people they don't need to make things complicated!
@AngelaHepp4 ай бұрын
I've been using this method for a few weeks, since I saw your genius video. Lots of larvae, but none are crawling up the ramp to the top hole. Instead they were wriggling out through (and getting stuck in) my drainage holes. So I just enlarged my drainage holes so they're slightly larger than the BSF larvae, kept the bin at its normal tilt, and put another small bin below the drainage holes. I now have a big pan of squirming gold for my fluffy butts! Any tips on getting them to crawl up instead of down? I'm happy with the way things are working now, just curious if I'm missing something.
@OR6600 Жыл бұрын
5-8-23 thank you for this video this is the simplest way I have ever seen. I think people make this complicated because they want to make a video. Your idea is genius so simple. Thank you.
@WithAllMySoul12 күн бұрын
If it can be done in a simple way why make it complicated? Absolutely LOVE your simple method and I'll set up a bin just like yours. Thanks for the great idea, you are fabulous!!! We have about 30-40 of those yellow top black plastic bins, we used them to move our belongings when we moved to South America. Greetings from Ecuador!!
@him050 Жыл бұрын
I love videos that overcomplicate the simplest thing, they're hysterical. Bullshit boggles the brain, and never is that more true than in the current KZbin universe. This video was a breath of fresh air!
@LisaDeeRealtor2 жыл бұрын
Just found you! YOU ARE AWESOME; Your personality, your content, everything! You should have 10 million subscribers. ... Subscribed and sharing :)
@markregan7639 Жыл бұрын
I love fermenting my feed. I just take a couple scoops, throw it in a jar, put water in and wait a few days. Sometimes I cover it, sometimes I don't. I've had flies lay eggs and it turns into a little larvae snack too. It looks gross but the girls go bananas for it.
@coldhaven12332 жыл бұрын
Dude. I love your videos. They're informative and hilarious. Its like listening to Jack Black discuss homesteading. Awesome!
@BornFreeFilms8 ай бұрын
I am thinking, just the bin set up at a slight slant to drain any water to bottom of slant with a few small holes if needed, a 2-4" hole in the top for black soldier fly access, a horizontal slot at the high end a few inches up from bottom, for the larvae to crawl out, a piece of flat wood like a 1"x4" that would fit in the slot, the larvae would crawl up and just fall in the floor of the chicken coop if it was inside the coop and all you would have to do is put left overs, animal manure, kitchen scraps in it, the rest would be automatic. The wood slanting up extra would be so it would keep above the food for a while. Subbed, like, and black belled. I may put a video of this up on my channel.
@nicholasnapier26843 жыл бұрын
Y did a great job showing the people's past it's important to do this saves a lot of the new people into thinking they have to go buy feed all the time.
@1Corinthians15-1 Жыл бұрын
👋as a new person, I can attest that you've saved me a lot of time! Thank you, subbed 🥳
@missmonica0876 Жыл бұрын
I used your method, but added two flat pieces of scrap wood to go across the top of the bin like your stick and used rubber band to attach cardboard strips to the underside of those scrap wood and the soilder flies are laying a ton of eggs in them. It's worked like a charm, I'm dumping about 2 cups per day of black soilder flie larvae to the chickens!
@alexgarner594 Жыл бұрын
They’re laying eggs in your cardboard strips?
@missmonica0876 Жыл бұрын
@@alexgarner594 yep
@EHTheGreat8 ай бұрын
Do you put your bin in the shade or the sun?
@missmonica08768 ай бұрын
@eh6971 it's in the sun...it's partial sun, late afternoon it's shaded.
@missmonica08768 ай бұрын
@alexgarner594 its corrugated cardboard, that has ridges/holes big enough for the black soilder flies to lay their eggs. It's free, so it's what I use.
@Freddy789092 ай бұрын
Absolute genius. Thank you. I want to try this for my chameleon. Black soldier fly larvae are the healthiest food for them
@spencerswenson95083 ай бұрын
Brilliant! I've never seen a comparment underneath the compost. Absolutely brilliant! Thank you
@azsunburns Жыл бұрын
I bought an old wooden toybox for $5 with the fly bin in mind. I just slid the plastics inside & it sits under a shady tree looking all cute. We've raised thousands of chickens, rabbits, ducks, etc...and you are so correct. Most things can be done so simply. That's honestly how we are designed to function. Man makes things complicated. Thank you for the morning dose of stupid sanity!!❤
@SpaceCadet528 Жыл бұрын
I love your videos! @jeffgray Question about the fly larvae bin.. I'm new to this stuff, and was wondering how the worms go to the smaller larvae catcher bin. Do they just end up in there naturally for easy removal? Also, do some larvae make it to fly form before harvest? I'd rather them not reach adulthood since I live in a suburban area. I'm thinking about doing this for our chickens but am curious about these two things. Thanks so much!
@JeffGray Жыл бұрын
The worms crawl upwards out of the muck when they’ve reached maturity (ie, ready to pupate). Hence the reason for the slope of the inner tub. When the crawl up, they eventually fall into the hole that’s been cut in the inner tub and they’re caught by the small bin. They can’t pupate and turn into flies until they reach soil. Which they can never do with this system.
@karrenbrazel88442 жыл бұрын
Do you know another thing i saw......when ever there is a dead animal on your farm, place the carcass in a bucket with some holes around the bottom......and the maggots will fall out onto the ground as the carcass rots. I like this idea also....gonna try this for sure.
@SimpleEarthSelfReliance Жыл бұрын
I came. I laughed. I learned. We are all suffering analysis paralysis, thanks for brining back simple thinking. 😊
@cristinabondar933 Жыл бұрын
I’ve got a super simple way to ferment feed. Works for us. One container. Overnight fermentation. We use a stainless steel pot with a lid. At night we leave a little bit of previous fermented food behind and mix in 1 part feed to 1.5 part water. When pouring in water rinse the sides. Ferments overnight perfectly ready for next morning. Once in a while reserve some food and wash out the pot well. Maybe every two weeks.
@wendyjennings1502 Жыл бұрын
Super simple video, thanks! I just came across your channel and hope you've already posted fermented feed too. Super simple to make as well.
@HelenEk7 Жыл бұрын
You are my type of guy! No tools needed-projects are my favourite kind of projects.
@angelofamillionyears4599 Жыл бұрын
Jeff. could you build 5 raised beds and fence them off. Then put scraps in all 5 and rotate the birds to a different bed each day?
@R2NOTU Жыл бұрын
Hi if you use cheap grain and make alcohol then reuse the left overs to make deacons whisky basically more alcohol the remaining left over from the process is super food for farm animals.tye alcohol can run your farm equipment at no cost you can use a solar distiller just a wood frame and plastic rap..if you got a switch car you can run it on the alcohol.if you sprout the grain and feed that to your chickens it makes them grow twice as big it's a super food for them..also if you alkaline there water they don't die as much like 10 percent less death ..have you tried using a fly set up with sewage the flys grow very well ..and removes a contamination problem they can be washed off to feed the birds .
@theHOAmestead Жыл бұрын
This is definitely stupid simple! I had BSF invade my compost tumbler and flourished all last summer in a SPINNING compost bin. I tried to transfer them into one of those semi-complicated plastic totes with PVC pipe, and while I did get a few mature larvae to climb up and out, I never got any new takers to lay eggs in the new bin. I will try again this summer because I finally have chickens, and I do still want finished compost some day! Right now the chickens' favorite place to scratch is under the compost tumbler. I may have to block the area off if I want to get BSF this year.
@nicholasnapier26843 жыл бұрын
Yep and then I'm so glad you brought it up man you alright there so many videos on KZbin unbelievable I started reading about it 10 years ago I'm doing it now I dispose of everything into that container they break it down for me I have another container just so I can use that for my chickens..
@ramhornjoe4 ай бұрын
Great video Jeff, new subscriber & new parent of a 17 bird free range flock.
@vinimarshall7301 Жыл бұрын
Jus find some road kill stick it in mesh wire and hang on a tree or stick and the maggots fall of for the chickies , we also did this for feeding fish by hanging road kill from bridges
@angelofamillionyears4599 Жыл бұрын
Good info. Also soak your feed before feeding and you get more volume. Most stores will give you expired greens and produce if you pick it up 2 days a week. Some ask you to sign a liability waiver but most stores will donate them to you. Yokes will be orange when you feed greens!
@donnaa2180 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Jeff. I think I have almost everything on hand to do this! I appreciate you sharing this for us simple folks out here with limited resources!
@cybertones9422 жыл бұрын
I get a lot in the compost by leaving the food scraps in plastic bags for a while then tip it in the pile. This would be nice to manage them thanks
@deebrown5863 Жыл бұрын
Cheers.....I grow mine in an upright 12" PVC pipe set upright set down into the soil with a plate on top and half a cork glued on the to keep the gap. Your hen run is lovely and generous however a couple of shade trees would be generous for your egg queen's 🥂
@FusionDeveloper Жыл бұрын
Used Coffee Grounds is a very good base for BSF and they will occasionally graze on it, so it acts as a backup emergency food source for them. Optional bases: Sawdust or other "browns (aka, fiber)" to act as non-food bedding, so they have a place to get away from the food and keep the temps from getting too high as food breaks down and BSF larvae heat it up. Also it helps some of the food get hidden from the surface, which helps avoid attracting some pests and helps absorb excess liquids. If you give them high fiber foods, the fiber will build up over time for you, but I recommend starting with a fiber source and used dry coffee grounds are the easiest and free from Starbucks. and of course, give them actual food.
@-OBELUS- Жыл бұрын
We have a composting bin that turns. We leave it slightly open. Every few days we dump it into trays and the chickens eat the larvae then we put the compost back.
@lindajohnson29502 жыл бұрын
I love, love, love stupidly simple!!!!! You just came up on my feed, and I am kicking myself for not finding your channel earlier. Thank you so much!!!!!! I tried the other "stupid" ways with BSF, 😑
@wendydisanto Жыл бұрын
Love how not stupid but simple this is! Thanks.
@ichooselife19162 жыл бұрын
So if that's the amount you give them every or every couple of days, how would it reduce food costs? It seems just like a treat or desert rather than lowering the cost to feed them.
@williamburke9947 Жыл бұрын
I’ve seen more intensive BSF action, I like how straight forward it is but that’s not enough of an impact on the feed bill.
@justme11953 ай бұрын
Thank God for people like you who simplify things for simple people like me
@susieQcumber2 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid we raised chickens and sold eggs. I remember my dad telling me about a certain kind of maggot that can get in a chickens crop and eat the crop and go up the neck. He called it "limber neck". How do you know if any of the maggots you are raising are "bad" maggots? That was a long time ago, 60 years. Maybe I remember wrong.
@ogadlogadl490 Жыл бұрын
Eat the crop?
@nunyabiznes33 Жыл бұрын
@@ogadlogadl490 its some organ chickens have
@ogadlogadl490 Жыл бұрын
@@nunyabiznes33 TY
@ernestchadwell9069 Жыл бұрын
Such a specialised insect probably doesn't eat kitchen scraps. But it's worth checking for sure.
@georgeingridirwin61805 ай бұрын
Okay now this is my kind of BSFL farming. Thank you. Subscribed!!
@ibbylancaster8981 Жыл бұрын
Dude, that is stupidly simple. I will definitely try this method. My neighbor wants to do a compost as well and I have chickens so I could get double out of there
@jemi8202 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU!! THANK YOU!! I really wanted to do this for my chicken but it was SO complicated that I never did so this is a game changer!
@davem5308 Жыл бұрын
I like it. Currently have no use for it, the "simple" set up, but I have filed the concept somewhere in my brain. I will be interested to see how you do with your fermenting experiment.
@bigpumpkin222 жыл бұрын
You could also put the container in the chook area with a hole in the bottom so the maggots fell straight into the coop ?
@fredkeele6578 Жыл бұрын
I had forgotten a bag of chicken scratch in bed of spare pickup. It had gotten rained on and fermented some. Feed was in paper feed bag, and when I realized I had forgotten it in bed, it was too late. Soldier fly larvae were everywhere. Wish I'd had chickens at the time because it would have been a feast for them.
@freedomacreshomestead37232 жыл бұрын
LOL, great simple not stupid way to do it. Black fly larva at the feed store are so expensive.
@theemeraldfox7779 Жыл бұрын
28 dollars for a bag at tractor supply!
@davidkoetter7032 Жыл бұрын
❤ that's what I needed! I saw several solutions, but yours is the fastest and most easy. The only thing i will add is a tube that transpots the worms directly to my ladies.❤
@mr.mikesart7111 Жыл бұрын
Fermenting is more simple than your bin. 5 gallon bucket with lid Place scratch inside. Put a yeast packet in. Full with water to the top of grain Let it sit Add water as needed Never use all the soured grain so it will jump start the next batch. So you only need year the first go round
@bendugas8632 Жыл бұрын
Just a comment my nephew had a problem with earwigs, he bought 6 chick's, when they were about half grown he leed them where earwig were massing, his feed bill went to almost nil all summer. Your system is only common sense. Thanks for sharing.
@cisco5400 Жыл бұрын
Great bread, well done. I prefere to have bread cool down in basket with towel on top of it. If i cut bread while its still hot, the "smoke" from the bread is moist so the bread can dry out. Not sure about this bread though, just an idea. Thx 😊👍
@donnakennell5111 Жыл бұрын
Dang just found this video, YOU ROCK!!! I'm a new subscriber! I MacGyver the heck out of everything I can... Love this.
@dryclimateutah Жыл бұрын
Unfornutately, all you get here in Utah is house flies, which are extra stinky. It's too dry in Utah for BSF natural harvesting. But it can be done here if you are determined.
@zedwolf1589 Жыл бұрын
Did anyone else recognize he nailed exactly on how many black fly clips there are on KZbin wow that's amazing 😅
@patrickbutler1715 Жыл бұрын
Great stuff..subscribed straight away...I use to complain about the larvae that use to block my worm farm mesh holes until I worked out what they were. I've just got me 3 chickens and guess what I'll be making....thankyou
@michaeltaylors2456 Жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you. Simple cheap effective is the opposite of stupid. Good engineering!
@maverick6461 Жыл бұрын
All the best things in life, are pretty much free! Thanks for the 'stupid, simple' info. Our chickens will be thrilled!
@richardbeech2543 Жыл бұрын
okay just made mine, ill keep you posted. Took about 6 minutes with stuff i found laying around, plus the tote that I already had. Thinking about putting an egg in there to rot, along with fruit that was already rotting on the ground (sapodilla and early mangoes, im in So Fl) mixed with hay and compost.
@hectorbart Жыл бұрын
How's it working out?
@juliewilliams4892 жыл бұрын
Simplest one I developed is 2 flower pots one slightly smaller then the other. Drill some holes down the sides so moisture can get out. Put the lager one in the ground. I use mine as a meat digester. top pot fits upside-down snuggle on top . The rim just inside that of the larger pot. This collects maggots that fall out. They also crawl out the drain holes at the top and collect in the indentation on the top (the bottom of the smaller pot that is upside down.) Fill with scraps, a layer of straw/grass stops from smelling as you fill it. This is in the run. Every morning the chickens once let out beline straight for it to eat the maggots either in the lower rim or the top pot or from the top. I've tried making a larger one with a bin and lid but the simple basic black pots worked best. I just can't buy them big enough where I live. If the top pot some how could be made so the top came off to make filling it easier rather than having to take the hole smaller pot off to fill and then turn it upside down agin would be easier.
@CatskillCrafting2 жыл бұрын
I REALLY want to understand but don't. Do you have photos?
@juliewilliams4892 жыл бұрын
@@CatskillCrafting how do I add a photo?
@1Corinthians15-1 Жыл бұрын
THIS is genius! How may holes need to be in the bottom larger pot? Do you fill up the bottom pot all the way to the top with meat and layer of grass on top? Or half way or over fill or? This is a great idea!
@juliewilliams489 Жыл бұрын
@@1Corinthians15-1 at first it needed air circulation so layers of grass between carkuses. But now it's well established I just use the grass at the top(bottom of the top smaller pot, top when turned upside down.) I think I put 4or 5 holes with my largest drill bit down 2, opposite sides. But it would depend on the size of the pot. At first I was skinning the birds as I couldn't pluck them this wasn't good inthere the skin and feathers seemd to smother it, maybe didn't let the maggots out? But plucked feathers seem OK.
@katepaynedechavez Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!!! I’ve been looking for a simpler way to make one of these bins. This is perfectly simple!!!
@VIDEOEPPO Жыл бұрын
oh my god... truly this is the best one I found on this subject ...lol...I want to try it but I have a few questions. What happens to the waste, does it decompose and smell bad or dryout... or turn into manure....
@JeffGray Жыл бұрын
90% of what you put in the bin will decompose and turn into maggots. The rest (bones, feathers, etc.) I just toss in the woods. It definitely can smell bad so I keep the bin well away from the house.
@VIDEOEPPO Жыл бұрын
@@JeffGray then i guess i may not be able ro do it. There isn't much space. Then again, your idea is actually cool!.Thanks for replying!
@steffybael1245 Жыл бұрын
an old poaching trick for catching fish is to create a "honey hole" so fish will hang out and wait for food or food on a hook. you find a limb hanging out over the water and put some "ROAD KILL" in a wire basket and tie it close to the branch. flys will lay eggs and hatch into maggots that end up falling into the water which will draw in the fish that will take a bite of what ever hits that water. so an old umbrella type folding clothes line on a fence line post with 2 or 3 wire baskets attached will allow you to fill the wire baskets from outside the fence, the falling maggots will feed the chickens. in the south we feed the catfish in our farm ponds, they got so conditioned that the water would start boiling when they sensed the vibrations caused by foot steps, they would bite an empty hook!!!
@TigerLilyGzzTLRoars6 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was looking fir!!! Thanks a bunch.
@homesteadinginthecity Жыл бұрын
Gosh been looking for ages on a simply way to do this, thank you, just fantastic!
@GoodmanMIke59 Жыл бұрын
Another trick I've used is to raise quail in a hutch above the ground, let them poop, let the black soldier flies raise larvae, let the chickens go wild.
@steveman223 Жыл бұрын
I liked your video solely on the fact you accurately told us how many black soldier fly videos there are 😅😂. Made me chuckle cuz its true
@pinoykidboxer Жыл бұрын
Thanks for that. My question is, that netting is kinda low. How come your chickens don't jump over it? I needed like 8 foot netting to keep them in.
@MissouriHomemaking Жыл бұрын
This is awesome. I like how it it genuinely easy and cheap, but also genius. Well done.
@tjrubicon5463 Жыл бұрын
I gathered the old horse manure, put an old board on top, came back in a week and took the board off. Buggapalooza! The Chickens go wild eating.
@noconsentgiven Жыл бұрын
How do you keep raccoon, possums, and mice from getting in through the opening?
@KathryneKunz6 ай бұрын
Zip ties?
@lil-mac-acres2 жыл бұрын
Hi! Thank you for the "easy video". I would like to see the set up for your chickens. I currently have chickens, but looking to remodel their area. Would like ideas for a way to move them around in the pasture. I'm in SC also :) Thanks!
@paulatwood9982 жыл бұрын
Renee. You may want to put them in a chicken tractor & move them around and help fertilize the ground beneath. They will harvest all of the bugs and weed seeds.
@northcee9412 Жыл бұрын
I bought a screenhouse from Costco. Birdfeeder pole to hang food and water buckets on sunk into dirt. Cardboard box with one nest box in it . Chickens follow me (and bucket of grubs) to chicken camp in morning and back to coop in evening. Fairly easy to move to new spot after a couple of days of use
@D.J.604 ай бұрын
How do you get them to go into the little hole with the small tub? Legit gonna use this im starting a homestead and this is absolutely useful for raising chickens with no grain feed.
@BIBLE-UNBUTCHERED2 күн бұрын
Excellent method - chickens love black fly larvae
@captainchaaos1329 Жыл бұрын
How sustainable is this? Do you feed your chickens 100% llarve or does it just help to pad the expense of storebought feed?
@hotartesian4163 Жыл бұрын
Always searching for simple genius, and I found another one! Subbed, of course. Thanks for the vid!
@nicholasnapier26843 жыл бұрын
About time somebody address this the easiest way to feed chickens is what you're showing right there it is free forever they selling now online now.. they multiply like crazy they're easy grow in any warm environment specially during the summer time in the mountains does it matter what country or what climate the Summer Spring you can grow these... or if you have a nursery that's encapsulated will work for you ..and you can do it during the winter worth at least seventy-five to eighty degrees in there....
@cindiraethayn4809 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. I've been fermenting for almost a year now.
@SheilaCook-x2b Жыл бұрын
Can youdo this in the winter time when temperatures that gets like 10 degrees? Thank you for. All you information
@tazziegee84798 ай бұрын
how do you keep rats and mice out of it? Here at my place they would be in it especially with the gap I have had a rat or some other maybe native animal eat through the black plastic of a rotatable compost bin to get at just veggie scraps.
@JkBee4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. QUESTION: Is it not better to just give the chickens your scraps
@udayatulachan6415 Жыл бұрын
You have given very honest information.I agree with you.Thanks!
@slenderwoodsman86482 жыл бұрын
Finally, someone with the same definition of "simple" as me