During winter, I save my cold woodstove ashes into a popcorn tin and store it indoors. Whenever the tin gets full, I spread it on our raised beds. The woodstove is not our primary heat, so we don't overapply. By planting season, the minerals have had plenty of time to mix into the soil.
Hello, Finally a RUclips narrator who genuinely knows his subject to give educated advice about gardening. I have seen too many people speak about what to add to the soil, but never mention doing a soil test first, which is imperative for good gardening. So I thank you for your diligence, and I too like your T-shirt from years ago. Let’s make America great again! Thank you from this 78 year-old in his little organic garden patch in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
@@CountryLivingExperience David should know that soil tests ARE NOT imperative. Jabs are not imperative. And his fake politics n fake politicians are NOT imperative and not needed at all.
A quick reminder oak leaves and pine needles need to be green when you add them to neutralize the alkalinity, As they decompose they become alkaline. You can also add elemental sulfur to help neutralize the acidity
Wood ash is the white powder, bio ,char is the black chunks. Bio char especially when composted or innoculated, is also important but they are different things.
I have various types of sedum growing in a tree circle around a sugar maple. The main soil is mostly pine mulch ground very fine. I'm guessing it's great to use on that stuff. Tree bases are usually very acid anyway. The dust should help the sedum spread. The recommended fertilizer is 0-5-5. A half a cup around the whole tree. 🐀🐾
Thank you. Yes, we are going to cover that in a different vid. I wanted to make sure to address all of those who wanted to add it directly to the garden. Appreciate it.
One thing I would like to add if I may, since someone mentioned a coal stove: NEVER use coal ash in your garden! Wood ash is awesome, but coal ash from your stove is the same stuff that power plants produce, and it's just as full of sulfur, arsenic, heavy metals and a ton of carcinogens as the coal ash ponds you see on TV. It will make your garden grow beautifully, but you won't want to eat anything out of it!
@@CountryLivingExperience While not as prevalent as it used to be, in Appalachia where coal is still king, it's probably used as much as wood. Across the board though, I would offer the caution to using ash from the Kingsford BBQ grill as the biggest contributor to suburban coal ash in the garden. It's the coal dust in briquettes that not only makes them smolder, but also gives that "wonderful charcoal" smell and flavor to your food.
I have a medium size garden I go to the local dry kiln and get a drum of mixed ashes that are very fine and till them.in really good seems to work great but I really till the time out of them
@@CountryLivingExperience I was going to give u a update I had lot of tomatoes that rotted on the vine ,going to skip the ashes this coming planting time
Instantly like your channel because of that t-shirt! America missed it's chance for the greatest Statesman in the last century! Guess you've got a new subscriber and I don't even know what your channel is about and don't have to
Sounds like you just want to pick a fight. Forest fires produce many byproducts besides just ash. There is a large amount of charcoal which is key in feeding the soil by giving balance and a habitat for microbial development.
I have a hugenkultur above ground raised bed, I will use wood ash a little bit, I mostly tamp out the fire to make a charcoal/ ash mix as it seems to help the plants. Since I have a good sized bed, and I am constantly adding organic material and adding native sandy loam/ clay type soils to it, I've found that charcoal helps aerate the soil. I also add vermiculite or perlite or cinders to the soils, my plants seem to do fine and they produce great yields.
@@CountryLivingExperience Thank you I did before the C 19 junk, now I use my hobby to feed myself. Raised beds/ Hugunkulturs are the best method I've come across to actual food crops, ground planting is nice if the soil is good and full of life. However in the Western states most of the regions that aren't already turned into farm land the soils suck. And being able to control the soil by using common sense and good techniques go a long way. I once had this same channel until I peed off a YT god, and all my vid's and subs went away. Word of advice make sure to back up all of your work onto solid state drives. I had a video of constructing the bed and the techniques that I used. What I really like is the fact that I use about a tenth of the water to grow with vs if I had sowed directly into the soil. Being a dry high desert location, water is a premium. While it's not quite as good as a hydroponic setup, I don't have to rely on the Petrochemical fertilizer's to grow my food. Take Care and God Bless Trump MMXX
can i add wood ash in soil mix...or it has to be on top of soil and be watered?? Can i also add ashes to potted plants/flowers?? Following your videos and thanks bunch! :)
We tested our soil and it is 6.5 so we didn't add any wood ashes to it. My husband said there was too much alcaline in it. Too bad though since we have lots of wood ash with our stove burning constantly since October in Canada.
This is true we have bonfires in our backyard because we have large trees that drops twig, branches leaves . I spreads the ashes to my plants like the day lilies the ones I have sprinkled ashes looks much taller this year and the blooms last longer so I think the plants benefits from the ashes.thank you
Sir Pm My tomato,Chilli was 30 days old starting buding but after l apply Ash on them they started to dried up their leaf and die. What could be problem.....?
It may or may not be the ash. More than likely it is not. It sounds like it was a watering or disease problem. Without seeing your plants, it is hard for me to tell.
do you add prior to plants being in garden? I'm getting ready to start our indoor seeds and once warmer start preparing the garden to plant... Is this something to wait till we have plants in the ground?
All of our wood Ash just get thrown into the chicken pen with all our other waste. By the time it's ready to out into the garden there's nothing to worry about
Thank you and welcome. I wouldn't compost it as you might change the ph of that compost too much. I would either spread it out over a large area or burry it.
We heat mainly with a wood stove. Could I just add to my 3 composting piles and not be in danger of overdoing come Spring when I use my compost to the garden? You are my fav channel!!
@@CountryLivingExperience Actually in India it's pretty common ,to use cow dung soaked water as a fertilizer,and yesterday I just gave some of the burnt dust of it(that is actually used to make fire or heat for cooking and also like an agarbatti) so that's it.
Sorry my friend, I do not know. That is not something I have ever studied or read about. All I know is if you put those animal residue (fats, bone, meats, etc) into a compost pile, it will attract rodents.
I’m a little confused I had 2 potato patches this year one of them was in the ground two weeks before the other The one potato patch not very impressive 60 pounds of potatoes on a 8 foot and 20 foot roll the other we dug it up the same time was very impressive with one 8 foot roll producing 50 pounds of potatoes and a third of the size bigger and we put wood ash on that one! It seems to happen consistently they seem to love wood Ash and the potatoes will be 30 to 40% more productive Heard you can use it on the leaves to help control potato beetles.
I mix mine in a watering can with a off the self water soluble fertilizer designed for acid loving plants in theory it should equal the ph out.. in theory
The regular charcoal they sell in the store has chemical additives. I am not sure what is in them exactly. I am not sure I would add them to the garden.
@@CountryLivingExperience by the way what if I added Paper ash in soil I mistakenly added some in my garden which also have a guava in it an yes ques 2 what if I composted paper ash??
During winter, I save my cold woodstove ashes into a popcorn tin and store it indoors. Whenever the tin gets full, I spread it on our raised beds. The woodstove is not our primary heat, so we don't overapply. By planting season, the minerals have had plenty of time to mix into the soil.
Came for the gardening tips, thumbs upped for the t-shirt ❤
Awesome! Thank you!
Hello, Finally a RUclips narrator who genuinely knows his subject to give educated advice about gardening. I have seen too many people speak about what to add to the soil, but never mention doing a soil test first, which is imperative for good gardening. So I thank you for your diligence, and I too like your T-shirt from years ago. Let’s make America great again! Thank you from this 78 year-old in his little organic garden patch in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Thanks David, I appreciate the kind words. Best of luck with your gardening.
@@CountryLivingExperience
David should know that soil tests ARE NOT imperative. Jabs are not imperative. And his fake politics n fake politicians are NOT imperative and not needed at all.
To neutralize the alkalinity of wood ash, mix in shredded oak leaves (pH 4-4.5) or pine needles (pH 3-4) to make a neutral combo.
If I already have a lot of pine needles falling I assume there's no reason to worry about making my soil too alkaline with ash right
It won’t work mix it with sulfur or aluminum sulfate or vinegar because it will act faster
A quick reminder oak leaves and pine needles need to be green when you add them to neutralize the alkalinity, As they decompose they become alkaline.
You can also add elemental sulfur to help neutralize the acidity
@@nerdlingeeksly5192 or vinegar
@@Youdontknowmeson1324 Yep! I use ferrous sulphate granules sparingly, if my soil is on the high alkaline side( which it usually is.).
Wood ash is the white powder, bio ,char is the black chunks. Bio char especially when composted or innoculated, is also important but they are different things.
I know.
Thanks for the explanation I didn’t know the difference
I have various types of sedum growing in a tree circle around a sugar maple. The main soil is mostly pine mulch ground very fine. I'm guessing it's great to use on that stuff. Tree bases are usually very acid anyway. The dust should help the sedum spread. The recommended fertilizer is 0-5-5. A half a cup around the whole tree. 🐀🐾
thankyou for
If you add it to the compost the pH will neutralize and you’ll still get the nutrients. Sweet shirt.
Thank you. Yes, we are going to cover that in a different vid. I wanted to make sure to address all of those who wanted to add it directly to the garden. Appreciate it.
What i was thinking like mans doesnt compost 😂😂
Thanks
You're welcome
Love from India
Thank you
I'm from Bangladesh. Your vedio is really informative. Go ahead.
Thank you so much
Excellent advice
Glad it was helpful
Now I have to follow after I saw the shirt!
Awesome. I hope my content is helpful too.
One thing I would like to add if I may, since someone mentioned a coal stove: NEVER use coal ash in your garden! Wood ash is awesome, but coal ash from your stove is the same stuff that power plants produce, and it's just as full of sulfur, arsenic, heavy metals and a ton of carcinogens as the coal ash ponds you see on TV. It will make your garden grow beautifully, but you won't want to eat anything out of it!
Good point. I have never heard of anyone burning coal in their home though.
@@CountryLivingExperience While not as prevalent as it used to be, in Appalachia where coal is still king, it's probably used as much as wood. Across the board though, I would offer the caution to using ash from the Kingsford BBQ grill as the biggest contributor to suburban coal ash in the garden. It's the coal dust in briquettes that not only makes them smolder, but also gives that "wonderful charcoal" smell and flavor to your food.
Very good presentation
Thanks a lot
Love the shirt I have the same one end the fed also this video was excellent.
Awesome! Thank you! Good to have you here.
You can neutralize the alkalinity by adding the ash to a hot compost pile. Great video!
Yes, good point. Thank you
does it need to be hot? how about worms?
How about adding acetic acid solution?
I put my ash in my compost first
Good video and very informative. Thanks much.
You’re welcome
I respect the shirt.
Very informative. Thank you.
You’re welcome
Great facts thanks for sharing and clarification on the negative sides of it
Glad it was helpful!
beautiful tshirt
Thank you!
I have a medium size garden I go to the local dry kiln and get a drum of mixed ashes that are very fine and till them.in really good seems to work great but I really till the time out of them
I also add 2 bags of.fertilizer ,10-10-10 and a bag of triple 12 thanks for posting
Thanks for sharing!
@@CountryLivingExperience I was going to give u a update I had lot of tomatoes that rotted on the vine ,going to skip the ashes this coming planting time
hi im use ask wood for my garden once in a month still good like tomato.,
Hello. I am not sure what your question is exactly. Be careful adding too much wood ash in the garden because of the reasons I mentioned in the video.
Information is so usefull
Thank you for this .
You’re welcome
It was very helpful. Thank you 😊
Thank you it’s very informative.
Glad it was helpful!
Does it have to be pot ash or will hash ash work as well?
lol
Is it good for cannanbis??
When ever I used to have a bonfire in the garden I would observe weeks later, how the stinging nettles would thrive on the nutrients added back!!
best time to use wood ask is at first snow. And you can use quite a bit of it too.
I burn wood ash year-round and keep it close by and put it in my compost mounds and then keep it watered and use it in my garden Every Spring...
@@bonesc7201 first snow mixes in the minerals in the wood ash. Cold/frozen ground keeps them around a lot longer.
Great work.
Thank you
Instantly like your channel because of that t-shirt! America missed it's chance for the greatest Statesman in the last century! Guess you've got a new subscriber and I don't even know what your channel is about and don't have to
Awesome! Welcome to the channel. For Liberty brother!
Dr Ron Paul changed the direction of my political and economic life. Free Markets for the win and a better society.
Same, I subscribed as soon as I saw that shirt
Thank lots Sir.....
You're welcome!
I can tell you banna plants love wood ash i mean i sprinkle every other week and man its growing like crazy
Cool
Thank you for the information.
You’re welcome
Loved the T shirt, stuck around for the content 😉
Awesome! Thanks
Thanks for information
You're welcome
Great that you shared knowledge. Thanks.
Glad it was helpful!
Well, how do you answer the good the wild fires makes to soil after time ???
Sounds like you just want to pick a fight. Forest fires produce many byproducts besides just ash. There is a large amount of charcoal which is key in feeding the soil by giving balance and a habitat for microbial development.
I have a hugenkultur above ground raised bed, I will use wood ash a little bit, I mostly tamp out the fire to make a charcoal/ ash mix as it seems to help the plants. Since I have a good sized bed, and I am constantly adding organic material and adding native sandy loam/ clay type soils to it, I've found that charcoal helps aerate the soil.
I also add vermiculite or perlite or cinders to the soils, my plants seem to do fine and they produce great yields.
Wonderful. Sounds like you have a great thing going.
@@CountryLivingExperience Thank you I did before the C 19 junk, now I use my hobby to feed myself.
Raised beds/ Hugunkulturs are the best method I've come across to actual food crops, ground planting is nice if the soil is good and full of life.
However in the Western states most of the regions that aren't already turned into farm land the soils suck.
And being able to control the soil by using common sense and good techniques go a long way.
I once had this same channel until I peed off a YT god, and all my vid's and subs went away.
Word of advice make sure to back up all of your work onto solid state drives.
I had a video of constructing the bed and the techniques that I used.
What I really like is the fact that I use about a tenth of the water to grow with vs if I had sowed directly into the soil.
Being a dry high desert location, water is a premium. While it's not quite as good as a hydroponic setup, I don't have to rely on the Petrochemical fertilizer's to grow my food.
Take Care and God Bless
Trump MMXX
Wood ash lighted with fire starter fluid?
can i add wood ash in soil mix...or it has to be on top of soil and be watered?? Can i also add ashes to potted plants/flowers?? Following your videos and thanks bunch! :)
Yes, you can add it to both. Just be careful how much.
We tested our soil and it is 6.5 so we didn't add any wood ashes to it. My husband said there was too much alcaline in it. Too bad though since we have lots of wood ash with our stove burning constantly since October in Canada.
Sounds like you have a lot of ash to deal with......and a lot of chilly weather 😉
Just piss in your garden, itll balance out the ph. No im not joking
Or add lots of coffee grounds lol
Put it on your neighbours garden.
How about adding acetic acid solution?
So cool 😎. I have the exact same stove!
By the way, that's not a little stove.
Cool
If you started a garden using foxfarm grow big and big bloom could you switch to wood ash for the later stages and switch from chemical's to organic?
I don’t know what those fertilizers you mentioned are but you can always switch your organic. I highly recommend switching as soon as possible.
Would ash from a charcoal smoker work as well? Kingsford charcoal and wood chunks only. Thank yiu
Wood chunks yes but I wouldn't trust the chemicals that are in the Kingsford.
Like the Ron Paul shirt
Awesome!
I used a mixture of compost and wood ash and top soil and peat moss on my mango tree and plameria flower plant. Any suggestion
Suggestion for what exactly? What is your specific question?
What about Sunflowers? Acid or Alkaline soil preferred ?
Slightly alkaline
Thank you
Nice shirt 👕👍
How about adding some acetic acid solution?
How about ash from burnt dried leaves?
Does it contain the same nutrient benefits?
It does not. The ash from hardwood is much more beneficial. It is better to compost leaves.
@@CountryLivingExperience thank you my friend
Leaf ash and wood ash will have similar properties?
Similar
what if i put the ashe around the roses.
Roses like a slightly acidic soil of around 6.5. You need to test the soil ph around your roses before you add anything.
Thanx
Welcome
@@CountryLivingExperience i cant find your PH tool
In your links. I really need one! Thank
You! 🙏
Bonfire ash has higher nutrient ash than ash from a coal or wood burning stove due to the burning of leaves & smaller twigs in a bonfire.
This is true we have bonfires in our backyard because we have large trees that drops twig, branches leaves . I spreads the ashes to my plants like the day lilies the ones I have sprinkled ashes looks much taller this year and the blooms last longer so I think the plants benefits from the ashes.thank you
Lordy lordy. whatever did the settlers and farmers do before ph meters came along?
Ah, smart aleck troll comments, benefiting nobody since never.
nice video very informative. thanks.
Thank you
Wood ash for pot?
Sir Pm
My tomato,Chilli was 30 days old starting buding but after l apply Ash on them they started to dried up their leaf and die.
What could be problem.....?
It may or may not be the ash. More than likely it is not. It sounds like it was a watering or disease problem. Without seeing your plants, it is hard for me to tell.
Thank you!
You’re welcome
Can we use coal ash from blacksmith? Will the trace stuffs harm the plant..??
That may be harmful.
do you add prior to plants being in garden? I'm getting ready to start our indoor seeds and once warmer start preparing the garden to plant... Is this something to wait till we have plants in the ground?
You can add it before you plant in the ground.
Dude I love the Ron Paul shirt 👕
Thanks brother!
Love the shirt!!
Thanks
All of our wood Ash just get thrown into the chicken pen with all our other waste. By the time it's ready to out into the garden there's nothing to worry about
That's cool.
Is it good for grains?
It depends on the grain and depends on your current soil. Wheat likes a 6.2ph so if you have an acid soil, balance it with some ash.
@@CountryLivingExperience Kamut barries like wheat
I mix it into my compost dirt before before use it so it doesn't get wet and turn to lime or w.e. it is
Cool
You had me at Ron Paul 🇺🇸
Awesome! Welcome
⭐️⭐️⭐️ i cant find the Tool
To check PH on your link. Please help! ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sorry about that. Here you go: amzn.to/3st9ZjZ
look up the jadam method for using wood ash. Totally safe and will not affect the ph
What about mixing wood ash with urine? Would that be a viable fertilizer?
It would but you need to be careful of the ratios. You don’t want to add too much wood ash all the time.
1st visit to your channel. Good video. so, if I generate more ash than I need in my garden can I compost it? if not, how should it be disposed of?
Thank you and welcome. I wouldn't compost it as you might change the ph of that compost too much. I would either spread it out over a large area or burry it.
@@CountryLivingExperience Thanks
Damn I like that stove ash catcher
It is very handy.
In the winter I sprinkle wood ashes in my garden. But fall before I put ash in I fill up the garden with leaves would this help balance out the PH?
Yes, any organic matter will help balance out the PH.
We heat mainly with a wood stove.
Could I just add to my 3 composting piles and not be in danger of overdoing come
Spring when I use my compost to the garden?
You are my fav channel!!
Thank you.
It really all depends on how much ash you are putting into your compost piles over time.
What are the nutrients in the ash (the results of wood burning)
About four percent potassium, and less than two percent phosphorus, magnesium, aluminum, and sodium.
Urine added to the wood ash will correct the Ph issue and add Nitrogen making it the perfect fertilizer.
Absolutely
What kind of urine?
@@awesomemermaid2796 Well, I suppose any.
@@hizzlemobizzle sweet. I’ll just tell my husband where to point. ✔️
@@awesomemermaid2796 Just remember not to add it directly to your plants. Will burn them.
I
You should use a metal bucket for all stages of ashes
I'm curious as to why.
@@4044pdelgado because ashes can be hot and melt plastic which in turn could cause a fire
Does woodash and cowdung ash have the same pottasium or nutrients?
I have never heard of using or making cowdung ash so I do not know its chemical makeup.
@@CountryLivingExperience Actually in India it's pretty common ,to use cow dung soaked water as a fertilizer,and yesterday I just gave some of the burnt dust of it(that is actually used to make fire or heat for cooking and also like an agarbatti) so that's it.
Thank you. Very interesting. We do use dried cow dung as fertilizer here too but not in an ash or burned form.
@@CountryLivingExperience well I just used it as a form of experiment, let's if there's any changes,I will let you know here. :)
Sounds good
how about the ash used with barbecue with lots of fats drained into it ? can you still use it? would it do any harm ?
I have never thought about that. The reason Yo not use those ashes is it will attract rodents to your garden.
@@CountryLivingExperience No worries on rodents, I like to know about its effect on the soil.
Sorry my friend, I do not know. That is not something I have ever studied or read about. All I know is if you put those animal residue (fats, bone, meats, etc) into a compost pile, it will attract rodents.
Nice shirt
Thank you
Really love your videos and love your shirt!!!
Awesome! Thank you
ash... it has the electrolytes plants crave.... or is that Brawndo
The best part of this video is his shirt, hands down.
Thanks!
Ron Paul t-shirt? >>> Subscribed!
Awesome. Glad to have you here.
I’m a little confused I had 2 potato patches this year one of them was in the ground two weeks before the other The one potato patch not very impressive 60 pounds of potatoes on a 8 foot and 20 foot roll the other we dug it up the same time was very impressive with one 8 foot roll producing 50 pounds of potatoes and a third of the size bigger and we put wood ash on that one! It seems to happen consistently they seem to love wood Ash and the potatoes will be 30 to 40% more productive
Heard you can use it on the leaves to help control potato beetles.
Very interesting. I'll have to experiment.
@@CountryLivingExperience The potato I plant is Kennebec potato maybe it prefers more alkaline soil?
Potentially. I'll have to research that variety.
I’ve read it’s because of the potassium. Potatoes thrive in potassium. But I put too much on one of my potato plants and it did Burn it.
Wood ashes should be put in a metal container and away from any thing flammable in case u have hot coals in ur ashes.
Nice Ron Paul shirt! ❤
Thank you
I came for the wood ash advice, and stayed for the Ron Paul t- shirt👍
Awesome. Glad you are here.
I mix mine in a watering can with a off the self water soluble fertilizer designed for acid loving plants in theory it should equal the ph out.. in theory
That is a good way of doing it.
Mix some sulfur in to the ashes will lower the ph.
Is it okay to use charcoal ashes on tomatoes instead of wood ash?
The regular charcoal they sell in the store has chemical additives. I am not sure what is in them exactly. I am not sure I would add them to the garden.
Does it matter what kind of wood ash I use in the garden?
Generally speaking, hardwoods produce more ash and contain a bit more nutrients than softwoods.
@@CountryLivingExperience What are some hardwood trees?
Trees like oaks, maples, birch, beech, cherry, etc. Softwoods are mostly coniferous trees like pine and fir.
Also avoid treated wood.
Wait, is that a RON PAUL shirt?! ❤️❤️❤️
Absolutely!
Love the shirt! And the video 😁
Awesome! Thank you!
Great advice and sweet shirt. Like minds.
Awesome!
1 thousandth like 😁😁
Thank you
@@CountryLivingExperience will keep supporting ya 🤗🤗😉😉
@@CountryLivingExperience by the way what if I added Paper ash in soil I mistakenly added some in my garden which also have a guava in it an yes ques 2 what if I composted paper ash??
@@aektaraghav4810 Paper ash should be very similar to wood ash. Just be careful if it is printed with too much color ink.
with the left over ash you could use to make lye soup or washing powers
Absolutely. I plan on it.
Dead ash