On-farm biochar production and practical application in Brazil

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 5

  • @sumakwelvictoria5635
    @sumakwelvictoria5635 Год назад +1

    I wear hard soled shoes. Spread it thin on a cement floor and stomp on it carefully.
    I then sweep it carefully into a dustpan and put in a bucket with water some compost and some biodegradeable material. After a month I pour and mix into soil.
    If I get lazy, after crushing I just mix into soil. I add kitchen waste and fallen leaf litter every day and mix with a shovel. After a year I spread some all around the house.
    Oh and resist the temptation to grind to dust. It maddeningly retains water even more. It will easily behave a bit like clay and cause waterlogging.

  • @OscarCaicedo
    @OscarCaicedo 3 года назад +2

    Exists better forms to make biochar with less co2 emissions, and you can build it with recycle materials.

  • @Guarani01
    @Guarani01 2 года назад +1

    this doesn't look like biochar, it's simply charcoal. Hi level of CO2 emission.

    • @MushInSkull
      @MushInSkull 3 месяца назад

      So? That CO2 isn't from "fossil fuel" oil, it's from part of the existing natural carbon cycle. If they didn't burn it to make charcoal to turn into biochar, the pruned branches would rot and emit CO2 anyways.
      Now, what they showed was using the charcoal directly and not inoculating the charcoal with a micro biome like compost. Maybe they did, but from what I've read adding the charcoal directly will pull nutrients out of the soil and away from plants until it "fills up" which could take a long time.