AVOID THIS MISTAKE when making JADAM Wetting Agent

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2023
  • In this video, I show you step by step on how to make JADAM Wetting Agent
    JADAM Wetting Agent (JWA) is a pesticide that is critical in coating, wetting, and delivering the active ingredient into the target, it is a surfactant we use on our plants to control pests. This is a low cost method from the JADAM system to make your own natural pesticide.
    In this video I used dehumidifier water and I noticed at the end of the process, it did not yield the results I wanted for the final product. It is recommended to use Soft Water or Distilled Water and after using the dehumidifier water, I highly recommend only using the soft water or distilled water to make JWA.
    I show you how to make 5L of JADAM Wetting Agent, I used:
    .09L Canoloa Oil
    +
    160g Potassium Hydroxide (KOH) 90%
    +
    120mL of soft water or distilled water (initial)
    +
    4L of added soft water or distilled water
    No expiration date for JWA
    Apply early morning or sunset
    Improves pesticide-coating effect, increases pesticide effect
    Natural Farming Resources:
    JADAM Organic Farming amzn.to/461gnBB
    JADAM Organic PEST and DISEASE CONTROL amzn.to/3SrSIqx
    100 Herbs For Making JADAM Natural Pesticide amzn.to/47eL8Uw
    Video Equipment:
    Canon EOS M50 Camera amzn.to/3QN2ti8
    RØDE Auxiliary VideoMic GO amzn.to/3FK9QQT
    Aureday 74’’ Camera Tripod amzn.to/3QM6YcJ

Комментарии • 54

  • @suzannestack7784
    @suzannestack7784 Год назад +9

    I make pure castille liquid soap for use in my household. This looks exactly like liquid castille soap. I knew I could use it in the garden. Great to see more ways to use it.

  • @peligroy2k
    @peligroy2k Год назад +7

    I thought you quit farming!!... good to see you back!!

  • @Jeannette311
    @Jeannette311 Год назад +9

    As a soap maker, please use KOH outside and with safety goggles and a mask.
    I’m definitely going to try this method if I need to!

    • @SimpleEarthSelfReliance
      @SimpleEarthSelfReliance 7 месяцев назад

      This is key. With a pH of over 10, this is at far opposite side of acid, and can ruin your eyes if splashed (and burn skin). Be safe. Once created, it's great, though.

  • @jaymartin85
    @jaymartin85 Год назад +5

    Once made, you can use JWA to test future water to see if it's soft enough too.
    Cabbage and broccoli get attacked the most of most crops. It's good to use 3-4x a week. Or every 3 days. Keep up the good work Jon!

  • @chuckheppner4384
    @chuckheppner4384 Год назад +5

    I appreciate your humility, John. 🙏🏻
    "Vulnerability is a wonderful thing. We're all so afraid to be vulnerable in this world."
    Matisyahu

  • @nobodyreally
    @nobodyreally 9 месяцев назад +3

    Just a safety tip when you’re working with potassium hydroxide or sodium hydroxide. You’re supposed to add this stuff to the water and not the other way around.
    It’s said to be safer that way. I used an ice bath to help keep the reaction cooler when making soap.
    Also protective equipment isn’t a bad idea to have on. The stuff gets in your eyes, or on your skin it could burn you or blind you.

  • @mariajoseph9916
    @mariajoseph9916 Год назад +4

    I respect your honesty.

  • @ecobluefarms223
    @ecobluefarms223 Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing and keeping us from making same mistakes 🎉

  • @miriampletan2847
    @miriampletan2847 2 месяца назад

    I love that you’re showing failures.

  • @camperjack2620
    @camperjack2620 Год назад +2

    Mine is real thick right now, like maple syrup. I haven't waited the last day yet, I will check it tomorrow. It would be real nice, if you have a lot of experience with JADAM, if you could make a video on fabricating the water softener like he did in the book.

  • @SO-kv5cc
    @SO-kv5cc Год назад +1

    Just found your channel, great info thanks

  • @onLYbyM
    @onLYbyM Год назад +1

    thx john
    respect!

  • @mardirazzberry
    @mardirazzberry Год назад +2

    I made hard soap by accident, got nurvous and frustrated, needing 30 gal of water to break it down enough. I have soo much soap. Learning through mistakes 😅

  • @CannabinaTV
    @CannabinaTV 3 месяца назад

    Nice video, but i really recommend the use of protection equipment like googles, gloves and masks for the fumes.

  • @otrotland5377
    @otrotland5377 28 дней назад

    wow, great videos, Have you considered using a hose end sprayer like Jerry Bakers?

  • @kitchenGardenofficalchannel027
    @kitchenGardenofficalchannel027 Год назад +1

    Nice❤❤❤👍👍👍👍

  • @GrapeGrows
    @GrapeGrows 10 месяцев назад +3

    If you drill too hard, it will turn into a white cream. Add a little more water and let it sit for a few days. It will return to normal.

    • @SimpleEarthSelfReliance
      @SimpleEarthSelfReliance 7 месяцев назад

      Will try this. I think, being in a rush and using a blender, probably didn't help. Going to let it sit. Thanks for that.

  • @andrejofak4787
    @andrejofak4787 6 дней назад

    Thanks, would't it be easier to make higher potency liqid soap - KOH + canola oil, and add the soap to water when needed? As the rain water is soft and good for soap making it would be good for this aplication too. What do you think?

  • @zacharyking7729
    @zacharyking7729 Год назад +1

    would adding warm water help it disolve better?

  • @tyflores3779
    @tyflores3779 Месяц назад

    I see younused a home depot bucket..would a lowes bucket do the same? Respects 🤙

  • @raiseemuphomestead4988
    @raiseemuphomestead4988 11 месяцев назад

    I made this with rain water, but used your recipe And mine was cloudy as well. Oh well it still works

    • @GrapeGrows
      @GrapeGrows 10 месяцев назад

      If you drill too hard, it will turn into a white cream. Add a little more water and let it sit for a few days. It will return to normal.

  • @DuyNguyen-lo2mm
    @DuyNguyen-lo2mm 26 дней назад

    Can we use large stainless steel cooking pot instead of 5 gallon bucket?

  • @SimpleEarthSelfReliance
    @SimpleEarthSelfReliance 7 месяцев назад

    I still often end up with it being milky white, and I use the same (same batch) of pure, filtered rainwater every time. It's finnicky.

  • @ylee9507
    @ylee9507 Год назад +2

    I used distilled water and it turned out, like yours, milky

    • @TheRexona1986
      @TheRexona1986 Год назад

      Maybe more oil, less Potassium.

    • @GrapeGrows
      @GrapeGrows 10 месяцев назад

      If you drill too hard, it will turn into a white cream. Add a little more water and let it sit for a few days. It will return to normal.

  • @sk8ercory94
    @sk8ercory94 Год назад +3

    Should have the water in the bucket first

  • @josephlarsen
    @josephlarsen Год назад +2

    i'm surprised the water didn't work, since the water from a dehumidifier is basically just distilled water

    • @IjeomaThePlantMama
      @IjeomaThePlantMama Год назад +1

      Same, I wonder what the difference was? I used a PPM in both a distilled water jug and my dehumidifier water and both were at 0 ppm

  • @macabea4837
    @macabea4837 Год назад +1

    just finished a batch with all components 99 % pure and distilled water and have the same result as yours

    • @IjeomaThePlantMama
      @IjeomaThePlantMama Год назад

      Same result meaning yours also came out cloudy?

    • @GrapeGrows
      @GrapeGrows 10 месяцев назад

      If you drill too hard, it will turn into a white cream. Add a little more water and let it sit for a few days. It will return to normal.

    • @hawperify
      @hawperify 6 месяцев назад

      I think it can also happen if some of the tools you use to make it have mineral deposits. I used a large stainless pot, that I had previously used to boil potatoes for JMS. I had cleaned the pot, but I think there was still some mineral deposits on it. Even with distilled water, that batch came out cloudy and milky. Just made a new batch in a fresh bucket and made sure all other tools didn't have mineral deposits. It's in the final stages now, but is that nice transparent golden color.

  • @mfmr200
    @mfmr200 7 месяцев назад

    does it work the same? if it work the same i just use tap water. 😂😂😂

  • @miriampletan2847
    @miriampletan2847 2 месяца назад +1

    So far, it looks like you’re starting to make soap.

  • @kdogg071
    @kdogg071 2 месяца назад

    AMSR alert 🚨 at 6:51 and 8:05

  • @carlosmontoya2485
    @carlosmontoya2485 5 месяцев назад +1

    Water was still hard, not soft.

  • @arnoldbdb3617
    @arnoldbdb3617 4 месяца назад

    Why he look like that in the cover photo 😂

  • @DrNedu
    @DrNedu 9 месяцев назад +1

    You are making soap

  • @otrotland5377
    @otrotland5377 10 месяцев назад

    Have you ever had it get hard as a hard bar of soap?

  • @kateonianlaw1127
    @kateonianlaw1127 Год назад +6

    I mean no disrespect, but this is pretty much just a modification of making liquid hand/dish soap. I am curious with the fancy names associated with the original creators of these products but not their touted efficiency.
    I understand that there is no ill intentions behind these videos, and I find them interesting, but these are just marketed differently by different names in modern marketplace. This is what I would find equivalent to Ivory dish soap, which is biodegradable, not technically organic in semantics (I am okay with using sparingly in my organic gardening), but something that is very effective in killing insects. When necessary, I usually use 1 Tablespoon to 1 gallon of water of Ivory liquid dish soap to kill wasps that unfortunately were not forced to relocate soon enough and are a present danger to human health.
    The Ivory solution is very effective dispatcher of all other insects as well.
    I appreciated the video nonetheless.

    • @jarredkushnerd13
      @jarredkushnerd13 Год назад +3

      When a label specifies biodegradable do we know how long that process takes? JWA is 5 days

    • @kateonianlaw1127
      @kateonianlaw1127 Год назад +4

      @@jarredkushnerd13 It is true that commercial labeling does make biodegradable claims as marketing, but I am sure there is some obscure literature on how long it takes for theirs to break down, and with modern scientific research it is also probably behind a paywall. Yet from experience, it seems comparable, but cannot say for certain. I appreciate you sharing the timescale of breakdown as pleasantly informative.
      I would love to try an adequate comparison in the future when available, but until then thanks for the information.

    • @jarredkushnerd13
      @jarredkushnerd13 Год назад

      @Kateonian Law if you ever want some JWA, let me know. I'll send you some

    • @tylerhartley8531
      @tylerhartley8531 Год назад

      This formula bio degrades in 3 days. Ivory and dawn take 3+weeks

    • @SeanOrfila
      @SeanOrfila Год назад +3

      JWA is also known as Dr Bronners Castile Soap, but making JWA is $5-10 for a massive supply! It can be used in garden but also made into soaps, laundry detergent and even toothpaste. You are correct in your assumption, but those companies also borrowed this idea too

  • @GlenCollinsHiveMind
    @GlenCollinsHiveMind Год назад +1

    Surly using an inorganic acid like Potassium Hydroxide is not a natural farming method? Spraying that on veg your going to eat can't be good for your inside's 🤷‍♂️

    • @Creative_soil
      @Creative_soil 11 месяцев назад +1

      Sodium hydroxide can be made from hardwood ashes. It's also used in preserving olives.

    • @siyabongandlovu
      @siyabongandlovu 9 месяцев назад +2

      Potassium hydroxide is not an acid it is a strong base, and you can find it in nature