I think the point of weed tea is that nutrients become available after breaking down in the soil. Noting the JADAM method, as others have mentioned. I've observed noticeable benefits after feeding plants with weed tea made from their own plant waste. Strawberries with huge fruit output. Dandelions 18" tall after feeding with dandelion tea. It certainly raises questions in support of a hypothesis.
@cmbmail42 Жыл бұрын
Interesting, never heard of using just the plants waist as a fertilizer
@austin2842 Жыл бұрын
@Chris Beebe It makes sense when you consider that in nature a plant takes nutrients from its own deadfall (or other plants it thrives alongside) without any human intervention.
@annebeignatborde1832 Жыл бұрын
It makes sense that the plants contain the nutrients they need and those go back into the soil when they die and break down.
@shaunblade2116 Жыл бұрын
It’s very interesting. I met a guy two summers back that only fed his cannabis their trimmings. He passed all the test of a marketable product. Great size, superior nose, organic, fought bugs. Incredible
@607genetics Жыл бұрын
@@shaunblade2116yep
@Mark_Nadams Жыл бұрын
Properly brewed weed tea must go through the same process that a fish tank does when it initially starts, for the water to be used for fertilizer. Begin with ammonia (from decomposing finely chopped weeds) and bacteria (nitrosomonas and nitrobacter) converts it first to nitrite and then to nitrate AKA plant food. That process is aerobic and must be aerated at all times to keep the bacteria alive. It keeps the smell to almost zero. That process takes about two months to get to the nitrate production phase. Then you can start to use the water for fertilizer. Replace the water used each time. Keep adding a little more pulverized weeds each time you use it back into the mix. Repeat two to three times a week. Essentially it is a regenerating aquatic compost tea made from scratch occurring under water for maximum efficiency. Aeration is the key to no smell and good fertilizer. A home made bottom under gravel filter used with 2 air pumps and lava rock in a blue plastic 55 gallon barrel with a mix of about 50/50 water to weeds starter batch every spring is what I use. I admit I have never done the tests you ask for. Maybe you could try the technique for more content.
@TheNewMediaoftheDawn11 ай бұрын
My guess would be done correctly it feeds the soil biology, which does the job of breaking down organic matter/minerals for release to the plants. So it’s more about soil health, rather than just NPK.
@chuckpatch12302 ай бұрын
yes
@Douglas-xs1bfАй бұрын
That's exactly what i was taking away from this video. It doesn't feed the macronutrients but more so the micronutrients.
@frodehau Жыл бұрын
The scond year of my first veg gardens I didn't add more compost. Plants started to look pale when growth started to take off. I got worried,and filled pales and buckets with lawn clippings, and let it sit for just a few days. The grass was cut from the garden area, not a very large area compared to the beds themselves. I stirred thoroughly, and watered with this green soup. The plants perked up quickly, and I could clearly see where I had run out of the liquid, these plants were still less green than the others. I doubt tha I had heard of "weed tea" then, but when we make silage, which is basically the same fluid, we spray it on the fields as fertilizer. It creates algal growth in waterways if we don't disperse it over a larger area. This liquid contains quite a bit of sugar, wich feeds soil bacteria in a similar way to what root exudates does. Fermenting it for a month would probably consume most of the sugars though, and again, it has enough NPK to create issues in waterways. It is also possible that the nutrients in your tea was bound up in living obligate anaerobic bacteria, and that it would be released when these die when you add them to the soil. But that's just a guess on my part. Btw, the liquid should foam if it is high in nitrogen.
@truthonly7699 Жыл бұрын
how did we farm for thousands of years before chemical fertilizers? compost, compost tea, manure, etc
@TILTED_DAN9 ай бұрын
you would never know !!! lol
@lksf98209 ай бұрын
Very inefficiently.
@mikeyrobles29778 ай бұрын
We used dead bodies and blood
@joniboulware14368 ай бұрын
People starved.
@michaelbranscum8 ай бұрын
The indians dug a 1 foot hole by hand the size of thier hand, put in a fish head, threw dirt on top of that then planted a corn seed at the top. So as the corn grew, its roots would eventually reach the fishhead(fertilizer) and BING BAMM BOOM corn on the cobb. Is what I was taught in 3rd grade.
@Creative_soil Жыл бұрын
Leaf mold is used to break down the plant material, and make it Bio available, for use as a fertilizer.
@smeargut180910 ай бұрын
I've had 5 drums filled with different types of plant matter such as grass, weeds, bamboo leaves, seaweed and a mixed barrel its been 3 years since I filled the barrels and this year I start planting.
@MhUser Жыл бұрын
my tea is black; there is hardly any leftover plant mass when its done; test trace minerals, like titanium in nettle tea; make a grow test, water 1 plant with water and other with water + tea and compare it after some moths; you dont need NPK and you dont use compost for NPK; its mostly carbon/caries and diverse soil life/microorganisms that matters
@Gardenfundamentals1 Жыл бұрын
I think you missed the point of the video. Weed tea does have nutrients so it will have a higher NPK than water - known fact.
@timturk189911 ай бұрын
It's mostly an anaerobic bacterial compost tea, indeed. I'm not sure of the benefits, especially versus aerobically aerated bacterial compost tea..?! As a fertilizer, and using "Weeds", that's the definition of a "Weed Tea" here, this video has shown it has no fertilizer effects. The anaerobic bacteria will actually feed on any fertilizer, if any was derived from the Weeds in the "Weed Tea". Great video, showing how to get actual affirmation of whatever "fertilizer" you may trying to create, as well! Thanks for the real work!👍💯🙏✌️
@Brandon-wq6rf10 ай бұрын
This is some great testing and great content. However I would like to add that when adding things to your soil it's not necessarily all about looking for NPK but more about adding organic materials to the microorganisms in your soil to help them thrive. By making this tea you are adding organic materials to your soil which will feed millions of bacteria and other microorganisms such as haematodes. By doing this they will create more nutrients for the plants for the plants when the plants tell them what they need
@harrybrandelius78166 ай бұрын
Maybe a stupid question but wouldn't adding the weeds directly to the soil add as much or more organic materials? Also if we want to encourage soil life wouldn't we want the microorganisms in the actual soil to do the breaking down instead of the bucket dwellers?
@thedirtprincess32934 ай бұрын
yes to pretty much all. People are trying to speed up the process. Based on an overwhelming weight of observation im guessing this tea method does work. Just not the way this experimenter expected or tested for. Not a stupid question at all. Edited to add: using wom bins to break down organic matter DOES speed the process up, as do active composting operations, but a lot of folks dont want to do those steps for varios reasons.
@jamiepitcher2055 Жыл бұрын
Science is great. It either humbles us or we resort to denial. Of course we should take industry-funded science with a grain of salt and and definitely consider any major biases. Thanks for the info
@Mrjboomseedco2 жыл бұрын
I use grass clippings and banana tree leaves mixed in a tea now and then but I always use worm castings black strap molasses and kelp other times I use other meals in there and I have good luck
@brianstandridge6580 Жыл бұрын
We used grass clippings and did leave them soaking for over a month. I did not dilute it. Our okra plants “died” while we were on vacation, but watering them with this stuff at full strength brought them back! They made full crops of okra all over again.
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
So, the extra water they got - whether this stuff or just plain water - was enough to revive them. Have you done a test to see, you know, repeat the same conditions but when you return from holiday use only tap water?
@terrycarkner1698 Жыл бұрын
Well, it depends which weeds or plants you are using, and the quality of the soil they are growing in to begin with. It’s a good way to get rid of weeds. Then through into the compost pile.
@scottytpancakes8553 Жыл бұрын
Ive heard people using it to jump start a compost pile, saying that the surplus of microorganisms in the weed tea supercharges the decomposition process. You should do a video about that. Make two separate pile of the same materials but add a bucket of weed tea to one amd monitor the results. I think it would make a great videos.
@szabomarton8064 Жыл бұрын
also a myth. if your compost pile isnt made of disinfected material (which it isnt) then it has a brutal amount of microorganisms in it. You can measure this by mixing it properly to 1:30 N:C and checking temperature 1-2 days later. It will be maxed out.
@dustyflats3832 Жыл бұрын
Lol, now I have a stink pot of bacteria that I need to get rid of. Wish I had seen this earlier. I’ve seen another method that used brown sugar to extract nutrients. Have no idea, but guess I will stick with granular.
@pplusbthrust2 жыл бұрын
The proof is in the pudding and since I've been adding fermented tea to my 28, 25 gallon container vegetable garden, it has never done as well as it is now. I'm not saying it was doing amazing before, but it has certainly made a noticeable improvement.
@theressomelovelyfilthdownh43292 жыл бұрын
It may just be down to you paying more attention to watering and your plants.
@pplusbthrust2 жыл бұрын
@@theressomelovelyfilthdownh4329 Well, I do listen more & yell at them less.
@pplusbthrust2 жыл бұрын
@@pissrockdust5997 The neighbors haven't complained about the smell, but they have 5 cats, 1 dog, & a chicken in the house.
@jamilifunk6199 Жыл бұрын
I know many folks who just use Jadam/KNF rotting weeds and vegetables for their garden. They add other inputs, such as leaf mold to break down more. I've seen the proof, especially on their cannabis. They did a side by side comparison with using super soil and organic, high-quality nutrients known to produce high-quality cannabis vs living soil and jadam inputs. Both sets of plants grew vigorously. However, the living soil jadam had less pest pressure and appeared healthier overall. The yield was higher as well at the end, and the terpenes (smells) were more complex. The biggest noticeable effect was the price. 430% less expensive.
@waltermcphee37879 ай бұрын
I use plastic corrugated tree tubes nailed/plastic tied to a post with a bucket under. Have 2 one for Comfrey and one for nettles, mostly in the UK we have enough rain to keep this set up working, the plants rot down and just keep filling the top, a couple of long nails to stop it all falling out the bottom, keep it going all season.
@ronaldhiser8602 жыл бұрын
This is why I love your content.
@BigWesLawns Жыл бұрын
I read way down in the comments to see if anyone asked my question. Where is the leaf mold? Bacterias easy to grow, feeds on nitrogen, nitrigen is high when greens are added. Microbes are aquatic, and leaf mold jumps into the water, believe it or not. Fungus is older than bacteria, and it started its life in earth under water. Fungus is the slow breakdown of plant materials, and release a lot of nutrients. Fungus can extract minerals from stone and maie them plant availabe. Skipping adding leaf mold is your mistake. You can use high quality compost as the digester as well, hopefully fungal compost, not pyrolitic. Chickenpoo liquid fertilser does it all on its own, it has everything it needs to do both parts of the decomposition. NPK takes care of itself. You can also use mre tyan 1 bucket of randomly chosen weeds. Jerusalem Artichoke turns into a pest control sauce. Chickenpoo, and anything that came from a blood pumping, bone havin creature is a phosphorous rich fert. Fish has fast decomposition tissues, and has everything a plant needs in it. Cannabis can be fermented and fed back to cannabis. Feed them the greens and roots and seed toyoung plants for Nitrogen, and hormones, and feed them buds and leaves and seeds during flowering season. Does this stuff click at all? I just learned, My results of my soil i create is cannabis seeds sprouting in less than 24hrs and 3 weeks later a foot tall. My oawn is deep green and neighbours admit its the best lawn on the street. I buy nothing from a store except buckets and Co2 breathers to make it in. Mimic Nature, do swamps have bubblers? BP oil spill was eaten by the biome in the great everglades, and they were astonished. I wasnt. An ancient fungal network, nematodes, arthropods, and thousands of trillions of bacerias ate it.
@mjwal008 ай бұрын
Nice video. Thanks for putting in the work
@HeiderosesPhotograph9 ай бұрын
I have been making sting nettle soup for over 40 years. I put it on straight to my plants after it rains and if there is dry weather after the rain for a while. My plants grow very nice and the stench keeps pests away.
@victormcox2 жыл бұрын
I've been searching high and low for a video like this. Thank you so much. I knew there had to be a science behind this fertilizer tea method. I have tried it. I really haven't noticed any difference. I didn't know that it should help if the tea decomposed a lot longer. I guess I was looking at this from a self-sustaining angle. However, while I've got the money I'm going back to miracle grow! 🤣🤣🤣 Thank you so much for taking the time!
@amyrenee13612 жыл бұрын
Miracle Grow disrupts the microbiology in the soil, which is important for the Nitrogen cycle. I would recommend organic fertilizers like Guano or Fish fertilizer. Best wishes 🌺
@amyrenee13612 жыл бұрын
@hulmil but they cost more in the long run. You are dependent on them as long as you have a garden. Using organic - which isn't expensive at all- you build up the natural ecosystem and the garden will take care of itself. I use one bag of Spaghnum peat moss for $16 @ Home Depot, with 6 bags of Steer Manure ($1.88 a bag) mix it up and put it in my yard. I live in the desert where we rarely get rain and the soil is sandy clay. I use a $25 bottle of fish fertilizer that lasts 3 months. So it's not expensive at all. And when you understand the science behind it-- the Nitrogen Cycle, microbes, and how ecosystems work, it doesn't make any sense at all to use synthetic, especially with all the harm it causes our environment.
@amyrenee13612 жыл бұрын
@hulmil wishing you all the best in this garden called life! ✌️🌼
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
Amy - That is not correct. The nutrients in synthetic and organic fertilizer are identical. kzbin.info/www/bejne/qYLHfGOmodeph7s
@jonathanlochridge9462 Жыл бұрын
@@Gardenfundamentals1 I agree from a chemical perspective. The base nutrients the plants will take in are identical. But, those aren't necessarily the only thing in them. Although, non-nutrient molecules potentially might have negative effects or more complicated molecules might act as fuel for micro-organisms that can promote a slower release of nutrients. As long as you aren't worried about potential contamination issues, then I wouldn't expect organic fertilizer to be better simply because it is organic. It is important to have slower releasing nutrient sources as well. Such as compost, mulch, or general organic matter content. Your video also doesn't really touch how the ratios of nutrients. And also the carbon to nitrogen ratio is pretty important. Having too fast of a nutrient release can result in nutrients being leached away by rain before the plants can use them. Although fertilizing as close as possible to planting, watering before fertilizing, and timing it during a time when heavy rain isn't expected can mitigate that. Or simply using a mix of them. I would expect the biggest difference between fertilizer types would be in how long and fast they release nutrients. Outside of the chemical side, I have been reading some of the literature, and the exact effects of particular types of fertilizer and various amounts is an area with a significant amount of scientific study. Both for grains and vegetables. But, there are at least about 3 dozen studies that I know of that investigate the links of various types of fertilizer to microbe populations. Many of which involve long-term analysis over 10,15, or 20 year periods. The form of fertilizer and speed of release definitely seems to have an impact. Although, I haven't seen a cohesive hypothesis of the details and the whys. We do have direct comparisons of the results of particular nutrient mixes and fertilizer forms. There were some particularly interesting 15 year studies out of china that compared manure to specific mixes of chemical fertilizers which similar ratios of macro nutrients. It wasn't a clear win for "organic fertilizer" in any way. Compost in particular when applied in larger amounts had a negative effect on soil microbes and respiration rate. However, there seems to be a pattern of fresh manure from any source having a greater positive impact on microbial biomass and a-diversity. Although, some other chemicals such as pesticides and herbicides were shown to have negative effects on soil microbes as well. And different ratios and mixes of synthetic fertilizer also had fairly different effects on soil microbes. With some having a negative effect, some positive, and others relatively neutral. It seems to be an active area of research where we have learned a lot of small things. But, most general sweeping claims I hear for particular solutions don't seem that compatible with the research. And it is made more complicated since we don't really know how much of a difference elevated microbial populations has on plant growth generally. Although, there are studies that go into how being deficient in microbes in various ways can cause problems. There is more reputable information available on their impact on decomposition rate. Although, that is also highly dependent on temperature and some other factors. Many plants actively feed some types of fungi and are less adapt at processing and obtaining nutrients without them. Brassicas are a notable rare exception there. And tests with potted plants have shown that sterilized or even soil with significantly reduced levels of micro-organisms results in reduced plant growth rate and biomass. For compost Tea, I haven't looked much on KZbin about it, But the books I saw talking about it suggested that the fermentation and anaerobic brewing should happen for more like 8 months to a year not a couple weeks. I would expect most of the nutrients in the weeds to still be in them after only a couple weeks. I haven't brewed any of that yet. I still intend to, but I think I will get them tested for nutrients and microbe content to see if scientifically it is actually worth the effort. I do think your advice about simply throwing them back in the soil makes sense. Unless the weed is rhizomes or has gone to seed already. Throwing weeds back into the soil is good for the soil but can result in higher weed pressure. So, in my view if the costs are low and results worthwhile, then finding a way to still use that can be valuable. A compost that was intensively managed and gets hot enough to kill any weed seeds can be an effective strategy though. But, if you don't do that well you can just have more weeds when you do that. I have bought local compost that ended up causing more weeds and having unkilled weed seeds in it before.
@Sylviar357 Жыл бұрын
I have been using weed tea for 2 yrs. The longer you soak it the better it is. I use 3 5 gallon bucket with rain water. I use grass clipping, any type of weeds pulled from my yard, leaves from plants in my garden, banana peels, kitchen scraps, my garden is thriving and my harvest are great and delicious. It's not a myth. It works when done right. Yes it stinks but my garden loves it.
@canadiangemstones76368 ай бұрын
What’s your analysis say? Let us know the numbers please.
@Sylviar3578 ай бұрын
@@canadiangemstones7636 Sorry number? I did not send it in for analysis. I just use the method the God use. When the seasons change the leaves fall and decompose in the forest and feeds the soil. Same concept, but soaking them in rain water in a closed bucket works faster. Also I chop everything first. I have a small garden. Maybe this is not something for a acre garden. But for my 25ft x 25ft bed it works. I can take the time and let it decompose properly. I don't use sticks, only grass clipping, leaves, banana peel, weeds from my yard, veggie peels, egg shells, etc. I also have a bucket with a drain that I let decompose on it on without adding water. Once the bucket is filled I add the water, close up the container. Let it sit for 30 days, sometimes longer. Stirring once or twice a week. I keep a rotation. Whatever I'm making my garden responds to it in a very positive manner. Lush green plants, very delicious veggies. That is the outcome I'm looking for. No Chemical Fertilizers ruining the soil. Build the soil and the plants can uptake the nutrients they need. Hope this helps. Try my way and then do an analysis. Hope you get better numbers. Let me know.
@LMcAwesome6 ай бұрын
@@Sylviar357 Yeah but these are just stories. Our man in the video above actually tested it and didnt find anything. Now you can say he tested the wrong thing - for example it might be that what weed tea does is work the same as if you were regularly adding compost - but clearly theres a problem with the idea as it stands.
@meettheworld62416 ай бұрын
@LMcAwesome your man also noted how at least one test failed to detect something that was known to be present... so test failure being an obvious factor really makes all of his results questionable... I can say that the 50 gallon drum I've been adding and taking from for many months has decomposed a lot. The only material that's recognizable is only the newest added stuff... good weed tea is something you start and keep going continually. When things actually start decomposing, that's when you see the difference.
@Sylviar3576 ай бұрын
@@meettheworld6241 So true. I just keep adding material to it. I grow organic and this team feeds my garden and it is flourishing. I will always use compost tea. It's basically free to make. Long as you have a lawn, weeds, garden and it rains, you will have organic fertilizer for your families food.
@littlenugs9942 Жыл бұрын
I checked the pH and ec with my Blue lab pen it was a pH of 7.2 and ec was very high. I fermented it for 7-8 months with ground egg shells. In a temp of 80f. The odor goes away some but not much. It does work well
@juneshannon80747 ай бұрын
Thank you once again, you have saved me time, energy and have freed up my bins. No more stinky weed tea for me.
@mikep4902 жыл бұрын
I love the video. I've heard it said that the advantage (especially with aerated tea) is the micro-organisms more than the nutrients. I *seem* to have an improvement when I used to apply that to a lawn... at least as effective as the expensive products you can buy to stimulate breakdown of thatch, especially considering I used chemical fertilizer. (Though it did require regular application, which is a lot of mulch water.) Like you, I found it better to simply place some steer-plus (composted steer manure and wood chips) atop certain beds. I figure watering over a season or two releases the nutreients over time without the stink. The best "weed tea" I found was decades ago, where a friend trapped the water runoff from his rabbit dung in a pit.
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
When one points out the low level of nutrients - believers in compost tea point out it is the microbes. It is not. www.gardenmyths.com/compost-tea-does-it-work/
@amateur-alchemist2 жыл бұрын
@@Gardenfundamentals1 The study you cite performed an analysis on aerated compost tea, which would kill all anaerobic microbes, then claimed tea has few microbes present. This is misleading methodology, especially since the root zone of all plants is anaerobic, or aeroohilic (very low oxygen). The symbioses from anaerobic microbes, especially fungi, would be completely wiped out by aerating the tea. I encourage you to please read peer reviewed published scientific literature that is CURRENT. Microbes do matter in agriculture. It is a scientific fact.
@ericgronlund5729 Жыл бұрын
@@amateur-alchemist if the root zone was anaerobic that would not be a good thing as in the rhizosphere roots take in oxygen. Anaerobic would be a poor condition for a plant to live in so could you please explain yourself more on what you mean?
@StringofPearls55 Жыл бұрын
@@ericgronlund5729 reread the comment. It said that root zone is a low oxygen zone.
@ericgronlund5729 Жыл бұрын
@@StringofPearls55 I have reread, it says “anaerobic” just before your low oxygen point. Now look up the definition of anaerobic. The comment didn’t make sense. Roots absorb oxygen, if there’s no oxygen, would that make sense? No, the plant would be dead.
@ErikAkerman6 ай бұрын
Wonderful to see somebody sharing knowledge based on science.
@jeanpauldupuis Жыл бұрын
Swamp bucket does a few things. It kills weedy/seedy waste better than the compost pile. It saturates woody waste with swampy moisture, softening it and making it accessible and appetizing to various digesters. The water contains the same kind of dissolved minerals and nutrients that would wash into the soil during a rain, but concentrated. The water is full of aquatic microbes which die when aerated in soil, liberating their nutrient content and feeding other digesters. I use a 100L rubbermaid trashbin. I add woody or weedy yard waste (especially thorny waste) loosely to the top of the bin, and fill with water to the top of the bin. I throw in a BTI puck for mosquito control and leave the top open to the rain. I freely add new waste if the bin will accept it. After it's been sitting a while, I draw some of the liquid to water my plants, then top up with collected rainwater. I keep cycling the water this way, occasionally stirring the solids, until the solid material is quite black and soft and slimy. Using a pitchfork I lift out some portion of the soggy solids and remove to a compost cone or empty trashbin. I find the earwigs and pillbugs go berserk for soggy swamp solids. By the fall, the woody solids have rotted enough to go under the mower with the fall leaves. In this way I am able to dispose of troublesome woody waste, and provide a kind of 'accelerated rainfall' to my plants.
@NoahNobody Жыл бұрын
So I guess it would be good to take some soil, split it into two parts, inoculate one part with the weed tea and aerate it, letting the water microbes die. Then do the nutrient tests on both soil samples.
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
Swamp? Only one person on yt I know who calls it that. Most people refer to it as coming from Korean Natural Farming or JADAM. Have you done any scientific testing to prove the dying bacteria release the nutrients or are you just spouting what your garden hero said?
@jeanpauldupuis Жыл бұрын
@@HollyOak I am spouting conservation of mass, like I learned in grade nine science class.
@triciac10197 ай бұрын
I have the same thing going on in a Rubbermaid trash can. I did it by accident, though. I put weeds in that trash can and it has been getting water since last year. I haven't done anything to it. So should I scoop out some of the water and dilute it to water my vegetable garden? Or should I just dump it all in my compost pile, which has wood chips from 1-2 years ago?
@thedirtprincess32934 ай бұрын
😂 i was gonna comment ."energy is neither created nor destroyed" 😊 but you said it better. @@jeanpauldupuis
@galbeeri83602 жыл бұрын
I searched for information about bokashi and found your website. I love your additute and info. Thanks 🤠✌️
@diannadavis13626 ай бұрын
To get your weed tea to ferment and extract the most nutrients, chop your weeds finely to increase surface area , I also bruise mine before chopping , I also use an aquarium air pump and air stone to oxygenate it for a few days when first starting it. Adding comfrey and fish heads also helps tremendously , and trust me you'll want that stuff pretty far down wind of you as it's working off.
@carlosmontoya248510 ай бұрын
You need to do another test with leaf moldvadded at the beginning. It has more benefits. From my experience.
@theressomelovelyfilthdownh43292 жыл бұрын
A few guys on the allotments make nettle tea. But they have it in a water butt for two or three months at least before they use it. Also, because they have nettles growing right beside them anyway. When it's done, nothing is left but the fibres. So I'd say they are getting something out of it. But they only use it to supplement their regular fertilizer use, or on things like cabbages or other brassicas. I think they would be much better off just going in the watering can. Filling that up with water, and then using it on their plants.
@nowonmetube7 ай бұрын
Two or three months? Dude I'm concerned that my Nettle manure turned bad after one month. The smell turned from the sweet lemonade like aroma to that baby shit after it was done after a week, to bad breath smell later on. Could it be the anaerobic bacteria won and the manure turned bad?
@sparkyh629 ай бұрын
Ive had a u ket setting al m os8 month's. Stinks bad. Should i use it????? 14:09
@RC_7238 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video! Finally someone who actually tested for npk
@LeoBarnes Жыл бұрын
I think this is a good start. Following the line of thought that the bacteria rob the tea of soluble nutrients, I would be curious to see the tea tested over time to see if any P or K is released early and then disappear as the bacteria really take over. maybe with a better test kit. cheers for using controls!
@RM-yf2lu Жыл бұрын
So where exactly do the bacteria take the nutrients away to?
@sherececocco5 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you for your energy
@ericlion22082 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for scientifically illuminating these unspeakable myths and explaining why they are not true. I've been looking for a garden channel like this for a long time and finally found it. I would be happy to recommend you. Please make many more videos like this.
@amateur-alchemist2 жыл бұрын
The idea behind fermented plant juice is to propagate and concentrate beneficial symbiotic microbes, not NPK. Please consider viewing Dr Jo Handelsmans excellent summary of US government research on microbes. It is peer reviewed government research, not home test kit anecdotes. Here is a link: kzbin.info/www/bejne/oH-Zq4qNjsuGapo
@littlenugs9942 Жыл бұрын
I've checked this with with a blulab pen pH 7.2 and ec was around 7000
@timmcilraith8762Ай бұрын
I made weed tea in 3 55gal drums. After 2 months in summer, it was hot, bubbling, and stinking, so I tipped it on top of the garden and DUG the whole lot in. Fantastic vegetables resulted. So I'd made fast liquidfied compost (or precompst). That's all, not just compost water, but whole compost fast.
@JohnnyNucc5 ай бұрын
Can you add pruned off leaves from the garden Or Cut grass to add with weeds? Thanks
@ogpenguin4713 Жыл бұрын
What compound does the soil test look for? Which form of nitrogen? Plant matter in water breaks down to ammonia, to break it down further in water you need to use microorganisms to break it down to nitrite an nitrate. But I think plants can use ammonia as their source of N.
@ansabulfone69402 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your science approach, but was two weeks enough? I also question the materials put into the sample. I think a larger variety of plant material and longer time would change the result, as would aeration.
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
1) I used 2 weeks because that is what most others recommend. Longer is better. 2) The problem is that the plant material does not decompose that quickly. That is true of all plant material so what you use won't change the results. Decomposition is a slow process. 3) Few people aerate weed tea.
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
I came here from another video using the JADAM method. They said 10 day would be sufficient but some people might need to do it for 14 days, aka 2 weeks. That is the recommended length of time by many. Also, it is said it doesn't matter what you use, even just grass on its own.
@rachelclark639311 ай бұрын
Everything I know about fermentation intended for human consumption tells me that it does indeed matter what duration, what materials, and what method you use. I think when people say 'two weeks' and 'whatever you have', they do this in a spirit of 'anything is better than nothing'. And for a home gardener just trying compost tea and not sure what exactly to do, paralyzed by the myriad choices, it doesn't really matter if they hit the most efficient method for maximum effect - that can come later, or if they're satisfied, never. But I wouldn't write the whole concept of weed tea off simply because the average gardener isn't that great at it. I have struggled to make apple cider vinegar for several years in a row. I don't have dedicated equipment, I don't have a great attention span for tending to it over time, and I ve never done it right so I don't know what I'm looking for all the way through. But it would be a mistake for me to write off the concept of successfully fermenting my own vinegar just because my method is off and my inexperience is showing. I think there's value in the video, but I can't consider it a definitive 'debunking' of the idea. There's too many variables, and not enough established values. Soil biology is complicated. I'm not ready to completely ignore anecdotal evidence from hundreds of gardeners without a roughly equivalent set of evidence that they're misattributing their results to a different cause.
@marinetrax2 жыл бұрын
Great video. I have been using the green tea method as I have farmers friends and they spread very rapidly so was using the green tea method to kill the seed heads. Just pulling them up and throwing them back into the garden, the normally re- root and if they don't, they drop thousands of seed heads and you have a much bigger issue than when you started. Any idea how to recycle these but kill off the seed heads? (and composting does not work on these seeds). Thanks.
@classictvgold4 ай бұрын
I use my kitchen scraps in a bucket, then I cover to the top of the bucket of water.. Leave it on my south facing deck for about a week, and man is it good stuff , my plants blow up a few days after I give them this. I’ve also thrown in manure…works just as you’d think it would except it’s more bio available to them❤
@zoranploscar82295 ай бұрын
Great job looking at the real data.
@emptynestgardens90572 жыл бұрын
Once again proving why you are my go to for quality gardening info 👍🏻 Yup I'm sticking with chop & drop and my compost bins.
@ba-a-a Жыл бұрын
4:08 you're supposed to cut nettle into small pieces, not throw one branch in a bucket and call it a day 😭 my mixture after 2 months is almost completely uniform and smells like Satan's anus. 5:35 "let's get as much water to test, throw everything away and let's test" ??? So to summarize: you've (somehow) made worst tea possible, tested only for molecules in settled down watery part and later, when you talk about bacteria, do not add 2 to 2 when it's so easy to tell how much mostly broken down nutrients are in bacteria and the heavier parts of mixture. Gee, I wonder why $10 test kit FOR SOIL doesn't detect a thing. Maybe, because in soil those molecules are already broken down completely and thus detectable? As far as I liked this whole "got you" psudoscience vibe you deserve a dislike from me. Best of luck with your videos!
@loveatfirstsprout88allotment4 ай бұрын
I have my weed tea going over a month I add old bananas and coffee grounds. I'm still adding some more food stuff and weeds to my brew.
@truthbknwn Жыл бұрын
I noticed the Potassium failure in that kit too when I used it. I wonder how the results would be if you didn't dilute it.
@johnmalcolm48222 жыл бұрын
I found this very informative but as a Bachelor of Science I have to say a few things off the top of my head. No offence or lack of respect is intended at all. I'm still experimenting with weed tea. The following are brief points. My main reason for drowning the weeds is to kill them before putting them on the garden. I am trying using the diluted liquid for watering plants, and the hopefully killed weeds as mulch. The lack of nitrogen is not a problem as I can get that from diluted urine which is sterile unless you have a severe bladder infection. An option is adding urine to the weed tea at the outset, which might help the weed materials to break down Water from your well or bore is a good control for you, but a lot if not the majority of us will be using rain water or town water. If you generally water with your ground water your soil probably has plenty of phosphorus. A good experiment should be repeatable by others and ground water is a variable. The lower concentration of phosphate in the weed tea compared to the fertilizer is also a function of comparative dilution. The problem with using ground water as the control is also highlighted here. I have my weeds drowning in a 240 litre wheelie bin which was loosely filled to about 2/3 capacity with weeds and am going to try scooping off a little liquid starting in a month, and topping up with tank rainwater as I go until the liquid is pretty clear. My control will be a garden bed watered with tank water only, and I will judge by comparing the harvests of a variety of plants common to both beds. Any other comparison is more academic than related to desired outcome. I will eventually dry out the solids in the blazing sun and use them as mulch. I don't have a lot of space and I need the food supply, so I can't be as scientific as I would like to be. Maybe you or someone can try the "proof is in the pudding" approach with a number of beds for comparison of rain water, weed tea, and commercial fertilizer ( which perhaps gets its nitrogen from urea - why pay for pee?) and other combinations. Another consideration is burning the residue and using the ash in an informed manner, but of course there is the downside to burning the carbon. I hope these rough points provide food for thought and that your gardens out there provide food for your healthy bodies. I definitely give this video the thumbs up.
@LeoBarnes Жыл бұрын
You raise some valid points. There may be other benefits to weed tea besides just NPK. Looking at harvest yield as an end point is a good idea, so long as it is properly controlled. I would imagine peeing into your weed tea would bring the smell to a whole new level!
@jonathanlochridge9462 Жыл бұрын
Measuring the impact on yield directly is important. But measuring and standardizing other things is too. Particularly if you want to identify the "why" behind it. Making sure you grow the same crops and that the other elements of your management is the same is important. I might consider doing a direct bed comparison in a section of my farm in 1-2 years or so though. But, I could probably measure the source nutrients directly. And also measure the effect on microbe counts and respiration. But, you can get a Haley test done to get the microbial biomass, respiration, and nutrient amounts from a lab. If you just took a couple beds and experimented with before and soil tests that would be informative. On a long term, any of the microbal stuff would need a 1 year study term Since, they are heavily effected by temperature and other seasonal factors so measuring at the same time of year gives a better base for comparison. I am currently more interested in comparing the effect of multiple methods of starting new beds and the immediate and 1-year effects on the soil nutrient levels and microbe counts based on the method used. As then once I confirm a best method with a local experiment then I can make all of the new beds on the next round of expansion use that method.
@susanbernier9399 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
"My main reason for drowning the weeds is to kill them before putting them on the garden." That's a valid reason, but is not the reason behind why others make this or the claims they make. They are saying it's the water that makes the difference and even throw away the weed mass instead of using it. As a science person, you would know what you are doing not testing the actual hypothesis - that the nutrients are unlocked into the water and therefore, the water is the nutrient dense source and instead, you are using a known solution (tossing the weeds back on the bed) to prove a hypothesis that makes no claims about that method. Everyone who claims it works are claiming it is the liquid alone that is key. How can using tap water for the control test be an issue when it was stated it was being used BECAUSE that was what had been used to make the weed tea? Using the same source of water for the control as you use in the weed tea is extremely scientific because you are testing water vs water with weeds added - effectively ruling out the water and then comparing only the difference between the two. You say you will be using tank water - but aren't you going to test weed tea made from tank water vs just tank water? That's the same test that was done in this video.
@blanckieification Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! I think it depends on what you put in it. Some plants are more nutricious than others and I think it give your plants some extra boost in the summer. I also think some plants are not worth the effort and they will give of their nutrients when you just leave them decompose on the ground.
@howardchambers9679 Жыл бұрын
Nettles are really good as is Borage. Nettle water for Tomatoes and borage for brassica. Pretty sure I got that the right way round.
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
What you put in does not affect the outcome when it's about the method of getting nutrients out. If the method is useless, then it just means you leave more nutrition locked up in the rotting weed mass.
@suebar51772 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info...I'm going to test my stinky brew. 😊 I collect seaweed every spring, rinse it, blend it and stick it in a bucket with a lid. I stir it periodically and let it sit for a couple months. It's easy and the plants seem to be benefitting.
@francismeowgannou53222 жыл бұрын
Any updates? I made and used similar brew by accident from rain getting in my seaweed bin.
@austinwebdev Жыл бұрын
When those anaerobic bacteria end up in the top layers of the soil where oxygen is available, they are eaten by the aerobic bacteria in the soil.
@thedirtprincess32934 ай бұрын
Exactly right.
@travisevans75022 жыл бұрын
they make tea with fish tank bubblers also don't know if that helps but I don't bother I just use compost and granular organic fertilizer and fish emulsion and use no dig method works great no need for it and after my beds are established I only use compost
@Wampaking-q9l3 күн бұрын
I dump my weeds in a bucket with holes in the bottom abd on the sides on top. Then place a very heavy rock ob top and close the lid. Below the bucket i catch the juce and that is the fertilicer. Hardly any smelling and the leftovers just get compostet.👍 I dont know the nutrients but i dont have too. 🤷
@gigiartstudiowithartistvir39198 ай бұрын
I did this method in a 15 gallon tub. I forgot about it and it sat over part of a summer and all winter. It was the stinkiest rankiest sludge ever! I finally dumped it out in the flower bed a couple months ago. That's one experiment I won't repeat, and am doing the chop and drop method now.
@kaabe418 ай бұрын
How did the flower bed react to it?
@gigiartstudiowithartistvir39198 ай бұрын
@@kaabe41 Everything is healthy, but I have no real way to know if the sludge made a difference because plants in my other beds are growing well too. My experiment was poorly conducted hahaha
@kaabe417 ай бұрын
@@gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919 thanks for the response. so far, that fetid 'swamp water' hasn't killed anything. first attempt this year at a garden and so far, fingers crossed, things have been going well
@gigiartstudiowithartistvir39197 ай бұрын
@@kaabe41 I wish you much abundance from your garden. It's one of the most satisfying things to grow your own food.
@kaabe417 ай бұрын
@@gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919 thank you so much :) my potato vines just broke through the bags!!! very excited 😍
@invalidtargt Жыл бұрын
Was there any compost added to the tea to allow for microbes to do their job of breaking down the material? The teas I have seen myself had leaf mold and compost added to the mix and after it was done "brewing" for several weeks it looked nothing like what's in that bucket. But I do however agree that other's have not done their due diligence by doing any tests before telling you this is the best thing ever, they all just say thru trial and error I have figured out what works best for my garden...
@pattipostcard84892 жыл бұрын
Wow. Thank you for this.
@quintinturner99612 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your research. Always wanted to know what the true base facts were but never had time to test it for myself.hats off to you sir.
@user-ju7dx8mu6d9 ай бұрын
My sister swears by nettle tea and while I thought that a nutrient effect was highly unlikely, there was something that offered faint hope. A friend started a kelp seaweed fertilizer company. It had very low levels of nutrient but did show growth effects in good trials (done in a university environment). He believed, and analysis supported, that growth effects were from growth regulators in the brew. Apparently kelp has extremely high levels of some growth regulators during its extreme rapid growth. He had to sell the product as a fertilizer even though he didn't think that was the mode of action. I guessed that rapidly growing nettles might also be high in growth regulators. But I don't use weed or compost teas.
@Wolfgang34187 ай бұрын
I think this can only be exlaines in one way: That these growth regulaters have a huge influence on the kelp root growth. What do you think?
@8cupsCoffee2 жыл бұрын
Love it. Tired of people trying to get "likes" by peddling bs that hasn't been tested
@Rittley8 ай бұрын
This is pretty interesting but as some have commented you should have added some leaf mold (the logic being that its bacteria will help break down the weeds). Anyway I did that. This is my experience if anyone is interested: I put weeds (whole) into large mason jars and added water. After a few weeks added leaf mold. Had them for a good 7 months now. Yes they stink. The mistake I made is that I filled up the jars too much and when fermentation began the water started getting out along with the foul smell. Definitely don't do this inside your house! I plan to use the "tea" this spring and summer and hope it helps at least a bit. But I noticed something interesting: I got 5 jars in total and 2 of them have been fermenting almost all along while the others stopped fermenting after 2-3 months. Any guesses why that may be? Also they smell differently. The dead ones have more of a sour smell. The fermenting ones just stink to high heaven. I guess the more fermentation the better, right? But why should only some of them keep fermenting? I don't even remember having done anything different with those two... Could they somehow have different bacteria? It might be interesting to test both groups and compare the nutrient contents, eh? Thanks anyway! Great videos!
@DavidMFChapman9 ай бұрын
It may not act as quickly, but chop and drop works for me. Occasionally I collect grass clippings and spread those.
@chewysfish6967 Жыл бұрын
this test only shows nitrate. in the nitrogen cycle bacteria converts ammonia to nitrites and then nitrites are converted to nitrates. You would likely see massive amounts of ammonia if you tested for that. This ammonia can quickly become nitrates when added to healthy soil.
@wendystewart5665Ай бұрын
Thanks, a great help
@jomarijarapa7623 Жыл бұрын
Can you use this fertilizer for kratky hydroponics
@markfcoble Жыл бұрын
Very good video on weed tea. I've been using it this summer and there is little doubt that it is great stuff, for us anyway. We did a full month with various weeds including wild lettuce, Didn't chop it at all, just pulled weeds or chopped them. Yes, more weeds and less water. My "tea" stinks so I put it downwind, no problem. Here on high mountain desert forest plateau it works very well. About 1 to 10 ratio or so. Seems to control pests too?
@jdpickel589 Жыл бұрын
The difference between compost and weed tea and the reason you can recognize the plant material after composting is because the bacteria nematodes etc in the compost break all of it down cells and all and in weed tea the smell comes from the bacteria decomposing it but it only really gets softened nutrients are basically salts you know minerals the weeds are broken down enough to where a majority if the salts or nutrients can seep out and into the water of course it won't be all the nutrients but definitely enough to give your plants a boost
@roymoss91787 ай бұрын
Did you inoculated the brewing. Does not work with out microbes
@humbllbug Жыл бұрын
Have you considered inoculating the water with EM-1 so that the microbes won't smell bad?
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
You mean from the JADAM method? The method in this video is the KNF method, JADAM uses the EM1 and guess what - it also stinks. I've seen quite a few JADAM fans make similar videos and all say it stinks.
@benchmarkcomputing21592 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great vid...Do you know if leaving bananas in water for a week is pointless too, as there are so many vids saying they make a great liquid potassium fertilizer for potatoes, ginger etc?
@kylekoenig47302 жыл бұрын
Yes. Add them to your pile
@benchmarkcomputing21592 жыл бұрын
@@kylekoenig4730 thanks but what does that mean though, add them to your pile?
@benchmarkcomputing21592 жыл бұрын
@@pissrockdust5997 OK thanks. Do you know the answer to my question regarding banana skins in water making awesome potassium liquid fertilizer?
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
www.gardenmyths.com/banana-peels-garden/
@benchmarkcomputing21592 жыл бұрын
@@Gardenfundamentals1 Legend. Thank you
@cannafarmer7 ай бұрын
I use an air stone on the porch in a 5 gallon bucket with a little worm casting and blackstrap molasses
@user255 Жыл бұрын
IF that is cobaltinitrite test for potassium (looks like it), then you should not look for color change, but turbidity change. Cobaltinitrite is orange/yellow and when it reacts with potassium is becomes insoluble yellow. So, filter the liquids first, then test if there are any changes. To me, the fertilizer test seems strong positive for potassium.
@matthewking22092 жыл бұрын
I run my comfrey through a meet grinder or use ground alfalfa and kelp meal. I use lactic acid and molasses to ferment in a container with and air lock. It has a sweet sour smell and the low ph keeps it stable.
@francismeowgannou53222 жыл бұрын
Do you have to strain it before use or does it liquefy? And how much molasses do you use and how long do you let it sit?
@matthewking22092 жыл бұрын
@@francismeowgannou5322 sorry my comment got removed but I'll try to paste it again from the website. We recommend doing a 4 week fermentation to ensure full extraction of the alfalfa. There are organic acids produced by the microbes in EM-1® including lactic acid and carbonic acid. There is also a small amount of alcohol produced (by the yeast) during the first few weeks of fermentation that will speed up the extraction process. Not to worry, the alcohol is digested in about a month by another microbe in the formula. Here’s how we do it. Buy a bag of alfalfa meal, some blackstrap molasses (Wholesome Sweeteners or Barbados Blackstrap. It doesn’t matter if they are sulfured or not). You’ll need a container with an airtight lid (a gallon milk bottle will work fine) and a funnel. Finally, get some EM-1 Microbial Inoculant (teraganix.com or your favorite grow store). Using the funnel, pour in 1 cup of alfalfa meal, 3/4 cup molasses, 3/4 cup EM-1. Fill the container with hot water (filter if you have contamination issues such as arsenic or excessive amounts of chlorine). Screw on the cap. Shake to mix molasses. Check the container every day for the first couple weeks, unscrewing to release pressure. After a couple weeks the amount of pressure will decrease and you won’t have to keep gassing the product. It should have a ‘grassy’ smell like hay and also a sweet to sour smell from the fermented EM-1. The exact dilution rate and frequency is highly debated online, ranging from 1ml to 2oz/gal. I diluted 1oz of the extract and mixed in 1 gallon of water and drenched the plants (I learned about doing foliar later). It worked out great. Most of my plants grew 8” to 10” in about 10 days. I also noticed a lot of greening up in the leaves of all my plants. Choose your dilution and spray your plants’ leaves. Since you are applying to the leaves to get the best benefit, you should mix with a sticker/wetting agent, like yucca extract. That will help the mixture stick to the leaf surface and give time for the plant to suck it up. The extract will be good for up to a year when stored out of direct sunlight in a closed container. During the vegetative cycle you can apply this mixture once per week (or bi-weekly). You can mix it with any other foliar nutrients and inputs. Mixed info about spraying after flower is out there. I asked a few growers about their applications and got all sorts of answers. Therefore, you will have to experiment and find out what works best for your plants. I imagine it will vary by the plant type. We suggest you try incorporating alfalfa into your growing operation, if you haven’t already. In our simple trial we saw quite a bit of growth with just one application. We are sure with regular applications you’ll have some monsters on your hands in no time!
@francismeowgannou53222 жыл бұрын
@@matthewking2209 thank you very much!
@tamardevane66352 жыл бұрын
I thought the value of the tea was in the bacteria, adding to they microbiolme in the soil. Plenty of bacteria in the soil, helps in the breakdown of the weeds and other micro particles in the soil. BTW there are ❤a lot more nutrients than NPK. Your test only proved that 2 of them were low. I have usually found that the tea is too stinky to use. I make it, than leave it there forever, but it is useful for breaking down seedy weeds. The seeds don’t regenerate after a few weeks in water
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
Yes there are more nutrients - but nitrogen and phosphorus are the ones that usually limit plant growth. Adding microbes to soil does not work - although a lot of people out there will tell you it does. kzbin.info/www/bejne/aneYpoKOnamieJo
@HollyOak Жыл бұрын
The bacteria in weed tea is anaerobic, but the soil need aerobic bacteria.
@triciac10197 ай бұрын
I hope someone can help me. I put pulled weeds in a garbage can in my garden. It over wintered, has been rained on, and now is moldy green. Should I drain it into another container, dilute it and use it in my vegetable garden?
@Owl4909 Жыл бұрын
funny i came to this today, i just asked about testing this brew on another channel. I make tea from rabbit manure ,,, i dont know if its better than just putting it around plants but it makes me feel better .
@whohash8312 Жыл бұрын
A compost-sipping CRAZY man! hehe. I love it. great info!
@wildedibles8192 жыл бұрын
I use comfrey most arnd always add molasses i didn't buy it yet this year and my brew is not very bubbly Ive never tested mine because i didn't buy or know i could buy a test Some nutes are water soluble but not all It be interesting to find out I use flowering plants like dandelion greens and flowers, comfrey,docks, ....i look around the garden and find say yarrow... sunchokes Ive tried adding strawberries and watermelon rinds and rotting berries it does make it smell better Diluting well depending on what needs it and how much i have 1:4 or 1:2 Depending on if something needs a good boost say a broken damaged plant Or if i want good flowering and fruits I use my weed tea for my weed too lol works great for me Oh ya banana peels too.... Its done in two weeks or shorter because the bubbles stop When making compost tea you want the bubbles because of the microbes I also heard mixing sugar water and adding it to your garden gets the microbes going and your garden will grow too so??? Maybe the two week brew would be better because they still have microbes at thier higest I reuse the same plant matter because it does lower in mass so i add more plants and mollassas and start over Ive done this for ...oh over five years easy now impoving every year i think anyway except forgetting the mollassas this year lol.... maybe thats a good thing i will have a look at it
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
"Some nutes are water soluble but not all" - all plant nutrients are water soluble.
@wildedibles8192 жыл бұрын
@@Gardenfundamentals1 the fibre in most cases is not water soluble except pectins in fruits So it would make sense that most of the plant matter is still there
@rendros6343 Жыл бұрын
I began doing weed tea just to get rid of / disable weed rests conteining seeds, disregarding its composting effective value
@pierreshasta14802 жыл бұрын
Always so interesting, once again, the proof that there are far too many people who give false information.👍👍
@irishk.1041 Жыл бұрын
I have always heard to put leaf mold into the mixture too. This mold is what helps to break down the ingredients of the bucket to produce micro-organisms that will benefit the plants through the soil?? You didn't say anything about putting leaf mold into the tea. Just wondering?? Years ago I used to make cow manure tea. My plants thought they had died and gone to heaven :)
@IronDruids2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I was just getting stuck in the trap of thinking this was something I should be doing next year. I have a bunch of broad leaf dock which people said could replace comfrey. It's so easy to get tricked into thinking something is more worthwhile than it is when everyone on youtube is saying it's great and powerful for your garden and definitely, surely will have noticeable results. But it sounds like it's just one of our modern day growing myths. I think I'm just going to throw them into my compost for some extra green material this fall.
@narinthebeardedalien29942 жыл бұрын
thats all fine and dandy but the anaerobic tea i made superboosted my plants and completely changed the hue of green the plant was. I think I'll take my chances with it seeing the results I've already experienced...
@amateur-alchemist2 жыл бұрын
The concept of fermented plant juice is based on propagation and concentration of beneficial symbiotic microbes, not NPK. Please check out this great summary of government funded peer reviewed research in this area by an actual scientist: kzbin.info/www/bejne/oH-Zq4qNjsuGapo
@jez-bird Жыл бұрын
@@narinthebeardedalien2994 I had a bunch of young broccoli plants and kohl rabi that were pale green and purple. And now they are all nice and green. I did nothing to them. They just found their footing in the soil.
@witekprytek9940 Жыл бұрын
If you have great rich soil then the tea probably won't do much more than application of compost or just mulching with cut down weeds. However if your soil is not great or starting new patch the tea would wonders in very short time. Most likely great crop in first season comparing to 2-4 season with compost/mulching. The tea is basically same thing as compost/mulch, but in next stage of evolution with nutrients available pretty much instantly without the need to wait few seasons for nutrients from mulch to become available.
@johnliberty3647 Жыл бұрын
I soak mine in urine after it’s filtered through charcoal in my biochar production process. Not sure what the NPK is but I get explosive growth when I use it. I use it straight on bananas and papaya. Everything else I dilute it with 75 to 90 percent water. Not going to test it but I get explosive growth. Haven’t burnt a plant yet. The biochar goes into the ground everytime I plant something.
@gilbertarzner2 жыл бұрын
What about aerobic bacteria with a air pump, would this be different? I have a lot of Mares tail and Mullein, which might bring a lot of minerals from deep down in the soil. They wouldn't register much on NPK tests, but might have a lot of the other nutrients.
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
Lots of ways to make it - but if it is not decomposed - the nutrients are still in the weeds.
@joeyl.rowland41536 ай бұрын
I would like to see that done by placing a air tube and stone with an air pump, and aerating that water over a 6 week period. My thoughts are the tea would likely have a high amount of calcium magnesium iron zinc sulfur and lesser amounts of some other minor nutrients such as boron or molybdenum. The advantage is using air there is little smell kind of like proper made compost the smell is not unpleasant. I also would like to know the levels of calcium magnesium and sulfur the First 3 micronutrients, NPK being macronutrients. That said even if those nutrients exist in the water are they in a form that is plant ready or does the soil microbes have to convert those nutrients for plant uptake? With anaerobic bacteria I am not certain that those bacteria will produce nutients that are plant ready, meaning your adding nutrients that may take 7 to 12 months for soil biology to convert into a plant ready nutrient. Plants live in symbiosis with soil bacteria and the plant and the bacteria feed each other.
@mr.pareto5116 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video you have saved me from wasting my time .I had planned to try this but I am now discouraged,.which isn't a bad thing if its not effective.
@canixrayyou2 жыл бұрын
I've seen a hand full of compost or leaf mould added to the bucket...would that make it better???
@Gardenfundamentals12 жыл бұрын
NO!
@aryanahr7887 Жыл бұрын
A year late but thank you for doing the analysis. I was contemplating on making weed tea for my coconut farm but the question of how much nutrients it contains has been bugging me. Thanks again for saving me from the stink! 😆
@Wolfgang34187 ай бұрын
Today is tomorrow evening and the result is: Very little N was found, but more then in nettle brew. Again I put fresh leaves of clover and dandelion in this brew to enhance nitrogen. Note that these testing sticks are very sensible. The highest reading is 250ppm in the case of nitrate, which is 0.025%. So if the reading is zero, it is really zero. Artificial fertilizer contain, say, 26% total N.
@doncc6080 Жыл бұрын
Have you done this with comfrey as many rave about it's benefits as a tea?
@kitsurubami6 ай бұрын
This is a really good video. Thank you! When you drop a dead weed or plant on the ground to decompose, does much of the nitrogen get released into the atmosphere? I held this belief for a long time, but now I'm questioning it, as no scientific method was applied. I simply saw the grass clipping or whatever turn from green to brown. Many people would say while making compost that things brown in appearance are often carbon rich, and green in appearance is nitrogen rich. I always believed that fresh grass clippings would be nitrogen rich, and that week old, dried in the sun with good aeration grass clippings, would be lacking that nitrogen containing mostly carbon at that point. Do you know the truth behind this? Based on what you said in the video about these elements being tied up in long molecule chains, I'm beginning to think that the transition from fresh cut green grass clippings to dried up crumbly old grass clippings might actually not have a big difference in nutrients and the availability of those nutrients to plants.
@rogerboeve46582 жыл бұрын
Ok. You mentioned comprey
@GarethLloyd-pj3hy2 ай бұрын
Thanks mate 👍
@000pps Жыл бұрын
I used to use nettle tea. I brew it each time for a few weeks in a closed container in the hot summer. My aim was not to create fertilizer, but to use it as pest control by spraying onto (and under) the leaves of the infected plants. It did work well against whiteflies and spider mites. As you say, it stinks terribly and when sprayed onto the infected plants the entire garden stank for a day or two. That was a big drawback for me. I am bringing this up here, because I think your process was quite different from my nettle rotting. After two days, the nettle tea started bubbling heavily. The bubbles created thick foam on top of the water. After few days there was no tiny little bit of green color anymore whereas your processed weed still looked half green and half brown. Also the clippings from other videos which you integrated to show the material at the end, showed brown stuff only and no green. So probably your tea did not heat up. You had fairly thick roots and main stems and I guess they did not process a lot in a month. Nettle tea is taken from the stems and leaves only which are quite thin and not sturdy at all. I squeezed a huge amount of nettle shoots in a fairly small container. After a few weeks no leaves were visible anymore and from the stems only the lower parts remained which were a bit "woody". Everything else was just fibers floating in the soup. But yes, creating stinky tea for fertilizing a garden is silly. Better just to leave weeds where you picked them (unless they already created seeds). All plant cuttings and other waste I run through the shredder and put it as mulch, so it composts in place.
@annebeignatborde1832 Жыл бұрын
Did you add anything to the nettle tea before spraying? I'm struggling with whiteflies 😢
@howardchambers9679 Жыл бұрын
@@annebeignatborde1832I add urea. It's going to stink anyway
@annebeignatborde1832 Жыл бұрын
@@howardchambers9679 ok thanks for the tip. Are white flies allergic to urea?
@howardchambers9679 Жыл бұрын
@@annebeignatborde1832 fresh pee. I think it's the ammonia but not entirely sure.
@annebeignatborde1832 Жыл бұрын
@@howardchambers9679I see. Well at least if it doesn't get rid of the white flies my flowers and veggies will benefit from a foliar fertilizer 🙂 I just hope the wind will be blowing in the right direction; towards my nextdoor neighbor's 😁
@angelaengbrecht563 Жыл бұрын
A couple of thoughts here... First, all of the reputable sources (from what I have seen) recommend FULL decomposition of the plant matter when making homemade weed-based fertilizer. Most estimate this to take about one full year's time. I'm wondering what sources told you otherwise? Also, your take on the inefficiencies of homemade fertilizer (i.e. that you would have to make a lot of it) is kind of missing the point for most people (permaculturists) who are using this type of fertilizer. The point isn't to make all of the fertilizer that you need, but rather to use all of the resources that you have. In this sense, most people using homemade weed fertilizer are looking for alternatives to throwing out plant material that has already gone to seed (in which case, they don't want to compost in a pile or "chop and drop"). I think this is an interesting test that you conducted, but it's a little misleading to dismiss all weed-based fertilizers as useless, when you really didn't let the plant matter fully decompose. I appreciate your spreading the knowledge that a "weed tea" brewed over the course of a week (of course) has no nutrients, but I don't know that it would be shocking news to many serious permaculturists...
@greenhorntenderfoot92619 ай бұрын
Thank you for spending the time to actually test this! I saw one of the videos in question and I immediately thought why didn’t he show a test.
@pedrowhack-a-mole67863 ай бұрын
Weed tea is basically liquid composting. But what those weed tea videos show is the disposing of the solids, where the majority of the remaining nutrients are still sequestered.
@RetroWolf934 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see you do a weed or compost tea and put a large sponge filter with generous bubbling. I think its the anerobic nature of the tea that makes it toxic when undeluted. Using biological filtration, sponge filter. You create the perfect environment for the breakdown of nitrogenous and other bio compounds.
@sunnybizz4857 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the research. I have portulaca, and lots of it. I want to soak it in water to extract nitrogen and pour it over my compost to speed it up. not sure
@sistergoldenhair22312 жыл бұрын
Great video. Thx for info.
@AndYourLittleDog2 жыл бұрын
This was really helpful. I’m making seaweed tea…guess I’d be better off composting it
@karlderouin9429 Жыл бұрын
What if we added a bit of leaf mold from the forest that’s full of good bacteria wouldn’t that help decomposition and make the macronutrients plant available and then maybe use a bubbler to make it aerobic
@Gardenfundamentals1 Жыл бұрын
The point is that the amount of nutrients never changes no matter what you do in the pail - so why bother.