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Seriously Upgrade Your Garden (Do This To Your Compost!) with Noah Sanders

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  • Опубликовано: 26 май 2023
  • We are getting ready to release our brand new Freeze Drying Masterclass! To get special free training, the best price ever offered on the class, and a chance to win a freeze dryer, CLICK HERE to join the class waitlist NOW! classes.homest...
    Welcome to another episode of the Pantry Chat. This week we have Noah Sanders from @RedeemingtheDirtNoahSanders with us to help us troubleshoot common compost problems.
    For answers to even more compost problems as well as to the most FAQs on my compost videos, check out the blog post here: homesteadingfa...
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    MORE ABOUT US!
    WELCOME! We're so glad you're here! We are Josh and Carolyn Thomas. Together with our eleven children, we are The Homesteading Family where we’re living a self-sustainable life in beautiful North Idaho. Let us welcome you and show you a bit about us here: bit.ly/HFWelcom...
    Grow, Preserve & Thrive with us!
    Visit us on our blog: www.homesteadi...
    Facebook at / homesteadingfamily
    Instagram: / homesteadingfamily
    Rumble: rumble.com/Hom...
    A few highlights you don't want to miss are our FREEBIES!!
    Healthy Healing at Home - Learn how to confidently use herbal medicine in your home with this FREE 4 video workshop: homesteadingfa...
    Your Best Loaf - A Free 4 video workshop teaching you how to make great bread at home, every time, regardless of the recipe you are using: homesteadingfa...
    Meals on Your Shelf - Can along with me! Learn to can and put jars of a delicious meal on your pantry shelf with this FREE video series: homesteadingfa...
    FREE PDF DOWNLOADS:
    - Homesteading Family's Favorite Holiday Recipes - Grab all of our family’s favorite holiday recipes. homesteadingfa...
    - 5 Steps to a More Self-Sufficient Life - Simple steps anyone can take wherever they are to start a more self-sufficient lifestyle. homesteadingfa...
    - Thrive Wellness Checklist - A simple guide for healthy living: homesteadingfa...
    - Permaculture for Your Homestead- An introduction to permaculture with some strategies for applying it to one’s homestead and garden.
    homesteadingfa...
    - Carolyn’s Cottage Garden herb list - Carolyn’s favorite herbs for growing at home.
    homesteadingfa...
    - Carolyn’s Make-Ahead Breakfast Casseroles - These easy casseroles are a life-saver for busy weeks! homesteadingfa...
    - Your FREE Guide to Preserving Eggs - Grab your guide to preserving eggs with multiple methods. homesteadingfa...
    - 5 Steps to a Healthy Garden - Get an explanation of what makes healthy soil and 5 steps you can take to improve your garden. homesteadingfa...
    - Save the Crumbs- Several Recipes for using bread leftovers, a less committal entry to bread than the workshop. homesteadingfa...
    - Fearless Fermenting- A simple guide on basic lacto-ferments. homesteadingfa...
    - Fermenting Tomatoes - Easiest and fastest tomato preservation: homesteadingfa...
    - Preserving Culinary Herbs - Downloadable, step-by-step directions to drying, freezing, and salting culinary herbs. homesteadingfa...
    - Render Your Own Lard - Grab these easy instructions on how to render your own lard. homesteadingfa...
    - Grandma Lynn's Blueberry Buckle - A delicious dessert anytime of year: homesteadingfa...
    #compost #composting #thermalcomposting

Комментарии • 42

  • @user-dm1tv6nl2e
    @user-dm1tv6nl2e Год назад +10

    Compost for us has been lawn trimmings, fall leaves, and a bit of chicken bedding. I'm lazy and don't mix often enough, so I doubt it gets terribly hot. Add chicken bedding in spring, then the rest of it the rest of the year, and spread the pile the following spring. Turns black each time and is full of worms, so no complaints.

    • @nikkitobin8356
      @nikkitobin8356 Год назад

      I'm with you ... I don't do a compost pile ... I compost in place ... That's y the true nature of mother nature

  • @deborahjoyvalentine6180
    @deborahjoyvalentine6180 Год назад +2

    Living in typical American homes, eating from the franchised food supply, w e have lost so much information about basic natural survival on Earth. I am so thankful for all the info we are rediscovering. Thank you for sharing.

  • @AM-br4ix
    @AM-br4ix Год назад +12

    About 40 minutes in before they get to basics on compost

    • @pennyobernyer7914
      @pennyobernyer7914 Год назад +2

      Thank You !!!!

    • @bridgetwilkins312
      @bridgetwilkins312 Год назад +1

      This guy is always like that! Thanks for the warning.

    • @Alpha1Farms
      @Alpha1Farms Год назад +3

      Guy definitely uses a lot of words to share a small amount of information. Ran about 10 minutes for each question.

    • @sandyl.2646
      @sandyl.2646 Год назад +1

      I totally agree, he's TOO darn smart! SIMPLIFY PLEASE

  • @sandralafond3818
    @sandralafond3818 Год назад +5

    Josh, thank you so much for this podcast. We live in the burbs. Nice sized lot, but still limited. We've been static composters for years, but we're amping up our gadens, and need more ammending, now. I'm intrigued by the idea of vermicomposting, and will be looking into that on Noah's site. Great show!

  • @ronevergrow8319
    @ronevergrow8319 Год назад +1

    Praise God the Most High 🙌

  • @skinnyWHITEgoyim
    @skinnyWHITEgoyim Год назад +4

    I cover my garden rows with shredded leaves. The walkways I cover with thick layers of grass clippings. It looks pretty cool too. I added pelleted chicken manure in the beginning of the season but won't be adding anything further as the season progresses.

  • @ruthcalsada1440
    @ruthcalsada1440 Год назад +1

    This is awesome material and I will watch/listen to it over and over again.

  • @David_Sammons
    @David_Sammons Год назад +1

    Excellent! I learned so much!

  • @pamelaparks8921
    @pamelaparks8921 Год назад +1

    Awesome!!! Love this information!!

  • @kate739
    @kate739 Год назад

    excellent video Josh, thanks. I do not have the land/space availability as you do but I have used a lot of your ideas and knowledge to what I can do. I also have used One Yard Revolution - an impressive gardener in rather cold areas. I mostly just do the static composting, can't turn it anymore, and while it does take longer the end result is still the same. thanks and tell carolyn hello. miss her pleasant teaching ways. oh, I also will take the bones with water in the crock pot for a long time, they break up well and just toss them in the pile. You are a weakth of knowledge Josh and Carolyn thanks so much for all you do and share.

  • @k.p.1139
    @k.p.1139 Год назад +1

    Ummm, Somebody would be happy campers to come do a compost class in my yard! 😆 I have a 7 year old compost pile in one corner of the yard. From that, this mass of grass has taken hold ( some call it Johnson grass) This grass ( up to 5 feet tall) is spreading like crazy! NOTHING so far has taken it out! Boiling water- HA! I even tried 350 degree oil, neither even wilted it. Maybe I should lay it down and start piling more and more on top of it and let it get super hot just to kill it off....Or get a goat! 😆

    • @taxat10n1sth3ft
      @taxat10n1sth3ft Год назад

      I vote, get the goats. They will eat what needs to be eaten and turn it into fertilizer very efficiently. Maybe get 2 so you can make more and eat them, it's one of the more noteworthy benefits of having a place where you could keep goats...

  • @trulylynn9941
    @trulylynn9941 Год назад

    Get the Jadam book and you can make your own fertilizer, pesticide and fungicides from nature.

  • @cynderelli2
    @cynderelli2 Год назад +1

    Wow , had no idea an Alabamian like him was here.

  • @nancyschwartz5665
    @nancyschwartz5665 Год назад +1

    WoW!

  • @susanbrown3358
    @susanbrown3358 Год назад +2

    I don't have the space to make a big pile, I have no animals to bring able to use their manure. I only have a small backyard that I'm trying to make for my small garden

  • @jeanpaeth7424
    @jeanpaeth7424 Год назад +2

    Does wood chips steal nitrogen from a raised bed if mixed in...or do we just use it for mulching?

    • @skinnyWHITEgoyim
      @skinnyWHITEgoyim Год назад +2

      Any carbon source like wood chips will definitely tie up nitrogen in the soil if mixed in. It's great as a mulch though

  • @kimberlyhughes5475
    @kimberlyhughes5475 Год назад

    An extremely useful tool is a compost thermometer. But how hot is TOO hot? Mine has been 160°F for two days now, so what should i do...or should i just wait it out?

  • @dravonwalker2352
    @dravonwalker2352 Год назад

    It’d be awesome if you reached out to Matt Powers. He just came out with soil microscopy book focusing on all the life in our soils. He’s a great source of information and he’s entertaining to boot.

  • @KumiOriFarm
    @KumiOriFarm Год назад

    What do you think of the Johnson-Su composting method?

  • @KumiOriFarm
    @KumiOriFarm Год назад +1

    Question: Since I live in a fairly northern latitude about 48.5N, and most composting material is available later in the growing season, how does one finish compost before the temperature get to freezing?

    • @skinnyWHITEgoyim
      @skinnyWHITEgoyim Год назад +1

      If it's gets cold too soon try piling hay around the pile to insulate it and keep the heat in and cold out.

  • @ericb724
    @ericb724 Год назад

    Thanks for all the wonderful information been doing hot compost for a few years this lets me know that so far I'm on the right track🙂

  • @cherylanon5791
    @cherylanon5791 Год назад

    i love the backgound info, but over 9 minutes in, there has been no mention of what the title says....

    • @pennyobernyer7914
      @pennyobernyer7914 Год назад +1

      Go to around 35 minutes for the compost information . . . .

  • @Kyle900t
    @Kyle900t Год назад

    In nature, there is no god.

  • @smokerise
    @smokerise Год назад

    They have never given me a problem. I use them for mulch, I also have a compost pile with cleanings from my chicken house, which is a lot of dried pine shavings.
    Leaves are free gift, don't burn them, throw them in your mulch pike...you won't regret it. The only "unnatural" thing I mix in my raised beds is 10-10-10 fertilizer I get from home depot.
    I live in Georgia, this red clay is not friendly to the small gardener, since I switched to raised beds, I've been very happy with my yields and they are so much easier to maintain.

    • @user-dm1tv6nl2e
      @user-dm1tv6nl2e Год назад +1

      Do you have to age the chicken manure for a certain amount of time? I'd heard it needs to either sit for a year or be hot composted to kill diseases

    • @smokerise
      @smokerise Год назад

      @B yes, it goes from coop to pile, sets for a year. Same with my horse crap. Never put fresh manure in your garden. In the meantime I'm also throwing in leaves, small twigs, shredded paper. Never food scraps though, that draws in varmints.

    • @user-dm1tv6nl2e
      @user-dm1tv6nl2e Год назад +1

      @Smoke Rise sounds the same as me, minus the twigs. Nice to hear someone else doing pretty much the same. All (applicable) food scraps go to the chickens, rabbit manure goes straight on the garden. Thanks for the reply!

    • @smokerise
      @smokerise Год назад

      @@user-dm1tv6nl2e lives a garden...dig it!
      🤘