If You Only Make ONE Fertilizer Make It THIS ONE - Here's EXACTLY What Your Plants Need - JADAM JLF

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2022
  • This video explains to you exactly how to produce the single best and most effective natural fertilizer a person can make. Harnessing the inherent beauty and intelligence of nature we can replicate her process and utilize it in the home garden or the market farm as well.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @Saphen22
    @Saphen22 5 месяцев назад +51

    All your principles for plant health apply exactly to the health of man and woman. All I would add is in reference to 'good' and 'bad' bacteria - it is a fallacy to still think of bacteria as good or bad. The role of bacteria is to support - they are helpers - only when the environment they live in becomes toxic or poisoned do they proliferate to the extent that we perceive them to be 'bad'. They are just doing their job. Love your videos, so pleased I found you - thank you - absolutely spot on!

    • @racquelkoziel7358
      @racquelkoziel7358 3 месяца назад

      Do you follow Dr.Cowan? You would love him. And IMO germ theory is wrong wrong wrong.

    • @Lanaestu
      @Lanaestu 3 месяца назад +2

      I have heard this from Jadam Method, there's no such thing like bad or good bacteria, they live in harmony.

    • @TheLastBlackJaguar
      @TheLastBlackJaguar 2 месяца назад

      This bucket thing is great that is why i always buy a bucket of chicken from KFC to fertilize myself 😁

    • @umwhatamIdoinghere
      @umwhatamIdoinghere Месяц назад

      ​@TheLastBlackJaguar hahaha. But remember, it's all about balance! If you throw off that nutritional balance, you'll also throw off that bacterial balance.

    • @TheLastBlackJaguar
      @TheLastBlackJaguar Месяц назад

      @@umwhatamIdoinghere That's why it also comes with coleslaw and biscuits. Nutritional balance 😂😂

  • @KimcheePancakes
    @KimcheePancakes 3 месяца назад +15

    You are a natural teacher. I have been watching a lot of these garden videos for years now, and I must say you were designed to impart your wisdom onto others. Your delivery is so easy to digest and you’re leaving no questions unanswered.

  • @TrishInThePiedmont
    @TrishInThePiedmont Год назад +130

    Da Vinci said “Mother nature never breaks her own rules”. This is such a fantastic video. I’ve watched it about 3 times. Now I understand why my grandmother always told us to pick from the tree and leave the apples where they fall. 😊

    • @stepper8584
      @stepper8584 Год назад +11

      Nice to see now your grandmothers wisdom reached you again. I also will leave fallen fruit from now on

    • @BigWesLawns
      @BigWesLawns Год назад +18

      ​@@stepper8584 Me too. My friend whos property I maintain as of last year, has an apple tree, and I raided every single aplle on the ground for my big composter I built last year. Now I feel dumb over it. So I am going to give the tree all my lovin this year, compost, fish hydrolysate, and pile the leaves around the base so the next apples have somewhere to immediately start decomposing.
      My friend said he wants to fix the tree again, and return it to a fruit maker. He knows the pruning aspect that I dont know about, but I will be its nutritionist. Peace!🇨🇦👊🏻👨🏻‍🏭✨💖🙏🌞

    • @stepper8584
      @stepper8584 Год назад

      @@BigWesLawns awesome!

    • @ApeHolder42069
      @ApeHolder42069 Год назад +12

      ​​@@BigWesLawns don't feel too bad, i always collect and compost the fruit. The reason being fungal infections are pretty common and if you don't remove affected fruit, also on the ground, it can spread further and seriously deminish the output of the tree and the rotting fruit also attracts tons of yellow jackets where i live.
      Even when composting the fruit, it can still spread spores if in the vicinity of a tree.
      The best solution would be to bury the fruit deep and it will rot and act as a fertilizer without the risks of contamination

    • @rachelwaddleton3283
      @rachelwaddleton3283 Год назад +2

      Love your videos

  • @gracierose3076
    @gracierose3076 Год назад +68

    We are so blessed we have a forest of rotting leaves. A lot of it is already composted. We have our first garden ever. So we are not expecting much this year. My husband just turned 80 and I am not far behind.
    We have lived in NC for two years this spring. So still have a lot to learn! We put up a greenhouse and have a bunch of huge pots all planted with Potatoes, Tomatoes, Peppers, and Sweet Potatoes ... I want to put them outside but we are going to start building our raised beds this summer and in the fall.

    • @audreysmallcombe4319
      @audreysmallcombe4319 Год назад +9

      Wishing you all the best and a wonderful, hefty, harvest.

    • @jasminewinesburg
      @jasminewinesburg 11 месяцев назад

      PUT THEM IN THE EARTH BYPASS POTS ITS ABOUT MICROBS AN SOIL WEB AN ONLY SO MUCH FITS IN A POT

    • @truthreigns3267
      @truthreigns3267 2 месяца назад

    • @juliascorey999
      @juliascorey999 Месяц назад +1

      Hope I'm still gardening at 80,😊

    • @jamesreid8638
      @jamesreid8638 Месяц назад +1

      Helen and Scot Neering did great work farming in New England for many years, despite Scot's advanced age. They were an inspiration to me even during my youth. Now that i'm old, their success is all the more of an encouragement.

  • @unaffiliated_x9279
    @unaffiliated_x9279 Год назад +15

    I just went out and squished all of my split peaches into the soil after watching this. Thank you for the video my friend.

  • @surferdude-ll2qu
    @surferdude-ll2qu Год назад +64

    This is the best information anyone could get on plants it was explained in the most simple way that it took me 2 years to figure this out and it was just explained in less than 5 min. I wish I knew this 2 years ago. Subbed and turned on that notification.👍🏻

  • @presterjohn1697
    @presterjohn1697 Год назад +22

    This was PURE FIRE. Nice and condensed. Just the facts

  • @euphoniahale5181
    @euphoniahale5181 Год назад +37

    FYI. For fruit trees. Take the prematurely fallen fruit and stick it in a bucket of water. Many times it falls early cuz it has worms. When the worms come out they will drown. Then the fruit water can safely be dumped back out around the tree. Found out about the worms from Stephan but found out about the drowned worms on accident 😂

    • @rickbacch
      @rickbacch Год назад

      @@miken1579 beneficial worms are earth worms not fruit worms. fruit worms are bad

    • @poobalanmaistry6279
      @poobalanmaistry6279 Год назад

      @@miken1579 yes thats true dont kill the worms its better alive it produces more proteins in the soil

    • @HaloHighlightz
      @HaloHighlightz Месяц назад

      Or if you can a compost bin, but the fruit there and the worms can make castings which is a great addendum

    • @euphoniahale5181
      @euphoniahale5181 Месяц назад

      @@HaloHighlightz composting worms and in general earth worms are different than fruit worm. Don’t want to chance them crawling into the ground after and re emerging onto other fruit trees in my yard in the spring

  • @sittingdoe
    @sittingdoe 9 месяцев назад +12

    I love your passion for explaining this concept which is so obvious that we’ve missed it entirely. I’ve followed a ton of how to’s and this is brilliant! I’ve noted to myself many times how nature manages to grow things perfectly, so thank you for stating the obvious. ❤️

  • @rickh633
    @rickh633 Год назад +16

    For over 30 years I have been raking my fall leaves over my garden and rototilling them into the garden in the spring just like my father did.

  • @MegaCrystalWater
    @MegaCrystalWater Год назад +46

    I'm really enjoying making the fertilizers, I have my buckets ready for the fish & leaf mold. I've made a bucket of potash. I'm working on getting jars for the hydrolysate, lactic acid and making cheese. Man, you've turned my world right around.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +11

      I know its so enthralling especially when you can see what incredible effect it all has on the food you grow!

  • @AllGrowing
    @AllGrowing Год назад +30

    How am I gonna have the time to watch all your videos, I can't stop! You're an inspiration, love the broad plant and gardening knowledge you share, thank you!

    • @onlyreallove17
      @onlyreallove17 9 месяцев назад +1

      😁 very COOL!!!
      YES!!!
      I just discovered him!!! He IS THE BOMB DIGGITY, for sure!!! WoW, Beautiful Light of Source🕊️

  • @graemedevine9651
    @graemedevine9651 Год назад +22

    Thanks Nate, perfect timing I just ordered 75 ltr drums with lids, its go big or go home here on Gods emerald isle, my veg I planted the other week is coming on well, going to get rid of the other stuff soon when drums arrive and get this stuff brewing, there's a lot of untouched forests here where I live the smell when you walk through them is like heaven and after a damp night the leaf mould is white and smells amazing, the sphagnum moss is starting to erupt into bright green everywhere, I'd love to show you with some photos.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +8

      wow thats a beautiful picture in my mind thank you and thats right Grow Big or Go Home! lol

  • @garywillow6578
    @garywillow6578 Год назад +14

    Interesting view point on nature's way. I have recently found that cucumbers are a plant saver. I grow weed and any sick plants or problems I make a cucumber leachate and the plants get better. Seaweed and cucumbers are my go to for fixing problems. I always have a container with water to make a soup of whatever is in season as I love to forage for free stuff. Comfrey, nettles, dandelions and any fruits. Keeps me in tune to the seasons. Massive ragwort problem in my area; but the leaf mould from them is amazing.

  • @catherinemcmartin8275
    @catherinemcmartin8275 Год назад +8

    You are seriously a gift to our planet, much needed gift. Thanks very much. Much love.

  • @Anarchyacresfarmstead
    @Anarchyacresfarmstead Год назад +7

    About three sentences in, and I knew I’d love your channel. I’ll definitely be implementing this! Thank you!

  • @billyandrew
    @billyandrew Год назад +4

    Whole heap of work, when stinging nettles contain every nutrient and mineral that _any_ plant needs, just stored there in _one_ single plant!
    Been fermenting them every year for decades.
    Just over five decades, that's over half a century, and it's never failed me once.
    The most reviled, yet vastly underestimated plant on the entire planet.
    Food, drink, medicine, material and fertiliser under people's very noses and they don't even give it a second glance.
    Everything else I use to bulk up, as organic matter, the growing medium, but that ferment is the spark giving plants the zest for life.
    They look different, act different, smell different.
    It's garden voodoo. 😁
    May your fingers stay green.

  • @AnnikaOBrien
    @AnnikaOBrien Год назад +6

    I clicked on this video and was sitting here dreading what I was about to hear, then realizing you were going the direction of Jadam, I got so excited when I finally heard you say it! I was so fortunate to have a close friend turn me on to this method in my first season of gardening. Bless you for all you do; you’ve gained a new subscriber!

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +2

      welcome my friend!!... so glad to hear you are starting on the right path from the very beginning!!... let me know if you have any video idea suggestions along your journey

  • @JoyceHAnderson-rp5bf
    @JoyceHAnderson-rp5bf 5 месяцев назад +2

    Suddenly I feel so stupid right now. Why didn't I think of this? It's so simple and so logical. It's simply growing food using mother nature's ways. Thank you sooooo much for making this brilliant video. I shall follow your instructions. :) See me smiling? I'll start in the morning.
    joyce

  • @allendiaz9031
    @allendiaz9031 Год назад +11

    You are absolute correct in stating a healthy plant wards off most insects and diseases. I just harvested 10 different types of tomato plants. People are amazed how beautiful the plants are and the quality of the fruit. Yes, I also make my own compost and fertilizer. With 40 years of gardening the simpler the better. Observing nature is the best teacher.

  • @mindyourmindbyevaflood9555
    @mindyourmindbyevaflood9555 Год назад +8

    Great!! And totally logical. Thanks for your energy and intelligence!

  • @carolparrish194
    @carolparrish194 Год назад +25

    Thanks Nate You have opened up a completely differently way of feeding my vegetable plants. This is something I will have to experiment with. I want to grow the best, hardiest, plants that I can.

  • @jimwyatt6652
    @jimwyatt6652 Год назад +26

    It’s amazing how all of this was designed, from the microscopic building blocks coming together making our food and then returning to microscopic building blocks to do it again. This is the kind of thing that has convinced me that there is intelligent design. Have a great day. 🙏🏻

    • @smas3256
      @smas3256 Год назад +3

      I know. And from what we eat we grow fingernails, hair, etc. and for the next generation, eggs etc .

    • @stevemiller8952
      @stevemiller8952 Год назад +4

      Yes the intelligent design has a name and His name is JESUS

    • @bardowesselius4121
      @bardowesselius4121 Год назад +1

      @@stevemiller8952 the God and Father of Jesus did all the work. John 17:3, John 20:17 and Revelation 3:12 show us Jesus has a God who is Creator of all, instead of what is taught in most churches due to tradition.

    • @stevemiller8952
      @stevemiller8952 Год назад +1

      @@bardowesselius4121 Colossians 1:12-17
      King James Version
      12 Giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light:
      13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son:
      14 In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins:
      15 Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature:
      16 For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him:

    • @bardowesselius4121
      @bardowesselius4121 Год назад +1

      @@stevemiller8952 the question in that passage in verse 16 is to whom the 'him' refers to. Jesus or God the Father... It is ultimately God the Father working through Jesus and creating everything for and because of His Son. This passage is no proof Jesus is the Creator of the world. It is God the Father reconciling the world to Himself through Jesus. And since the risen Christ still has a God in Revelation 3:12, he can never be God the Creator.

  • @mrfixit20012
    @mrfixit20012 4 месяца назад +16

    YAHWEH IS "MOTHER" NATURE WHICH IS REALLY FATHER YAHWEH! GREAT START

    • @adhizzle9985
      @adhizzle9985 Месяц назад

      shes not a jew dude

    • @jamesreid8638
      @jamesreid8638 Месяц назад

      YAHWEH is a feminine noun in Hebrew, and the Tetragrammaton Formula contains both male and female, as it begins with Yod, the seed, and ends with the feminine ending.
      There is in Tetragrammaton the Father, the Mother, the Son, the Daughter, and the Holy Spirit, which is feminine, not masculine.

    • @patriciacole8773
      @patriciacole8773 10 дней назад

      Remember the fourth commandment KJV reminds us of Genesis 2:2&3😁

  • @mopeaceproductions218
    @mopeaceproductions218 Год назад +5

    Right on ! Got it ready to rock this 💪 😎 appreciate the love you give and the teaching ! You dig ! I have the chicken poop,the natural with the weeds, the roots, insect pest control the egg shells calcium. And started a leaf mold pile thank again 🙏 👏 😀

  • @The_Garden_Ranger
    @The_Garden_Ranger Год назад +4

    Awesome information my brother! You are a great teacher and inspiration for us! 🙏🏼

  • @lynettedaniels6101
    @lynettedaniels6101 Год назад +2

    Thanks Nate. Sharing is caring.

  • @paulozua7425
    @paulozua7425 27 дней назад

    I like the way you explain things , it’s mind blowing .

  • @philweaver457
    @philweaver457 Год назад +11

    Great stuff Nate. Been feeding with jadam and the plants love it

  • @daichimax
    @daichimax Год назад +3

    That was a Master Class!!! Thanks again for sharing.👏👏👏👏👏

  • @buggabee477
    @buggabee477 Год назад +1

    A new subscriber here. I’ve watched a few of your videos while waiting for my kids after school. This one explains things so well and I’m amazed at the simplicity of it. Thank you!! Keep the videos coming, your clear way of explaining is so needful.

  • @user-ts9dh2ob1v
    @user-ts9dh2ob1v Месяц назад

    You are now the only garden video content created I follow for gardening tips.

  • @garthwunsch
    @garthwunsch Год назад +55

    If someone didn’t have a “bucket list” before, they surely do now… and lots of labeled buckets to prove it… we’re the “bucket brigade”! 😹😹😹

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +11

      lol thats no joke like a mad scientist buckets and brews everywhere!

    • @jasonknight6514
      @jasonknight6514 Год назад +5

      That's funny I ordered some yesterday.

    • @stephaniepacheco5871
      @stephaniepacheco5871 Месяц назад

      @@gardenlikeavikingmy husband’s soon going to hate you for giving me more ideas of what could I possibly need more buckets for. I’m so sorry, but he just is a bit OCD for my buckets being all over the place. 😂
      But thank you for making these videos. I’ve been watching RUclips videos about gardening and homesteading for 4+ years now, so kind of strange you never popped up on my recommended videos. But thank God I noticed you today. I’ve been binge watching and taking notes every time I had available at work today. I’m sharing all of your amazing work with my sister. Now I’ll be getting yelled at when my 6 year old grandson starts peeing on my compost pile buckets. But he’s the only male on the house that’s totally drug/alcohol free that knows how to pee on command in a small space. Hope the neighbors aren’t peeking out back 😂.

    • @lauriaktahi
      @lauriaktahi 13 дней назад

      I ordered camo buckets. Lol. Just couldnt put home depot orange in the garden 😅

  • @dana7340
    @dana7340 Год назад +6

    One fertilizer to rule them all! 😂👍🏽

  • @flipflopgardener6629
    @flipflopgardener6629 Год назад +1

    You are an excellent teacher. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.

  • @F7uxy
    @F7uxy Год назад

    this is knowledge we have been missing! Thank you for passing it on!!

  • @rbc123456789
    @rbc123456789 Год назад +4

    This guy is great! I've learned so much from him. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us.

  • @rrbb36
    @rrbb36 Год назад +5

    A family member uses this method in his very successful garden. It’s time for me to get up to speed and reap the same great results. Thank you !

  • @davidchaveriat4130
    @davidchaveriat4130 7 месяцев назад

    So smart yet so simple. Much appreciated.

  • @trenomas1
    @trenomas1 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the clarity

  • @georgehinestrosa6274
    @georgehinestrosa6274 Год назад +36

    Thank you for all the great videos! I purchased some barrels two months ago and have filled some with the leaf mold/ fish prep, and started three JLF barrels. Apart from that I have also two stations for Food waste that I mix with leaf mold and some manures and carbon stuff like last winters leaves and such... not to mention the Calcium prep, the Rice water/milk prep for cheese and Lactic acids, and the Urea...there are a lot of videos on Urine usage for different things on the Garden/ farm scene...your videos have gotten me so into this stuff that know I am looking into Biodynamics, which works on the same basic principle of aging the compost, whatever it is, and having nature just do her thing! this sure beats running to the store and trying so many different brands of specialized mixes, and the savings that has emerged... Thanks again!

    • @stephenbeck6410
      @stephenbeck6410 Год назад +1

      Where did you get your barrels?

    • @georgehinestrosa6274
      @georgehinestrosa6274 Год назад +3

      @@stephenbeck6410 so I live in North Carolina, looked online line for used Pickle barrels...they are used to transprt Pickes in Brine...the same black ones that the Viking showed in his video..

    • @maryannbrown6606
      @maryannbrown6606 Год назад

      Where can I purchase these barrels ?

    • @robinroberts9304
      @robinroberts9304 Год назад

      Can you use dog poo for fertilize in the compost?

    • @johnscottwalker3417
      @johnscottwalker3417 10 месяцев назад

      @@maryannbrown6606🎉

  • @lvanderb3
    @lvanderb3 Год назад +14

    Thanks for another clear and concise video. I have been doing the JADAM and KNF thing for a few years. Working on getting fertigation working. Just added a urea bucket and fish bucket to go along with the grasses and everything else buckets.

  • @mercyalabi4927
    @mercyalabi4927 Год назад

    THANK YOU FOR LOVING NATURE

  • @maddog135
    @maddog135 Год назад +1

    Makes absolute perfect sense! Thanks!

  • @joannmcculley8253
    @joannmcculley8253 Год назад +8

    Thanks! Looks like I'm growing a huge crop of buckets 😃

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +3

      lol I know exactly what you mean!!... thats why I only do black buckets now so they kind of disappear into the garden scape!

  • @madaxe79
    @madaxe79 Год назад +3

    I’m so glad i found your channel. Everything you’re saying makes absolute sense. An old chinese guy told me about jadam, and after searching for ages I found this channel and it’s the most basic explanation of the process. Awesome

  • @michaelbelluso
    @michaelbelluso Год назад

    Love the practicality of your videos.

  • @danielmaxfield5816
    @danielmaxfield5816 Год назад +1

    Knowledge reigns supreme!
    Thank you!

  • @abramthegamingguy9016
    @abramthegamingguy9016 Год назад +4

    Directions start 3:30
    Great info! It makes so much sense! Thanks!

  • @elena2010111
    @elena2010111 Год назад +7

    Thank you for this video. Leaf mold video will be greatly appreciated!

  • @a.p1675
    @a.p1675 8 месяцев назад

    Just got a cabin in the middle of the forest. Discovered your channel today and can't stop watching. So inspirational. Thx!// Sweden

  • @rodb4410
    @rodb4410 Год назад +1

    Nate! So glad I stumbled upon this. Excellent work thanks for sharing!! Nature is amazing

  • @corithefrugalflower
    @corithefrugalflower Год назад +4

    New sub here from 🇨🇦👋
    I'm quickly becoming a compost nerd, lol as I have expanded from producing small quantities of anaerobic compost from last year indoors, to now owning & collecting from a vermicomposter kept in my bsmt, as well as a rotating outdoor composter! So your channel is another new facet of composting and creating your own, so I will be diving into your content! Many Thanks!👏👌 🤩

  • @AfterBurner369
    @AfterBurner369 Год назад +10

    Just like the acorn contains the makings of the whole oak tree. As above so below. Nature is wonderful. We are being so far removed from our natural way of being by the 'controllers' and their puppet politicians that the onus is on every one of us to be the change we want to see. I love your videos Nate. Thank you 😊 🙏

  • @thesoundofwheat
    @thesoundofwheat 3 месяца назад

    This is the best gardening channel I have found yet on you tube. Your delivery is engaging and methods are well explained and not overwhelming. Especially thankful for your descriptions on how nature functions. Awesome, so helpful thank you!

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  3 месяца назад

      Thank you for the positive energy and feedback my friend!!

  • @thabisobaloyi7431
    @thabisobaloyi7431 Месяц назад

    Thank u for sharing this knowlegde and wisdom.....we love it and appreciate it

  • @GingerWaters
    @GingerWaters Год назад +13

    Thanks, I started to see this same understanding last spring.
    So I collected all the plants around, which looked structurally similar as plants I was about to grow. I chopped them as small particles as I could and put them to water. To make bacteria proces quicker I added some compost soil and sugary rotting fruits…and started to use it straight ahead, better than plain water anyway. Plants that I’ve been giving that are thriving. If I have a break, plain watering, they start to show signs of deficienies in a week.

  • @danschkeeper4076
    @danschkeeper4076 Год назад +43

    Excellent advice! Thank you for putting in all the time and effort to make your videos. You may or may not recall, but I posted another comment on a different video of yours about having nutritionally lacking soil and trying to prep it for eventual topsoil and grass seed. Your recommendation to me was to use a cover crop. I tried planting buckwheat, but the hot, dry summer and my inability to keep the seeds moist prevented any hopes of germination. Instead, I let the weeds grow and serve as a cover crop of sorts. I have also put together some JADAM fertilizer using the blades of weeds that were growing heartily. I tried that fertilizer on some young trees I was trying to help endure the summer and I noticed new leaves growing very shortly after! So, it appears the fertilizer works very well based on the rapid response of the trees to the fertilizer (I read somewhere that high nitrogen fertilizer prompts new growth in trees, and that lots of water is required thereafter, which is why it’s generally better to fertilize trees in the spring and fall). I dedicated a fair amount of time and water making sure the trees did well over the summer, but otherwise I sat back in amazement at how the weeds continued to thrive despite no water other than the very rare drizzle. You’re not kidding about nature taking care of itself! While my neighbors’ lawns are dead/dying, my yard (albeit covered with weeds) is lush green. Anyway, thanks again and keep up the good work! I really appreciate it!

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +9

      depending on where you live you can plant winter wheat or winter rye and it will grow all winter then shade out the other weeds as it grows very prolific in the spring time... the thing with weeds cover crop is you have to make sure they don't germinate next year when you try to use the land!!

    • @TheMississauga333
      @TheMississauga333 Год назад +1

      @@gardenlikeaviking so when i make these barrels and i put the garden leftovers and plants like string bean plants, so it is ok to add potato plants as well? i was going to throw it out, good to know. i have great looking potato plants above ground, but not much growth below ground, thanks

    • @truekoreanightcore4090
      @truekoreanightcore4090 Год назад +1

      Have you tried mulching the trees?

    • @timothyblazer1749
      @timothyblazer1749 Год назад

      Desert? Use cowpeas and alfalfa. Trust me on this! Just keep their root zone moist with drip irrigation and they will repay you 10 fold. They thrive in desert sun.

    • @LeeWaite
      @LeeWaite 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yearning for that freeze preperation tip as I live in the North UK......can get a bit chilly

  • @GottabKD777
    @GottabKD777 Год назад +1

    Awesome!great natural remedies!

  • @nancyhenderson-chapman8901
    @nancyhenderson-chapman8901 2 месяца назад

    Beautifully explained. Thank you.

  • @johnnewby1949
    @johnnewby1949 Год назад +4

    Good concise info brother. I appreciate the technical breakdowns . Thanks for making a normally slow topic as fascinating as it truly is.

  • @sweetmtnhome2617
    @sweetmtnhome2617 Год назад +3

    I'm fairly new to your channel and have 1 season of....learning growing behind me. Your explanations are excellent and your methods and recipes are perfect for the way I think and want to do my growing. I do have a barrel of this composting tea brewing for Spring. I will add some leaf mold today. I'm in 7a/b central Arkansas. Thank you!

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo Год назад +2

    Seeds are miracles and farmers are miracle workers.
    That said, trees reach down their roots the farthest of all plants. I already do this fermenting tree leaves. I also raise earthworms and use their "castings" dissolved in water to feed my edible plants. I grow 100% in wicking tubs.

  • @migdungo1146
    @migdungo1146 11 месяцев назад

    Right info is gold. Thank you so much.

  • @tomboland9761
    @tomboland9761 Год назад +6

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge. You introduced me to KNF and JADAM and now I can't get enough of it! I really believe this is the way to the future. I live in a northern climate and I'm planning on documenting my journey with KNF.

    • @janicejurgensen2122
      @janicejurgensen2122 Год назад +1

      If u post the video I’d love to watch it.

    • @tomboland9761
      @tomboland9761 Год назад

      @@janicejurgensen2122 Thank you. I have been thinking of posting some videos but haven't done so yet.

  • @mathsgeniusonline.pathansi9333
    @mathsgeniusonline.pathansi9333 Год назад +3

    I am now very sure of increasing my farm yield. You are really of great help to many farmers. Thanks. God bless you. Pathan Sir…India

  • @blessed2bfree
    @blessed2bfree 5 месяцев назад

    I just love what you just taught us. Thank you

  • @freegreenguru57
    @freegreenguru57 2 месяца назад

    Thank you brotha for the great information you've changed every way I used to garden I really appreciate it

  • @kaoline4172
    @kaoline4172 Год назад +7

    Wow! So many questions answered in just this video! I am all in a hurry to make a few buckets for my different crops. I somehow like the idea of giving each type its own food. So, here I go😊😊😊

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +2

      yes that will give you the finest results making each crop their own!

  • @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281
    @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281 Год назад +6

    1 cup of your own pee (if you take absolutely no medicine) to a gallon of water for seedlings, 2 cups to one gallon for blooms. Water the soil, not the plants and leaves. Easy Peesy

  • @siew-hn4il
    @siew-hn4il Год назад +2

    Three week ago, I suddenly have the urge to buried my weeds such as dandelions and garden waste in a bucket of water. Wow, today I saw your video. Now I know I am doing the right thing. Thanks so much

  • @user-su1iv3zr9w
    @user-su1iv3zr9w 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks Nate for all your awesome videos!

  • @smas3256
    @smas3256 Год назад +5

    Thanks you much. On a tight budget. Small garden. Going to watch how you apply. Maybe the bucket we have will be enough. We have plenty of leaf mold always making compost so we can top dress plants if need be. However the fertilizer is much easier for us in our 70's.

    • @Alyssajoyfulheart
      @Alyssajoyfulheart Год назад +1

      I'm using one of those plastic storage containers to try things out before I invest in a big barrel. It's working out well.

  • @michelleperkins9886
    @michelleperkins9886 Год назад +3

    New subscriber here! Thanks for all of the vital information that’s so useful to newbies like me!

  • @gaildauzat4400
    @gaildauzat4400 Месяц назад

    So interesting. Thank you.

  • @suuzq02
    @suuzq02 10 месяцев назад

    I Love 💗 your excitement about gardening!!!!
    You are so passionate my brother

  • @lidiasoares5675
    @lidiasoares5675 Год назад +192

    The more I learn about Nature, the more I feel more and more grateful to God! Godd bless you abundantly for sharing all your knowledge and experties.

    • @williamfreeman8197
      @williamfreeman8197 Год назад

      The christain god is against nature your ancestors killed and converted mine the germanic gods odin thor tyr loki etc are within nature and nature itself our religion is about the natural cycle of life death and rebirth you should really look into nordic animism instead of christaininty which says nature is scary and evil and temples are your holy place to me nature is the holy place

    • @roilhead
      @roilhead Год назад +11

      FYI Imaginary friends don't have any have any bearing on nature.

    • @1human179
      @1human179 Год назад +1

      ​@roilhead, on the day you're about to die, you will wish you were a believer in this "imaginary God". I really hope you find salvation before then, for the sake of your offspring if not for yourself.

    • @roilhead
      @roilhead Год назад

      @@1human179 WOW that is some serious brainwashing bringing children into it. That should be considered as criminal behavior. I pity your children being brainwashed into believing that and I am sure that you would not treat them well if they decided that your religion was not true.
      Honestly I pity you, I will never believe in your fictional god!
      There is nothing after death get a grip on reality and live your life instead of living to die.

    • @englishsteve1465
      @englishsteve1465 Год назад

      @@roilhead The magical thinking folk with the 15th century world view will always anthropomorphise everything and create the "God crutch", they cannot help it.

  • @johnjude2685
    @johnjude2685 Год назад +3

    Thanks again I'm going with the fish fertilizer also
    Thanks

    • @myfitstoreuk5608
      @myfitstoreuk5608 Год назад +1

      Yes! Me too! Those will be the 2 fertilisers ill be using next year, as the fish one is still in the making

  • @markbooth5983
    @markbooth5983 6 месяцев назад

    Very interesting.... great to watch.....thanks😀 for sharing your hard found knowledge !

  • @kackmalwieder
    @kackmalwieder Год назад

    Interesting concept. I will give it a go. Many thanks for sharing.

  • @sweepingpage1845
    @sweepingpage1845 Год назад +6

    I got an experiment going in a 5 gallon bucket. No leaf mold yet, but I tossed in a bunch of weeds, spent rejuvelac seeds, spent yerba mate leaves, a bunch of squash bugs along with the delicata plant they ruined, and most recently some lacto fermented pickles that turned out way too mushy. I might try it on some less important plants first...

    • @dagmarratatosk5997
      @dagmarratatosk5997 Год назад

      Good ideas. Doing your own experiments is so amazing.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +4

      did you place enough bay leaves in the pickles?... that helps keep them firm... mine are so crunchy you can hear it from 10 feet away

    • @sweepingpage1845
      @sweepingpage1845 Год назад +1

      @@gardenlikeaviking This was just prior to your pickle video, so no bay leaves. But they were store bought English cucumbers that come plastic wrapped, which may have contributed to the mushy texture. But mostly, I think it was because I weighed them down with a big spring I got from a Ball mason jar fermenting kit. The pickle spears were crushed to about an inch tall after a day of fermenting. Lessons learned!

  • @RhinoDNA
    @RhinoDNA Год назад +6

    ...what a shame people all over the world are screaming about shortages of fertilizer. I learned this from David the Good’s channel (he calls it “Fetid Swamp Water).
    I’m thrilled to have found this channel suggestion this morning and I subscribed immediately...(you can also make a decent fertilizer with human urine & wood ash).

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +1

      I agree Sandy most people have no idea they already have all the fertilizer they'll need!!

  • @pampotgieter7611
    @pampotgieter7611 Год назад +2

    Thank you "Nate the Viking Gardener". Awesome video! And of course I shared your video as always with my family and friends.

  • @Lana.L.Benson
    @Lana.L.Benson 2 месяца назад

    Love this!!! You rock ma friend! ☀️💫

  • @stephenbeck6410
    @stephenbeck6410 Год назад +3

    Where can I get the large air tight black barrels you used for making inputs?

  • @organiccleanfoodconnection
    @organiccleanfoodconnection Год назад +7

    Thanks I am using 6 gallon food grade buckets with screw on lids for my garden. Where do you get the larger barrels with screw on lid? I want my son-in-law to try it on a field? Living next to chemical farming I had to learn to heal my gut and now I’m learning to heal the soil. Good bugs and bad bugs :-) Micro greens is what helped me the most. I look forward to your video on how to store it through the winter I am in Northwest corner of Kansas so it freezes hard.

    • @dana7340
      @dana7340 Год назад +3

      I have seen them at a feed store. So check your Grange co op or Tractor Supply (etc)

    • @AustinMark
      @AustinMark Год назад +2

      Craigslist also has suppliers sometimes, they are industrial surplus from pickle making in many cases.

    • @carfvallrightsreservedwith6649
      @carfvallrightsreservedwith6649 Год назад +3

      I'm in southeast Nebraska and I've experienced -0 - -40°F for WEEKS.
      Would think putting the barrel in the ground and leaving lid above grade covered with 6" mulch (like we do for parsnips/etc) or an insulated box could keep from freezing. Ferment may be halted (or slowed).
      Know quite a few people who have sunk old chest freezers to grade and use for root cellars. Potatoes keep throughout the winter.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +2

      I get them from a guy I found on facebook marketplace he works at the olive factory

  • @yvanapantino273
    @yvanapantino273 Год назад +2

    Thank you for another informative video. Much appreciated.

  • @donnamitchner614
    @donnamitchner614 Год назад +2

    I agree that stuff works great your plants will grow abundantly

  • @saltlifegull4091
    @saltlifegull4091 Год назад +4

    Question for ya Nate: I see you're throwing peppers away. Do you ever save your seeds to replant? You're the dang best go-to for gardening tips. So brilliant, down to earth, and easy on the eyes!

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +4

      actually I'm not throwing them away I'm recycling them into fertilizer for next years peppers! lol... and pepper seeds are one of the few seeds I buy every year because they cross pollinate with each other very easily and the peppers you plant next year will have very different properties than the ones you saved seeds from if you are growing more than one type of pepper.... easy on the eyes.... lol

    • @cathyhvazda8443
      @cathyhvazda8443 Год назад

      @@gardenlikeaviking do you have a video on cross-pollination and how it effects plants and how to prevent it

  • @erickhofmann8765
    @erickhofmann8765 Год назад +12

    Question..... since this process allows for Facultative and Strict Anaerobes to proliferate the barrels would the introduction to soil through a soil drench mean that (assuming that your soil is predominantly aerobic) these Strict Anaerobes will die immediately through the introduction of oxygen and the nutrients stored within them become immediately available to the plant? Or is this simply how this fertilizer works in general? 😅 Cheers from PA, Zone 6B! ✌️🌱

    • @kathynix6552
      @kathynix6552 Год назад +1

      As I understand you add to soil that is already saturated with water then the microbes can wash down h the rough the soil

  • @joyscott374
    @joyscott374 Год назад

    Thank you, my friend

  • @tammyshaw4540
    @tammyshaw4540 Год назад

    Thank you Nate !

  • @charlesmoura9143
    @charlesmoura9143 Год назад +3

    You could make a video on techniques for planting fruit trees with twigs.

  • @benmitchell5880
    @benmitchell5880 Год назад +3

    Legend brother, you are stone cold add tripping, it's awesome. I love it when people get and can explain how soil works in harmony with plants. You make me laugh brother. That is awesome just being real. Word King

  • @dharma404_
    @dharma404_ Месяц назад

    Excellent! Thank you for this, you explain things very clearly and with sufficient detail. I'm now a new subscriber. 🙏🏼

  • @sitindogmas
    @sitindogmas Год назад

    i love everything about this

  • @margareth1504
    @margareth1504 Год назад +8

    I love your ideas, putting the excess back into the soil to regenerate more and better plant growth. It makes so much sense to me.
    We were brought up to choose ourselves how much we want to eat, and whatever was left was used to replenish our garden. And all seemed good and well.
    In contrast to that, it was perhaps amusing to see another lot, become very upset, accusatory and angry when e.g. an apple was found to be rotting. They were shouting that good food was being wasted, and therefore apples should not be purchased anymore! to stop food wastage. Then someone would be told they had to eat the apple even though it was not good, as they needed to be taught not to let food go off.
    I wondered why the old woman in particular didnt understand that the tree had produced more fruit than would be eaten by humans, and that some of the fruit would go through the rotting and recycle processes as plant fertilizer in an almost perfect balance, and no one needed to live feeling like a bad person just because an apple or an orange began decaying. She could have treated the left over apple as treasure for her garden!.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад

      this is a wonderful observation my friend thank you for sharing!!

  • @Khalinjai
    @Khalinjai Год назад +8

    I was considering making 6 diffrent barrels one for each group of vegetables that i grow. So one for legumes - nightshades - chicories - chenopods - brassicas and alliums. Then ill also make a barrel from nettles for young plants and one from bocking 14 comfrey. So 8 barrels should do fine i hope :) not sure how long the ingredients need to stay in tho, was considering a year for the diffrent groups and 4 weeks or so for nettles and comfrey.

    • @gardenlikeaviking
      @gardenlikeaviking  Год назад +5

      thats a fantastic idea and ideal for maximum plant nutrition.... however I would either add an additional barrel for the fish fertilizer or replace probably the chicories barrel with fish as the fish is of utmost value to the plants and soil...

    • @Khalinjai
      @Khalinjai Год назад

      Thanks i could do that, ask the local fish store for fish waste they throw away to make a free fish fertiliser from your reciept :)

    • @djiguibacamara8766
      @djiguibacamara8766 Год назад

      @@gardenlikeaviking does fish fertilizer should be make without vegtables?

  • @melodieduperron1252
    @melodieduperron1252 Год назад +2

    I was thinking about this as I was pruning my plants throughout the season definitely going to be making a barrel for next season thank you

  • @Defiant_Creations
    @Defiant_Creations Год назад +1

    Awesome! Thanks for the video. Going to get a barrel this weekend.