MEAT in Your COMPOST!? | Learn to compost anything!!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 349

  • @Lulusnotreadyforthis
    @Lulusnotreadyforthis 3 года назад +193

    Thank you for this. Here in the UK we're told *not* to compost animal remains but that makes no sense to me - I thought soil loved blood and bones. Great to see you use techniques to do it safely.

    • @thebluebutterfly5177
      @thebluebutterfly5177 3 года назад +13

      Uk watcher here also. Soil is there to use anything organic matter.

    • @Sandstar942
      @Sandstar942 3 года назад +3

      Yup! My last town didn't let us compost animal waste due to the concern of how much space they had and percentages of material. Much easier on a small municipality to just use carbon and vegetation.
      In the city I'm in now you are only restricted on animal waste. No litter no urine no feces. All else is fine 🙂

    • @Sandstar942
      @Sandstar942 3 года назад +1

      And to add - time. My smaller town needed turnover to be fast! Here it doesn't matter if it sits for the time it takes to break down blood and meat.
      Also as he said - more management and knowledge needed. :)

    • @Sandstar942
      @Sandstar942 3 года назад +3

      I can't wait to be able to have composting experiments.... we compost our dog waste ourselves for the flower beds (not risking it on edibles) but sooooon

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda 3 года назад +5

      In reality there is lots of gore to farm life even roses thrive from "bone meal" people think horror movies desensitize kids to violence but I woke up one morning with my Dad and brother bleeding a pig out hanging from a tree when I was 6 or so because we have to eat this winter. We moved from the city to save my brothers from joining violent gangs but they co op at butcher shops and black smiths instead slaughtering forging weapons and such.

  • @alfonsomunoz4424
    @alfonsomunoz4424 2 года назад +30

    I seem to remember in school learning that native Americans would bury fish when planting corn. Basically composting in place. Also, I read a scientific paper describing how important the salmon run is to the forest because bears and eagles leave fish carcases littered way up from river banks, which decomposes and feeds the soil.

    • @JoRoBoYo
      @JoRoBoYo Год назад +3

      fruit tree often grow on graveyard, people eat the fruit just fine. 😂

  • @LivingtheHightLife
    @LivingtheHightLife 3 года назад +21

    I love that y'all show composting with animal remains. It is such a taboo subject, but the earth needs all of it's nutrients replaced. Animal remains are a great source of nutrients!
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @amandaforeman2626
    @amandaforeman2626 3 года назад +38

    This is a great video! I composted my favorite roosters offels when I had to butcher him for attacking . I take the blood and put it around my trees and in my
    Garden ! No waste ! We are so blessed to be able to feed our soil ! For me , blood added to the garden is blood
    Meal! Once
    I break the chicken down for broth and do bone broth , I’m gonna dry the bones to grind up as bone meal!

    • @shylakalbacher2164
      @shylakalbacher2164 3 года назад +1

      Hi Amanda! What do you use hone meal for?

    • @amandaforeman2626
      @amandaforeman2626 3 года назад +8

      @@shylakalbacher2164 bone meal adds phosphorus to the soil and blood adds nitrogen !

    • @The.Branch.Ranch5
      @The.Branch.Ranch5 3 года назад +1

      How do you dry them? What a great idea

    • @amandaforeman2626
      @amandaforeman2626 3 года назад +3

      @@The.Branch.Ranch5 dehydrator :) I leave mine outside so I don’t stink up the house lol

    • @The.Branch.Ranch5
      @The.Branch.Ranch5 3 года назад

      @@amandaforeman2626 lmao good thinking. How do you know when they're ready? Do you have to blend them or do they disintegrate on their own once dried?

  • @thespig13
    @thespig13 3 года назад +22

    One tip is if freshly starting a compost, to substitute the introducing of bacteria by adding old compost, you can use yeast, just dissolve a couple tablespoons in a 20 gallon lawn sprayer and spray every layer you lay. The yeast will feed on all the natural occurring sugars

  • @jcdiver522
    @jcdiver522 3 года назад +7

    I get an odd amount of satisfaction out of compost videos

  • @TUKByV1
    @TUKByV1 3 года назад +11

    I never had a problem composting meat/bone scraps from the kitchen. Plants grow their roots around and through old bones.

  • @OuttheBackDoor
    @OuttheBackDoor 3 года назад +64

    Animal protein makes some of the richest soil. When I first started composting several decades ago, I lived in town. At that time I was told not to compost anything but vegetation because everything else would attract animals into my yard and that it would stink.
    Fast forward to today and I live in the country. Meat by products are getting composted. Actually our fish carcasses and entrails are getting buried immediately around our rhubarb plants and we get great rhubarb every year. No problems with wild life getting into our compost or odor.
    With any type of compost, it needs to have that drier vegetation (carbon) mixed in with it like you've used the wood shavings. Otherwise all you'll have is a garbage dump pile.
    Josh, with all of the chores you do daily, would you really have time to turn the pile every day? You're far from being lazy.
    Thank you for sharing this and if done properly, you get rid of waste and end up with BLACK GOLD.
    God bless you and your beautiful family 😊 Mickey

    • @katewizer2736
      @katewizer2736 3 года назад +3

      I completely agree!

    • @sometimessnarky1642
      @sometimessnarky1642 3 года назад +6

      I've been told to only use vegetation as well and I thought it sounded stupid since animals die in the wild all the time and things grow BETTER after they decompose. So it made no sense to me why having meat (non GMO funky meat) in your compost pile be a bad thing.

    • @seanpenn4405
      @seanpenn4405 3 года назад +4

      @@sometimessnarky1642 there's literally nothing wrong with GMO foods. I think most people don't understand how GMO's are used for food and food specifically. Does the term "selective pollination" or "selective breeding" ring a more comfortable bell for you?
      GMO insecticides and fertilizers I can't speak to however

    • @BLAQFiniks
      @BLAQFiniks 3 года назад +1

      @@seanpenn4405 they genetically modify not only food nowadays, fyi.
      Btw, selective breeding does not involve inserting foreign species' genes into food, i.e. tomatoes with scorpion genes supposedly to better ward of disease, roundup-ready corn or soy with its highly unhealthy chemicals already inside not to die off by external addition of same chemicals, etc. - THAT imho is NOT good~

    • @seanpenn4405
      @seanpenn4405 3 года назад

      @@BLAQFiniks care to show where they've done that?

  • @theflamingone8729
    @theflamingone8729 3 года назад +18

    Yep, it's all about the ratios.
    Even large bones can be dealt with, first by composting or cooking to get the oil out, them covering it in wet ash. You may need to mix it every other day, but the wet ash dissolves the bones.

  • @Well_I_am_just_saying
    @Well_I_am_just_saying 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is a good method as long as you have equipment to turn the pile once in a while and you are not in a hurry to finish it. I completely agree that you can include animal parts in your compost pile.

  • @his-sweetie
    @his-sweetie 3 года назад +4

    Nature gives and gives then gives more. Thank you for sharing your method. It's very inspiring.

  • @bootmender
    @bootmender 3 года назад +5

    👍👍👍👏👏👏 very good video!! Look at how well his garden produces for as far North as he is… because of this composting! The more work he does now the better he eats next winter! ❤️✝️🇺🇸

  • @amyschaefer1140
    @amyschaefer1140 3 года назад +6

    Thank you for this video!
    I'm going to make my compost piles differently now. No more throwing out the blood, bones etc.

    • @jonald3
      @jonald3 3 года назад

      Don't use it on veggies. Unless you don't mind E Coli

    • @BonnieBlue2A
      @BonnieBlue2A 3 года назад +1

      @@jonald3 Inaccurate comment. Hot composting eliminates that concern.

    • @jonald3
      @jonald3 3 года назад

      @@BonnieBlue2A lol okay. I work at a compost testing facility. I don't know anything 👍

    • @mikeypc3592
      @mikeypc3592 2 года назад

      @@jonald3 how long do you think E coli survives in a compost pile? By the time compost is used, the e coli would've been destroyed a long time ago.

    • @jonald3
      @jonald3 2 года назад

      @@mikeypc3592 OK buddy! Im sure you know everything. Tell the state regulators or any other agency that keeps producers in check. Funny that you have to test for e coli to sell commercially. E coli can survive very long on any surface or soil. MONTHS long. Once a colony gets going you have to get rid of the compost.

  • @plante_n_seeds4505
    @plante_n_seeds4505 3 года назад +27

    Thanks so much for this video Josh! My brother and I had this discussion once and he said it couldn't be done. As you were showing, when done correctly, you can make use of all those waste items rather than filling up the trash.

  • @Greens5511
    @Greens5511 3 года назад +29

    Love this! I wish I had that much sawdust! I love composting! Great job!

    • @katewizer2736
      @katewizer2736 3 года назад +4

      See if you have a nearby sawmill, or ask around if anyone has sawdust (someone who trims trees, or someone who saws a lot for a wood burner. Maybe even a lumber yard)

    • @DearWokeChristian
      @DearWokeChristian 3 года назад +1

      What about ash from the grill? I could imagine that one could start a business going around cleaning restaurant's BBQ grills of ash. Then turn around and compost the ash and sell the compost.

    • @BonnieBlue2A
      @BonnieBlue2A 3 года назад +1

      You can use wood chips.

    • @yvoennsche
      @yvoennsche 3 года назад +3

      @@BonnieBlue2A Wood chips take really long to break down though, even in an active pile

    • @ar2qureshi10
      @ar2qureshi10 8 месяцев назад

      Can I make compost from leftover flatbreads? Please answer

  • @maccliff2115
    @maccliff2115 2 года назад +1

    Very cool video! I have heard many on RUclips say not to compost meat 🍖/ guts
    however, you Good Sir, are absolutely correct. It’s been done for 1,000’s of years.
    Great content! Thank you for posting.

  • @jenniferdruery8661
    @jenniferdruery8661 3 года назад +5

    Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge about composting! I feel like Between my chickens, kitchen scraps and a pitchfork, I can go forth and create great compost for my garden! God bless!

  • @swolytrinity8579
    @swolytrinity8579 3 года назад +1

    Love how at 7:03 when se spills the guts how the music gets hyped and uplifting 😂👍♥️

  • @amandaforeman2626
    @amandaforeman2626 3 года назад +9

    Your compost looks amazing !

  • @renamaemcdonald2075
    @renamaemcdonald2075 3 года назад +4

    No waste there! Great video! I do like to see the animals as well 🙂

  • @Aubz-ro5xy
    @Aubz-ro5xy 3 года назад +6

    Y’all are such a beautiful family! Thank you for blessing us with the wisdom you guys have have acquired over the years. Always enjoy your videos.

  • @freakygardener8033
    @freakygardener8033 3 года назад +1

    Great video! I get SO TIRED of hearing everybody saying you can NOT put any meat in your compost! I live in suburban mpls/stp, so my small compost pile isn't enough to keep out scavengers, but if I could, I would put ALL of our kitchen waste in the compost!

  • @joelbruneski6486
    @joelbruneski6486 2 года назад +1

    I love it. I do the same thing up in Canada. 150 meat birds and my sheep guts. I have a couple aerated bins so I only have to turn it once to make sure the edges are given a chance to heat up.
    Much better than it all going to the landfill.

  • @Minnesota_Mama_Bear
    @Minnesota_Mama_Bear 3 года назад +5

    So much knowledge to help those of us who struggle with their compost. I finally dove into compost this year. Although my summer pile was all greens, now I have the carbon (leaves) I need to make it right. I should have a wonderful amount of compost to start fixing my corn garden gravel into a nice soil bed next year. Thank you so much for helping me understand this subject a little better. 💚🌞

  • @DearWokeChristian
    @DearWokeChristian 3 года назад +2

    I can't be the only one who keeps stopping by to see how this pile is coming along.

  • @elisaturse4777
    @elisaturse4777 3 года назад +9

    As a homeschool mom, I appreciate your liberal and appropriate use of adverbs.

    • @FebbieG
      @FebbieG 3 года назад +1

      This comment makes me smile. Lol

  • @BeautifulTripsandPlaces
    @BeautifulTripsandPlaces 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great video and a good demonstration on how to make composte, i always wanted to know! Also i really like the nature, really lovely trees, it looks great

  • @ladonnawoodley5279
    @ladonnawoodley5279 3 года назад +1

    I enjoyed your video. I liked the way you showed the progress on the compost pile. Thanks for sharing

  • @TRuth.T
    @TRuth.T 3 года назад +3

    Thanks, for sharing . I have seen this with dead animals, too(cows/pigs)...

  • @94Margie
    @94Margie 3 года назад +1

    I really liked this video. I especially liked the little tour through the barn showing your new troths and the animals.

  • @michellel5444
    @michellel5444 3 года назад +3

    Great video as always. Love seeing the animal set up. Thank you.

  • @sonsofliberty3081
    @sonsofliberty3081 2 года назад +1

    If you live somewhere that people want to tell or just cause problems, actually have someone come in and dig a hole with a machine so it ramps downward. The pile won't look large then because most of it will be "underground " we fork up all of our horse crap every day and put it on our pile. By the next spring I till it into the garden. The garden is over a .25 acre and the topsoil is around 16 inches deep now.

  • @VOsTravelwithKIDS
    @VOsTravelwithKIDS 3 года назад +23

    I can’t wait until we have land so we can do all the homesteading things!

    • @sabl6381
      @sabl6381 3 года назад +3

      Me too. I'm using my current suburban lot as a stepping stone from my apartment balcony. I think in the long run I'll be happy I had to do everything gradually - it gives me time to learn and practice without being overwhelmed. God bless you and here's to realizing our farming dreams one day!

    • @VOsTravelwithKIDS
      @VOsTravelwithKIDS 3 года назад

      Yes! I do as much as I can as well 😊

    • @tanyascarbrough7204
      @tanyascarbrough7204 3 года назад +1

      Me too!☺️😌😋

    • @FebbieG
      @FebbieG 3 года назад +1

      While you wait, do what you can where you are. :)

    • @justinomar9210
      @justinomar9210 3 года назад

      It's gonna be boring and a lot of work

  • @hopechannelcat5462
    @hopechannelcat5462 3 года назад +4

    well, i sure liked the way you did the compost pile with the sawdust/wood shaving and using the tractor to mix it. what broke my heart was to see 25lbs or more of gizzards in the scrap bucket. i see this a lot with off grid farmer and can't figure out why. i guess each to his own. by the way gizzards are very delicious/nutritious and easy to fix.

  • @anitaculp683
    @anitaculp683 3 года назад +1

    I hope you take us along for the whole ride!!!! I am learning so much from watching you. I need visuals!!! 😂 Thank you so much for your time and knowledge.

  • @prairieindulgencehomestead3332
    @prairieindulgencehomestead3332 3 года назад +2

    This is awesome! Thanks for showing us this Josh, I will be trying it for sure!

  • @suemagyari2992
    @suemagyari2992 3 года назад +2

    Absolutely loved this video! Just wondered why you are not feeding a bit of that stuff to the pigs! I have seen permaculture guys put whole carcasses in the compost successfully. Great instruction.

  • @ceepark114
    @ceepark114 3 года назад

    Your finished pile of compost looks so rich, your garden beds are going to love it. I've buried whole carcasses of dead animals like chickens or rabbits in the middle of the pile. All we find after several months are the bones.

  • @peterstevens6555
    @peterstevens6555 Год назад +1

    Good afternoon from Auckland, New Zealand ... 🙂🙂🙂

  • @PrewittHomestead
    @PrewittHomestead 3 года назад

    Good looking compost folks. Love that you add ALL your animal harvest. I love wood shavings for carbon! Much quicker decomp.

  • @doc2793
    @doc2793 3 года назад +1

    Great video! Love seeing yalls place and the animals!!!

  • @brianadixon8995
    @brianadixon8995 3 года назад +10

    I always heard don't put animal products into the compost, but then I started researching additives for soil and one was bone meal. My question from then on was why can't I throw my old bones into my compost and avoid having to buy ANOTHER thing.
    I started doing it ANYWAYS. Now I know I'm not wrong.

    • @ethankaufman8577
      @ethankaufman8577 3 года назад +1

      Not only bone meal, but blood meal and feather meal are super common orga kc garden additives,

    • @bigdog517
      @bigdog517 2 года назад +1

      Bones are one things, when composting meat ya gotta do it right.
      Can be left with a nasty kinda toxic mess otherwise. That's the only reason people say not to. Most won't take the time to do it right and end up with a mess.

    • @tindrums
      @tindrums 2 года назад

      Vermin will dig up your pile. Thats the only problem

  • @Spawkat
    @Spawkat 3 года назад +1

    Really great video Josh. Perfect example of composting, thank you for taking the time to show people before and result of one year later. Hope you're all having a beautiful fall and good luck on your hunting season to add to the pile! 🍁🍂🐔

  • @markogeri73
    @markogeri73 Год назад +1

    Where I am from (Hungary that is) we eat some of the innards of chickens like the liver, gizzards (cleaned!) and heart, we make soup from them adding vegetables to the mix. So we have less waste there, and then of course at the end of the day with poop composting they will be composted as well but first they go through my digestive tract :)

    • @absolutecharles
      @absolutecharles Год назад +1

      After eating all that, are you still Hungary? ;) Yeah, the hearts and gizzards are excellent, I can't imagine why people don't eat them more... or at least feed them to the dogs and cats.

  • @cyndidame1721
    @cyndidame1721 3 года назад +2

    Learned so much...thanks for sharing.

  • @sarahburke8955
    @sarahburke8955 3 года назад +8

    Question: How does the day to day collection of green material work in the house? Do you have a five gallon bucket or something that everybody knows to throw scraps in? Do you save the bones from meals and bone broth to add on the compost pile?

    • @lisathatcher3773
      @lisathatcher3773 3 года назад +2

      I would probably freeze it till you have enough.

    • @shelbysieg1607
      @shelbysieg1607 3 года назад +3

      I have a small one gallon bucket for food scraps. It get's emptied daily as the compost pile is on the way to the chickens. I just make a small hole in the top of the pile to make my deposit then cover with more wood chips.

    • @tehfuqizg0inon588
      @tehfuqizg0inon588 3 года назад

      Question: can I compost my granny?

    • @theflamingone8729
      @theflamingone8729 3 года назад

      Hi, I commented about bones earlier on if you're interested.

  • @melcurll
    @melcurll 3 года назад +1

    I love this channel!! I love their lifestyle!! 😃❤

  • @justsaying1744
    @justsaying1744 3 года назад +1

    Love the video, thank you very well put, I will use this video to do my own composting soon!

  • @daniswara1164
    @daniswara1164 2 года назад +1

    Carcass especially is a good materials for fertilizer. In Indonesia where a dead body is buried without any preservation process happening in their body. The body become a really good fertilizer. You can just look at a giant tree from afar then it's almost surely that the tree was planted on a cemetery.

  • @cynthiafed
    @cynthiafed 3 года назад

    Great educational video. Thank you for sharing this information!
    1) What wood are your shavings? 2) How do you compost human waste? 3) What food items do you feed the chickens instead of putting them in the compost pile?
    Thank you in advance for answering!

  • @calamitysue1274
    @calamitysue1274 3 года назад +1

    Good info, as always. Thanks Josh.

  • @BerkeyCleanWater
    @BerkeyCleanWater 3 года назад +1

    This really was a great educational video for me to watch. I love seeing your passion for homesteading and btw, all those tall trees in the far background look wonderful!

  • @10KidsandAGarage
    @10KidsandAGarage 3 года назад +1

    I love the feed areas! Great idea!

  • @Brovillion559
    @Brovillion559 Год назад +4

    I’ve been organic farming for 2 years now. At first I didn’t understand why the government was giving me a hard time. A couple years now and it’s very very clear why the G men hate organic farmers.

  • @clintufford_777
    @clintufford_777 3 года назад +5

    Question regarding sawdust/ wood shavings: is there a preferred wood? Hardwood, softwood, etc? Would pine set the alkalinity or acidity off to far one direction or the other?

    • @BonnieBlue2A
      @BonnieBlue2A 3 года назад

      No black walnut, walnut, or pecan due to their allopathic nature.

  • @kirstenjohnston7100
    @kirstenjohnston7100 3 года назад

    Thanks for the good info. I love those new feed troughs !!

  • @70washington
    @70washington 2 года назад

    Thank you for the video, very informative. I was just talking about this with my wife a couple days ago, and you answered my questions on the safety aspect of doing this. I have enjoyed watching your videos over the last few years and how you moved to where you are now and how things have progressed. It is looking great too. Happy New Year!

  • @nickthegardener.1120
    @nickthegardener.1120 2 года назад

    Hi there good video, I love composting! I've been adding blood fish and bone, azomite and organic potatoe fertilizer to help speed things up and add nutrients and minerals. I add leaves and grass nearly every day and turn once a week. Lovely stuff!👍😁 I'd add feather meal if I could get it! But I do mow up lots of feathers and the odd dead bird.

  • @denisdufresne5338
    @denisdufresne5338 4 месяца назад

    Carbon matter is essential to avoid the stinky ammoniac odor. When you add and mix enough carbon matters with green or animal matters (at least twice the green matter) there will be enough carbon to bond with nitrogen instead of letting the nitrogen bonding with hydrogen to form the stinky gas NH3 (ammoniac). If ever you add to much brown matters, your compost pile will simply take more time to compost, there will be no stinky odor. However if there is not enough brown matter, no only the heap will give off an unpleasant ammonia smell but some nitrogen will also bond with oxygen to transform in NO2- and NO3- (nitrite and nitrate) which are toxic components.

  • @Sandstar942
    @Sandstar942 3 года назад +1

    I can't remember if you've talked at all about your livestock and farm dogs. Time to go see!

  • @JunkDobber
    @JunkDobber 2 года назад

    Your method works great for you and I wish I could compost like that. I do compost but I live in a neighborhood and not on a farm. So I have to use a no meat method and I also do not have a source for saw dust. We never have any left over meat, We eat it. LOL Enjoyed your video.

  • @nattravn8445
    @nattravn8445 3 года назад

    I compost everything including animal parts. What I do as a precaution so animals will leave it alone is I mix in ashes from my stoves and fireplaces. Ironically the hunters here have actually started to dump the carcasses in there too . What I've noticed though is that bones covered in ashes and soot dissolves much quicker. Nice to see that there are others doing this aswell:)

  • @adamfraser4509
    @adamfraser4509 3 года назад

    Very interesting. Keep us posted mate! 👍

  • @addictedtoelf
    @addictedtoelf 3 года назад

    Fantastic video! You articulate the ideas so well while working, a task I admire because it is such a challenge for me haha! Thank you

  • @FloridaGirl-
    @FloridaGirl- 2 года назад

    Great vid and great way to recycle everything!

  • @rickyjackson7888
    @rickyjackson7888 Год назад +1

    Great video 📸

  • @TheSpartanBuilder
    @TheSpartanBuilder 2 года назад

    must have quite a bit of acreage to make so much garden leftovers! nice video

  • @chadRatwell
    @chadRatwell 3 года назад +1

    We pressure cook chicken carcasses with a bunch of veggies for stock. Are those leftovers good for compost? I always thought it already spent all its nutrients.

  • @laurieshatney9279
    @laurieshatney9279 3 года назад +1

    You could keep any of the organs or gizzards that you don't use for yourself, you could keep for your dogs and cats. I keep these things for my dogs and they LOVE them.

  • @elizabethcope1502
    @elizabethcope1502 3 года назад +1

    No sawmills, check with local tree cutting companies. Sometimes local municipalities also have trimmings. Hope this helps. God bless.

  • @damianhackett4761
    @damianhackett4761 Год назад +1

    Great video! Thanks very much

  • @papapiers1588
    @papapiers1588 Год назад

    Found a dead badger to start off my “ gloop soup” for fertilising my soil. Stinks to high heaven. Adding garden waste too. Browns, greens and butchering? Noted.

  • @ruthbarrett8907
    @ruthbarrett8907 3 года назад

    Great video! Josh, it made me a little sad to see all those lovely gizzards. They aren’t hard to process and make the best winter soups with celery, onion and spices. Cook(after cleaning) in pressure cooker with broth. Add in rice and some greens. Yum. Just a thought.

  • @pyrorc
    @pyrorc 3 года назад

    You guys ever thought about doing the aerobic Johnson su bioreactor. It's a pretty cool way of making aerobic compost and they kinda can stay in their own spot for awhile until they finish

    • @pyrorc
      @pyrorc 3 года назад

      You don't even need to touch it unless you're doing the initial turn

  • @yankeegardener9565
    @yankeegardener9565 2 года назад

    Great video looks like you have a handle on it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @saritasarit
    @saritasarit 3 года назад

    I compost all our food scraps in our big city garden but we end up taking all the animal waste to landfill. To me it makes no sense. I have to show this to my husband. At least we could just burry it somewhere. Thanks for this awesome video. One day i hope i can put this into practice.

  • @muhammedahmerkhan2605
    @muhammedahmerkhan2605 Год назад

    In Karachi Pakistan we have compost of Animal remainings from slaughterhouses usually called "intestine manure" in our Urdu language "Ojhri ki khad" very rich in fertility Once I purchased it from nursery he has fresh stock of it and I saw steam coming out from it when he put a shovel in it to fill my 50kg Bag he charged me 150 rupees almost a 1 USD for it.

  • @JFAM077
    @JFAM077 Год назад

    We are a few miles down the road paradise valley where do you get all those wood shavings? Cabinet shop?

  • @joyceterra2265
    @joyceterra2265 3 года назад +2

    Josh where did you get all the saw dust? We do not have any mills around us.

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda 3 года назад +1

      Well lots of people have woodstoves and cut firewood too.

    • @joyceterra2265
      @joyceterra2265 3 года назад

      @@AnnaLVajda I cut wood for our home and cooking but it does not produce the amounts of sawdust that he was using. That is why I asked him where acquired the amounts he is using. I also do wood working and get some sawdust but still not near the amounts he used.

    • @HomesteadingFamily
      @HomesteadingFamily  3 года назад +1

      A local cabinet shop

    • @joyceterra2265
      @joyceterra2265 3 года назад

      @@HomesteadingFamily Thank You. We have a couple of those close. I will go talk to them. It doesn't matter what type of sawdust then?

  • @heatherjolly8389
    @heatherjolly8389 3 года назад +2

    This is great.I LOVE composting and the neighbors are going to start a regular butchering time with birds next year. Great info to stock away in my mind :-)

  • @christophernordine1903
    @christophernordine1903 3 года назад

    Can I use weeds like scotch broom blackberry vines and other forest cover to turn in compost for my garden or will the seeds survive? I hope that's not a dumb question . Thank for the channel I been binging . God bless your family and your granny's stories were touching

  • @spankbank4822
    @spankbank4822 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video

  • @evelynshaw3932
    @evelynshaw3932 3 года назад

    Would like to know where you get that fine wood shavings from? Love your teachings.

  • @devinclement
    @devinclement 2 месяца назад

    I never water my open piles, but if you live in a warm climate you should water.

  • @hair2fab
    @hair2fab 3 года назад

    Love this! Great info for anyone! Our pigs get the offal, minus the feathers, we boil it all together at the end, ice it and serve. Its their favorite day of the year!

  • @johnmudd6453
    @johnmudd6453 2 года назад

    I didn't realise the tractor shovel was raised ,I thought it was flat on the ground ,then the dog disappeared! 😁 Great video ! Can I ask why you didn't feed the offal to the pigs ?

  • @sytdoc3218
    @sytdoc3218 2 года назад

    Aw, Man, I can't believe you waste the gizzards! They are so good.

  • @dhansonranch
    @dhansonranch 3 года назад +3

    Great content! I saw the gizzards - I guess not everyone likes them..lol.

    • @elizabethcope1502
      @elizabethcope1502 3 года назад +1

      One lady on You Tube cans her gizzards. She said that canning them made them tender when she fried them. God bless.

  • @allthingsgrowing
    @allthingsgrowing 2 года назад

    Where are you getting all your wood chips/sawdust?

  • @RimGardensHomestead
    @RimGardensHomestead 3 года назад +1

    This is awesome! Do you guys have turkeys roaming around and scratching through your compost? They seem to poke their nose in everything😝

  • @BullfrogBackyardFarm
    @BullfrogBackyardFarm 3 года назад

    That stuff looks awesome!

  • @Teukimounga101
    @Teukimounga101 2 года назад

    If you don’t harvest animals, would you suggest buying offal to add? Or just “add it if you have it” kind of thing?

  • @Kbenzito
    @Kbenzito 3 года назад +2

    Would raw chicken leftovers be good for dogs if they are on the BARF diet?

    • @kabodick
      @kabodick 3 года назад

      @Kyle B, I was thinking the same thing….good for dogs and cats 😃.

  • @pfeifferized
    @pfeifferized 3 года назад +2

    Where’d you get all the wood shavings??

    • @HomesteadingFamily
      @HomesteadingFamily  3 года назад

      A local cabinet shop

    • @DC-rd2rv
      @DC-rd2rv 3 года назад

      Do you ensure the wood has not been treated/sprayed? My husband is a cabinet maker and I'm excited for another use of sawdust and wood shavings!

  • @maryloomis8075
    @maryloomis8075 2 года назад

    Would hydrated lime help with breaking down the offal/bones/feathers etc.faster? I'm wondering if that is OK in and organic method of compost?

  • @ExcellenceInAgriculture
    @ExcellenceInAgriculture 2 года назад

    Great video! It’s great to see how to do this on a large practice scale. I need to do more of this on our place! Have you or anyone on here had any success just using wood chips instead of sawdust? Or would they need more than a year to decompose?

  • @latarshacampbell7305
    @latarshacampbell7305 Год назад

    If you ever sale your compost I would be interested. I want to start a small garden in the fall. right now I am clearing my property in South carolina

  • @DebDDigger
    @DebDDigger 2 года назад +2

    Skin, bones, beaks... Oh, my! Just think of all the broth that would have made. Then you still could have composted the solids. Other than that, you have a LOT of compost.

  • @bluemoon8268
    @bluemoon8268 2 года назад

    ... Fascinating ...! ... but, I'm wondering why you don't use the chicken heads for making your chicken stock?

  • @shelbybrown4192
    @shelbybrown4192 3 года назад

    So I am brand new to everything, and I came across this video. With garden waste for anyone, what prevents stuff from actually regrowing in the pile. Like undetected seeds, weeds, and things like that. Is it the cover that prevents the sun from getting to it? Thank you for any information or info from anyone responding. 😊

    • @mitchspurlock3626
      @mitchspurlock3626 3 года назад +1

      The high heat and moisture either kill it or rot it.