Scientists should embrace soil health as an overarching principle that contributes to sustainability goals, rather than only a property to measure. That's amazing! This is exactly what I said yesterday that human health should not be manipulated by statistical numbers alone observed but actual observation of nature. Same for soil health it goes, to truly observe the soil, the life it prospers beneath and abundance it has is so much more important than just arbitrary numbers. I am glad soil food web is teaching us about the soil and turning us to into true observer of mother nature.
Watching the replay.... I love your work.. Im from Australia.... The sunny Gold Coast.... I am trying to grow my own and desperate for soil health so I dont need to reply on the supermarket for my produce and would love to connect with other farmers so we can swap/share and sell to each other. Bring back the old ways and stop supporting the bigger chains.
Let’s share info. I’m just a small time gardener. To get microbiology into your soil start with a anaerobic compost tea just get any plant around you and stick it inside water and let it sit. Don’t do the typical way with a bubbler it doesn’t fill the soil with proper microbes it’s a myth most believe and just a way for corporations to make money from you
01:29:35 to 01:36:18 no audio!! Was a great question too!! Thanks for posting, wonderful to watch and made me so so so happy to hear earlier in the video you couldn't keep up with everyone commenting where they were from! To hear the regenerative movement having such "growing" success really made my day 🤓😇
We get right at 59 inches of rainfall a year. Yet we still going thru droughts. All because of compaction and hard to keep organics in the soil with all the rainfall I will put in what grasses I can to get back something on the soil. It is bare right now.
Great presentation. I am in the process of creating a permaculture homestead: this information gives me much food for thought..... or food for organisms. 🤔
During the Q&A section of our webinar our audio went out. If you are interested in watching this missing section, please go here: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html The question being answere is, "Is lime the only way to correct Soil ph?."
Soil is essential to good health, you should grow your own food for a well balanced life. Growing your food will make you thankful, peaceful, and physically healthy. We are connected to the land and inseparable, without it we die. Imagine that the land you garden was gardened by your ancestors for hundreds of years, that the soil you walk on was walked by your great grandfather and grandmother, what an awesome feeling! Taught to love and respect the land. Next time you are in the garden take your shoes off and meet your grandparents, because what you feel on the soles of your feet is what they felt. This is our inheritance, don’t squander it.
Adam's presentation is eloquent and descriptive. I have yet to watch the rest of the video, but I wanted to get that comment written before I get sidetracked.
what actual microscope do i need to check soil and compost. some type to have that i wouldnt need to upgrade too later. i want the best quality needed at a good price
@Florie Brown As long as you registered for the webinar series, you will have access to the replays of all the webinars. Replays will be posted here within approximately 48 hours after each webinar airs live: webinar.soilfoodweb.com/reg-webinar-rebuilding-soil-health Here is a link to the portion of the video where there were audio difficulties: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html Here is the lineup of webinars in the "Rapidly Rebuild Your Soil Health" series: Webinar 1: How Soil Health Works airs live on Thursday, October 6 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London) Webinar 2: Soil Health Success Stories airs live on Wednesday, October 12 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London) Webinar 3: How to Rebuild Soil Health in 1 Growing Season airs live on Thursday, October 20 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London) Webinar 4: Meet the Soil Health Experts airs live on Thursday, October 27 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London)
I am looking to convert sandy clay soil in an Arid location (New Mexico). I am wanting to go through the painstaking process and wanting to know how to do something that builds nutrients very deep. I have found one Rear Tiller that will go 14" deep and would be willing to clear and do it again for an even deeper run. When my wife grew up (we are in our late 50') there was plenty of black dirt but being in a windy arid environment and lack of land management (over grazing of cattle in an area that shouldn't have them). I want to rebuild from deep down so that we can prep it for many, many years to come. I am going to first start with the yard and putting grass to provide "bugs" for some chickens and a llama. I want to know if you dig deep and put in clay healing supplements, nanoclay, and Biochar as a base layer. Are there any additional items that would be used as fuel for future growth? Next question is if you put in a layer which would be a mixture of Biochar (near 1:1 mix), micro nutrient additives, and local soil, at what weight can you compact the soil without completely negate what your trying to do but still replace the natural compaction of the land? Example would a push roller such as an approximately 250lb water filled roller be heavy enough or would it be acceptable to use a Tow-Behind Poly Lawn Roller at 690 Lbs.? Finally, what would be the preferred supplements, microbes, fungi to add to soil at the bottom and through out the layers?
im trying to start a veggie & herb garden this year in my yard and haven't really learned enough yet (doing is more fun than learning haha), but my soil is pretty compacted and lifeless for the most part, and ive dug one plot about 2 feet down and im throwing in cut up whole bananas & grass, twigs & leaves, and also whatever worms/other insects i can find in a smaller concentrated area to hopefully propegate the insect population im mostly just going on intuition and trying to feed as much life on as many levels as i can in the soil would it be wise to cut up & throw some raw garlic cloves down there as well? (i bought some for that purpose but raw garlic is potent, and im not sure if it will just be toxic to insects or something and kill them off haha) would it be wise to use even more banana for even more microbial life to proliferate? (i bought 8 bunches for a roughly 2x3x5 foot volume, but part of me wants to double or triple it honestly haha) im also lightly watering/misting every layer that goes in also wondering if i should cut up the bananas and let them rot a bit first before throwing them in or maybe letting them sit in the sun to absorb sunlight as well haha there's so many possibilities and i just dont know enough about any of it
Im in So.Oregon, still cold at night and windy today. My soil is BAD! AND we have DEER!! I have rocky soil on one side of my yard and hard clay on the other. .WHAT should I do?? Do I need to rototil first?? We are still at 30-38 at night, 60-70 during the day. My pepper plants died. .too cold at night.
@christiesvoger8598 To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com and visit our website here: www.soilfoodweb.com/?page_id=19296
I have a question. Red Asian beetles have infested our back yard, how do we get rid of them without harming the soil? And we have a clay like soil in the back yard. How can we make it healthy again for growing crops in our own yard?
This was really helpful! One question though.. What would be an example for a ground-covercrop ? It has to be a perennial as Elaine mentioned, but I wonder, how this would be apply to a field of wheat for example? TY for sharing the information!
I have a question,can we use rain water as source of different micro organisms because it is observed that when water brings mud , it boots trees and plants
Hey I am imri from Israel And I grow olives for oil. I have 2.5 acres. I really want to start implementing biological practices in the soil. I would love to receive guidance on this matter. Thanks
Does anyone have any experience making micro piles of compost? I figure generally speaking the rules of thumb are the same but if you are making a pile say 2ftx2ft so you can run a few and see what variable the natrual oranic matter, just wondering what is the best way to trial it at home in verry small scale without having to destroy my biology in my yard and not making a giant mess lol
Yep, those black plastic modular units, and the domestic worm farm stacks, start the mod unit, after 6 months, harvest from the bottom, begin the worm bins, then add kitchen scraps to the worm bin, freeze scraps if you generae excess, and to breakdown the cells
@Petrus Wild it is a great question. You might be interested to watch this video with some case studies: promo.soilfoodweb.com/oct22-consultant/#casestudies
@@soilfoodwebschool ohh my God ,I can't belief that a fruit tree like cherry plant roots can go upto 100 feet deep...??? As we normally say roots like well aerated conditions then does it mean it's aerobic upto that depth and also I think it's only tap root which goes so deep and tap root has no role in nutrition uptake ,right ..??
@il Dreadmaker Our Tech team has made the segment of the webinar where the audio cut out into a Q&A short video: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html
I feel we need to realize the need to reduce the popalition by reducing the number of children we have as a means of reducing things like deforestation , polloution and micro plastics in our oceans .
There is nothing rapid about it. It can be done on a small scale by trucking biomass and inputs from elsewhere for a number of years. Rinse and repeat to maintain production. One needs uncultivated lands to rob of their biomass to practice this approach, or just truck biomass from the industrial fields. Still makes sense for a health conscious family willing to work, however there is just no way to scale it up. Impossible.
Good day. Thanks for sharing. Is there an effective , quicker way of getting worms to move into my garden ? Or where am I sure to find some that I can introduce myself?
✅ EXTENDED SALE! Sign up today and get 45% off our Soil Regeneration Classes 👉 promo.soilfoodweb.com/
Webinar stars at 26'12"
26:12
Noo, it starts at 7:30 after the intros with a great intro to the soil food web by Doctor Mycelium
Scientists should embrace soil health as an overarching principle that contributes to sustainability goals, rather than only a property to measure.
That's amazing! This is exactly what I said yesterday that human health should not be manipulated by statistical numbers alone observed but actual observation of nature.
Same for soil health it goes, to truly observe the soil, the life it prospers beneath and abundance it has is so much more important than just arbitrary numbers. I am glad soil food web is teaching us about the soil and turning us to into true observer of mother nature.
i am a Filipino Forester living with Indigenous people ( Subanen) i am impressed of your webinar
Watching the replay.... I love your work.. Im from Australia.... The sunny Gold Coast.... I am trying to grow my own and desperate for soil health so I dont need to reply on the supermarket for my produce and would love to connect with other farmers so we can swap/share and sell to each other.
Bring back the old ways and stop supporting the bigger chains.
Let’s share info. I’m just a small time gardener. To get microbiology into your soil start with a anaerobic compost tea just get any plant around you and stick it inside water and let it sit. Don’t do the typical way with a bubbler it doesn’t fill the soil with proper microbes it’s a myth most believe and just a way for corporations to make money from you
Thank you!! 😃 I Deeply appreciate you guys for all your time and hard work 🙏
Lakehills Texas USA
Esteemed and lettered folks having tech issues….relatable as all get out.
Smile!!! Your dog looks just like mine!
@@soilfoodwebschool wow! You have a blue Merle Pomeranian too! That’s awesome!!
01:29:35 to 01:36:18 no audio!! Was a great question too!!
Thanks for posting, wonderful to watch and made me so so so happy to hear earlier in the video you couldn't keep up with everyone commenting where they were from! To hear the regenerative movement having such "growing" success really made my day 🤓😇
Hi B, we will be posting the missing question to YT shortly. Sorry for the technical difficulties.
You can watch the section when the audio went out here: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html
@@soilfoodwebschool Wonderful, thanks so much for linking!!
"Cosmic and Soil Awakening of Humans" yes, sums up what the Soil Food Web and School is all about!!!! Yeah!
Thank you, Dr. Cobb, for sharing those perspectives (lehmann et al-2020, FDR) and ecosystem services.
We get right at 59 inches of rainfall a year. Yet we still going thru droughts. All because of compaction and hard to keep organics in the soil with all the rainfall I will put in what grasses I can to get back something on the soil. It is bare right now.
I just love your webinars. I’ve been watching and loving compost for a year. Thank you so much for sharing❤❤❤
We are so happy that you have been watching, learning, and enjoying our webinars!
Zoom had a solar flare today, our group also was challenged today...discussion restarts about 38:20. Keep growing ya all!
Great presentation. I am in the process of creating a permaculture homestead: this information gives me much food for thought..... or food for organisms. 🤔
During the Q&A section of our webinar our audio went out. If you are interested in watching this missing section, please go here: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html The question being answere is, "Is lime the only way to correct Soil ph?."
Thank you for these videos. I just started building my own soils and this is critical for people like me
Couldn't have said that any better way good job never knew there was life in soil 👏
Soil is essential to good health, you should grow your own food for a well balanced life. Growing your food will make you thankful, peaceful, and physically healthy.
We are connected to the land and inseparable, without it we die. Imagine that the land you garden was gardened by your ancestors for hundreds of years, that the soil you walk on was walked by your great grandfather and grandmother, what an awesome feeling! Taught to love and respect the land. Next time you are in the garden take your shoes off and meet your grandparents, because what you feel on the soles of your feet is what they felt.
This is our inheritance, don’t squander it.
Adam's presentation is eloquent and descriptive. I have yet to watch the rest of the video, but I wanted to get that comment written before I get sidetracked.
BBatangas, Philippines
Can cover crops add enough potassium and phosphorous back into the soil? We hear nitrogen fixing often but the other two i never heard people mention.
what actual microscope do i need to check soil and compost. some type to have that i wouldnt need to upgrade too later. i want the best quality needed at a good price
@Bobby Edmaiston Here is an info sheet on selecting a microscope and camera: drive.google.com/file/d/1VRIFOnuil-8Gjav2t4aQwoR3tRIPbm6G/view
Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤
Thanks for this video
❤ thanks 🙏 from Philippines😂❤❤❤❤ love you all
Dr. Ingham Thank you
enjoy webinar
Indiana
Loved the presentation by Dr Cobb, part of this video was silent thank you
Glad you enjoyed it, Florie. And thank you for letting us know about the issue with the silience.
@Florie Brown
As long as you registered for the webinar series, you will have access to the replays of all the webinars. Replays will be posted here within approximately 48 hours after each webinar airs live: webinar.soilfoodweb.com/reg-webinar-rebuilding-soil-health
Here is a link to the portion of the video where there were audio difficulties: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html
Here is the lineup of webinars in the "Rapidly Rebuild Your Soil Health" series:
Webinar 1: How Soil Health Works airs live on Thursday, October 6 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London)
Webinar 2: Soil Health Success Stories airs live on Wednesday, October 12 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London)
Webinar 3: How to Rebuild Soil Health in 1 Growing Season airs live on Thursday, October 20 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London)
Webinar 4: Meet the Soil Health Experts airs live on Thursday, October 27 at 11a.m. Pacific (7p.m. London)
I am looking to convert sandy clay soil in an Arid location (New Mexico). I am wanting to go through the painstaking process and wanting to know how to do something that builds nutrients very deep. I have found one Rear Tiller that will go 14" deep and would be willing to clear and do it again for an even deeper run. When my wife grew up (we are in our late 50') there was plenty of black dirt but being in a windy arid environment and lack of land management (over grazing of cattle in an area that shouldn't have them). I want to rebuild from deep down so that we can prep it for many, many years to come. I am going to first start with the yard and putting grass to provide "bugs" for some chickens and a llama.
I want to know if you dig deep and put in clay healing supplements, nanoclay, and Biochar as a base layer. Are there any additional items that would be used as fuel for future growth? Next question is if you put in a layer which would be a mixture of Biochar (near 1:1 mix), micro nutrient additives, and local soil, at what weight can you compact the soil without completely negate what your trying to do but still replace the natural compaction of the land? Example would a push roller such as an approximately 250lb water filled roller be heavy enough or would it be acceptable to use a Tow-Behind Poly Lawn Roller at 690 Lbs.? Finally, what would be the preferred supplements, microbes, fungi to add to soil at the bottom and through out the layers?
@F Cereceres Please feel free to send your questions to info@soilfoodweb.com
im trying to start a veggie & herb garden this year in my yard and haven't really learned enough yet (doing is more fun than learning haha), but my soil is pretty compacted and lifeless for the most part, and ive dug one plot about 2 feet down and im throwing in cut up whole bananas & grass, twigs & leaves, and also whatever worms/other insects i can find in a smaller concentrated area to hopefully propegate the insect population
im mostly just going on intuition and trying to feed as much life on as many levels as i can in the soil
would it be wise to cut up & throw some raw garlic cloves down there as well? (i bought some for that purpose but raw garlic is potent, and im not sure if it will just be toxic to insects or something and kill them off haha)
would it be wise to use even more banana for even more microbial life to proliferate? (i bought 8 bunches for a roughly 2x3x5 foot volume, but part of me wants to double or triple it honestly haha)
im also lightly watering/misting every layer that goes in
also wondering if i should cut up the bananas and let them rot a bit first before throwing them in or maybe letting them sit in the sun to absorb sunlight as well haha there's so many possibilities and i just dont know enough about any of it
How did you make out?
Good job
Medford, oregon. USA
Can we grow or help bacteria fungi protozoa nematode directly in our soil
Привет из России! Как всегда очень познавательно!
Im in So.Oregon, still cold at night and windy today. My soil is BAD! AND we have DEER!! I have rocky soil on one side of my yard and hard clay on the other. .WHAT should I do?? Do I need to rototil first?? We are still at 30-38 at night, 60-70 during the day. My pepper plants died. .too cold at night.
@christiesvoger8598 To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com and visit our website here: www.soilfoodweb.com/?page_id=19296
Bonner’s ferry Idaho
I have a question. Red Asian beetles have infested our back yard, how do we get rid of them without harming the soil?
And we have a clay like soil in the back yard. How can we make it healthy again for growing crops in our own yard?
Feel free to reach out to us with your questions at info@soilfoodweb.com
This was really helpful! One question though.. What would be an example for a ground-covercrop ? It has to be a perennial as Elaine mentioned, but I wonder, how this would be apply to a field of wheat for example? TY for sharing the information!
@geronimoflyingfree thank you for your question. Please send it to info@soilfoodweb.com and we will reply with the information
Iowa,La.
I have a question,can we use rain water as source of different micro organisms because it is observed that when water brings mud , it boots trees and plants
Hi Zafar, please feel free to reach out to us with your questions at info@soilfoodweb.com
Hey
I am imri from Israel
And I grow olives for oil.
I have 2.5 acres. I really want to start implementing biological practices in the soil. I would love to receive guidance on this matter. Thanks
Hi Imri, Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so that we can help you.
Iam mad about soil❤
NC Piedmont hardy zone 7b
Italy
Does anyone have any experience making micro piles of compost? I figure generally speaking the rules of thumb are the same but if you are making a pile say 2ftx2ft so you can run a few and see what variable the natrual oranic matter, just wondering what is the best way to trial it at home in verry small scale without having to destroy my biology in my yard and not making a giant mess lol
Yep, those black plastic modular units, and the domestic worm farm stacks, start the mod unit, after 6 months, harvest from the bottom, begin the worm bins, then add kitchen scraps to the worm bin, freeze scraps if you generae excess, and to breakdown the cells
I'm farming in Saskatchewan. Had a pan about 4-5 inches deep. It's dry after we had combined . How do I break it up .
Petrus
@Petrus Wild it is a great question. You might be interested to watch this video with some case studies: promo.soilfoodweb.com/oct22-consultant/#casestudies
@@soilfoodwebschool ohh my God ,I can't belief that a fruit tree like cherry plant roots can go upto 100 feet deep...??? As we normally say roots like well aerated conditions then does it mean it's aerobic upto that depth and also I think it's only tap root which goes so deep and tap root has no role in nutrition uptake ,right ..??
@Iiaquat talash Thank you for your questions. Please feel free to send your questions to info@soilfoodweb.com
Washington state
Every time I hear someone identify themselves as Academia, all I hear is "I know everything yet I know nothing." 🤣
Respectfully, adults are talking about "climate change". "Climate Change" is a political problem, not a climate issue.
The UN is using climate change as an excuse to impose Sunday laws. That tells me that the churches are manipulating or imposing religion
I can only assume that you also have a college degree geology.
It is a human problem
Australia ☆
From 57:00
To 01:04:00 is muted, the question on pH
@il Dreadmaker Our Tech team has made the segment of the webinar where the audio cut out into a Q&A short video: ruclips.net/video/T8bNuf44Ic0/видео.html
Uk
27 October
Today is 13October2022
malaysia
I feel we need to realize the need to reduce the popalition by reducing the number of children we have as a means of reducing things like deforestation , polloution and micro plastics in our oceans .
There is nothing rapid about it. It can be done on a small scale by trucking biomass and inputs from elsewhere for a number of years. Rinse and repeat to maintain production. One needs uncultivated lands to rob of their biomass to practice this approach, or just truck biomass from the industrial fields. Still makes sense for a health conscious family willing to work, however there is just no way to scale it up. Impossible.
I like to put a split log in the area of my perennial root system the worms like to hang out and party there.
Good day. Thanks for sharing. Is there an effective , quicker way of getting worms to move into my garden ? Or where am I sure to find some that I can introduce myself?
Big question about little soil critters. Please send us your question to info@soilfoodweb.com
@Thandolwethu Maphumo You might be interested to hear what some of our students are saying: promo.soilfoodweb.com/oct22-consultant-va/#student-reviews
Web inarticulate farm
I'm all for regenerative farming, but these climate change cultists are such a turn off--their models and theories are so thin.
So youre saying, obamas monsanto pertection act is a bad idea and we should not eat roundup on our food ?
Companion Plant Farmer In South Africa 🙏🏿🧎🏿♂️
Australia