We practice the Jadam method too for fertilizing. We do this too with weeds and everything from the garden & with humus & leaf mold from the woods as well. When it is completed, we strain it off in batches and put it in a different container with a submersible pump and aerate it for about 24hrs then dialute and use on the garden. Sometimes it's too acidic for some plants because it is fermented and we have to put alittle pulverized dolomite lime in it to bring up the ph. Great video!
Yay to JADAM!!! I’m planning on diluting it as well. Doesn’t the aeration kill of the anaerobic bacteria that the whole process is about?? Stay tune to my rain catching barrel and JADAM set up!!
I love your videos! Keep them coming. I wonder if you put your white bucket inside a black garbage bag and set it in the sun if that would add some warmth and help it break down better during the cold months?
@@basementfigs It survived moving to another state and I got a few ripe figs. I was able to give some of your Chicago Hardy trees as gifts to friends. I'm in zone 7b now and I'm not sure how I'm going to overwinter my potted figs but if I can get cuttings and make duplicates over winter, spring will be about testing them out in-ground. My plan is to grow out the varieties that I've got so I even know what they taste like before buying a whole bunch of new cuttings of new varieties. We'll see how well that goes! LOL.
How does the crab legs break down? I’m curious about this. I live next to the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean and it’s really seafood country. So I think I could get as much crab shells as I want. Need to know more.
Luke, the whole theory is decomposing just like nature. If you were to bury the crab legs, over time the bacteria and microorganisms of the soil would break the crab legs down and there would literally be nothing left. The leaf mold just does this in a bucket… faster.
Magnolia Texas, it's 2:15 a.m. and I'm watching Homer play in the backyard!
There you go glad to see another video!
Living soil!
excellent video your 100% organic fertilization
Thanks for watching!
We practice the Jadam method too for fertilizing. We do this too with weeds and everything from the garden & with humus & leaf mold from the woods as well. When it is completed, we strain it off in batches and put it in a different container with a submersible pump and aerate it for about 24hrs then dialute and use on the garden. Sometimes it's too acidic for some plants because it is fermented and we have to put alittle pulverized dolomite lime in it to bring up the ph. Great video!
Yay to JADAM!!! I’m planning on diluting it as well. Doesn’t the aeration kill of the anaerobic bacteria that the whole process is about?? Stay tune to my rain catching barrel and JADAM set up!!
I love your videos! Keep them coming. I wonder if you put your white bucket inside a black garbage bag and set it in the sun if that would add some warmth and help it break down better during the cold months?
That’s a great idea!!
Your figs look amazing.
Thanks! How is your collection!?
@@basementfigs It survived moving to another state and I got a few ripe figs. I was able to give some of your Chicago Hardy trees as gifts to friends.
I'm in zone 7b now and I'm not sure how I'm going to overwinter my potted figs but if I can get cuttings and make duplicates over winter, spring will be about testing them out in-ground.
My plan is to grow out the varieties that I've got so I even know what they taste like before buying a whole bunch of new cuttings of new varieties. We'll see how well that goes! LOL.
@@JuliePascal great plan… if I had more in ground space…. I would plant a 3 year thick trunk to try to survive my cold winters.
Nice Homer!
Get your’s going!!
How does the crab legs break down? I’m curious about this. I live next to the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean and it’s really seafood country. So I think I could get as much crab shells as I want. Need to know more.
Luke, the whole theory is decomposing just like nature. If you were to bury the crab legs, over time the bacteria and microorganisms of the soil would break the crab legs down and there would literally be nothing left. The leaf mold just does this in a bucket… faster.