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It is fun to create too. Please subscribe if you have a chance (Thanks!) As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. Please subscribe as it really helps me in making videos.
Great video, one thing that you forgot to mention is that you shouldn't use galvanized metal because of the zinc fumes which are very dangerous to the health.
I get to make lots of biochar come spring. I heat with wood in a large furnace. Lots of times, with the damper closed, the wood I put in in the evening doesn't always burn to ash completely by morning when I clean the ash pan and furnace bottom. I have a huge pile of ash to sift in spring. It should yield lots of biochar I intend to use in the new raised beds I am building along with a hugelkultur type fill with some homemade compost. Very interested to see how this works out. Feeling pretty good about it. Thanks Gary. Take care.
That sounds great. Keep an eye on the pH with lots of ash. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I bought biochar this year for my new raised beds. And, I used what is called Hegelkulture method to save dirt and my results were great. Now, I have to make sure it is ready for Spring.
Ill be working on some ideas for this. Biochar is the long game. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I really appreciate this video. I have very sandy soil. I have an in ground garden and every year I’m adding what I can to improve and build it up. Another channel/ Market Gardner suggested I add bio char and now I have idea in just how to do it!
So that would be a great use for the biochar. Good luck. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Great video! I'm gonna try my hand at biochar this spring, or summer. I've tried it once and it worked great but I'm still looking for the easiest way to do it, and I think you're on to something!!! Thanks for sharing
We always have fires in the early spring so I will drop a can in. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I love playing with fire, it runs in the family. I have watched videos of store bought biochar also being good for the lawn. I need to do further research. Thank you for this video on how to make biochar.
Hi Gary, I add bio char each year early spring..usually begining of March. Mostly in my containers and any extra is scattered in the in ground rows. I seems to help with releasing nutrients slowly. And some moisture control. I've read you can use bio char to help remeadate soil that has alot of fertilizer salts. Will add it to the tomatoes. Blessings.
Yeah looks like a slow thing you do over the years. Ill make it when I have fires. Just wanted to convey its not a must have been more of a kind of cool to make. Lol.
Great video and explanation. I've been playing with biochar. I built a TLUD kiln and use tree company chips as fuel. I have to dry the chips for 3 weeks on racks but it burns super clean and takes about an hr to do a 55 gallon drum. I end up with about 1/2 the drum of char after the cook. I'm not sold its any kind of miracle cure but it's fun to make lol
So fun. It will hold nutrients and moisture but is probably more valuable for needy soil. Nice set up! Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
The work. You might have to adjust the hole but they work. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Its a fun experiment but I think it has limited value. Ill be testing it out Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
so BASICALLY :)...as a scientist myself, this video is very cool! I love the videos you make where you explain how things that we use in the garden work. If only I wasn't in Northern California, I would make this right away!
I think I like watching the fire and gasses escape more than the finished product! Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Please consider posting your videos on Rumble as well, I have read posts that it pays a bit better and people are flocking to it. The information you share is so important, everyone should be taking the time to learn as we prepare for the next growing season.
Thanks. Ill be working on that soon. I need more biochar Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I bought hardwood charcoal to prepare for next Spring while i build up biochar that i make over the winter. I have then in 5gal buckets and plan to leave outside. In Wisconsin, it will freeze. Will the freezing hurt the micro biome starting in there now? I added things to inoculate it earlier
Recommend audiobook "Burn." Biochar for gardening is just the beginning! I put pee and fish emulsion in mine. Can't believe I missed this vid of yours!!
Thanks Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop (My Shop) for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com The Rusted Garden 'Scan & Grow' Collection (My Seed and Garden Shop) Just scan the QR code and watch a planting video: www.therustedgarden.com/search?type=product&q=qr Plus support The Rusted Garden by subscribing and using my Amazon Store Front link when shopping for anything on Amazon www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden. As an Amazon Associate I earn from any qualified purchases, not just items I link. You can also find items I use or discuss in videos, by checking out my Amazon Storefront for cameras, fertilizer, pest management, shade cloth, seed starting supplies, books and more! Earn 15% by becoming a Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop Affiliate. Some people are using it for their social media followings and some people are using it for a fund raiser for schools and sport teams. To sign up... use this link to our shop and click the MORE tab on the green bar and select TRG Affiliate Program www.therustedgarden.com/ Or use this link to go directly to our TRG Affiliate Program sign up the-rusted-garden.goaffpro.com/create-account
Question: can you just use charcoal? I found some in the bottom of the walls in my basement when I removed the bottom board. It use to be a coal room in my 100 yr old house. I'd love to just put that in the garden. How much would you put in a 4x8 garden bed?
Wood charcoal can be crushed and used. But it is not a must have. I am just sprinkling it lightly across the top. Something I will do as I make it. Nothing heavy. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs at www.therustedgarden.com & Please Ring the Bell (next to subscribe) to get immediate real-time video notifications. Thanks
It is fun to make. I am going to use it in different places. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
VERY old school... thousands of years old school. We’re just rediscovering its effectiveness. Gary does a good job in his tutorial. So many others have lots of BS and misinformation.
Fantastic ! I have been wanting to do this in a simple manner for months. Does anyone have a suggestion of how to access metal paint cans that are not galvanized ? All paint is sold in plastic cans or pouches locally.
So I got mine at home depot. But I had to burn plastic out from the inside. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Interesting. That's effectively a flameless thermal oxidizer. The only oxidizer available is the O2 that it started with. If you're able to take a torch to the charcoal and get it to burn a bit then there are still some traces of remaining nutrition. Thanks for the video!
I use the dust and small pieces of lump charcoal from the bottom of my charcoal barrel each spring. Good use for something that does not work will in the grill.
I think the biggest advantage is that it is an inert porous amendment that can really help with soil structure. If you have clay that really smothers soil life this can be a way to try and remediate the soil. I think if you have good soil already this doesn’t make a huge difference since obviously it’s not a “fertilizer”
I take the char out of my wood stove when I clean it out, but it in an enamel pot with a lid, save it, now I know what to do with it, inoculate it. THANK YOU! Saving my urine, I’ll just dump it in there and ferment all winter!!
That works. Good luck, Earn 15% by becoming a Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop Affiliate. Some people are using it for their social media followings and some people are using it for a fund raiser for schools and sport teams. To sign up... use this link to our shop and click the MORE tab on the green bar and select TRG Affiliate Program www.therustedgarden.com/ Or use this link to go directly to our TRG Affiliate Program sign up the-rusted-garden.goaffpro.com/create-account Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop (My Shop) for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Plus support The Rusted Garden by subscribing and using my Amazon Store Front link when shopping for anything on Amazon www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden. As an Amazon Associate I earn from any qualified purchases, not just items I link. You can also find items I use or discuss in videos, by checking out my Amazon Storefront for cameras, fertilizer, pest management, shade cloth, seed starting supplies, books and more!
I use wood ash regularly. There is a recent video on it on my channel from last month. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Thanks Please subscribe as it really helps me & please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim.
Going off topic here I have a dozen or so raised beds . Some newer ones some older ones . Last October I put 2 or 3 inches of mushroom compost on them . Then a couple of inches straw . Lately I have been hearing a lot negativity about seed germination . I live in eastern pa zone 5 .just wandering if you had a thought . Till it in leave it alone ? Any info would be appreciated thanks.
I have to have a lot of large containers and planters in my garden due to large paved areas (and it’s a small garden anyway)...but even the big long and deep planters dry out rapidly in summer and the soil goes hydrophobic. Will this biochar help the containers hold moisture against a blaring sun??? It’s certainly something I think I need to try...every little helps.
It will. Biochar at creation is hydrophobic (wont accept water easily for those that may not know) so it has to go through 10-14 days of inoculation. Which is water, nutrients and microbiology. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I seen someone say you can buy a cheap bag of charcoal from the store break it up and put in your garden for biochar. How do you feel about that 8 dont know enough about it reason why im asking. Thank for sharing your videos very informative you do a awesome job.
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN oh yeah. I love that you show us ways that can save the first year I spent 800$ on potting mix for containers and I got mosaic on beans and cukes and well tomatoes had something but I had to throw away all that mix and re-buy all the next year. So yes gardening can cost now I garden 3 different ways so if I got to throw away my potting mix at least ill still have raised beds and my ground garden to grow in the next year if I dont have money to buy the stuff to make a potting mix which I do make because of the amount of containers I have to fill.
@@charliewilliams8794 you don't have to throw away all your soil after you spent all that money on it, keep it. You can plant different crops the next season and after that you can recharge/revitalize the soil by either adding organic fertilizers ( sea 90, bone and or blood meal powder, clean organic chicken, cow or horse manure etc. ) or by mixing it into your compost bin. Look into making your own soil by making compost or leaf mold from kitchen scraps and local materials around you ( leaves, tree mulch from local tree trimming companies around you, spent coffee grounds from Starbucks or any coffee shop, etc ) you don't have to spend money to get good soil, but it takes a lot of time and effort...u can start a worm bin as well for worm castings...this is all free or very low cost but takes a lot of time and patience to get good results...sorry this was long just wanna share all of what I learned by watching all these videos and doing it for myself and seeing that it works I just want to pass it on. Good soil is the first step, but it without we have nothing. In a nutshell look in vermicomposting ( worms ) biochar, hugulkulture, leaf compost and regular compost for different ways to make or enrich your soul. Cheers!
@@ianfrancisledesma4431 thank you for sharing all you've learned im here to learn so I dont mind it being long lol. I was told to throw my potting mix away because I had the mosaic virus. Im trying to compost now getting seed happy made a mistake and didn't check if it was mosaic virus resistant and now its got it and I have like 30 10 gal bags of mix that I have no idea what to do with because they say throw away but I've read that it can stay in soil for 2 years and if its wet 1 month I wonder if thats the same with potting mix?
Been using potash on my tomatoes. They love it. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I’ve looked into BC and the making of it and it’s use. Ordinary BBQ hardwood lump charcoal (NOT the bricketts that have a binder added) is the same thing as that expensive stuff. In Canada we have a brand called Royal Oak but you may need to smash it smaller in a bag with a hammer. Of course you have to activate or charge it prior to use, the most economical is human urine. In my research I also found that if you have already fertile soil it will add or do nothing to improve it. Bruce in Ontario, Canada
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN just a caution galvanized or chrome gives off toxins when heated that may be captured by the charcoal created. As with all things it a small percentage of what’s in your soil, what is taken up by what parts of the plants and if ingested how much is retained and how much is passed out and any accumulated or long term, genetic issues. All things in moderation including chemical fertilizers some ppl don’t understand that the world needs food and would the purists want to condemn others ...
Hi Gary! Thanks for the video. I have a question about the container options. I read various articles about the leaching of toxic chemicals when being burned, such as Pressure Treated wood, PVC etc etc, and I thought I read something about Galvanized metal (such as those 10-15 gallon outdoor trash cans) not being safe to burn stuff in. I am paranoid now about those chemicals leaching into the char, which as discussed, is great at holding onto stuff. Any chance you can provide some clarity on this topic? Also, when I looked at some paint cans, most of them say they are "lined", but I am not clear on what that actually means. Should I try to find a specific type? Also, is standard 'Non-Treated' lumber scraps safe to burn? I have lots of 2x4 & 2x6 scraps laying around from my bed frames that I am trying to figure out the best way to use or dispose. Thank you in advance. PS. I do not know how to 'Search in the comments' in RUclips otherwise I would have done that before posting.
So I know you can burn off galvanization. But the idea is how much. While I can't say how much actually comes into play with trash cans, I also can't find how much would then go in the garden. Often it is nothing to worry about. Dont burn pressure treated lumber or PVC. The fumes arent good. I burned the lining off my cans first. Non treated lumber is fine to burn. That is the issue that people say this leaches. But never provide the facts and quantities. Check out our new Fall Gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com
Also I wanted to mention that Luke from M.I. Gardner said that some of his subscribers were unsubscribed by RUclips. So maybe ask your subscribers to make sure they are still subscribed and pass it along?
Interesting. I know they remove dead accounts once a year. I see that yearly. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
It can. The char would pull in nutrients Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for seeds, seed starting supplies, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com & Checkout my quick and to point 2 minute (or sow) TRG Gardening Tips playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLMsTQWKi63STRub6SgaV6PlB9-O1ooM5l
Im with you. Ill most likely make this when I have fires at night. Soak it. And toss it on compost over the years. You idea is sound. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Using wood chips and forest litter, my charcoal makes excellent Biochar without any pulverizing to make it smaller. Leaving the pores intact is the point of this amendment and crushing it makes no sense to me. I appreciate not having the extra handling requirement and potential carbon dust inhalation hazard others are dealing with enhancing their gardens. Freeze and thaw cycles over time bust the Biochar further while it’s in the ground. No mess. No-crush works fine for me.
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So if biochar 'holds' the nutrients in through adsorption, when does it release those nutrients to benefit the soil? Charcoal has adsorption properties, which are beneficial in removing or blocking Microbiol impurities; it does not release those impurities...Activating it increases its porosity allowing it to adsorb much more nutrients or impurities. Please explain
Roots can grow into it. The 'Rusted Garden Red' Vertical Gardening Towers are Back for a Limited Time! Use the Discount Code THERUSTEDGARDEN on GreenStalk 'Vertical Tier Systems'. Use this link and enter my code for the discount store.greenstalkgarden.com/?afmc=therustedgarden or this short link lddy.no/4eal
Biomass charcoal. Basically yes charcoal. It would be as it is wood based charcoal left after the fire. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
I thought you had to expand the pores by hitting it with water while extremely hot. (rapid expansion to steam) That makes it activated charcoal as opposed to regular charcoal. Am I mistaken?
You can expand them more that way for sure. And the hotter the fire, the difference in pores. Bringing a fire to embers and dousing it is better for that in my opinion. That is a way to make biochar too. I would not recommend opening this hot. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
So with nutrients forever. Microbiology will live as long as their is moisture in it. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Biochar, is it same as the ash in the trash can when I go burn some lumber scraps or boxes or junk mail? Are they same thing? Do I need to make biochar or what about the charcoal when I go barbeque on my grill?
Ash is different and has lots of other stuff in it that is good for the garden like potassium. I have videos on using ash. Biochar is the actual charcoal that is made, not ash. Grills that burn charcoal or wood with no additives makes good ash. But dont use it if it has additives. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
When you burn 🔥 the wood what comes out is hydrogen and methane and CO the one is dominantly highest gas byproduct is hydrogen from the water 💦 in the wood when you heat it reacts with the carbon and take some carbon with 4 hydrogen to create methane and the rest as H2 and starts burning both with methane
Thanks for the info Please subscribe as it really helps me & please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim.
It might if you use a plant based litter, but there might be some disease type organisms in it. Regular cat litter would not be good for the garden, it’s made of clay.
Urine is good for composting. But I dont know about cat urine via litter. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN Yep, I've only done it with chicken and turkey bones, but I suppose it would work with other bones as well if they could be chopped up small enough to get into the container.
Actually you can. My only concern is that you have to make sure you fully process it to charcoal and not somewhere in transition. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Although biochar works by capturing carbon and that keeps the soil fertile for thousands of years doesn't it still add nutrients to the soil but only for the first year or 2 because of the nutrients in the stuff you used to make biochar?
It might have some phosphorous or potassium but not a lot. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop at www.therustedgarden.com for seeds, starting supplies, neem oil, peppermint oil, fabric pots and more & Please Ring the Bell (next to subscribe) to get immediate real-time video notifications of new videos. Thanks
Seeds in general.... all kinds of companies Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Question??? Who decided you need to wait 2 weeks before spreading on the garden, or using? Is this from actual research, or some ones thoughts. That people thinks the person knows what he is talking about?
You can put in on surface as is and let Nature do its thing. It is hydrophobic and doesn't have any nutrients. If you mix it in the soil to start it can take from you soil in the beginning. So you inoculate it before mixing it in. And it is research. All over on the internet. BTW. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
Bit of an outdated video. It's not really bio-char till it's been innoculated. ie. filled with micro organisms so it is effective straight away. You are making charcoal and putting it in the soil. this will absorb moisture and nutrients in the soil so hence starve the plants for a year or two. About year three it might come back to life.
Thanks. Watering it in with a water soluble fixes any concerns. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop (My Shop) for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Plus support The Rusted Garden by subscribing and using my Amazon Store Front link when shopping for anything on Amazon www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden As an Amazon Associate I earn from any qualified purchases, not just items I link. You can also find items I use or discuss in videos, by checking out my Amazon Storefront for cameras, fertilizer, pest management, shade cloth, seed starting supplies, books and more! Earn 15% by becoming a Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop Affiliate. Some people are using it for their social media followings and some people are using it for a fund raiser for schools and sport teams. To sign up... use this link to our shop and click the MORE tab on the green bar and select TRG Affiliate Program www.therustedgarden.com/ Or use this link to go directly to our TRG Affiliate Program sign up the-rusted-garden.goaffpro.com/create-account The Rusted Garden 'Scan & Grow' Seed Collection (My Seed and Garden Shop) Just scan the QR code and watch a planting video: www.therustedgarden.com/search?type=product&q=qr
Yeah I caught it but not till after the video. But it is the same stuff I did the close up on in the cardboard box. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
That is safer. The lid popped on this. No big deal though. Please check out The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for all your gardening needs: www.therustedgarden.com
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Around 11:15 you said you'd be making another video on inoculation did you make it and what's the title of it if you did?
Great video Gary. I've been researching biochar and trying to find a simple method where I can use my backyard fire pit. This is perfect!
It is fun to create too.
Please subscribe if you have a chance (Thanks!) As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. Please subscribe as it really helps me in making videos.
Great video, one thing that you forgot to mention is that you shouldn't use galvanized metal because of the zinc fumes which are very dangerous to the health.
Thanks
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I get to make lots of biochar come spring. I heat with wood in a large furnace. Lots of times, with the damper closed, the wood I put in in the evening doesn't always burn to ash completely by morning when I clean the ash pan and furnace bottom. I have a huge pile of ash to sift in spring. It should yield lots of biochar I intend to use in the new raised beds I am building along with a hugelkultur type fill with some homemade compost. Very interested to see how this works out. Feeling pretty good about it. Thanks Gary. Take care.
That sounds great. Keep an eye on the pH with lots of ash.
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN already have alkaline soil, so I will be doing my best to keep the char and sift out and discard the ash.
I bought biochar this year for my new raised beds. And, I used what is called Hegelkulture method to save dirt and my results were great. Now, I have to make sure it is ready for Spring.
Ill be working on some ideas for this. Biochar is the long game.
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Oregon here 💜thx Gary(the pyrotech, lol)
anything natural I can DIY for my garden I'm totally up for..thx for simplifying the process👍💜
Its fun. Now I will be testing it out.
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I really appreciate this video. I have very sandy soil. I have an in ground garden and every year I’m adding what I can to improve and build it up. Another channel/ Market Gardner suggested I add bio char and now I have idea in just how to do it!
So that would be a great use for the biochar. Good luck.
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Great video! I'm gonna try my hand at biochar this spring, or summer. I've tried it once and it worked great but I'm still looking for the easiest way to do it, and I think you're on to something!!! Thanks for sharing
We always have fires in the early spring so I will drop a can in.
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Wow ,,, I did not know how to make that biochar !!!! Thank you ,,, full watch !
A fun experiment. Thanks for watching
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I love playing with fire, it runs in the family. I have watched videos of store bought biochar also being good for the lawn. I need to do further research. Thank you for this video on how to make biochar.
Sure. It is fun to make. Enjoy.
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Great content. Where some other famous youtubers shut it down during the winter, Gary keeps the content coming. Thanks! Loved the video. Very helpful.
Thanks. Got to stay busy.
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Hi Gary, I add bio char each year early spring..usually begining of March. Mostly in my containers and any extra is scattered in the in ground rows. I seems to help with releasing nutrients slowly. And some moisture control. I've read you can use bio char to help remeadate soil that has alot of fertilizer salts. Will add it to the tomatoes. Blessings.
Yeah looks like a slow thing you do over the years. Ill make it when I have fires. Just wanted to convey its not a must have been more of a kind of cool to make. Lol.
Great video and explanation. I've been playing with biochar. I built a TLUD kiln and use tree company chips as fuel. I have to dry the chips for 3 weeks on racks but it burns super clean and takes about an hr to do a 55 gallon drum. I end up with about 1/2 the drum of char after the cook. I'm not sold its any kind of miracle cure but it's fun to make lol
So fun. It will hold nutrients and moisture but is probably more valuable for needy soil. Nice set up!
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN Yeah and I have sandy garbage soil down here in FL so that's my main incentive
A couple of weeks ago I bought 3 paint cans just for the purpose of making my own biochar.
The work. You might have to adjust the hole but they work.
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This was awesome. I did put burnt charcoal in my soil last year
Its a fun experiment but I think it has limited value. Ill be testing it out
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I use lump charcoal in my smoker and grill . Would was do the same or would the small pieces off unused charcoal work
so BASICALLY :)...as a scientist myself, this video is very cool! I love the videos you make where you explain how things that we use in the garden work. If only I wasn't in Northern California, I would make this right away!
I think I like watching the fire and gasses escape more than the finished product!
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I. NOT. BORED. YES. IS. EXCELLENT. I LEARNED.
A fun experiiment
Fantastic work Gary
Its a fun projected.
Please consider posting your videos on Rumble as well, I have read posts that it pays a bit better and people are flocking to it. The information you share is so important, everyone should be taking the time to learn as we prepare for the next growing season.
I will. Thanks
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Gary, Thank you for this informative and interesting video. I look forward to the next inoculation video.
Thanks. Ill be working on that soon. I need more biochar
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I bought hardwood charcoal to prepare for next Spring while i build up biochar that i make over the winter. I have then in 5gal buckets and plan to leave outside. In Wisconsin, it will freeze. Will the freezing hurt the micro biome starting in there now? I added things to inoculate it earlier
Recommend audiobook "Burn." Biochar for gardening is just the beginning! I put pee and fish emulsion in mine. Can't believe I missed this vid of yours!!
Thanks
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Question: can you just use charcoal? I found some in the bottom of the walls in my basement when I removed the bottom board. It use to be a coal room in my 100 yr old house. I'd love to just put that in the garden. How much would you put in a 4x8 garden bed?
Wood charcoal can be crushed and used. But it is not a must have. I am just sprinkling it lightly across the top. Something I will do as I make it. Nothing heavy.
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Wow I just watched a TV show called Alaskan last frontier and they just added this to they're gardens. Old school trick.
It is fun to make. I am going to use it in different places.
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VERY old school... thousands of years old school. We’re just rediscovering its effectiveness. Gary does a good job in his tutorial. So many others have lots of BS and misinformation.
Fantastic ! I have been wanting to do this in a simple manner for months. Does anyone have a suggestion of how to access metal paint cans that are not galvanized ? All paint is sold in plastic cans or pouches locally.
So I got mine at home depot. But I had to burn plastic out from the inside.
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Also the gas burning is mostly methane, hydrogen and some organic oils and alcohols that form as the cellulose break down.
Thanks so much!
Thanks for sharing this video
Glad to share
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Interesting. That's effectively a flameless thermal oxidizer. The only oxidizer available is the O2 that it started with. If you're able to take a torch to the charcoal and get it to burn a bit then there are still some traces of remaining nutrition. Thanks for the video!
Thanks for that idea
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I use the dust and small pieces of lump charcoal from the bottom of my charcoal barrel each spring. Good use for something that does not work will in the grill.
Yep that works.
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I think the biggest advantage is that it is an inert porous amendment that can really help with soil structure. If you have clay that really smothers soil life this can be a way to try and remediate the soil. I think if you have good soil already this doesn’t make a huge difference since obviously it’s not a “fertilizer”
Good points. Thanks.
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I take the char out of my wood stove when I clean it out, but it in an enamel pot with a lid, save it, now I know what to do with it, inoculate it. THANK YOU!
Saving my urine, I’ll just dump it in there and ferment all winter!!
That works. Good luck,
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Cool experiment ! I have wood ash from wood stove and would like to use in garden cause have plenty have you used ?
I use wood ash regularly. There is a recent video on it on my channel from last month.
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It's also great for bioactive enclosures and for springtails
Thanks
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That's so cool. Will be following to see how it's used.
Yep. Ill be testing it out.
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Going off topic here I have a dozen or so raised beds . Some newer ones some older ones . Last October I put 2 or 3 inches of mushroom compost on them . Then a couple of inches straw . Lately I have been hearing a lot negativity about seed germination . I live in eastern pa zone 5 .just wandering if you had a thought . Till it in leave it alone ? Any info would be appreciated thanks.
I have to have a lot of large containers and planters in my garden due to large paved areas (and it’s a small garden anyway)...but even the big long and deep planters dry out rapidly in summer and the soil goes hydrophobic. Will this biochar help the containers hold moisture against a blaring sun??? It’s certainly something I think I need to try...every little helps.
It will. Biochar at creation is hydrophobic (wont accept water easily for those that may not know) so it has to go through 10-14 days of inoculation. Which is water, nutrients and microbiology.
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I seen someone say you can buy a cheap bag of charcoal from the store break it up and put in your garden for biochar. How do you feel about that 8 dont know enough about it reason why im asking. Thank for sharing your videos very informative you do a awesome job.
That would work. Cost is key.
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN oh yeah. I love that you show us ways that can save the first year I spent 800$ on potting mix for containers and I got mosaic on beans and cukes and well tomatoes had something but I had to throw away all that mix and re-buy all the next year. So yes gardening can cost now I garden 3 different ways so if I got to throw away my potting mix at least ill still have raised beds and my ground garden to grow in the next year if I dont have money to buy the stuff to make a potting mix which I do make because of the amount of containers I have to fill.
@@charliewilliams8794 you don't have to throw away all your soil after you spent all that money on it, keep it. You can plant different crops the next season and after that you can recharge/revitalize the soil by either adding organic fertilizers ( sea 90, bone and or blood meal powder, clean organic chicken, cow or horse manure etc. ) or by mixing it into your compost bin. Look into making your own soil by making compost or leaf mold from kitchen scraps and local materials around you ( leaves, tree mulch from local tree trimming companies around you, spent coffee grounds from Starbucks or any coffee shop, etc ) you don't have to spend money to get good soil, but it takes a lot of time and effort...u can start a worm bin as well for worm castings...this is all free or very low cost but takes a lot of time and patience to get good results...sorry this was long just wanna share all of what I learned by watching all these videos and doing it for myself and seeing that it works I just want to pass it on. Good soil is the first step, but it without we have nothing. In a nutshell look in vermicomposting ( worms ) biochar, hugulkulture, leaf compost and regular compost for different ways to make or enrich your soul. Cheers!
@@ianfrancisledesma4431 thank you for sharing all you've learned im here to learn so I dont mind it being long lol. I was told to throw my potting mix away because I had the mosaic virus. Im trying to compost now getting seed happy made a mistake and didn't check if it was mosaic virus resistant and now its got it and I have like 30 10 gal bags of mix that I have no idea what to do with because they say throw away but I've read that it can stay in soil for 2 years and if its wet 1 month I wonder if thats the same with potting mix?
Created Biochar and potash for your garden :)
Been using potash on my tomatoes. They love it.
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Might as well take advantage of the warmer weather in MD :)
Nice day for burning wood for sure.
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I’ve looked into BC and the making of it and it’s use. Ordinary BBQ hardwood lump charcoal (NOT the bricketts that have a binder added) is the same thing as that expensive stuff. In Canada we have a brand called Royal Oak but you may need to smash it smaller in a bag with a hammer. Of course you have to activate or charge it prior to use, the most economical is human urine. In my research I also found that if you have already fertile soil it will add or do nothing to improve it.
Bruce in Ontario, Canada
That works. Thanks
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN just a caution galvanized or chrome gives off toxins when heated that may be captured by the charcoal created. As with all things it a small percentage of what’s in your soil, what is taken up by what parts of the plants and if ingested how much is retained and how much is passed out and any accumulated or long term, genetic issues. All things in moderation including chemical fertilizers some ppl don’t understand that the world needs food and would the purists want to condemn others ...
Thanks.
Hi Gary! Thanks for the video. I have a question about the container options. I read various articles about the leaching of toxic chemicals when being burned, such as Pressure Treated wood, PVC etc etc, and I thought I read something about Galvanized metal (such as those 10-15 gallon outdoor trash cans) not being safe to burn stuff in. I am paranoid now about those chemicals leaching into the char, which as discussed, is great at holding onto stuff. Any chance you can provide some clarity on this topic? Also, when I looked at some paint cans, most of them say they are "lined", but I am not clear on what that actually means. Should I try to find a specific type? Also, is standard 'Non-Treated' lumber scraps safe to burn? I have lots of 2x4 & 2x6 scraps laying around from my bed frames that I am trying to figure out the best way to use or dispose.
Thank you in advance.
PS. I do not know how to 'Search in the comments' in RUclips otherwise I would have done that before posting.
So I know you can burn off galvanization. But the idea is how much. While I can't say how much actually comes into play with trash cans, I also can't find how much would then go in the garden. Often it is nothing to worry about. Dont burn pressure treated lumber or PVC. The fumes arent good. I burned the lining off my cans first. Non treated lumber is fine to burn. That is the issue that people say this leaches. But never provide the facts and quantities.
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Also I wanted to mention that Luke from M.I. Gardner said that some of his subscribers were unsubscribed by RUclips. So maybe ask your subscribers to make sure they are still subscribed and pass it along?
Interesting. I know they remove dead accounts once a year. I see that yearly.
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They also drop off, I think, if people don’t “like” the videos often.
Oh they definitely unsubscribe the active subscribers and tell us they purge inactive subscribers. They cast a wide net. It brings up questions.
@@OfftoShambala it sure does. Lately when I like a video it’s like I never hit the like button 🤷🏼♀️ I go back several times to click it. 🤦♀️😂🤷🏼♀️
Could this biochar be put in a compost pile and turned in? Would that add the nutrients to it before putting it in the garden?
It can. The char would pull in nutrients
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Why not just make this casually and then use it in compost? As the compost decays, wouldn't that inoculate the biochar?
Im with you. Ill most likely make this when I have fires at night. Soak it. And toss it on compost over the years. You idea is sound.
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PRETTY amazing
It was fun
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Using wood chips and forest litter, my charcoal makes excellent Biochar without any pulverizing to make it smaller. Leaving the pores intact is the point of this amendment and crushing it makes no sense to me. I appreciate not having the extra handling requirement and potential carbon dust inhalation hazard others are dealing with enhancing their gardens. Freeze and thaw cycles over time bust the Biochar further while it’s in the ground. No mess. No-crush works fine for me.
Excellent.
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So if biochar 'holds' the nutrients in through adsorption, when does it release those nutrients to benefit the soil? Charcoal has adsorption properties, which are beneficial in removing or blocking Microbiol impurities; it does not release those impurities...Activating it increases its porosity allowing it to adsorb much more nutrients or impurities. Please explain
Roots can grow into it.
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can i use chicken manure with 50% moisture and turn it into biochar?
On 7:16 those firewood burning there, would that be biochar, too. I am just learning what biochar is?
Biomass charcoal. Basically yes charcoal. It would be as it is wood based charcoal left after the fire.
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I used to make lumb charcoal looks like the seem process. Now can you use store bought lump charcoal instead of making your own?
Yeah you can use that.
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I thought you had to expand the pores by hitting it with water while extremely hot. (rapid expansion to steam) That makes it activated charcoal as opposed to regular charcoal. Am I mistaken?
You can expand them more that way for sure. And the hotter the fire, the difference in pores. Bringing a fire to embers and dousing it is better for that in my opinion. That is a way to make biochar too. I would not recommend opening this hot.
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Question-one the bio char is inoculated how long will it store for?
So with nutrients forever. Microbiology will live as long as their is moisture in it.
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I wonder if one could put the 1-gallon can on a propane stove outdoors, instead of putting it in a wood fire.
I have seen it done that way
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Biochar, is it same as the ash in the trash can when I go burn some lumber scraps or boxes or junk mail? Are they same thing? Do I need to make biochar or what about the charcoal when I go barbeque on my grill?
Ash is different and has lots of other stuff in it that is good for the garden like potassium. I have videos on using ash. Biochar is the actual charcoal that is made, not ash. Grills that burn charcoal or wood with no additives makes good ash. But dont use it if it has additives.
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN what do you mean additives for an example?
Hi Gary. Can I use regular charcoal, like Kingsford, and crush it down to get the same result?
No. They have additives
@@09echols I was afraid that was the case. Thanks very much!
Yes but make sure they are clean as in no additives. Lots of pure charcoal companies out there. Not briquets but actually wood like oak charcoal
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN Thank you Gary. That makes it very clear. Appreciate all you do to help us "little gardeners"!
When you burn 🔥 the wood what comes out is hydrogen and methane and CO the one is dominantly highest gas byproduct is hydrogen from the water 💦 in the wood when you heat it reacts with the carbon and take some carbon with 4 hydrogen to create methane and the rest as H2 and starts burning both with methane
Thanks for the info
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Here is a weird question:
Seeing that cat urine high in ammonia and phosphorus would used catlitter be a good addition to compost or garden soil?
It might if you use a plant based litter, but there might be some disease type organisms in it. Regular cat litter would not be good for the garden, it’s made of clay.
Urine is good for composting. But I dont know about cat urine via litter.
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I was thinking the same thing since I use pine pellet cat litter!
Where is the spider? I don't see it on 6:15
Yeah I missed it too
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I would be concerned about metals other than steel being added to the char. Also, you can use bones and create home made superphosphate.
Ah interesting on the bones. Like chicken bones and such?
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN Yep, I've only done it with chicken and turkey bones, but I suppose it would work with other bones as well if they could be chopped up small enough to get into the container.
Can I use this type of charcoal to filter water?
Actually you can. My only concern is that you have to make sure you fully process it to charcoal and not somewhere in transition.
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Although biochar works by capturing carbon and that keeps the soil fertile for thousands of years doesn't it still add nutrients to the soil but only for the first year or 2 because of the nutrients in the stuff you used to make biochar?
It might have some phosphorous or potassium but not a lot.
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What brands of seeds do you use??
Seeds in general.... all kinds of companies
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6:15 RIP Spider
It happens.
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Where is the spider at as I don't see it.
Question??? Who decided you need to wait 2 weeks before spreading on the garden, or using? Is this from actual research, or some ones thoughts. That people thinks the person knows what he is talking about?
You can put in on surface as is and let Nature do its thing. It is hydrophobic and doesn't have any nutrients. If you mix it in the soil to start it can take from you soil in the beginning. So you inoculate it before mixing it in. And it is research. All over on the internet. BTW.
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN I don't doubt biochar just the time it takes for it to be ready to put in the garden?
can you also do a video in how to get a paint tin looking like it's never been used lol
Lol Home Depot.
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@@THERUSTEDGARDEN If only we had Home Depot in Ireland lol
Bit of an outdated video. It's not really bio-char till it's been innoculated. ie. filled with micro organisms so it is effective straight away. You are making charcoal and putting it in the soil. this will absorb moisture and nutrients in the soil so hence starve the plants for a year or two. About year three it might come back to life.
Thanks. Watering it in with a water soluble fixes any concerns.
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At the begining, your two hands too dark to see what is in your hands. Too dark.
Yeah I caught it but not till after the video. But it is the same stuff I did the close up on in the cardboard box.
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Interesting but looks dangerous. Will stick to the ash and coals from my wood stove. 👍
That is safer. The lid popped on this. No big deal though.
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Burn brush don't buy wood that has been glued together
put the bio char in your worm bin
Thanks
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