Cool, also woodchip for Johnon Sue compost bioreactor, some freinds have just created the most biodiverse compost ever recoreded with this method, they also added seaweed and bassalt i believe, i beleive hedgerows could be food corridoors as well as more traditional uses, great edge effect for many miles, could also inoculate woodchip in hedgerow and inoculate logs, hedge is a good place i reckon for mushrooms
Interesting but after very many years of burning my brash after hedging I now have a total no burn policy. Find room somewhere for pushing it up in piles,birds nest and gain much protection from predators and when you see half the world burning you feel your doing something positive. Think hedgehogs, toads and so much more.
Queimar matéria orgânica é um erro. Você pode triturar a matéria orgânica e por sobre o solo, para que com a decomposição, se forme o adubo para as plantas ou triturar e fazer compostagem.❤❤❤
Its a good video, all the right ideas and intentions. But can we, for the love of whatever, stop calling it "biochar" like it is some magical thing? Its charcoal. Its made by the same process (if you go down to chemistry), from the same feedstock and afterward is 100% indistinguishable from charcoal. If you pour compost liquid into it, its inoculated charcoal, but charcoal nontheless.
Yes, I thought biochar was made by heating at high temperatures (compared with charcoal) in the absence of, or very limited, oxygen. That's (so I've read) is supposedly what makes it more porous, containing more minerals, more environmentally friendly and much longer lasting than charcoal. I've seen quite a few "biochars" that look like charcoal to me.
Cool, also woodchip for Johnon Sue compost bioreactor, some freinds have just created the most biodiverse compost ever recoreded with this method, they also added seaweed and bassalt i believe, i beleive hedgerows could be food corridoors as well as more traditional uses, great edge effect for many miles, could also inoculate woodchip in hedgerow and inoculate logs, hedge is a good place i reckon for mushrooms
That was great I am jealous. I haven't been part of a good farm burn in ages.
Prática totalmente errada! 😢
@@mirleydamazio628just curious what you prefer?
Edit: I just read your other comment and generally agree.
Interesting but after very many years of burning my brash after hedging I now have a total no burn policy. Find room somewhere for pushing it up in piles,birds nest and gain much protection from predators and when you see half the world burning you feel your doing something positive. Think hedgehogs, toads and so much more.
Informative video. Can I ask where you got your kiln from? Or did you make it?
well done
It helps maybe when you shredded it before to compound it, what do you think about it?
Patience is a virtue……….
Queimar matéria orgânica é um erro. Você pode triturar a matéria orgânica e por sobre o solo, para que com a decomposição, se forme o adubo para as plantas ou triturar e fazer compostagem.❤❤❤
Its a good video, all the right ideas and intentions.
But can we, for the love of whatever, stop calling it "biochar" like it is some magical thing?
Its charcoal. Its made by the same process (if you go down to chemistry), from the same feedstock and afterward is 100% indistinguishable from charcoal.
If you pour compost liquid into it, its inoculated charcoal, but charcoal nontheless.
Yes, I thought biochar was made by heating at high temperatures (compared with charcoal) in the absence of, or very limited, oxygen. That's (so I've read) is supposedly what makes it more porous, containing more minerals, more environmentally friendly and much longer lasting than charcoal. I've seen quite a few "biochars" that look like charcoal to me.
Doesn’t sound nearly so posh though does it ?