I MADE A HUGE MISTAKE (In the No Dig Market Garden)

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2019
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    Richard Perkins is a globally recognised leader in the field of Regenerative Agriculture and is the owner of Europe’s foremost example, Ridgedale Farm, Sweden. He is the author of the widely acclaimed manual Regenerative Agriculture, regarded as one of the most comprehensive books in the literature, as well as Ridgedale Farm Builds.
    His approach to no-dig market gardening and pastured poultry, as well as his integration of Holistic Management, Keyline Design and Farm-Scale Permaculture in profitable small-scale farming has influenced a whole new generation of farmers across the globe. Garnering more than 15 million views on his blog, and teaching thousands globally through his live training at the farm and online, Richard continues to inspire farmers all over the globe with his pragmatic no-nonsense approach to profitable system design.

Комментарии • 305

  • @georgecarlin2656
    @georgecarlin2656 5 лет назад +439

    "The big mistake" is at 13:55. Thank me later.

    • @paweltomaszewski5418
      @paweltomaszewski5418 5 лет назад +3

      Trump's Dingleberries thanx!

    • @pemimpi
      @pemimpi 4 года назад +14

      Thank you for saving my time

    • @offthemap9582
      @offthemap9582 4 года назад +9

      Thanks! That saved me precious minutes. Carlin is G.O.A.T.! What a legend.

    • @jaideves6985
      @jaideves6985 3 года назад +6

      We need people like you more

    • @boots1256
      @boots1256 3 года назад +11

      I'll thank you now!

  • @cornwallcelticexperience1867
    @cornwallcelticexperience1867 5 лет назад +168

    I have a lot of respect for anyone who can stand up and say "I" made a mistake thank you for sharing and good luck with your remedial efforts. I look forward to seeing your future successes.

    • @robsubs1234
      @robsubs1234 4 года назад +4

      Cornwall Celtic Experience... I agree. Very respectable. Thanks for sharing your error as well. We can all be better if we can prevent old mistakes.

    • @Onlinesully
      @Onlinesully 4 года назад +3

      Cornwall Celtic Experience
      a lot easier to to when you are generally running a decent life, and feel ok with decent dignity.

    • @TravisFont
      @TravisFont 4 года назад +2

      that's how you improve.

    • @Michael-ki5oz
      @Michael-ki5oz 3 года назад +3

      I'm still a little confused on what exactly the mistake was.
      They put down low nutrient wood compost first to help retain moisture in case of another drought then added about an equal part of nutritious compost right?
      Then they raked them together to mix the 1:1 ratio of wood to nutritious compost?
      Is the only mistake that they worked too quickly and should have been more careful about mixing everything evenly?
      I'm also wondering why they wouldn't put down plenty of nutritious compost first then just a few centimeters of wood compost on top for moisture retention.
      Any info is appreciated.

  • @louiseolivato838
    @louiseolivato838 4 года назад +30

    We are a small farm school in South Africa and find your videos extremely helpful. Just ordered your book for the children. Can’t wait for it to arrive. Thank you for all your advice

  • @jpenneymrcoin6851
    @jpenneymrcoin6851 3 года назад +10

    Admitting mistakes is a sign of strength, kudos.
    The lesson I take from that is, "don't make arbitrary deadlines, just get the work done and it takes as long as it takes" - I"ve seen hundreds of thousands of dollars fall victim to this false management fallacy that you have to set deadlines.

  • @jeanoconnor3163
    @jeanoconnor3163 5 лет назад +40

    We so often learn MORE from mistakes that what is going well. Thank you for allowing us to see them and learn. I really love your videos.

    • @ntatemohlomi2884
      @ntatemohlomi2884 4 года назад

      Very true that. I often tell new farmers asking for magical farming secrets advice that they should pray for a fair bit of failure, especially in the beginning. You reap its rewards as you go along.

  • @Grown-in-Tyrone
    @Grown-in-Tyrone 4 года назад +60

    'The best fertiliser is the gardener's shadow' Chinese proverb :-) You'll be ok.

    • @BUNeekification
      @BUNeekification 2 года назад +1

      How beautiful ..thank U for sharing this proverb @hugs@

  • @maimclean7493
    @maimclean7493 4 года назад +4

    Richard" I have so much respect for you and your farm. If you're afarmer there will be challenging days and rewards days. I'm just thankful To see all the youing people stepped up to be afarmer!!. I'm from Vietnam and I'm proud to be a afarmer . it take passions and will to be afarmer. I saw it in your eyes when you're talking about your FARM.😊

  • @timwoodger7896
    @timwoodger7896 4 года назад +23

    Just mix up a liquid feed and run through the beds 1-2 a week,it’s amazing what an anaerobic digester can do 🤷‍♂️

  • @pamalajjohnson9576
    @pamalajjohnson9576 Год назад +1

    Pure joy watching this little boy brings back memories of my childhood, thank you your doing a good job, may God continue to bless you.

  • @steb8335
    @steb8335 5 лет назад +66

    The skill of a craftsman is to know what to do when the unexpected happens either through error or circumstance. Then be able to fix or correct it so there's the minimum impact. The way your going about fixing it seems like the best option. Glad you're sharing how you fix things rather than glossing over issues.
    Cracking video and good luck in resolving the situation.

  • @sansomspressurecleaningpoo9519
    @sansomspressurecleaningpoo9519 3 года назад +5

    I love how you’re so honest and transparent. God bless y’all.

  • @my_permaculture
    @my_permaculture 5 лет назад +14

    Richard. I love to see the looser atmosphere you show by sharing unexpected and more kind of trial and error footage in comparance to last years high productivity super professional foitage. There is a sense of Gracies Backyard going on. Love it! All the best to all of you wonderful people.

  • @sarafriberg9689
    @sarafriberg9689 6 месяцев назад

    I just realized, after looking at a few of your videos for the first time in 2024, that Ridgedale farm is in Sweden! How wonderful! And thankyou for sharing mistakes and thoughts about how to manage it.

  • @TerryMcGearyScotland
    @TerryMcGearyScotland 4 года назад +6

    I only have a small back garden, but this is encouraging stuff even for me, so thanks for sharing your trials and tribulations. A great set-up.

  • @c-b.s.7624
    @c-b.s.7624 5 лет назад +14

    almost the same problems here, I used too small planting trays, broccoli planted into field too small at size, 40% killed by short time water shortage and cold, but garlic is growing well, we do not use any compost but are planting into pure clay soil, do mostly add only potash (500kg per year) from our woodstoves and burned wood, manure does make plants grow very nice but the quality of taste of vegetables dramatically drops same as the storaging capability, my aim is to grow vegetables with the best taste, we do not go after quantity, we are selling at 30% + to the average bio market price, do not make those small pasture plots for our animals like you do but give them a 8 hectar plot which is fenced only 75% so they can leave the pasture at the distant end from the farm and go on for wild grazing. Goats, sheep, pigs, turkeys are grazing all together. All the best to you. I will follow your season on RUclips.

  • @fippovich
    @fippovich 5 лет назад +3

    Love this video, partly because you're disussing your mistake, partly because of the paperpot experience in a short season and also cows.

  • @glendonrhoades4716
    @glendonrhoades4716 4 года назад +2

    Thank you very much for sharing this. I think one of the biggest stress managers for me is realizing there's a community of folks that love efficiency and effectiveness and hate making mistakes... and that community of folks still makes them now and then despite all the planning and thought that goes into a project. It's easy to feel isolated and overwhelmed (emotionally, physically, financially, and spiritually) when a big mistake is made, so I place a real value in hearing about the tough times and seeing an example of someone working through it. It serves to limit the doubt and feeling of lost bearings that can come with those mistakes. And keeps us all grounded. Thanks again, and all the best with this speed bump.

  • @hebrewhomesteadupdatewalee8303
    @hebrewhomesteadupdatewalee8303 4 года назад +3

    Everyone is having problems the weather this year is pretty bad worldwide it seems. Stay motivated....the non stop rain has been beating me down for over a month here

  • @dione.c.3432
    @dione.c.3432 5 лет назад +12

    Hello from Northern Australia. I over come that issue when it comes up by soaking poultry manure pellets in water and then diluting it 1 ltr into 10 ltrs of water and applying it to the plants via watering can. It is a big job but it works and you see results within days. Cheers D.

    • @flowerfieldfarmstead5793
      @flowerfieldfarmstead5793 3 года назад +2

      Is the issue here that the very fertile layer of compost was not spread evenly?

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 3 года назад +2

      @@flowerfieldfarmstead5793 I think so, yes. They were in a hurry to get the job done, and got careless.

  • @Okiehomesteader
    @Okiehomesteader 5 лет назад +8

    Yes thank you for the honest look. It will be better next year .
    Love all your videos.

  • @debrabray8855
    @debrabray8855 4 года назад +3

    This is the first of your videos that I have seen. What a beautiful, beautiful property and operation! Following...

  • @christopherlane57
    @christopherlane57 5 лет назад +75

    I love what you’re doing on this farm, absolutely love it. In terms of editing and production values I feel that you could make the videos shorter and more specific to the title. I’m interested in finding out what the big mistake was but I’m obliged to scrub through the whole video to try and find out. What I’ve resorted to is checking in the comments for clues, then scrub through to the bit where you’re standing next to a garden bed and hope you’re talking about the big mistake.
    I really want to engage more with the channel but honestly I quite often skip over when your videos are suggested in favour of ones that I know are more specific.
    Hope you get chance to read this and know it’s all love. I’m exactly the customer that would get sucked into watching every video, buying the book, signing up for the training etc. I’m just a busy dad trying to set up as a designer whilst working a full time job too, and struggling with how to engage with the content on this channel.

    • @Horse237
      @Horse237 4 года назад +11

      i AM GOING THROUGH THE VIDEO BUT i CANNOT FIND HIS MISTAKE. i WOULD REALLY WANT TO KNOW WHAT IT IS.
      FOUND IT AT 14:00.

    • @timflatus
      @timflatus 4 года назад +2

      I managed five minutes. As a vegetarian I'm not interested in looking at bits of dead pig, so I shan't be back. Please note: I'm not disapproving, if you're going to eat meat this is surely the way to go. You just bored me.

    • @kadrianstahley1241
      @kadrianstahley1241 4 года назад

      Agreed

    • @C.Hawkshaw
      @C.Hawkshaw 3 года назад

      He is a talker. 😉

  • @dirkfey7831
    @dirkfey7831 5 лет назад +7

    There is a trick for the carrotseeds. You can sprout them under a board. That keeps the moisture much better. You have to look every day and if they start germinating, they already have such long roots that you can skip the board and they will grow well.

    • @pamalajjohnson9576
      @pamalajjohnson9576 Год назад

      Long boards work well for lots of places in the garden to save moisture to protect from freezing. Saved me lots of times.

  • @c3mac55
    @c3mac55 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you Richard!! Always very informative. It takes strength to admit an error but that is often the most valuable information!! So grateful for all your hard work and expertise shared from these videos!

  • @wesbaumguardner8829
    @wesbaumguardner8829 4 года назад +5

    That mistake was a short term loss but a long term gain. Now you know what not to do.

  • @mammiemania893
    @mammiemania893 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you for sharing the day to day. The little things are so important.

  • @CoachLexie
    @CoachLexie 4 года назад +2

    Thanks Richard for not just putting out 'nice' vlogs - we can all learn much more from one another's mistakes and I've learned lots tonight - thank you! :)

  • @torbjornlundaahl7974
    @torbjornlundaahl7974 5 лет назад +7

    Thank you for sharing - so inspiring (and impressive) whith someone assuming full responsibility
    -and thanks for showing the value of observation!

  • @SHANONisRegenerate
    @SHANONisRegenerate 5 лет назад +4

    That is such a great example to learn. Thank you so much for sharing.

  • @eclose0923
    @eclose0923 4 года назад +1

    I have been watching your videos for years now and I *SO* appreciate you showing the outcome of a project that had poor consequences. We are all on a learning curve and mistakes are often just as valuable as successes. THANK YOU for sharing. I'd like to believe I might someday aspire to a place as well-thought-out as your farm is. You are dauntingly impressive overall ... BTW- I'm excited about the multi-species livestock operations you've added.

  • @Mandy-cn5cl
    @Mandy-cn5cl 5 лет назад +2

    Great to share such things we are all human you know .mistakes often happen when you prioritize something else your concentration on the normal stuff dips a bit & catches you out frustrating for sure

  • @LizZorab
    @LizZorab 5 лет назад +12

    I made the woody material error a couple of years ago, by year two it was all looking good again. I really hope that you can get it sorted before too long. Thanks for sharing!

    • @tomlinstead1218
      @tomlinstead1218 4 года назад +1

      Hi Liz, By woody material, are you referring to straight woodchip compost i.e chip with leaf that has broken down?

  • @tayleanruatha
    @tayleanruatha 4 года назад

    Such valuable information! Thanks for sharing so other people can learn from what you do. Wether you want to call some of them "mistakes" or not it's all learning and very much appreciated!

  • @oby-1607
    @oby-1607 4 года назад +1

    Its very hard to trust someone else to do work outlined properly and with the dedication required. We were going to go with the paperpot system, but after watching this, will stay with the tray system. Thanks Richard.

  • @Newsblaze
    @Newsblaze 4 года назад

    Thanks for the update and what to do about thinking through the next step.

  • @clairetasker9181
    @clairetasker9181 4 года назад +1

    Hats off to you, we can all see how this has impacted on you. Very brave to show this mistake and is good for young people to see failure and how to manage it, you are doing a great job

  • @abcefg5451
    @abcefg5451 5 лет назад +7

    Happy belated Birthday to YOU Richard!❤️❤️❤️

  • @247KW
    @247KW 3 года назад

    I swear I could listen to you talk about how to count straws in a straw bale and I'd be 😃 smiling. Love listening to you

  • @ladyfortunaadams8836
    @ladyfortunaadams8836 5 лет назад +24

    Thank you for sharing what is not going well and how you plan to deal with them. Everyone I have heard of is having a harder year. There is a 200 year cycle of solar minimum with varying weather, temps, cosmic rays and precipitation. History shows famine in these cycles. I believe rain and mold affected the crops that did grow in the 1600 and 1800's. I hope this cycle we have knowledge and skills that will help us get through. Communicating with each other is a great way to survive .

    • @watereverywhere
      @watereverywhere 5 лет назад +6

      Richard didn't attribute the crop failures to solar cycles or cosmic rays. These do affect climate, and potentially had more impact during pre-industrial times, but their net effect is completely dwarfed during the post-industrial era by CO2 and CH4-forcing. If cosmic rays really are the main driver of climate (as many climate change sceptics suggest), why has the solar cycle (currently at a minimum) decoupled from global mean temperatures, which are record hot and getting hotter? No matter where you look: land/ocean/atmospheric temperatures, combined with dozens of other climate proxies (e.g. Arctic sea ice extents, mountain glacier retreat, species distributions, forest fires/storm/precipitation magnitude and frequency etc) are also moving in a hotter, not cooler direction. Solar cycles and cosmic rays cannot explain the magnitude and direction of modern climate and weather extremes because they cannot possibly explain the observed changes. The paleo, pre-industrial, post-industrial, proxy data are all totally aligned with each other, and all indicate that atmospheric CO2 is the main show in town, and the dial we all need to be watching.

    • @ziborgbe
      @ziborgbe 4 года назад

      @@watereverywhere I don't get your answer right. The video is talking about a colder year that previous affecting crops. And co2 music is all about a climate getting hotter so linking this to the video conclusion, co2 is ok.

    • @watereverywhere
      @watereverywhere 4 года назад +3

      ziborgbe Absolutely not. In fact 2019 was the second hottest year -globally -in records. Just because there is spatial and temporal variability in the magnitude and direction of heating/cooling relative to pre-industrial baseline doesn’t mean the overall trend isn’t towards a hotter planet. Like saying the basement is still nice and cool while your house is on fire.

    • @maplenook
      @maplenook 4 года назад

      Zharkova grand solar minimum

    • @abeknox7900
      @abeknox7900 4 года назад

      maplegingko m

  • @carolewarner101
    @carolewarner101 5 лет назад +8

    Wow, it's amazing how something that seems so small can have such a broad impact like that! Very valuable to learn about it and to hear about your strategies to remedy it: add fertility via composted manures, compost teas etc; scrap the worst beds, refertilize them evenly, and then replant; scale up micro greens; etc. Another thing that occurred to me assuming you continue to get the amount of rain you have been, is that you could scale up your egg and meat bird operations if you don't think they would be too much for your recovering pastures. You've got that one egg mobile that's not being used at the moment that you could fill with birds and there's always a strong market for eggs. Don't know how long an order for birds that are already laying takes to get delivered, but you could surely get meat chicks relatively quickly I imagine. Is that right or is it too late for this year to order more at this point? Anyway, those two have always been so profitable for your farm that they could pick up some of the financial slack from the veg losses as well.
    If you have time to respond, I'm very curious to know whether my thought process on this is on track or it's way off due to a strong necessity to keep some of the pressure off your pastures that were hit hard in the drought last year even though you're getting so much rain.
    Also really valuable to learn that in more extreme climates like yours it is far better to have your first starts at the beginning and end of the season be larger, more well established starts, whist saving the paper pot transplant starts for mid season plantings when the weather is much friendlier to those fledgling sprouts.
    Please keep this extremely valuable content coming. Sharing your breakdowns as well as your successes are such valuable learnings for us novices. Very courageous and generous of you, and much appreciated!

  • @KarelSeeuwen
    @KarelSeeuwen 3 года назад +2

    Possibly the best of your videos I have seen so far, although the crux is the comments regarding the failure are only in a minute or two(@ 20:00 @13:55). I have had patchy problems with spinach in my raised beds, where in the tilled soil right next to the bed they have grown perfectly. Farming is one of the hardest arts to master...

  • @cchurch5037
    @cchurch5037 5 лет назад +6

    Ragnar a mirror image of our son with our chickens - both the BEST and WORST helper ever 😆. Thanks for sharing - least I have a good idea now why my beets and carrots are so ordinary.

    • @ollievw3450
      @ollievw3450 5 лет назад

      Hahaha, we have a three year old who just loves ‘helping’ out. I can’t even count the amount of eggs he has broken 😂

  • @juliamartin5135
    @juliamartin5135 3 года назад

    I enjoyed learning from you! Thank you for sharing!! Blessings to you all!!!

  • @michelleeasterly1985
    @michelleeasterly1985 3 года назад

    Amazing endeavor..thank you for taking care of the earth..and thanks for your video.

  • @reinhold-vst9499
    @reinhold-vst9499 4 года назад +1

    Made the same mistake, not mixing compost ... but could save the harvest (more or less) by giving the plants compost tea. I know feed the soil not the plants, but it worked and it saved my business.
    Germination of carrots is often a tricky thing, last two years I cover the seeds with cardboard until the first green leaves appears. This way it is so much easier to keep the seeds moist.
    Keep up the good work. Thank you for you honesty...“We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best we can find in our travels is an honest friend.” (Robert Louis Stevenson)

    • @pedromq7807
      @pedromq7807 3 года назад

      So whats the mistake, i kind of only half get it... i did once added straight mushroom compost to a raised bed, about 70 to 80 % and it wasnt the best idea. His mistake was the wood chips or not mixing the compost? And mixing you mean with top soil or other thing?
      I ask that because I removed the grass from my front yard and planted white clover and marigolds as cover crops, we are in Oahu Hawaii. It turned out beautiful but after an year some weeds are trying to take over and Im thinking if I should chop and drop the cover crop, then add molasses and cover it with cardobard then cover it again with mulch, good soil, compost or mushroom compost that is cheaper. I do like the cover crop and the benefits of it, but the wood chip would make things cleaner and easier to manage... im thinking maybe half and half... cover crop around the edges and around raised beds, but between every other raised bed I would do a wood chip walking path... i dont know..
      I was thinkinf in just planting in the cover crop but harvesting becomes becomes more foraging

    • @reinhold-vst9499
      @reinhold-vst9499 3 года назад +1

      @@pedromq7807 Haha, I know what you mean :"harvesting becomes more foraging." At the end of my far too long answer you'll find our solution.
      Hi, Pedro and thank you for asking this questions. From my point of view: I use every year two types of compost. The first one is from wood chips which have been on a pile for at least one year. I add this kind of compost because our soil is very heavy clay.
      With organic material it keeps way better the moist during dry season here (about 6 months of no rain.) This is as you could say a poor compost, lot of carbon and some micro nutrients, but almost no 'N'.
      This compost is mixed in the soil for about 1 spade deep. (We don't use a spade, but anyway it is to give you an idea)
      The second type of compost is a mix of manure, leaves, leftovers from vegetables and fruits. This is spread out on top of our beds... the mistake I made was working with volunteers and not keeping an eye on them. So the compost was spread out but not evenly. The result was the plants standing in an area with the second type of compost were doing very well and the ones that had no compost were starving. The were not thirsty because the organic matter of the first compost kept the water in the soil.
      Why I didn't notice before the damage was done? Well on top of this second compost we put a layer of hay (end of autumn, beginning of winter). Every material that is composting takes nutrients to feed the bacteria (that is why you have to be careful when you use wood chips, composting wood chips takes a lot of nutrients for a long time.) We use wood chips with perennials and in the orchard or food-forest whatever you want to call it, but not around our vegetables.
      As you wrote, put the wood chips on the path between the raised beds, the wood chips will start decomposing, this process will take nutrients from the soil and this way you'll benefit from two fronts : 1 take sunlight away and 2 taking the food for the wild plants away, it will slow their growth.
      We use cover-crops on large areas, always a mix of nitrogen fixers and plants that will cover (taking away sunlight), this way in spring we pass with a scythe. The large cover-plants will cover the small (like clover) and then we plant our seedlings.
      So I hope this was a little helpful, have a nice day and keep growing your food. Reinhold

    • @pedromq7807
      @pedromq7807 3 года назад

      @@reinhold-vst9499 thank you very much

  • @faisalmohamed1763
    @faisalmohamed1763 5 лет назад +4

    Asante sana kwa kuinua lugha yetu ya Africa (swahili) thank you bro I like what you are doing.

  • @ChiefPFF
    @ChiefPFF 5 лет назад +4

    Good on you man. Its a tough thing to admit, or especially vocalise, a mistake. Hope it all comes good swiftly for you.

  • @tanyaratti
    @tanyaratti 2 года назад

    One of your best vids. Its raw and honest. You are right. Everything doesn’t always go right but there is always something to be grateful for. And yes… there is always a straggler 😃

  • @susanquinlan7426
    @susanquinlan7426 4 года назад +1

    Remember, one big experiment! Forgive yourself. Thank you for sharing, I know I feel better. It is so easy to git discouraged. You must draw on your successes-perhaps make a list. This is a challenging time and more stress is just more stress. Hang in there.

  • @MountainRoots
    @MountainRoots 4 года назад +1

    Love how you share the good, bad, beautiful and ugly👍

  • @rufia75
    @rufia75 4 года назад +2

    This is a great example however of massive of an impact your soil makes. The side by side comparison is huge.

  • @syalutsa
    @syalutsa 4 года назад +18

    It sounds like mixing the fresh wood chips with compost led to a situation where the nitrogen that wood chips take out as they first break down slowed growth because of lack of nitrogen, However, mulching with wood chips in the paths would not have caused the same issue. In fact, by creating an environment for mycorhyzae it would have actually added nutrients but you do need a basic level of nitrogen for growth. However, if you give it a year or two, once the chips break down, they will pay back the nitrogen they have used three fold. Great that you talk about this, but the comments are right, it is a bit lost in a sea of rambling narration. We do love what you are doing, appreciate your honesty and sharing. Because RUclips posts are rarely dated, we can’t tell when this was, in your stream of events. It would be helpful to date your posts, so we could know that, at least in terms of which year this is. That way we can get a sequential sense of what happened when, which would be very useful to those of us who are learning from this.

    • @thetessellater9163
      @thetessellater9163 4 года назад +2

      I believe the date below the frame, which is the upload date, is shortly after it was filmed. A day or week, however long it takes to edit the video and upload.

    • @pedromq7807
      @pedromq7807 3 года назад

      So whats the mistake, i kind of only half get it... i did once added straight mushroom compost to a raised bed, about 70 to 80 % and it wasnt the best idea. His mistake was the wood chips or not mixing the compost? And mixing you mean with top soil or other thing?
      I ask that because I removed the grass from my front yard and planted white clover and marigolds as cover crops, we are in Oahu Hawaii. It turned out beautiful but after an year some weeds are trying to take over and Im thinking if I should chop and drop the cover crop, then add molasses and cover it with cardobard then cover it again with mulch, good soil, compost or mushroom compost that is cheaper. I do like the cover crop and the benefits of it, but the wood chip would make things cleaner and easier to manage... im thinking maybe half and half... cover crop around the edges and around raised beds, but between every other raised bed I would do a wood chip walking path... i dont know..
      I was thinkinf in just planting in the cover crop but harvesting becomes becomes more foraging

    • @lauraaiello5663
      @lauraaiello5663 3 года назад

      H

  • @sethl3702
    @sethl3702 5 лет назад +7

    I used pelleted carrots year before last and had the same problem. Raw seed germinate much better.

  • @nbkawtgnobody
    @nbkawtgnobody 2 месяца назад

    Thank you Richard.

  • @benjamingrezik373
    @benjamingrezik373 5 лет назад +9

    blood meal. carbon (wood mulch) need nitrogen thats all. its got lots of everything else

  • @danisesmith5785
    @danisesmith5785 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for sharing the great, good and not so good. Your place is absolutely beautiful!

  • @ambersykora352
    @ambersykora352 4 года назад +1

    Don't waste the pellets seed, just put them in a plastic zip lock bag, and run your hands over the sides or use something a bit heavier, to break the clay layer away. For pellets seed to germinate it must be same near wet for at least 4 or 5 days

  • @CSAcitizen
    @CSAcitizen 4 года назад +6

    The sound needs to be higher so we can hear it.

  • @maryalaii945
    @maryalaii945 5 лет назад +1

    A subscriber from Kenya, East Africa. Happy to hear some Kiswahili😁😁

  • @topazblahblah
    @topazblahblah 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing these struggles. We can relate.

  • @juliahelland6488
    @juliahelland6488 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge!

  • @Artoliva
    @Artoliva 4 года назад

    So beautiful and educational thank you; have you made a video on how you propagate seedlings?

  • @lornasten3124
    @lornasten3124 5 лет назад +1

    Ouch! Thank you for sharing your experiance.

  • @xyzsame4081
    @xyzsame4081 3 года назад +1

    The "big mistake" at 13:55. Collect some fresh human urine dilute it 1 : 1 with water (or other good organic fertilizer) and apply it manually with a watering can at the stunted plants, the soil not the plant, so that would be not a shower but more a targeted trickle / stream. That should give them a boost. enough interns running around. If only a part of the plants are affected doint it specifically would be better (those that have enough should not be over provided. And if a whole bed does poortly - well then give the whole bed some extra. (but also pouring it onto the soil not the plant).

  • @hilarygrebowicz4787
    @hilarygrebowicz4787 Год назад

    Sharing a solution to a problem is very helpful. I am surprised you talked a lot about the problem and a little about the solution. Many growers have staggard starts already planted to fill in. I am very surprised you would take out a thin row instead of planting inside it. I know you thought about climate change when you chose your farm location. These problems of dry one season and very wet the next are just the start of climate challenges. Thanks for sharing, your place looks great! I would love to see the actual solutions you do.

  • @akauerauf
    @akauerauf 5 лет назад +1

    So so valuable. Thank you

  • @Ihaveausernametoo
    @Ihaveausernametoo 5 лет назад +3

    LOL were your crown covers off when it hit? I live in a yurt so I have a vested interest xD. Thank you for sharing this. I usually learn more from mistakes than from success. Down the line I'm always glad for them.

  • @michaelthegardener4989
    @michaelthegardener4989 5 лет назад +1

    Good luck Richard.

  • @alcurtis93
    @alcurtis93 4 года назад +2

    Don't have woody compost in the root space. Plants tend to not like it according to Mr Dowding

  • @andreasalvatici8704
    @andreasalvatici8704 5 лет назад +8

    compost can be hit and miss these days, you should have your own composting facilities to avoid importing dodgy stuff, herbicides are found everywhere and it affects organic growers more than anything

    • @thetessellater9163
      @thetessellater9163 4 года назад

      They have enough from within for a normal years top up mulch, but this year they bought in and did a wholesale renew, but who knows what may be in it !

    • @bryanmilne
      @bryanmilne 4 года назад +3

      I think the issue here, is that woodchips eat up nitrogen in the early stages of decomposition, stealing it away from availability for the crops. This could be remedied by adding urine or coffee grounds or nitrogen rich organic matter to the wood chips to boost nitrogen levels. It can also be remedied by not tilling the woodchips into the soil, but only using at the very top of the planting bed as a mulch with highly nitrogen rich organic materials layered between the topsoil and woodchips. Herbicides could be a possible problem, but shouldn't be an issue with wood chips.

  • @aaronjacquelinesandford3518
    @aaronjacquelinesandford3518 4 года назад

    This would be a great review for holistic decision making process, used as an education piece.

  • @MeshackMwakalukwa
    @MeshackMwakalukwa 5 лет назад +3

    And that Swahili was good - hello from Tanzania....

    • @fabianlyimo7186
      @fabianlyimo7186 4 года назад

      Jamaa anataka kutoboa tundu kwenye frame ili aweze kufunga tairi..👍

  • @TheChrisomo
    @TheChrisomo 5 лет назад +4

    hey richard maybe you could spray some fertile liquid (compost tea etc.) for the short fix and then reammend the beds?

  • @rosstemple7617
    @rosstemple7617 5 лет назад +1

    So awesome to see your kid growing up in help mode. We definitely lack that in today’s society

  • @benjamingrezik373
    @benjamingrezik373 5 лет назад +1

    You have a really impressive set up. I suspect your yeilds will be great next year if you just balance that nitrogen/carbon ratio!

  • @Pipscape
    @Pipscape 5 лет назад

    I'd look at compost/manure foliar feeding the spotty beds. It's a bit more work, but you wouldn't have to scrap everything. And in just a few days the lagging plants could catch up. It's still early in the season. Good luck! I know timing in the market garden is important, and a setback like this feels heavy, but there are ways to turn it around.

  • @gardeningwithatley3098
    @gardeningwithatley3098 5 лет назад +4

    Youre doing a great job mate thanks for the video. No Dig is a constant learning curve and i think it takes a couple of years before it really starts working well. All i can say is set up some worms farms. I have a couple of bathtubs set up on the farm, and i do very little composting, letting the worms take care of majority of the farm waste, and in return giving me free fertiliser. It really is natures cheat move. Them beds i would aerate with a fork by just punching holes in the soil, dust with some composted manure, and add worm wee. I suffered many of these problems and still do after starting a No Dig farm. I'm getting the worms to help with a chop and drop method too where i just throw the waste from the plants back on the beds. All good fun!

  • @SwahiliSpicE
    @SwahiliSpicE 4 года назад +5

    Didn’t expect to see a Swahili brother in here! lol

  • @allnaturalhomesteaders
    @allnaturalhomesteaders Год назад

    You should rotate your animals on your pastures. Start with chickens on a pasture for 2-3 days, then move them and put sheep in the same spot that the chickens were in, for 2-3 days, then move them and put cows in, for 2-3 days, then back to the chickens. The chickens will scratch the manure from the cows and sheep, and remove the bugs from their poop, and they'll spread the fertilizer of the cows and any other animals you may put into the rotation. You can clear land like this for pasture, and clear woods like this, and it's also a great way to fertilize your pastures. Just a suggestion, take it or leave it.

  • @leannekudahl2432
    @leannekudahl2432 Год назад

    When direct seed planting have you tried the Bill Mollison Plank (cardboard, sheep wool etc...) method of retaining moisture over the seeds bed? Works a treat.

  • @catfunkcriteser3495
    @catfunkcriteser3495 5 лет назад +17

    You could save the crops by spraying with compost tea.

    • @barrymcdonald9868
      @barrymcdonald9868 4 года назад

      that's what I was thinking or another nutrient source

    • @flowerfieldfarmstead5793
      @flowerfieldfarmstead5793 3 года назад

      What exactly is the issue? Was the compost with the fertility in it spread uneven throughout the bed?

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      @@flowerfieldfarmstead5793 See 14:00 Richard had good compost and than a woody top layer (deficient in nitrogen) and they were in a hurry to finish the job , so it is unevenly distributed, some plants got good nutrients and others have hardly grown.
      Looks like he has more inexperienced interns than he can supervise. - in the comment section many suggest to add liquid fertilizer, dried blood, compost tea to hell the dwarfed plants w/o burning those that lucked out with getting good compost nearby.
      Plus the carrots did not germinate well, people suggest direct seeding works better.

  • @monfortproperties4966
    @monfortproperties4966 5 лет назад +1

    Your little boy is so cute!

  • @patriciaalber367
    @patriciaalber367 5 лет назад +1

    Very valuable content here. Lack of fertility has dogged us. We have exceedingly high phosphorus numbers. Hard pack clay. We have had to leave all brassicas and squash behind due to the horrible pests we have endured the last 2 years. Our hakurei turnips were covered since seeding and I used beneficial nematodes but the root maggots are still a terrible nuisance. They have ruined all of them. This year we are doing a "Salad CSA" and our beds are turning out better produce. Except for the hakurei. We now are going to transition to no-till. We have made some terrible mistakes this year as well. Thank you for sharing.

    • @patriciaalber367
      @patriciaalber367 4 года назад

      @@no-diggarden I'm sorry I didn't see your reply earlier. We had lab tests done. They didn't say anything-just gave us numbers: 85ppm in the 1st garden; 30ppm in the 2nd garden; and 77ppm in the 3rd garden area. Decided to just use tons of worm castings this year because our organic matter was in the decent range but that could hurt us next year. Going no-till is what is doing the best for us, I think. We had a better year. But we decided to get some of the wood based compost to put on the beds at the end of the season and did what Richard suggested-lay the wood based, rake it, then add the worm compost, rake it and tilth it all. We have covered each bed with either landscape fabric for the winter or 80% shade cloth. He was right to suggest spending your most money on your compost. We plan on sticking with no till, and worm compost this coming year. We do not have access to grass fed cow manure nor good chicken manure. Everyone around here is mega farm-Indiana. One thing we found works wonders for carrots is to cover them with shade cloth right against the ground until germination. It protects the seeds from rain or hail. Got that from a guy in New Zealand.

  • @thingformob
    @thingformob 5 лет назад +3

    With your patchy garden beds makes me think of compost foliar sprays as you mentioned. Here is a podcast where the gardeners compost sprays were 200 times what Elaine Ingham recommends. He had some freak fruit and veggies. Spuds 20 kg per sq meter, a single cabbage fitting in a wheel barrow and massive strawberries where the seeds were germinating on the fruit and growing more strawberry plants etc. You wouldn't have to go that extreme but maybe a bed or two could be a chance to experiment.
    podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/ep-35-making-the-perfect-compost/id1227283335?i=10004004
    Thanks for the vids!

  • @jimmydewberry
    @jimmydewberry Год назад

    Failing Forward! Painful mistakes create fertile ground for deep roots of learning to take hold, yielding exponential improvement of results over time. Awesome! Thank you for being humble enough to offer us a vicarious experience of learning. If you could see the fruit borne from that over time with your viewers, I believe it would seem like an explosion of productivity through time!

  • @fatjuniesfarmette6030
    @fatjuniesfarmette6030 5 лет назад +3

    I had to rewind & listen to your sweet baby (at the beginning) over & over

  • @lifesprodject5265
    @lifesprodject5265 3 года назад

    I too am learning that taking precious time to do it right out ways the just get it done because it needs to get done quickly.
    Sacrifice quality or quantity. Very hard decisions.

  • @cherylcarlson3315
    @cherylcarlson3315 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for sharing the errors, it truly is healing for those of us who have stumbled also. I dumped out the litter from the pigeon loft and seem to have killed my daylilies , hyacinth and ground cover while 2 different sources of squash seeds have failed to germinate now making it too late to try, the grapevines have run amok majorly while the mints have disappeared. Who can kill mint? apparently me.

    • @sujithsom5459
      @sujithsom5459 5 лет назад

      congratulations for killing them off ! Learn and avoid mistakes in future. Never add bird/poultry poop directly. mix with hay/compost and let it decompose before use.

    • @cherylcarlson3315
      @cherylcarlson3315 5 лет назад

      @@sujithsom5459 actually was 6 most composted and had done this every other yr 4 times.just like seeds that refuse to sprout..it just happens

    • @sujithsom5459
      @sujithsom5459 5 лет назад

      @@cherylcarlson3315 seeds don't sprout if they are not viable or soil/temp /humidity conditions are not right.

  • @weskentner8037
    @weskentner8037 4 года назад +1

    Save ur coffee cups and hit up anyone you can for them. Tim hortons cups make great starter pots . They don't mold they hold lots of material and can grow plant comfortably for 30days

  • @ericfe
    @ericfe 4 года назад +1

    That was very forthright and useful as well as the follow up with Charles Dowding.

  • @fischknole5
    @fischknole5 5 лет назад +1

    maby you could add some biochar soaked in nettle slurry or compost tee to your beds to add some nutriens and increas the wather holding even more?

  • @user-pi8rd8ur6k
    @user-pi8rd8ur6k 3 года назад

    Thank you so much.

  • @combitz
    @combitz 5 лет назад +2

    Brilliant information Richard, thank you. I suffer a huge amount with the same beets issue you show in this video and although I believe some is due to seed quality the fertility of the ground throughout the bed may be my issue. I'll ensure I get a more even volume spread in all future bed prep as I have really, really heavy clay soil.

  • @Shabbirkhan-pv6tk
    @Shabbirkhan-pv6tk 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you.

  • @patticriss2238
    @patticriss2238 2 года назад

    Look at all the lessons you learned. As I’ve aged, (and aged, and aged), I have realized every day is a lesson in something. Usually many something’s at once. 😀

  • @kansmill
    @kansmill 5 лет назад +20

    Please, please, please invest in a lapel mic or something like that, Richard. You share great information, but your video audio levels are really low, and hard to hear.
    THanks for sharing this challenge.
    Also, when is the book coming?

    • @curiouscat3384
      @curiouscat3384 4 года назад

      Yes, I keep wanting to watch but volume is really poor on my laptop so I leave after a minute or two.

  • @fencserx9423
    @fencserx9423 2 года назад

    Children with accents are the most adorable thing

  • @mandiegarrett1706
    @mandiegarrett1706 3 года назад

    Do you have any video on your greenhouse as I see that it survive that high wind? We have a lot of high wind in our area and have been searching for the type of greenhouse that will withstand high wind like yours. Thank you...awesome video.

  • @lazenbytim
    @lazenbytim 4 года назад +1

    Time is a killer or so we are taught. Personally I'd never compromise quality over time.

  • @601salsa
    @601salsa 5 лет назад

    Can you make your own compost tea? Maybe that would help with the nutrients needed for the plants to grow. Might be a little extra work but hopefully would help mitigate losses over the rest of the year. If you use a small shredder to shred green garden waste dump it in a bin of water it will speed up the compost tea process.