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Introducing the All New Bio-Extractor
The Bio-Extractor creates a liquid amendment from bio-rich compost that can rapidly improve microbe populations in depleted soils. Now it's available in three models to serve farms of all sizes.
www.hiwasseeproducts.com/equipment/compost-extraction-equipment
มุมมอง: 25 008

วีดีโอ

Simeon Kleinsasser Presentation at Acres Field Day: Part 2 - Compost Extract
มุมมอง 1.3K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
Simeon Kleinsasser from Hiwassee Products gave a presentation at Acres Magazine Field Day in Viroqua, WI on July 18, 2024. Part 2 of 3.
Simeon Kleinsasser Presentation at Acres Field Day: Part 1 - Soil Biology
มุมมอง 4463 หลายเดือนก่อน
Simeon Kleinsasser from Hiwassee Products gave a presentation at Acres Magazine Field Day in Viroqua, WI on July 18, 2024. Part 1 of 3.
Rick Clark on Soil Health, Compost Extract and Eliminating Input Costs
มุมมอง 24K5 หลายเดือนก่อน
Rick Clark farms row crops on 7,000 acres in Indiana. He discusses how moving to no-till organic made his farm healthier and vastly more profitable, and how he uses compost extract from the Hiwassee Products Bio-Extractor to supercharge his soil biology. hiwasseeproducts.com/products/continuous-flow-bio-extractor 00:00 The farm's history 01:42 Collecting and using data 03:44 Planting corn into ...
Soil Foodweb Inc Study on the Bio-Extractor
มุมมอง 1.3K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Soil Food Web Inc. www.soilfoodweb.com/ conducted a study on the efficacy of the Hiwasse Products Bio-Extractor. hiwasseeproducts.com/collections/bio-extraction See the full report text here: www.hiwasseeproducts.com/blog/extractor-efficiency-report
Talking with Cory Miller about Biological Farming and Compost Extract
มุมมอง 8K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
We had a great conversation with Cory Miller of grassvalleyfarmsmt.com/ about biological farming, health and of course, compost extract. 0:00 Background 0:55 Getting into biological farming 4:17 Making compost 4:59 Compost extract 6:46 Biofertilizer 7:42 Gathering and using data effectively 10:19 Results 12:25 Grass Valley Farms 14:00 Growing sod 16:01 Hunting 17:42 Taking cues from nature 19:5...
Calibrating Extract Concentration with the Bio-Extractor
มุมมอง 2249 หลายเดือนก่อน
1. Load 10 lbs of compost in the hopper. 2. Hit the RUN/CLEAN button. 3. Wait for pressure to reach 40 psi. 4. Set auger speed to 5. 5. Set hopper agitation to 5. 6. Start timer 7. Run hopper empty and stop timer. Extract dilution = flow rate × recorded time ÷ 10lb
Bio-Extractor Metering Plate Adjustment
มุมมอง 1469 หลายเดือนก่อน
NEW on the Bio-Extractor: a height-adjustable metering plate to accommodate a wide range of compost consistencies. hiwasseeproducts.com/collections/bio-extraction
Compost Extract for Soil Health and Cost Savings: An Interview with Douglas Poole
มุมมอง 13K11 หลายเดือนก่อน
We talked with Douglas Poole who farms 7,000 acres in central Washington. Compost extract helps him revitalize his soil biology and save money in spite of arid conditions and a short growing season. Douglas uses the Hiwassee products Bio-Extractor to make his extract. hiwasseeproducts.com/collections/bio-extraction 00:00 Getting started with no-till 01:51 Land and climate 03:41 Trying new metho...
Compost Extract at the Henderson Farm
มุมมอง 7K11 หลายเดือนก่อน
Bob Henderson and his sons use the Hiwasse Products Bio-Extractor on their 2,000 acre farm in Iowa. We stopped by to talk about their experience with compost extract and regenerative farming. hiwasseeproducts.com/collections/bio-extraction 00:00 Background in farming 00:37 Why regenerative? 01:56 Changes so far 03:00 Compost extract 04:12 Results from compost extract 06:08 Advice to someone con...
h-Pack Mobile Microscopy Kit
มุมมอง 561ปีที่แล้ว
Everything you need for on-farm testing in one tidy, compact kit. The rugged cases protect sensitive equipment when traveling over rough terrain. The mobile cart unfolds into a clean workspace, comprising a setup that is effective in a lab or on a barn floor. hiwasseeproducts.com/pages/hpack-mobile-soil-lab-solutions
VermiFlow Continuous Flow Through Vermicomposting System
มุมมอง 1.7Kปีที่แล้ว
VermiFlow Continuous Flow Through Vermicomposting System
The Bio-Extractor from Hiwassee Products
มุมมอง 1.7Kปีที่แล้ว
The Bio-Extractor from Hiwassee Products
VermiFlow: Harvesting
มุมมอง 2.4Kปีที่แล้ว
VermiFlow: Harvesting
Common Ground: Post Screening Q&A with Rick Clark
มุมมอง 714ปีที่แล้ว
Common Ground: Post Screening Q&A with Rick Clark
Rick Clark at Hiwassee Products
มุมมอง 677ปีที่แล้ว
Rick Clark at Hiwassee Products
VermiFlow: Getting Started
มุมมอง 2.5Kปีที่แล้ว
VermiFlow: Getting Started
VermiFlow Initial Assembly
มุมมอง 2.1Kปีที่แล้ว
VermiFlow Initial Assembly
Sieve Replacement & Coupling Installation on the Hiwassee Bio-Extractor
มุมมอง 515ปีที่แล้ว
Sieve Replacement & Coupling Installation on the Hiwassee Bio-Extractor
Hiwassee Bio-Extractor - Operation, Cleaning, Mixing & Application
มุมมอง 3.9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Hiwassee Bio-Extractor - Operation, Cleaning, Mixing & Application
Extraction in Action - Inside a Sample Compost Extract Operation
มุมมอง 7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Extraction in Action - Inside a Sample Compost Extract Operation

ความคิดเห็น

  • @thevector
    @thevector 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    So great to hear about real results from a large scale farmer. I very much think the yield obsession has been weaponized by self interested actors (not farmers). But when you consider inputs, land degradation, and resiliency, I observe that regenerative is a better business for many farmers. Just based on what I read in various surveys an studies. And that is just looking at it from the economic side. But that is how Americans think, so hearing from farmers like Mr. Clark is super helpful in our culture. Thanks for posting it.

  • @jimmartindale
    @jimmartindale หลายเดือนก่อน

    Until you address the curse of Genesis 8:21 and face the destiny of man which God declared in Genesis 2:5 you are destined to face frustrations which are completely avoidable.

    • @666bruv
      @666bruv หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hey buddy, you've made a comment on the wrong page

    • @jimmartindale
      @jimmartindale หลายเดือนก่อน

      My apologies​@@666bruv

  • @MarthaCarlson-ry2vt
    @MarthaCarlson-ry2vt หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've been following Dr. Elaine Ingham and her Soil Food Web for a few years now. It's cool to see the assessment of your new extractor. Looks like a great product!

  • @TonyBrady-u1o
    @TonyBrady-u1o หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've never seen dirt chang color

    • @seandoherty4236
      @seandoherty4236 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Soil that is more water-saturated will appear darker. I.e., Dry soil is lighter in color. Soil with more microbial and insect life will be darker as well. So in his example, the deeper you plow, the darker it would get.

  • @666bruv
    @666bruv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    How much does insurance cost the grower?

  • @ralvis20
    @ralvis20 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What hes doing wrong is making it bacteria dominant. Needs to be fungial dominant. They should make their own compost in the Johnson

  • @steveberkson3873
    @steveberkson3873 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Although I will never approach the scale of your operation I truly like what you’re doing. Thanks for sharing

  • @clarissag4454
    @clarissag4454 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Where do i find hat USDA seed bank? Tried googling it and I might be looking right at it, but can someone point me in the wright direction? Thanks

    • @hiwasseeproducts
      @hiwasseeproducts 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is the web site. www.ars-grin.gov/Collections#plant-germplasm

  • @mikehunte398
    @mikehunte398 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video, but the music was obnoxious and distracting. I want to hear the farmer not some copyright free elevator jingle.

  • @RobsanSugoides
    @RobsanSugoides 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am a bio char resurcher and i build equipment to make great charcoal that can be uploaded with compost and mycelium to then call it biochar also i make wood smoke vingar If it comes from biomass pre life organic back into carbon in the soil I love your channel

    • @mikehunte398
      @mikehunte398 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I would think the first step towards becoming a researcher, is learning how to spell the word researcher.

    • @RobsanSugoides
      @RobsanSugoides 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mikehunte398 dyslexic am I sorri spelling is not everything is that all you got to find fault is easy

  • @RobsanSugoides
    @RobsanSugoides 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Gday from Australia thank you for your wisdom

  • @stardust4459
    @stardust4459 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was surprised to hear him say he added molasses to his extract. That will make it bacteria dominant rather than fungal dominant. I’d bet his soil has plenty of bacteria but is lacking in the fungi needed for high assimilation of nutrients.

  • @twc9000
    @twc9000 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    He lost me when he started talking about carbon footprint. We shouldn't even acklowledge the hoax of "carbon footprint" or "climate change."

    • @fidelreyesh
      @fidelreyesh 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Politics is what is at the root of this, the politics of selling pesticides, fertilizer and other Agri Quemicals ...

    • @marcheussi7110
      @marcheussi7110 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Are you an idiot?

    • @LtColDaddy71
      @LtColDaddy71 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He is one of the guys doing this in my region, I’m N. Illinois, he is central IN. It’s a small community. I personally am all about putting more plant food in to the air. But it has to be integrated in to a cycle. Taken up by crops and cover crops, a little stays in the soil, some vents back in to the atmosphere, but some also is taken up by the plant life immediately. Hell, corn plants have little slits specifically for vacuuming it up as it leaches out of the ground. The regen concept is designed to bring everyone to the table. Including the greenies. But it’s something different for everyone. For me, it’s about freedom. Cashing checks, not writing them. Setting prices, not taking them. Most main line conventional operations who do trials on no till and cover crops, do it all wrong, and I can blow holes in their findings, go on their land and do the same thing for 2-3 yrs and make more money. So Rick is talking about some practical ways of going about it. This is for people who seriously want it. I tell many people not to do it, because if they do, they will go broke. One needs to do a lot of research, become a believer, then start trying things out.

    • @Melidontcare
      @Melidontcare หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your ignorance lost me sir.

    • @chuckbowen5024
      @chuckbowen5024 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Calling it something else is just another PC name to remember. Digging it black, tiling or draining it and watching it blow away and wondering why is just insanity.

  • @colinjolly7502
    @colinjolly7502 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well done boy keep going you are doing the right things one step at a time. i am positive that you will become a farming hero just like Robert Elliott and Sir George Stapledon .

  • @aaronswanson6719
    @aaronswanson6719 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Glad to hear him say he’s not telling everyone they have to do this. Most farmers would find this type of farming to be impossible. I do wonder how long one can go without fertilizing for phosphorus. My land grant has had a zero phosphorus plot going for about 25 years in a 3 crop no-till rotation. The yields and soil test levels have really crashed in comparison to the plots getting a modest amount of P. Cover crops can sequester mineral nutrients and make them more crop available but they don’t add any. Best wishes to Rick and his family.

    • @NB-lw4sm
      @NB-lw4sm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There's only so much phosphorus you can get from organic matter, the rest is all after weathering into the soil which takes time, which squeezing every bit of yield out of isn't possible, without some P application

  • @JimHerman-o3q
    @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Cover crops.........they are great for holding soils. However then farmers have to increase nitrogen application to make up for what the cover crop removed. Where does that nitrogen end up ??? The water supplies !

    • @stromantiling8122
      @stromantiling8122 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You're doing it wrong if you have to increase N. Most cover croppers are decreasing N applications

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@stromantiling8122 Thats what my neighbors told me too. That I dont need to apply more nitrogen. Before doing an entire field I tried a few strips. Tada !! The corn was in a world of hurt where the Rye grass was. YELLOW ! And a foot shorter while the others was nearly 5 foot tall. Oh.... then I notices the four neighbors I talked to about the nitrogen issue all had saddle tanks on the planter tractors...and they also applied Anhydrous before planting. Rye grass is a nitrogen hog ..... because it is a grass ! They out right lied to me ! Later I confronted them about adding nitrogen. Its as if then didnt know what I was talking about ! Cover crops serve one primary purpose.....erosion !

    • @markneuman2070
      @markneuman2070 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      By reading your posts, your paradigm is threatened, we all have our own bias from past experiences. I have farmed for over 40 years and I continually look to improve and learn new things to implement and understand how to keep moving in a positive direction. I'm glad that you have it all figured out.

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@markneuman2070 As you know....no one has it all figured out ! This is why most folks post comments . I have also been farming for 47 years. Im always looking for improvements ! After all... I only farm 160 acres ......and have time to play. From rotational grazing to working with pure sand .....since I live next to a rock quarry. Also worked as a Peace Corps volunteer to Liberia Africa for two years.............where soils there are like the county gravel roads here........hand heavy rains. Up to 160 inches of rain a year. Here in the USA....farmers have no idea what difficulties are out there regarding soils erosion heat etc. Whats interesting is the folks that talk about regenerative farming. When in fact its " degenerative " farming. All soils degenerate ! Soils eat themselves out of house and home !

  • @JimHerman-o3q
    @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a farmer myself...... rotational grazed milk cows for 45 years. Regenerative Ag does not exist !!!!! Its Degenerative Ag !!!!! Anything you do with the soil......no matter what...as long as you have rain / water and oxygen the soil Degenerates !!!! The soils eat themselves out of house and home ! An example...... if you have land that is " beach sand " ....... You can do what ever you want to improve this soil. No matter what you do....after so long....maybe a year....you have the same thing ::: SAND ::: This is true with all soils. This does not mean you should allow soils to erode away..... but to manage the soil ! A farmer should take advantage of what is there in front of them " now " not later. Because later it will be gone ! Again.......soil management ! With pasture lands.....take advantage of cutting hay.....baling hay from those lands. Then......fertilize !!!!!!! Keep a cover.......and with rain you can more then double your grass production ! Manage and utilize what an acre of land can produce with out jeopardizing the soil / land !

    • @veziqiniso4425
      @veziqiniso4425 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I also believed similar to what you are stating; but after 10+ years of exposure to regenerative agric I know that it works and this is why we need education on how soils function and how to manage soils for healthy soil functioning; without sound understanding of some of the ecology and biology and how to manage regeneratively for soil health and productivity we do run the risk of degenerating soils; but it is possible and there are many farmers who can attest to this. Examples: Gabe Brown of N Dakota, late David Brandt of Ohio, Rick Clark of Indiana. Gabe and Dave have both had scientific studies done of their soils and the improvements in soil organic matter (soil carbon content - organic matter is about 58% carbon), soil aggregation, porosity and water infiltration rates, nutrient availability etc is astounding. Gabes soils advanced from about 1.7% om to 6-8 % om; topsoil depth went from 4-5 inches to 20 inches; soils are now well aggregated to 48 inches; carbon content to 4 foot is >90 tons/ acre, infiltration rates changed from 1/2 inch an hour to >20 inches / hour. The atmosphere is 78%N; once soil biology is working there is no need for synthetic N fertilization. Dave Brandts soils were re-classified by USDA after 30+ years of regenerative farming methods due to the significant changes that occurred with the increased soil life and carbon and aggregation. The color, structure, infiltration rate, water holding capacity, drainage etc were all vastly improved. I know of a dairy farmer who has gone from 650 kg/ha N (13 x 50 kg N /ha) on his irrigated pastures under centre pivot irrigation to strategic application of only 20 kg N / ha in winter when the microbes aren't delivering sufficient N to the plants, with minimal reduction in production and greatly improved herd health of his dairy cows. He maintains a multi-species forage mix now of >15 varieties of forages and has practices minimum till (does very shallow surface tillage when he re-seeds some species annually), his profitability is highest of all the producers in their dairy study group. He also practices high intensity short duration grazing ('AMP' grazing - adaptive multi-paddock grazing) with continuous monitoring of forage production (using calibrated pasture disc meter) and multiple herd parameters. With >700 cows in milk. Gabe and associates set up 'Soil Health Academy' and 'Understanding Ag' to provide training and consultancy services to support farmers transitioning to regenerative agriculture. Google these names and find out more. Green Cover seeds have great educational resources on their website and TH-cam channel too.

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@veziqiniso4425 Regenerative works....... Soils are constantly Degenerating ! Thats the soils purpose ! To give off nutrients so there can be plant life ! Therefore in realty there is no such thing as Regenerative. Fertilizer can be added...and at that point that fertilizer starts to either be utilized by plants or degraded into the water supplies. Soils only have a short period of time that fertility can be held. UNLESS there is limited water. Then yes....soil fertility can be preserved for a much longer period of time provided its incorporated into the soil. As a former Peace Corps volunteer to Liberia Africa.......I can say this for a fact ! There its called the slash and burn farming method. In Liberia along with many other countries ( and parts of the USA ) the soils are equal to ( midwestern ) gravel roads. Farmers growing rice get little from nearly nothing for rice yields. The only way to change that is to " spoon " feed the rice. During the rainy season everything is washed away ! And with high humidity even a dead animal might last three days and the fertility would be gone ! As a dairy farmer myself.. I know about manure overload. Cows will not eat where they pooped for up to 2 years after the fact !!!! Cows can " smell " ! It has nothing to do with soil life and breaking the manure down. So...... pasture ground must be rotated out for a period of time to be hayed.... and then back to pasture. There is a reason stock cow farmers dont do dairy. Their cows would go dry ! They dont seem to notice the lack of milk production in the cows... of which limits the calves rate of gain. Along with keeping the pastures at below 6 inches for the calves to have tender grass to eat ! True.......some of what these so called Regenerative farmers say is true. But they say and do what they do is for " money " A clear example is Greg Judy. ( better called Mr. Glyphosate ) stating his neighbors soils are " dead " ???? And goes on to say they have no earth worms ??? Meanwhile where I live....on the county gravel road.... if its been wet for a few days I can count up to 15 earth worms per square yard. And the worms are coming up from the road surface ! A county road is one of the most toxic sights around ! But its still teaming with life ! Mr. Glyphosate is making these statements for only one reason~! MONEY ! No one dare step on his TH-cam enterprise ! If anyone askes a question that suggests anything negative at all..... its blocked ! I question why! As a farmer and a former Peace Corps volunteer.....I have learned to keep an open mind....and work with many types of soils. Bottom line.... harvest what you can from the soils as soon as you can....with out destroying the very foundation....the soil itself !

    • @ralvis20
      @ralvis20 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Instead of add fert you can layover terminate the cover crop and it feeds the soil. Same with the compost extract

  • @666bruv
    @666bruv 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nice

  • @postarica1767
    @postarica1767 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is that the kind of thing that worms are eating? Cool setup and screen! I hope the schools have this technology. Super exciting to kids I bet.

  • @michaelmanculich4004
    @michaelmanculich4004 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well said, I appreciate ur help

  • @danherrmann8755
    @danherrmann8755 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Soil bank in the 50’s and 60’s. Created a lot of pasture, for cattle. In later years. But. This program was stopped. Big money stressing out the land.

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      As a farmer myself...... rotational grazed milk cows for 45 years. Regenerative Ag does not exist !!!!! Its Degenerative Ag !!!!! Anything you do with the soil......no matter what...as long as you have rain / water and oxygen the soil Degenerates !!!! The soils eat themselves out of house and home ! An example...... if you have land that is " beach sand " ....... You can do what ever you want to improve this soil. No matter what you do....after so long....maybe a year....you have the same thing ::: SAND ::: This is true with all soils. This does not mean you should allow soils to erode away..... but to manage the soil ! A farmer should take advantage of what is there in front of them " now " not later. Because later it will be gone ! Again.......soil management ! With pasture lands.....take advantage of cutting hay.....baling hay from those lands. Then......fertilize !!!!!!! Keep a cover.......and with rain you can more then double your grass production ! Manage and utilize what an acre of land can produce with out jeopardizing the soil / land !

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Soil banks..... the change was because large sized farmers ...row crop farmers didnt want to deal with " haying ". And the government ( through Chuck Grassley ) had to find a way for those farmers to have an income from those lands instead of the equipment and time needed to work with those lands. This is prime " conservative " farming ! Spend more money with the government in control ! Conservative ????? Yah right !

  • @GlynDomingue
    @GlynDomingue 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have a garden that i was at the point of not growing anything. This my second year of changing my way of growing anything. My ground is bad and hard. I have been doing a little better. Adding compost to my ground and seeing a different. Also some crops i plant dont rot quick as before also taste better.

  • @timshirk6261
    @timshirk6261 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The question is not how much carbon can you sequester compared to how much you burned in fossil fuels in a given year but rather how much of that sequestered carbon stays in soil as stable soil carbon for many years which aggregates the soil storing water during wet season and percolates it back up during dry season. This is the ultimate goal. I am not sure annual crops will achieve this

    • @denniskemnitz1381
      @denniskemnitz1381 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dennis here.where is this research being done. Where do you regularly report your successful C sequestration farming technique. Dennis

    • @timshirk6261
      @timshirk6261 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@denniskemnitz1381 good question Dennis, Walter Jehne talks about this and if you stop and think about it annuals put most of there energy above ground and there is lots of research out there that most of surface residue will oxidize back into atmosphere and the grain that gets harvests will as well once it passes thru beef at feed lot or burned as ethanol. I am a grass fed beef farmer and when that is done correctly there is a huge long term draw down of carbon that stays in top soil as stable soil carbon and the more Forbs I have growing the deeper the aggregation goes. Diversity is key.

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@timshirk6261 Carbon as I always knew it was the rods found in dry cell batteries. Now suddenly its found in the soils / land ???? Dont think so !

    • @JimHerman-o3q
      @JimHerman-o3q 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@timshirk6261 As a farmer myself...... rotational grazed milk cows for 45 years. Regenerative Ag does not exist !!!!! Its Degenerative Ag !!!!! Anything you do with the soil......no matter what...as long as you have rain / water and oxygen the soil Degenerates !!!! The soils eat themselves out of house and home ! An example...... if you have land that is " beach sand " ....... You can do what ever you want to improve this soil. No matter what you do....after so long....maybe a year....you have the same thing ::: SAND ::: This is true with all soils. This does not mean you should allow soils to erode away..... but to manage the soil ! A farmer should take advantage of what is there in front of them " now " not later. Because later it will be gone ! Again.......soil management ! With pasture lands.....take advantage of cutting hay.....baling hay from those lands. Then......fertilize !!!!!!! Keep a cover.......and with rain you can more then double your grass production ! Manage and utilize what an acre of land can produce with out jeopardizing the soil / land !

    • @timshirk6261
      @timshirk6261 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@JimHerman-o3q carbon is always cycling thru it’s many phases which include, sugar, wood, C02 and fossil fuels which come from CO2 that a green plant took CO2 and turned it into sugar a long time ago. Yes carbon exists in soil in a big way and proper management can greatly influence this and the more liquid carbon you get in soil the more water you can hold and everything gets much better including yield and quality

  • @Mrbfgray
    @Mrbfgray 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fascinating and highly encouraging, hopeful for a bright future.

  • @marvinbaier3627
    @marvinbaier3627 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for the video! I saw Rick Clark in January or February 2020. The first thing I remember try something. I’ve been trying something all the time now. I try to keep ROI one of the key factors and how to work with Mother Nature and try to keep it healthy for all. My next step is putting in native pasture this coming fall/winter.

  • @behold_new_things
    @behold_new_things 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Loved the part about chemistry vs biology "...No wonder they continue to sell me crap, because all they gotta do is snow me with the Mulder's Chart... if you just get outta the way of the soil biology and it'll do it for me -- I'm in!" ...and banking "...It's somethin somebody's gonna do somethin for me and I don't have to write a check for it... again, to plagiarize Gabe Brown: he'd rather sign the back of the check than the front of the check." :-)

  • @sheelaghomalley5459
    @sheelaghomalley5459 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Watching from Ireland. Watching the Irish farmers with American accents makes me sad they had to leave

  • @richardmeyer4406
    @richardmeyer4406 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Loved your Video . Regards from Australia

  • @niall7089
    @niall7089 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Loved every bit of this and clearly he is making strides in a direction that can only be better than the past...and very applicable to us in africa too! thanks for sharing!

  • @1Buckluck
    @1Buckluck 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Looks like our field in the foothills of Ozarks lots of rocks!!

  • @xxuniquexx1000
    @xxuniquexx1000 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Met with John and some of the team today very nice local products well built.

  • @jasonmeyerhofer2262
    @jasonmeyerhofer2262 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a great video. Thank you for sharing your story. My mentor is john kempf with advancing eco agriculture. Really enjoy his free course on redox in the soil. May GOD bless you and yours!

  • @undefined3248
    @undefined3248 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    According to me that shit dies when used with sprayers like that, I might be wrong? It should be used to inoculate your seed or be used with low pressure systems

  • @CamwiththeCamera
    @CamwiththeCamera 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is a great idea

  • @4given-c5h
    @4given-c5h 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a genuinely warm and wonderful presentation. Love these kind of fireside chats with folks that know their stuff and are making it work so much better than the industrial reductionist model being pushed for a century. Thanks fir sharing. Wish you the best!

  • @Dresoils
    @Dresoils 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome information and video. Compost tea applied to foliage has been shown to not be impacted greatly when applied during the day vs nighttime. Can I ask if it was a tea or extract that you applied?

  • @FarmerCheryl
    @FarmerCheryl 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Would be nice to have Corey’s compost class online with microscope observations. How can he make this happen?

    • @666bruv
      @666bruv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Dr Elaine Inghams Soil Food Web course. Just use google

  • @danielmaclean8932
    @danielmaclean8932 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well done

  • @karenf9137
    @karenf9137 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    SOIL IS EVERYTHING, especially as it relates to the health of all living organisms. This man TOTALLY gets it from beginning to end. Observe nature, mimic it, and don’t try to manipulate it. As for his business model, farmer/rancher Gabe Brown (North Dakota) has been practicing and teaching a similar approach for a number of years. We desperately need more farmers and ranchers to get on board. Unfortunately, we’re running out of time because the powers that be are doing everything they can to manipulate us, and Step 1 is CONTROL THE FOOD. Lastly, many people blame farmers and criticize them for wanting to make a profit. Ha! Who else goes to work for free? No one. Furthermore, it’s not the farmers who have been profiting, it’s the middle men. Farm to table is the best option in many cases. And if people would stop buying highly processed food, it would put a hurtin on those businesses, then the whole system dynamic would begin to shift.

  • @Reutzel507
    @Reutzel507 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is an argument to keeping the same crops in the same plot. The fungi and other biological organisms unique to that plant will continue to thrive.

  • @danieltyrkiel6438
    @danieltyrkiel6438 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bacterial feeder ;)

  • @waynemacquarrie9833
    @waynemacquarrie9833 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi , did you use the same mix for corn + hay ? thankyou

  • @marchoule3564
    @marchoule3564 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "hard to stop using nh3 on a clay soil" ain't that the truth! Quit 5 years ago, but it's hard when that price spread grows..

  • @marcruel9401
    @marcruel9401 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Roundup=Dead soil

  • @marcruel9401
    @marcruel9401 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Will they allow you to grow hemp? Great soil remediator

  • @Th4thWiseman
    @Th4thWiseman 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    %100 correct 👍 I'm a retired engineer born and raised on a rural farm in dairy, I'm currently doing a degree in soil biology and applying the methodology techniques I've garnered along the way whilst engineering with stringent formats and flow charts to follow data results whilst learning the soil biology strata, the results speak for themselves once the overdoses of commercial inputs are reduced in soils and the natural biomes have a real chance at forming a whole complete biome biosphere in vicinity. Natural supercedes commercial hands down which data results prove time and time again. The way in which ( whom ever created this process is not replicable via mankinds manipulation). We call what comes from inputs grown to harvest utilising commercial products "ghost food" ,it's not the plants fault it has low nutritional value the plant does its best to grow to full yield to fallow and seed so it can survive naturally, the commercial inputs are hollow like building a paper mach'e child and expecting after much nurturing that it's going to function according to rules you and no-one fully comprehends. 🖕It does not work nor suffice anything in endurance. Thankyou my dear friend for posting honest insight to which many can now see!

  • @IlijaStuden
    @IlijaStuden 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You don't hear that worm castings are part of a system from people who manage large areas. Congrats on that one 👏

  • @delprice3007
    @delprice3007 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    pfoa: beware of biosolids

  • @tonymckeage1028
    @tonymckeage1028 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great Video, thanks for sharing

  • @craiglaplante9822
    @craiglaplante9822 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What was the biosolids material, was the sludge scraped out from the city waste water lagoons?