I live in Greece and people put all there "garden waste" in big plastic bags on the street for people to pickup, that has helped me rejuvenate the dead soil I have been dealing with in my property here. As we have very hot and long dry summers, it's hard to produce organic material on my small property, so that really was the key to kickstarting my garden!
I’m not a commercial farmer, just an avid gardener. I adopted no-till out of necessity because my Virginia soil was so very hard to dig. The results have been amazing. People ask “how do you have time to weed this huge garden?” I say well, maybe once a week I’ll see a weed. I use compost , hay and leaves for mulch. Works like a charm. Loved your book BTW
I was just reading a post on social media written by a woman who uses the deep litter method in her chicken coop. She states that she has no where to put it when she cleans it out, so literally bags it up and puts it out in the trash. People were encouraging her to find a way to offer it to gardeners/farmers.
I used to do this with our stone dust bedding before I started composting, then I realized I could just compost it and that would be easier. You don’t know what you don’t know until you learn about it, especially when coming from a mostly or entirely non-agricultural background. - Slayden
Lol I love how 3.5 feet of rain casually falls from the sky from november to May up here in Oregon. Sure, we don't typically face hurricane style weather events, but the atmospheric rivers up here are pretty nuts otherwise. Inches per day are a frequent occurrence during the cool seasons. But then it's conversely completely dry from mid May until late September. Actually, it's the wood chips and compost together that keeps our backyard and garden from turning into complete mud bogs every year. And then it returns the water when we need it most!
The drainage test you mentioned - seeing if the hole doesn’t drain after 24 hours filling it the second time, I can’t even imagine!!! I live in southern Indiana with VERY sandy soil and we can get the heaviest rain imaginable and all puddles will be gone within a few hours of rain stopping. Our drainage is TOO good here
Wood chips have been impossible to source here, so I bought a small chipper and chip my own branches. Recently I've resorted to filling the bulk of pathways with rice hulls and capping with an inch or so of chips . Works great.
@@sbffsbrarbrr I went with a HAIGE HG-65HP-GGS. It has a 4 star reviews. I needed to lift it into my van so went with the smallest/lightest model. Had it two years now and zero problems.
Notes on VERY regional compost ingredients (NA to 98% of US).... Rice hulls from elevator...wow! *VERY* hydroscopic. Repeals water like an umbrella. Takes years to fully breakdown. Featherlight (not worth hauling far/blows away easily) but great source of silica. Also, very good for heavy "gumbo" clay. Helps to loosen. Leaves tiny "voids" for drainage & root penetration Crawfish/shrimp/crab shells. Easy to source from restaurants during crawfish season (Lent). Also, from processors. Fantastic material but you need a lot of fairly fine consistency carbon material (sawdust/shredded leaves) to tamp down odor & balance N:C. Shells hard to breakdown but a multiseason source of all kinds of goodness. All kinds of trace elements.
I have a small farm in Japan, where farms are pretty fragmented (the large one piece of land farms common in the US are just not how farms are laid out here) and I have every single type of soil in this video (and some that aren't, like red soil) in at least one block of 9 blocks, or even just one bed to the next in some blocks. I've adopted a potato rotation through blocks to deal with any compaction in place of mechanical tillage because new rare variety potatoes are quite lucrative here.
I met a livestock farmer at my local farmers market who was very impressed with my produce. He has like 100 acres. Long story short he asked if he could hire me to grow on his land. I went out there today, and wow, this guy has the opposite of a green thumb. Just one failed/abandoned project after another. He has all the equipment too, it's just insane how bad he is at farming. He was trying to do no-till, but I've convinced him to just start with conventional agriculture. I'm a market gardener and I have never farmed massive acreage. I'm legit scared, but I'm going to give it a try. We're planting like an acre of okra, an acre of corn, an acre of beans, and an acre of melons. He has a team of immigrants (legal) and I met them all today, and he introduced me as one of their new bosses. This is going to be a wild ride. I may have to make a RUclips channel to document this experience.
I like the fact that you address the bobble heads. The emotional ones that freak out and look like bobble heads if not doing exactly as they believe it should be done. The HOA officials of no till.
Your videos are full of great information and dad jokes. I believe I've watched them all. Seeing as your videos helped grow a ton of food for us last year, I paid it back this morning and ordered your book. Thank you.
Hey Farmer Jesse - thank you for the excellent content! The context is soooo important. It is really what makes healthy farming practices accessible to all. On a side note, my dad was the first in his area to switch some large fields of wheat to a no-till system. Boy did he get grief from everyone. That said, when he retired and sold it, one of the loudest critics said he was " going to show him how to farm", went in and tore the entire field upwith a disc. The first rain we had, most of the field slid into the ditch and across the road. The county had to bring in heavy equipment to clean everything up. And, the crops he planted did not do well. Sad to see so much good work ruined. Hopefully, it planted a seed in the heads of anyone else who was watching...
I started using buckwheat hull mulch for my vegetable beds, because it's cheep where I live. And found that it's actually amazing. Very lightweight (to the point of the risk of being blown away by wind, but that's not an issue in framed raised beds), never compacts. Also dark, which is is nice in cold climate.
Excellent content! Every year my farm makes decisions for me! I learned after year two to not force things and just do what the farm is telling me to do. Both with livestock and growing. So far the farm has decided on flowers rather than vegetables, selling to wholsalers and not farmers markets, alpacas instead of pigs, 30' x 50' blocks rather than 50x100...and much more. Literally nothing I imagined on my head for my farm when we bought it four years ago has come to fruition. The farm decides. Not me.
We've rocky soil here in the foothills of the Stansburys. Rocks removed make great little retaining walls for soil. Step 1 pick up rocks, step 2 till and pickup rocks, step 3 pickup rocks. Step 4 top dressing.
@@Mr-Tranorganic I have never seen rice husks here in HI. Unless people own coconut trees or know someone with one, coconut leaves are hard to come by.
Hawaiian here from usually drought stricken California. we have a large stand of the sacred ti leaves... years ago my grandpa showed me...when they are just going yellow and we shed them , and have piles of them, we twist the leaves into bunches breaking off the stems and line the planters with thick mulch bundles... they make the water last so long we can water many days apart when in the hot summers you would normally need to water daily...
Your book is so helpful! I have read it multiple times and still refer to it frequently as I transition from tilling rows to building beds. I’m using my abundant supply of live oak leaves and cover crops to enrich my sandy Florida soil. Chicken manure from local farmers should give all the nitrogen I need. Thanks for all of your entertaining content to help me on my gardening journey!
Tillage also makes sense in contacts with oxidation and reduction in the right place, excellent information. Thank you. Yes, all excellent points, also on sweet corn, using foliar feeds. You can actually build soil, carbon matter and soil health while growing a sweet corn crop.
I’ve been gardening in raised beds, grow bags, and pots for a couple of years. Aug ‘22 I put cardboard over a grassy area to have my first inground plot. Late Oct ‘23 thru Feb 1, ‘24 I dumped quail poop trays (with pine shavings) on top of the cardboard. I started forking the area at the end of Feb. There is now at least 10” of material to grow plants and the native soil below it is dark and loose. Hopefully it’ll be fully composted and ready for planting next month. We’ve had some 80° days to help the process.
Bless you! For the sneeze and the great info! Here in sandy, high water table FL, I have to put lots of compost in every round of plants, all while discouraging the fire ants! No wood chip mulch here in the veg beds- only for ornamentals. It definitely is an individual situation for us all.
LOL I couldn't do the rebar test with our clay soil because it's so ridiculously rocky here. Finding spots to stake shepherd hooks is a nightmare because of it.
He never will, he'a ball of energy and passion! I'll go personally work on his farm at a humble wage or barter to help out if it ever came to that, I'm only an hour away!
My neighbor throws sticks over the fence into my yard. Even after I asked them to please not do that. So now they get to smell compost. Lots and lots of hot hot wet compost cooking right on the other side of their patio table setup and ornamental pond.
I bought my house in fall of 22. I’ve only had one growing season. The guy that lives behind me, he’s probably 80ish. He sprays loads of chemicals all around for weeds, including outside of his property. He refuses to stop even though I have explained it has been damaging do any growth I’ve had in my back yard. Knowing that his expiration date is coming up I have decided to not grow in my back yard and grow exclusively in my front yard until I see the for sale sign go up on that house
Don't listen to these dorks. You tried to do it the right way, and your neighbor didn't get the hint. Screw 'em, make sure you mix that compost extra green-heavy 😉
A lot of folks in MS will get cotton gin trash for starting beds or raised beds. It’s getting less and less easy to find though as we grow more soy beans and less cotton.
You are growing ginger in Kentucky? Can you tell us when you plant and when you harvest, please? I grew some last year and it didn't mature, so didn't store well. What I haven't used by now is shriveled and junk.
Jesse, We need more dragons. I do have plenty of fairies and some naughty ones too as they are always hiding my niwashi if I'm nor careful.😅 thanks for the video this Monday morning. Love and hugs from NZ, Phil the mad herbalist market Gardener.
@philippamanning-smith Thanks for the mention of niwashi; i hadn't heard of it, looked up what it was and realised i have one, somewhere in the back of my allotment shed. Will dig it out, now that my veg rowing techniques have changed since i bought it, x nr of years ago. 🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚
Semi sub tropical Kentucky 😂.... love the stuff you put out. Good stuff..... but here in tropical Louisiana it's March 2024vand we are still freezing our azz off
Enjoy his content clear explanation and delivery. Top notch. I’m small home gardener with previously hard hard clay soil 25 years ago. Now beautiful light soil however we’re in severe drought so about 6” down the clay is like brick. SVB and cucumber beetle 🪲 are constant work. In the city so can’t burn and don’t want to spray so succession plant all year
I can get cotton “trash” that I’m told is great for garden beds but I worry that the cotton that was ginned - thus creating the “trash” - might have been sprayed heavily. I know they don’t still use the “cotton poisons” we used to smell for miles around cotton fields when I was a kid growing up in central Georgia, but I don’t know what they’re doing now about pests like boll weevils. Therefore, although the cotton trash would be a relative bargain, I’m buying compost from a local nursery.
Do you have a video on the irrigation system you use or what you would recommend? I'm in the process of building my new no till gardens and I want be efficient with my watering. It didn't rain for 3 months last summer! I'm looking into a drip system but I'd love to hear your opinions.
🥬🥗 Thank you for all those nice tips and trick. You show an interesting 'tap' system at 8:00 to clean the vegetables. Could you please tell us a bit more about it? On top of the fine nozzle I suspect it is having a pedal for foot-control. Are you using (filtered) rain water fro this?
As expected another great wake me up Sunday Morning Video, Thank You! We are having a hard time finding someone to do a soil test on our place. The big agricultural University in the State no longer does them. Upon suggestion we have tried contacting a couple of other similar businesses and no banana so far. Did someone mention rainfall??? We are praying that we get more than five inches of rain this year! Went to town yesterday and thought of getting some wood chips for our fruit bushes and trees. All were artificially dyed so we opted not to purchase any. Is our new approach to No Till Farming wearing us out ........................................... DEFINITELY! As we are continually chomping at the bit and nervous as to what improvements we are making and will be seeing, LOVE it though!
Love your work, really informative and useful. I’m in the UK and recently got an allotment , ie local authority owned plots that the public can rent cheaply for growing food in their spare time.. do you have these in US? I think they mostly started here in WW2, when imported food couldn’t get here. I’ve started building no dig beds with the free soil conditioner made from green waste, but this winter the plot has been waterlogged. This video has made me wonder if it’s the clay soil or a high water table that’s the problem, or both? Maybe I should stop piling on the cardboard and soil improver and try digging some in for the next bed? I’m loving the opportunity to learn and experiment, and hopefully improve the environment at the same time, and you’re helping me do this, THANK YOU!
@melsanderson7774 My second plot (halfway between London and Portsmouth) demanded a pond, which frogs deem to be an ok place to breed. Maybe your allotment could do with a pond? Bit tricky to work out how, if you're dealing with a high water table or a pan, but i'm sure you'd find a way. 🌳🕊💚
Love your videos! I wish I lived close enough to visit your farm! There is a movement going, or a mentality starting that it is now a huge no-no to lay down cardboard when starting to beds. Some gardeners and maybe too, just opinionated people looking to downplay home gardening or small market garden farms, that say that cardboard has too many chemicals and should never be used as underlayment for a new garden bed. Would you please share you knowledge / opinion on this? Thanks!
Jesse, Would love to have one of the compost farms near me that have been featured in your videos. I have contacted the one in New England and gotten quotes on tractor trailer loads to Va. Freight roughly doubles price per yard! I would like to get 150 yds, 3 or 4 tractor trailer loads if u know any outfit near SW Va.
@@danphillips4590 Star City compost just started this year here in Roanoke, otherwise I haven't found a local compost farm yet, myself. Will keep a look out for you.
I was thinking of mulching the veggies in my raised bed garden with my mother's ever-growing pile of Boston Globe newspapers. If I were to shred these, would that 1) work well? and 2) be safe for consuming the veggies? I've got the usual tomatoes, peas, beans, squash etc.
Thank you so much for this discussion Jesse. It’s coming at the right time, just before the community garden opens up for me. The plots I have are possibly a kind of desert 🏜️ never-before-seen on the planet - and it’s tilled every year. I’m pretty sure that the only thing there is subsoil. It was horrendous last year. I had a friend help me bring in leaf mold that had some worms in it - and I’m pretty sure those are the first worms 🪱 that that soil has ever seen 😳 I couldn’t even get a broadfork in anywhere on the 1200 square-foot plot. But besides that, thank you for a balanced discussion of no-till practices and contexts 🙏 (and I’m still on team audiobook 🎉 whenever that happens 😊)
The only bonkers farming I have around me are all the crazy monoculture lawn grass growers. Most of them hire these 'landscapers' that mechanically mow, pour heavy chemicals all around like drunken sailors, and water excessively on timers, then complain about the weedy and algae filled creek drain...Context?
No Till is just one of five principles of Regenerative Ag. By itself it (No Till) doesn't do much for building soil -- it's a good start, but it can't be done on its own. Also, compaction can still happen if one practices No Till without other best soil practices.
Can you create a 5-20 minute video that explains the basics of no-till farming, and step by step explain things that need to be done (think basic yet medium-sized garden, not a green house, or big farmland). Write it like you're teaching an adult who barely keeps potted plants alive. That would be super helpful.
I'm very lucky that I live quite close to www.youtube.com/@CharlesDowding1nodig and www.youtube.com/@MyFamilyGarden, both of which do the no dig/no till thing very successfully. So I can pretty much copy and paste what they do.
Agriculture in your country is very developed unlike my country. still too backward compared to your country, you have technology. and modern machinery.
I live in Greece and people put all there "garden waste" in big plastic bags on the street for people to pickup, that has helped me rejuvenate the dead soil I have been dealing with in my property here. As we have very hot and long dry summers, it's hard to produce organic material on my small property, so that really was the key to kickstarting my garden!
I’m not a commercial farmer, just an avid gardener. I adopted no-till out of necessity because my Virginia soil was so very hard to dig. The results have been amazing. People ask “how do you have time to weed this huge garden?” I say well, maybe once a week I’ll see a weed. I use compost , hay and leaves for mulch. Works like a charm. Loved your book BTW
I was just reading a post on social media written by a woman who uses the deep litter method in her chicken coop. She states that she has no where to put it when she cleans it out, so literally bags it up and puts it out in the trash. People were encouraging her to find a way to offer it to gardeners/farmers.
I used to do this with our stone dust bedding before I started composting, then I realized I could just compost it and that would be easier. You don’t know what you don’t know until you learn about it, especially when coming from a mostly or entirely non-agricultural background.
- Slayden
Lol I love how 3.5 feet of rain casually falls from the sky from november to May up here in Oregon. Sure, we don't typically face hurricane style weather events, but the atmospheric rivers up here are pretty nuts otherwise. Inches per day are a frequent occurrence during the cool seasons. But then it's conversely completely dry from mid May until late September. Actually, it's the wood chips and compost together that keeps our backyard and garden from turning into complete mud bogs every year. And then it returns the water when we need it most!
The drainage test you mentioned - seeing if the hole doesn’t drain after 24 hours filling it the second time, I can’t even imagine!!! I live in southern Indiana with VERY sandy soil and we can get the heaviest rain imaginable and all puddles will be gone within a few hours of rain stopping. Our drainage is TOO good here
We have the same problems here in 7600' elevation CO. We have great volcanic minerals and NO organic matter.
Wood chips have been impossible to source here, so I bought a small chipper and chip my own branches. Recently I've resorted to filling the bulk of pathways with rice hulls and capping with an inch or so of chips . Works great.
I'm curious to know what kind of wood chipper you purchased. I haven't seen any at a reasonable price that are also well rated.
@@sbffsbrarbrr I went with a HAIGE HG-65HP-GGS. It has a 4 star reviews. I needed to lift it into my van so went with the smallest/lightest model. Had it two years now and zero problems.
Notes on VERY regional compost ingredients (NA to 98% of US)....
Rice hulls from elevator...wow!
*VERY* hydroscopic. Repeals water like an umbrella. Takes years to fully breakdown.
Featherlight (not worth hauling far/blows away easily) but great source of silica. Also, very good for heavy "gumbo" clay. Helps to loosen. Leaves tiny "voids" for drainage & root penetration
Crawfish/shrimp/crab shells. Easy to source from restaurants during crawfish season (Lent). Also, from processors.
Fantastic material but you need a lot of fairly fine consistency carbon material (sawdust/shredded leaves) to tamp down odor & balance N:C. Shells hard to breakdown but a multiseason source of all kinds of goodness. All kinds of trace elements.
I think you mean hydrophobic
@@supernumiphone7258 yep. My bad
I have a small farm in Japan, where farms are pretty fragmented (the large one piece of land farms common in the US are just not how farms are laid out here) and I have every single type of soil in this video (and some that aren't, like red soil) in at least one block of 9 blocks, or even just one bed to the next in some blocks. I've adopted a potato rotation through blocks to deal with any compaction in place of mechanical tillage because new rare variety potatoes are quite lucrative here.
Another great video! Finally ordered the book after hearing about it about 40 times. I'm slow 😁
@59kuphoff
Flapping about in the wake of time? I'm familiar with thAt one 😅
🌳🕊💚
I met a livestock farmer at my local farmers market who was very impressed with my produce. He has like 100 acres. Long story short he asked if he could hire me to grow on his land. I went out there today, and wow, this guy has the opposite of a green thumb. Just one failed/abandoned project after another. He has all the equipment too, it's just insane how bad he is at farming. He was trying to do no-till, but I've convinced him to just start with conventional agriculture. I'm a market gardener and I have never farmed massive acreage. I'm legit scared, but I'm going to give it a try. We're planting like an acre of okra, an acre of corn, an acre of beans, and an acre of melons.
He has a team of immigrants (legal) and I met them all today, and he introduced me as one of their new bosses. This is going to be a wild ride. I may have to make a RUclips channel to document this experience.
Good luck! That sounds like quite the undertaking.
@@bradliston8990 Yea, we'll see how it goes.
@@dungeonmaster6292 Seethe and dilate, loser.
Good luck, I would be worried about overseeing sometime that large, but maybe it's easier than I expect.
I like the fact that you address the bobble heads. The emotional ones that freak out and look like bobble heads if not doing exactly as they believe it should be done. The HOA officials of no till.
Thanks for sticking with science and staying away from dogma
Your videos are full of great information and dad jokes. I believe I've watched them all. Seeing as your videos helped grow a ton of food for us last year, I paid it back this morning and ordered your book. Thank you.
Hey Farmer Jesse - thank you for the excellent content! The context is soooo important. It is really what makes healthy farming practices accessible to all. On a side note, my dad was the first in his area to switch some large fields of wheat to a no-till system. Boy did he get grief from everyone. That said, when he retired and sold it, one of the loudest critics said he was " going to show him how to farm", went in and tore the entire field upwith a disc. The first rain we had, most of the field slid into the ditch and across the road. The county had to bring in heavy equipment to clean everything up. And, the crops he planted did not do well. Sad to see so much good work ruined. Hopefully, it planted a seed in the heads of anyone else who was watching...
I started using buckwheat hull mulch for my vegetable beds, because it's cheep where I live. And found that it's actually amazing. Very lightweight (to the point of the risk of being blown away by wind, but that's not an issue in framed raised beds), never compacts. Also dark, which is is nice in cold climate.
Excellent content! Every year my farm makes decisions for me! I learned after year two to not force things and just do what the farm is telling me to do. Both with livestock and growing. So far the farm has decided on flowers rather than vegetables, selling to wholsalers and not farmers markets, alpacas instead of pigs, 30' x 50' blocks rather than 50x100...and much more. Literally nothing I imagined on my head for my farm when we bought it four years ago has come to fruition. The farm decides. Not me.
We've rocky soil here in the foothills of the Stansburys. Rocks removed make great little retaining walls for soil. Step 1 pick up rocks, step 2 till and pickup rocks, step 3 pickup rocks. Step 4 top dressing.
Here in Hawaii old school we use a lot of coconut husks and leaves for mulching. New school is mostly wood chips.
I think only in undeveloped countries like mine do those things. In your country, there are rice husks and coconut leaves
@@Mr-Tranorganic I have never seen rice husks here in HI. Unless people own coconut trees or know someone with one, coconut leaves are hard to come by.
Hawaiian here from usually drought stricken California. we have a large stand of the sacred ti leaves... years ago my grandpa showed me...when they are just going yellow and we shed them , and have piles of them, we twist the leaves into bunches breaking off the stems and line the planters with thick mulch bundles... they make the water last so long we can water many days apart when in the hot summers you would normally need to water daily...
Your book is so helpful! I have read it multiple times and still refer to it frequently as I transition from tilling rows to building beds. I’m using my abundant supply of live oak leaves and cover crops to enrich my sandy Florida soil. Chicken manure from local farmers should give all the nitrogen I need. Thanks for all of your entertaining content to help me on my gardening journey!
Great reminders for the beginning of the growing season!
Tillage also makes sense in contacts with oxidation and reduction in the right place, excellent information. Thank you. Yes, all excellent points, also on sweet corn, using foliar feeds. You can actually build soil, carbon matter and soil health while growing a sweet corn crop.
I’ve been gardening in raised beds, grow bags, and pots for a couple of years. Aug ‘22 I put cardboard over a grassy area to have my first inground plot. Late Oct ‘23 thru Feb 1, ‘24 I dumped quail poop trays (with pine shavings) on top of the cardboard. I started forking the area at the end of Feb. There is now at least 10” of material to grow plants and the native soil below it is dark and loose. Hopefully it’ll be fully composted and ready for planting next month. We’ve had some 80° days to help the process.
I like ur no dogma mindset. I am adapting ur no till methods to my backyard garden. I've learned tons from u about soil management.
Love how simple and easily you explain these topics. I’m curious if you’ve had any experience or thoughts about incorporating Biochar into your beds.
Bless you! For the sneeze and the great info! Here in sandy, high water table FL, I have to put lots of compost in every round of plants, all while discouraging the fire ants! No wood chip mulch here in the veg beds- only for ornamentals. It definitely is an individual situation for us all.
There is commercial no till and domestic no till. Well done on your style
Greetings from Ukraine.
You are awesome
Slava Ukraini
LOL I couldn't do the rebar test with our clay soil because it's so ridiculously rocky here. Finding spots to stake shepherd hooks is a nightmare because of it.
Good video greetings from the Peten gustemala
I really appreciate all the work you do - I just hope you don't burn out - I love the info with the wry wit interspersed. The book is great.
He never will, he'a ball of energy and passion! I'll go personally work on his farm at a humble wage or barter to help out if it ever came to that, I'm only an hour away!
I really enjoy your content so much! Just your general attitude and the way you describe things!
Helping a lot of new growers man! Respect and keep on keeping on!
My neighbor throws sticks over the fence into my yard. Even after I asked them to please not do that. So now they get to smell compost. Lots and lots of hot hot wet compost cooking right on the other side of their patio table setup and ornamental pond.
Stop hating and you will have a better live
Better to be a warrior in a garden then a gardener in war?
Why not compost those sticks? Have you ever heard of Hugelkulture? Turn lemons into lemonade.
I bought my house in fall of 22. I’ve only had one growing season.
The guy that lives behind me, he’s probably 80ish. He sprays loads of chemicals all around for weeds, including outside of his property. He refuses to stop even though I have explained it has been damaging do any growth I’ve had in my back yard. Knowing that his expiration date is coming up I have decided to not grow in my back yard and grow exclusively in my front yard until I see the for sale sign go up on that house
Don't listen to these dorks. You tried to do it the right way, and your neighbor didn't get the hint. Screw 'em, make sure you mix that compost extra green-heavy 😉
A lot of folks in MS will get cotton gin trash for starting beds or raised beds. It’s getting less and less easy to find though as we grow more soy beans and less cotton.
Thanks!
Thank you 🙌
Great content! I look forward to the new videos.
Are there any plans to make an audio version of The Living Soil Handbook for Audible?!
Thanks for this video. I have been thinking about asking you to address this topic so that I had something to point people to!
This is the BEST!!!!! Could you make more?
Best video yet, thank you, thank you, thank you!
Whenever I watch your videos, I always remember one about microbes - where they were dancing to country music 😆
You are growing ginger in Kentucky? Can you tell us when you plant and when you harvest, please? I grew some last year and it didn't mature, so didn't store well.
What I haven't used by now is shriveled and junk.
Great video, just subscribed. I have found your videos before but for some reason I don't often subscribe when when i like the content.
Great info as always! Im a little late to the show i know.
Home owner annoyances ! lol you have a typo about minute 7:35 around there. Unless comopost is a type of compost?
I loved Onward🥺
Jesse, We need more dragons. I do have plenty of fairies and some naughty ones too as they are always hiding my niwashi if I'm nor careful.😅 thanks for the video this Monday morning. Love and hugs from NZ, Phil the mad herbalist market Gardener.
@philippamanning-smith
Thanks for the mention of niwashi; i hadn't heard of it, looked up what it was and realised i have one, somewhere in the back of my allotment shed. Will dig it out, now that my veg rowing techniques have changed since i bought it, x nr of years ago.
🙏🏽 🌳🕊💚
Good advice. Thanks👌
Somehow, I don't feel that the idea of figuring out our farm or garden's context is boring at all ! I guess I must truly be a nerd ;) .
Semi sub tropical Kentucky 😂.... love the stuff you put out. Good stuff..... but here in tropical Louisiana it's March 2024vand we are still freezing our azz off
Enjoy his content clear explanation and delivery. Top notch. I’m small home gardener with previously hard hard clay soil 25 years ago. Now beautiful light soil however we’re in severe drought so about 6” down the clay is like brick. SVB and cucumber beetle 🪲 are constant work. In the city so can’t burn and don’t want to spray so succession plant all year
I can get cotton “trash” that I’m told is great for garden beds but I worry that the cotton that was ginned - thus creating the “trash” - might have been sprayed heavily. I know they don’t still use the “cotton poisons” we used to smell for miles around cotton fields when I was a kid growing up in central Georgia, but I don’t know what they’re doing now about pests like boll weevils. Therefore, although the cotton trash would be a relative bargain, I’m buying compost from a local nursery.
Do you have a video on the irrigation system you use or what you would recommend? I'm in the process of building my new no till gardens and I want be efficient with my watering. It didn't rain for 3 months last summer! I'm looking into a drip system but I'd love to hear your opinions.
🥬🥗 Thank you for all those nice tips and trick. You show an interesting 'tap' system at 8:00 to clean the vegetables. Could you please tell us a bit more about it? On top of the fine nozzle I suspect it is having a pedal for foot-control. Are you using (filtered) rain water fro this?
Looks like you already published a video on that thing !! Thanks again
ruclips.net/video/JYQyovXIqGU/видео.html
There's a whole video about it ( maybe two). Look in the library. It was about two years ago.
Thank you, as always.
Thank you as always. Love your videos!
As expected another great wake me up Sunday Morning Video, Thank You! We are having a hard time finding someone to do a soil test on our place. The big agricultural University in the State no longer does them. Upon suggestion we have tried contacting a couple of other similar businesses and no banana so far. Did someone mention rainfall??? We are praying that we get more than five inches of rain this year! Went to town yesterday and thought of getting some wood chips for our fruit bushes and trees. All were artificially dyed so we opted not to purchase any. Is our new approach to No Till Farming wearing us out ........................................... DEFINITELY! As we are continually chomping at the bit and nervous as to what improvements we are making and will be seeing, LOVE it though!
No need to buy would chips usually. Put the word out to your community.
Love your work, really informative and useful. I’m in the UK and recently got an allotment , ie local authority owned plots that the public can rent cheaply for growing food in their spare time.. do you have these in US? I think they mostly started here in WW2, when imported food couldn’t get here. I’ve started building no dig beds with the free soil conditioner made from green waste, but this winter the plot has been waterlogged. This video has made me wonder if it’s the clay soil or a high water table that’s the problem, or both? Maybe I should stop piling on the cardboard and soil improver and try digging some in for the next bed? I’m loving the opportunity to learn and experiment, and hopefully improve the environment at the same time, and you’re helping me do this, THANK YOU!
Where abouts in the UK are you? My la has around 100-300 waiting list per allotment!
@melsanderson7774
My second plot (halfway between London and Portsmouth) demanded a pond, which frogs deem to be an ok place to breed. Maybe your allotment could do with a pond?
Bit tricky to work out how, if you're dealing with a high water table or a pan, but i'm sure you'd find a way.
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Love your videos! I wish I lived close enough to visit your farm!
There is a movement going, or a mentality starting that it is now a huge no-no to lay down cardboard when starting to beds. Some gardeners and maybe too, just opinionated people looking to downplay home gardening or small market garden farms, that say that cardboard has too many chemicals and should never be used as underlayment for a new garden bed. Would you please share you knowledge / opinion on this? Thanks!
@munchkin5674n
Certainly avoid cardboard from internationally transported fresh food, as they are sprayed with insecticide and fungicide.
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If you have the ability to easily and rapidly replenish your microbes (Jadam Microbial Solution) tillage can be an incredible tool on the small farm.
Jesse, Would love to have one of the compost farms near me that have been featured in your videos. I have contacted the one in New England and gotten quotes on tractor trailer loads to Va. Freight roughly doubles price per yard! I would like to get 150 yds, 3 or 4 tractor trailer loads if u know any outfit near SW Va.
Check out black bear composting
@@EvanMorgan7 nice, thx, 200 miles from me
Freestate Farms in Manassas may fit you, depending on where in VA you are.
@@UsurpedLettuce SW VA
@@danphillips4590 Star City compost just started this year here in Roanoke, otherwise I haven't found a local compost farm yet, myself. Will keep a look out for you.
you might be able to get potasium from saw mill ash piles after they burn sawdust and scraps.
My neighbour gets free woodchip for his composting toilet from the local sawmill. I guess it could also work for no-till walkways etc.
@4115steve
Just be aware that too much ashes will lock up magnesium
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I was thinking of mulching the veggies in my raised bed garden with my mother's ever-growing pile of Boston Globe newspapers. If I were to shred these, would that 1) work well? and 2) be safe for consuming the veggies? I've got the usual tomatoes, peas, beans, squash etc.
Newspaper is an OK mulch, but it blows away when dry and mats down when wet.
@@teebob21 Thanks for the input. Maybe I'll save them for another use.
I didn’t realize you are in Kentucky! Awesome 😊
Bless U!
Do I buy q walking behind tractor or just compost?
Good info
Thank you so much for this discussion Jesse. It’s coming at the right time, just before the community garden opens up for me. The plots I have are possibly a kind of desert 🏜️ never-before-seen on the planet - and it’s tilled every year. I’m pretty sure that the only thing there is subsoil. It was horrendous last year. I had a friend help me bring in leaf mold that had some worms in it - and I’m pretty sure those are the first worms 🪱 that that soil has ever seen 😳 I couldn’t even get a broadfork in anywhere on the 1200 square-foot plot.
But besides that, thank you for a balanced discussion of no-till practices and contexts 🙏
(and I’m still on team audiobook 🎉 whenever that happens 😊)
You rock!
The only bonkers farming I have around me are all the crazy monoculture lawn grass growers. Most of them hire these 'landscapers' that mechanically mow, pour heavy chemicals all around like drunken sailors, and water excessively on timers, then complain about the weedy and algae filled creek drain...Context?
What would you do with the excess wool?
I have a friend with sheep… she used the wool to insulate her house.
It works as a mulch around plants or a compost ingredient. High nitrogen and supposedly deters slugs
Cool, now I know why my garden will fail!
Pertanian yang begitu subur
Great videos. I would love to tour your farm and I'm sure your knowledge and time is very important. But 100$ per ticket WOW. Not going to make it.
Where's my greeting man 😢 I'm a nerd and miss the hey nerds
Sanatate❤❤❤
No Till is just one of five principles of Regenerative Ag. By itself it (No Till) doesn't do much for building soil -- it's a good start, but it can't be done on its own. Also, compaction can still happen if one practices No Till without other best soil practices.
Bottom line is...dont allow the scientific side of gardening to intimadate you! Start gardening & make mistakes but learn...just like the pro's!😂😂
Can you create a 5-20 minute video that explains the basics of no-till farming, and step by step explain things that need to be done (think basic yet medium-sized garden, not a green house, or big farmland). Write it like you're teaching an adult who barely keeps potted plants alive. That would be super helpful.
Where I live we have fire ants that just love garden soil. 🐜🤔
I'm very lucky that I live quite close to www.youtube.com/@CharlesDowding1nodig and www.youtube.com/@MyFamilyGarden, both of which do the no dig/no till thing very successfully. So I can pretty much copy and paste what they do.
Laws schmaws. Come and take my carrot officer rabbit. Rattlesnake on duty.
Washington state
Agricultura este atat de fertila
Gesundheit.
I like you mate
digging the soil is bad. This is why you can use raise beds on your property.
BUT you do you boo boo
A farm this big. No ones going to use raised beds. Why would you?
Man, the p*rn bots aren't even sparing gardening channels lol
why you gotta make so much sense?
Agriculture in your country is very developed unlike my country. still too backward compared to your country, you have technology. and modern machinery.