Today I share three easy ways you can use your lawn to feed your garden. If you have to cut the grass, recycle those clippings into high-quality food for the soil, which in turn will grow you some great food! You can learn more about producing lots of compost from a wide range of materials in Compost Everything: amzn.to/3DH1Z5M As a side note, this video was filmed on a vintage Russian Helios 44-2 lens, adapted to the Canon R6. Canon R6: amzn.to/3Or7BpM Helios 44-2 lens: amzn.to/43N7vOR Thank you for watching.
I thought my step dad was a little touched in the head. He had the best tomatoes and a happy garden. He talked to the veggies. Now I'm talking to my veggie plants.
A few weeks ago on the side of the road, someone had stacked twenty large, empty Tidy Cat litter buckets, complete with handles and lids, with a sign that said "free". Of course we swerved quickly and got 'em all! Then, I checked the number on the bottom of the buckets on the internet, and turns out they're food grade. So now, we're gonna mix up Dave's swamp water liquid fertilizer in a few of them. I'm telling you, this free fertilizer thing is AWESOME!
Dave's method is good . However, the Jadam method is superior. And Dave's swampwater is only missing one step. Go out and find leaf mold under an old healthy tree the woods. The microbe quality will be very diverse and plentiful. The microbes from the leaf mold will help break down the material in the buckets.
You know what I really like about David and his family!? He shows you don’t have to be all extra to do this bullshit. You literally can live in a townhouse with a tiny piece a grass in the front and small patch of vegetable garden in the back. I call it mullet gardening. Clean in the front party in the back baby. Anyway he shows it’s genuinely not rocket science and after a few years of failing you’ll finally get it half right and that’s a success. Dude is in love with the process. And makes videos and books because he cares about us like we’re part of his family too. It’s crazy
You guys, I made a massive tote of compost water and dumped in all my failed mushroom grains and lots of pineapple and coffee...i didn't realize the ferment (plus all green cuttings n chx poop) was so good bcz everything was at the bottom of the tub and mellow...i think my entire yard is drunk right now, it's going off like i can't believe. Gallons of yard beer, smells like a factory out here🤣😂❤ its werkin!
Your song at the beginning just brought on a flashback from around 5 yrs old playing alone outside pondering if the word was aminal or animal and getting myself all confused. I really spent some time on it. Thanks for everything you do!
You showed me how to make green tea. Nice. Thank you. I've used grass clippings that have started to rot to top dress veggie when they need a boost before flowering. 2 Compost piles gets no sun and water if it rains. Compost is hot. Leaf mold is ready to sprinkle some on compost kitchen scraps, brown bags from grocer, paper towels. I crush rinsed/air dried eggshells for the wild birds. They need calcium for nesting. I don't have the green thumb but I know stuff. lol I don't use my city water for the garden. It kills bacteria. Everyone should be allowed to have an artesian well.
It is hot here in East Texas. 105 degrees out on the deck. Been running some of my drip irrigation 24 hours at a time every other day. Black water from the bottom of the lake. I had to get high volume self clearing line for pond water applications. The normal stuff plugs up even with filters. I am finding small wormlike creatures in my filters but the plants love it, no droopy squash leaves even in this heat. A lot of aphids on my cow peas though. Grass works quite well to kill grass around fruit trees. Thank you David for all you have taught me through your books and videos. I’m still waiting for another Jack Broccoli book though!😂❤
We’ve been throwing our grass clippings in the chicken run. Whatever they don’t eat breaks down. Once it’s not 1 million degrees out in the fall I plan to scoop some of that black gold and top dress the beds. Let it mella out over winter and hope for the best in spring.
It hasn't rained much here recently. All I got is carbon material, other than my garden. We got a tiny bit of rain yesterday, but not enough to soak in. I need to get the solar pump going and get some of this river water working for me.
Thank you again for the great information. I am learning so much and I am learning how to grow things I never thought I could in this South Carolina oven. 🥵God bless you and you family.
Thanks, yal!! Little attitude, hahahahhaa awsumm I made a little ring of wire mesh and mix the scraps with the grass. The worms love it. I just started putting cardboard under it to keep the grass and tree roots out. Muey bueno!!
Out here in the plains of Colorado I don't have much 'grass' grass. Just loads of weeds and wildflowers. Everything is always in seed. But I decided I'm gonna load up these pallets with it anyway! If there are gonna be weeds anyway, I might as well get some compost along with it. So I just stopped worrying about it! ( I do shovel out the prickly pear and thistles when I see them out in the yard though.) Thanks for encouraging us to be simple and get er done. :)
You mentioned layering grass and leaves or other carbon-rich materials. Can you please elaborate on the specifics of that layering, such as how thick each layer should be, the amount of grass vs leaves in each layer, etc.?
If you are commenting to me..I just mow the yard and toss it in the pallet. Usually it already has green and browns but if not, I toss in eggshells, some straw, coffee grounds, paper, filters etc. in that compost I do not worry about it. I have another wire bin that I layer browns like leaves, straw, and dead stuff then green clippings of plants whenever I have it. I have another experiment bin made of bales...it has the clean out from the chicken coop only...which is straw and chicken poop. That one gets hot and breaks down fast since the chickens already mixed it in the deep litter of the coop through the winter. Seems best though to not have anyone layer too thick if you don't plan to stir it much. Even one stirring does make a difference though. This year I mowed my weedy yard often so it wouldn't go to seed as fast..I put those clippings directly iny garden as mulch to keep the soil softer and moister. It is what I had, so I used it.
@@bradbiesecker162 I mow my yard which is colorado plains stuff...lots of weeds. I try to mow before it goes to seed and keeep mowing every so often to harvest it in my bagger. I toss a bag of it on the compost or on top of my garden for mulch! I can also toss in any garden clippings, kitchen scraps, or coffee grounds, etc for other green materials. I mow dead stuff to get a brown layer. Sometimes I'll add straw. I have one pallet bin where I used tumbleweeds, haha. don't know the results of that yet. Layers are probably a couple inches each. The easiest compost I've found so far is scooping out the chicken coop twice a year which has straw and chicken poop and any other clippings I put in. It is already chopped and mixed via the chickens. I made a square hole with straw bales and filled it from the coop in spring and fall. I put a bit in and water and keep adding more and watering. If it needs more straw, I do that too. That pile heats up fast to about 120-140 F. When it cools down it is low enough that I can easily mix it up and pile it again to get it heating again. Works great. The easiest is the "grass" clippings directly on my garden. I also have a box on one garden where I added red wigglers and toss in scraps to get worm castings next year. hope that helps.
David, I missed the 3 o'clock bell today. I was out preparing a new garden bed. AND, you were there 😆 Water that layer, water that layer, soak that layer.. 🤣🤣Thanks for the help.
Got your book yesterday. Hoa requires my front yard to be a lawn... but or up a solid 6ft fence and now working on my tiny food forest. Front lawn will now be useful. 😂
I put all my green grass clippings into my garden or around my fruit trees immediately. I also receive a lot of cardboard boxes so those are used too along with pine straw and leaves and anything else in the forest. I`ve discovered that beans/peas and cucumbers will grow amazingly in half finished compost.
Very tropical, humid over summer here in Taranaki New Zealand. So hopefully this would rot down fast here? And very keen to try this method. I have severe chronic pain, and this method makes this achievable. And the cost of food is absolutely crazy, growing food is absolutely essential at this point 👍👍 So gonna try start now in preparation for spring coming end of September 😊😊
Question, according to Elaine Inghram (soil food web lady) the green grass when left to dry will still be considered a "green" in the compost as it retains nitrogen. But you mentioned the nitrogen evaporating as ammonia. Am I then right to assume the evaporation happens during composting but not during the drying process?
DTG's Ode to Grass (Shshhh, not THAT grass)! So Cool! So, people lucky enough to attend your plant sales also get a container with some Good Compost, with all the contributions from your hardworking animals and possible enemies. Awesome! I could make the real David's Fetid Swamp Water starting with a bit of that potting soil.
Our grass has a lot of weeds that quickly go to seed so I’m afraid to use grass clippings because they’ll be loaded with weed seeds. Can’t mow 15 acres frequently enough to keep them from going to seed. I suppose we need cows. 🤔
Built 5 new 54 cu ft raised beds this year. Filling w/~80% grass clippings....remainder is kitchen scraps & a little leaf compost from last year....and let the whole thing compost in place. I'll throw some cow manure & clover on them after they go through the heat & plant in them in April. Phoey on all that turning crap. Nature. Doesn't. Turn. Anything. 💯
Haha! If you’re not careful you might become a better comedian instead of a wicked gardener. I’m going to try this I need to mulch my orchard trees! Wohoo!🎉❤
Hey everyone, new gardener here and want to start a raised garden bed soon. 2 questions. 1 - can I throw my old grass clippings onto my lawn and problem areas to help the lawn? And if there are some weeds in my clippings is it still ok to compost and use in the garden? Don’t see why not but just wanted to get some knowledge. Thanks
My mower is electric but it has a bag. I put the grass clippings down green very thickly around my fruit trees and in my garden. I start with cardboard when I want to expand, cover it with about a foot deep layer of green grass clippings, add wrist size pieces of rotting branches, and water daily in summer for a week or so, then start dumping forest soil and leaves/pine straw with a few handfuls of the richest soil from my garden. When the dirt on top is just a few inches deep I plant Southern Cow Peas, maybe some basil, a few mustard seeds, and cuttings from a tomato and any mature cucumbers I find hidden in my patch get stuck in the dirt after I crack them. Then I transplant any cucumbers that grow and a few mustard plants. The rotting grass underneath makes the stuff grow like crazy in summer. I add another layer of cardboard around the edge to hold moisture and water a little each morning and evening. By late summer when the peas are almost done it`s ready for fall/winter greens & tubers.
I wish but I have Bermuda grass and I have worked hard to pull it up from my garden beds and the areas up to the beds. Using any part of Bermuda could create new areas in no time in the fertile soil. I chop and drop my cold hardy banana leaves (Musa Bajoo) instead.
I've heard through the years that "weed tea" or whatever type of discarded garden materials tea is not really any better then maybe chopping and dropping or just mulching with organic materials. Have you seen these studies? Love your channel!
I've got extremely sandy soil with practically zero organic matter. Is there any reason not to till fresh grass clippings with no seed heads into the soil as I revamp for fall?
I get my cardboard layers (for FREE) at COSTCO - the cardboard that is between the layers of most food packaged items is IDEAL - it's about 4'x4' square, typically no ink or printing - and does not need to be cut or folded. Look between the pallets also for a vertical stack of cardboard - the story is people use this for school projects, or painting.
If you leave grass clippings to dry out, do they lose their nitrogen? I like using dry grass for mulch, but it kinda sucks if it's losing that fertility.
The most common chemical compound in plants is cellulose which is carbon and oxygen and sometimes some hydrogen. Nitrogen is not even in that part. Nitrogen as an element is a gas and the simple forms are soluble in water so yes it is easily lost from plants when they dry out. Nitrogen fixing plants are the best thing you can do, grow them and chop down. I'd recommend sunn hemp and clover instead of grass lawns, you can mow them the same.
You mentioned layering grass and leaves or other carbon-rich materials. Can you please elaborate on the specifics of that layering, such as how thick each layer should be, the amount of grass vs leaves in each layer, etc.?
Love your videos...but your water intensity is large. Can you come up with ways to do this without so much input...we collect water in barrels off the barn. Field layout and electrical supply make it prohibitive to run water lines so we carry water anywhere we need..can use tractor but then there is the foot print issue. Would love to see how you would think about it. Perhaps a tarp to prevent evaporation during the day??? Not sure but love your ideas.
Ok the Russian lens made the video. 😂😂😂. We use our grass for all 3 of those uses. Just the swamp water makes me want to🤮 every time I open it up. Thank y'all and have a blessed day.
Make hay for bunnies (meat rabbits) which might be easier for a small two person family to manage than a whole cow when they can just hunt moose (Alaska homestead)
@@davidthegood 🤣 i know I'm being very picky lol because I'm growing a million things in my tiny backyard and using every square inches so i even stopped using the weed whacker cause i don't want all those bits of plastic from the string going everywhere 🤣 that lead me to compost all the giant weeds like burdock and thistles and now i dump 5 gallon buckets full of compacted weeds in my compost several times a weed as a result... i got really inspired by your weed compost videos last year so i use EVERYTHING! Burdock is awesome as it gives almost a lbs or weeds in one quick easy pull
Dave I read you could put a oz of olive oil on the swamp water to keep tge mosquitos out. Do you know if the oil would affect the verm tea or compost tea?
Use a mulching mower. The clippings create a mulch layer so the grass doesn't need as much water, and as the clippings decompose it provides a third of the nitrogen your grass needs over the course of the year. Source - worked in lawn care for a decade.
To the commenter who said Dave reminded him of STP, that'd be incorrect. Obviously David is lead singer of Spin Doctors. 👍 OH, and Scag mower police say put your roll bar back on. 😂
I just discovered that the lawn care company we signed up with used “traditional” herbicides instead of organic (!!!!!!!😭😭😡😡😡) Does anyone know how long it will be before we can use our grass clippings and weeds for composing again? I’m so mad I could chew nails.
Had the same problem a few years back (UK). First 2 cuts probably not good for much (too high loads of pyralids), next 2 - compost for at least 6 months, but I'd probably be careful using the finished product on the pyralid-sensitive crops. From the 5th cut, I mulched my chilli plants without adverse effects. Good luck!
Today I share three easy ways you can use your lawn to feed your garden. If you have to cut the grass, recycle those clippings into high-quality food for the soil, which in turn will grow you some great food!
You can learn more about producing lots of compost from a wide range of materials in Compost Everything: amzn.to/3DH1Z5M
As a side note, this video was filmed on a vintage Russian Helios 44-2 lens, adapted to the Canon R6.
Canon R6: amzn.to/3Or7BpM
Helios 44-2 lens: amzn.to/43N7vOR
Thank you for watching.
Should waxed cardboard be avoided if using it as a weed barrier? Do you know what the drawback of using waxed cardboard would be, if any?
I thought my step dad was a little touched in the head. He had the best tomatoes and a happy garden. He talked to the veggies. Now I'm talking to my veggie plants.
I literally thank the green bean plants for every single bean I harvest. they seem to enjoy gratitude...
A few weeks ago on the side of the road, someone had stacked twenty large, empty Tidy Cat litter buckets, complete with handles and lids, with a sign that said "free". Of course we swerved quickly and got 'em all! Then, I checked the number on the bottom of the buckets on the internet, and turns out they're food grade. So now, we're gonna mix up Dave's swamp water liquid fertilizer in a few of them. I'm telling you, this free fertilizer thing is AWESOME!
I do the exact same thing with kitty litter buckets. They are great!
I use them to collect scraps for the compost.
I think your missing it, as in my neiborhood they sell grass for 20 bucks for a little bag.
Dave's method is good . However, the Jadam method is superior. And Dave's swampwater is only missing one step. Go out and find leaf mold under an old healthy tree the woods. The microbe quality will be very diverse and plentiful. The microbes from the leaf mold will help break down the material in the buckets.
I've made self watering planters out of kitty litter buckets as well as using them for fertilizers. Nice find!!
Pro tip: put whatever your making compost tea with in a pillow case. That way you can just take it out and not clog your wayering can.
Like a tea bag brewing in a big ol' cup of tea. I like it. 😁
That is what my Mom used to do!!
You know what I really like about David and his family!? He shows you don’t have to be all extra to do this bullshit. You literally can live in a townhouse with a tiny piece a grass in the front and small patch of vegetable garden in the back. I call it mullet gardening. Clean in the front party in the back baby. Anyway he shows it’s genuinely not rocket science and after a few years of failing you’ll finally get it half right and that’s a success. Dude is in love with the process. And makes videos and books because he cares about us like we’re part of his family too. It’s crazy
"Mullet gardening." I like it.👍
Elaine Ingham says that freshly mown grass is one of the best sources for beneficial soil arthropods.
Be nice to your friends & compost your enemies...love it!
Be nice to your mother , always say please ,be loyal to friend and compost your enimies
@@danfay4860how can you be nice to someone who is Not nice to others
I dig out cardboard from our local cardboard recycling bins. They are already broken down and you can be picky and grab the sizes you want.
Should waxed cardboard be avoided if using it as a weed barrier? Do you know what the drawback of using waxed cardboard would be, if any?
You guys, I made a massive tote of compost water and dumped in all my failed mushroom grains and lots of pineapple and coffee...i didn't realize the ferment (plus all green cuttings n chx poop) was so good bcz everything was at the bottom of the tub and mellow...i think my entire yard is drunk right now, it's going off like i can't believe. Gallons of yard beer, smells like a factory out here🤣😂❤ its werkin!
Another reason for some grass (we don't use herbicide or fertilizer, don't even irrigate it )... Place for kids to play :)
Yep! Our grass is turned into mulch, compost, and eggs. Love the song!😂🎵
Hi from Southwest TN. It is beautiful today. Not so hot. Thank the Lord!
Your song at the beginning just brought on a flashback from around 5 yrs old playing alone outside pondering if the word was aminal or animal and getting myself all confused. I really spent some time on it. Thanks for everything you do!
Just found you on Spotify. Now I can listen to your tunes while gardening. 🎵🎧
You showed me how to make green tea. Nice. Thank you.
I've used grass clippings that have started to rot to top dress veggie when they need a boost before flowering.
2 Compost piles gets no sun and water if it rains. Compost is hot.
Leaf mold is ready to sprinkle some on compost kitchen scraps, brown bags from grocer, paper towels.
I crush rinsed/air dried eggshells for the wild birds. They need calcium for nesting.
I don't have the green thumb but I know stuff. lol
I don't use my city water for the garden. It kills bacteria. Everyone should be allowed to have an artesian well.
It is hot here in East Texas. 105 degrees out on the deck. Been running some of my drip irrigation 24 hours at a time every other day. Black water from the bottom of the lake. I had to get high volume self clearing line for pond water applications. The normal stuff plugs up even with filters. I am finding small wormlike creatures in my filters but the plants love it, no droopy squash leaves even in this heat. A lot of aphids on my cow peas though. Grass works quite well to kill grass around fruit trees.
Thank you David for all you have taught me through your books and videos.
I’m still waiting for another Jack Broccoli book though!😂❤
We’ve been throwing our grass clippings in the chicken run. Whatever they don’t eat breaks down. Once it’s not 1 million degrees out in the fall I plan to scoop some of that black gold and top dress the beds. Let it mella out over winter and hope for the best in spring.
BLACK GOLD!
I bag and save my grass clippings every time I mow the lawn. Makes excellent compost when mixed with dead leaves.
I'm naughty, I use old beer and pizza boxes. 😂
It hasn't rained much here recently. All I got is carbon material, other than my garden. We got a tiny bit of rain yesterday, but not enough to soak in. I need to get the solar pump going and get some of this river water working for me.
Thank you again for the great information. I am learning so much and I am learning how to grow things I never thought I could in this South Carolina oven. 🥵God bless you and you family.
Thank you, you too.
Thanks, yal!! Little attitude, hahahahhaa awsumm I made a little ring of wire mesh and mix the scraps with the grass. The worms love it. I just started putting cardboard under it to keep the grass and tree roots out. Muey bueno!!
Out here in the plains of Colorado I don't have much 'grass' grass. Just loads of weeds and wildflowers. Everything is always in seed. But I decided I'm gonna load up these pallets with it anyway! If there are gonna be weeds anyway, I might as well get some compost along with it. So I just stopped worrying about it! ( I do shovel out the prickly pear and thistles when I see them out in the yard though.)
Thanks for encouraging us to be simple and get er done. :)
You mentioned layering grass and leaves or other carbon-rich materials. Can you please elaborate on the specifics of that layering, such as how thick each layer should be, the amount of grass vs leaves in each layer, etc.?
If you are commenting to me..I just mow the yard and toss it in the pallet. Usually it already has green and browns but if not, I toss in eggshells, some straw, coffee grounds, paper, filters etc. in that compost I do not worry about it. I have another wire bin that I layer browns like leaves, straw, and dead stuff then green clippings of plants whenever I have it. I have another experiment bin made of bales...it has the clean out from the chicken coop only...which is straw and chicken poop. That one gets hot and breaks down fast since the chickens already mixed it in the deep litter of the coop through the winter.
Seems best though to not have anyone layer too thick if you don't plan to stir it much. Even one stirring does make a difference though.
This year I mowed my weedy yard often so it wouldn't go to seed as fast..I put those clippings directly iny garden as mulch to keep the soil softer and moister. It is what I had, so I used it.
@@essentialcomforts2166 Thank you. I was indeed talking to you and I appreciate your response. I am very much a beginner gardener and composter.
@@bradbiesecker162 I mow my yard which is colorado plains stuff...lots of weeds. I try to mow before it goes to seed and keeep mowing every so often to harvest it in my bagger. I toss a bag of it on the compost or on top of my garden for mulch! I can also toss in any garden clippings, kitchen scraps, or coffee grounds, etc for other green materials. I mow dead stuff to get a brown layer. Sometimes I'll add straw. I have one pallet bin where I used tumbleweeds, haha. don't know the results of that yet. Layers are probably a couple inches each. The easiest compost I've found so far is scooping out the chicken coop twice a year which has straw and chicken poop and any other clippings I put in. It is already chopped and mixed via the chickens. I made a square hole with straw bales and filled it from the coop in spring and fall. I put a bit in and water and keep adding more and watering. If it needs more straw, I do that too. That pile heats up fast to about 120-140 F. When it cools down it is low enough that I can easily mix it up and pile it again to get it heating again. Works great. The easiest is the "grass" clippings directly on my garden. I also have a box on one garden where I added red wigglers and toss in scraps to get worm castings next year.
hope that helps.
That vintage lens bokeh 🤤 📷 😍
David, I missed the 3 o'clock bell today. I was out preparing a new garden bed. AND, you were there 😆 Water that layer, water that layer, soak that layer.. 🤣🤣Thanks for the help.
I'm the box Kang and thats exactly how I ask ..I wait by the backdoor until someone comes out.
It works best if you jump out and startle them
Love the duck intro.😃🌱🐢
Love your gardening wisdom, music(😁), and Scripture! God bless and thanks!
I love the image quality of this video! Lovely! And I would watch you talk about almost anything.😂 You and your family rock!
Got your book yesterday. Hoa requires my front yard to be a lawn... but or up a solid 6ft fence and now working on my tiny food forest. Front lawn will now be useful. 😂
Love the info as always..but the duck intro slayed it. I laughed so hard 🤣
Hi ya'll from North Florida 😊
I put all my green grass clippings into my garden or around my fruit trees immediately. I also receive a lot of cardboard boxes so those are used too along with pine straw and leaves and anything else in the forest. I`ve discovered that beans/peas and cucumbers will grow amazingly in half finished compost.
Compost Everything is a great resource and very entertaining. Get it!
Very tropical, humid over summer here in Taranaki New Zealand. So hopefully this would rot down fast here?
And very keen to try this method. I have severe chronic pain, and this method makes this achievable. And the cost of food is absolutely crazy, growing food is absolutely essential at this point 👍👍
So gonna try start now in preparation for spring coming end of September 😊😊
I live in FL and have done this for years. (Zone 9b). Yes it decomposes fast actually
Question, according to Elaine Inghram (soil food web lady) the green grass when left to dry will still be considered a "green" in the compost as it retains nitrogen. But you mentioned the nitrogen evaporating as ammonia. Am I then right to assume the evaporation happens during composting but not during the drying process?
You lose some drying. Not enough to make it a ’brown’
DTG's Ode to Grass (Shshhh, not THAT grass)! So Cool!
So, people lucky enough to attend your plant sales also get a container with some Good Compost, with all the contributions from your hardworking animals and possible enemies. Awesome! I could make the real David's Fetid Swamp Water starting with a bit of that potting soil.
That lens is lookin *muah* *Chefs kiss*
Is the best place to get boxes is those Rent to own places or furniture stores because they have massive boxes.
Hilarious as always! Thanks for the laughs.
Our grass has a lot of weeds that quickly go to seed so I’m afraid to use grass clippings because they’ll be loaded with weed seeds. Can’t mow 15 acres frequently enough to keep them from going to seed. I suppose we need cows. 🤔
At about 140 degrees F composting sterilizes seeds. Just run a long hot batch of compost. I do it all the time!
David smokes grass too. Or so it would seem! Great video presentation
Not I. Thank you, though.
I love the grass music❤ it makes your videos unique
Very picturesquely presented and sonically.❤️🙂
Built 5 new 54 cu ft raised beds this year. Filling w/~80% grass clippings....remainder is kitchen scraps & a little leaf compost from last year....and let the whole thing compost in place. I'll throw some cow manure & clover on them after they go through the heat & plant in them in April.
Phoey on all that turning crap.
Nature. Doesn't. Turn. Anything. 💯
That ought to grow some great produce
The songs were perfection!
love and peace to y'all
You remind me of STP. Remember them? Loved that band.
Oh yes
I'm thinking Ray Stevens might be DTG's real father...
Haha!
And they call him the streak! All your missing is a Benny Hill musical montage now.
Great info. Thanks for standing up for Jesus!
Buddy love the tunes. And the knowledge.i just bought land in Ecuador. I've planted.30 fruit trees
Congratulations
@@davidthegood I've got 6 black soldier flies that hatched today
Ah, the melodius melodies of DTG.
❤ the music!
Haha! If you’re not careful you might become a better comedian instead of a wicked gardener. I’m going to try this I need to mulch my orchard trees! Wohoo!🎉❤
Loved the song!!! use the grass as cow manure!
Hey everyone, new gardener here and want to start a raised garden bed soon. 2 questions. 1 - can I throw my old grass clippings onto my lawn and problem areas to help the lawn? And if there are some weeds in my clippings is it still ok to compost and use in the garden? Don’t see why not but just wanted to get some knowledge. Thanks
Yes to all. Thick grass clippings act as a weed/grass barrier though. Just be sure the weeds have no mature seeds.
Quack quack quack quack quack quack! “It’s not funny!” Ahh, I laughed pretty hard right off the bat!
My mower is electric but it has a bag. I put the grass clippings down green very thickly around my fruit trees and in my garden. I start with cardboard when I want to expand, cover it with about a foot deep layer of green grass clippings, add wrist size pieces of rotting branches, and water daily in summer for a week or so, then start dumping forest soil and leaves/pine straw with a few handfuls of the richest soil from my garden.
When the dirt on top is just a few inches deep I plant Southern Cow Peas, maybe some basil, a few mustard seeds, and cuttings from a tomato and any mature cucumbers I find hidden in my patch get stuck in the dirt after I crack them. Then I transplant any cucumbers that grow and a few mustard plants. The rotting grass underneath makes the stuff grow like crazy in summer. I add another layer of cardboard around the edge to hold moisture and water a little each morning and evening. By late summer when the peas are almost done it`s ready for fall/winter greens & tubers.
One last thing lol get a drinking water hose. Well worth the investment!!
Thanks!
Shredded bill, grass clippings, left over rooster parts and ch I cken manure. Great compost
Your cows are adorable! I want one so bad!
They are fun
thankyou fir the courage
Hi from SouthEast Texas i the Big Thicket
Hi from central Louisiana, piney woods and pastures.
Totally digging the Alice in Chains, STP vibe
I wish but I have Bermuda grass and I have worked hard to pull it up from my garden beds and the areas up to the beds. Using any part of Bermuda could create new areas in no time in the fertile soil. I chop and drop my cold hardy banana leaves (Musa Bajoo) instead.
Good idea
Glad to see that you have joined the Scag riding community. 🤔Maybe we could get matching leather jackets.
hahaha
This reason I have a bag and lawnmower. 110 in the shade and I’m out bagging my grass.
So uh ...... have you got any links to sites where I can purchase cardboard boxes online?
I've heard through the years that "weed tea" or whatever type of discarded garden materials tea is not really any better then maybe chopping and dropping or just mulching with organic materials. Have you seen these studies? Love your channel!
I've got extremely sandy soil with practically zero organic matter. Is there any reason not to till fresh grass clippings with no seed heads into the soil as I revamp for fall?
That will work fine. Worms will eat buried grass.
“Welcome back….*🪿quack quack quack*…”IT’S NOT FUNNY!” 🤣had me rolling! I had to play it back😂👍🏽
Martha would love that🤣😂🤣😂❤
I get my cardboard layers (for FREE) at COSTCO - the cardboard that is between the layers of most food packaged items is IDEAL - it's about 4'x4' square, typically no ink or printing - and does not need to be cut or folded. Look between the pallets also for a vertical stack of cardboard - the story is people use this for school projects, or painting.
Subscribed when he said “take those lemons and make some lemonade”
If you leave grass clippings to dry out, do they lose their nitrogen? I like using dry grass for mulch, but it kinda sucks if it's losing that fertility.
The most common chemical compound in plants is cellulose which is carbon and oxygen and sometimes some hydrogen. Nitrogen is not even in that part. Nitrogen as an element is a gas and the simple forms are soluble in water so yes it is easily lost from plants when they dry out. Nitrogen fixing plants are the best thing you can do, grow them and chop down. I'd recommend sunn hemp and clover instead of grass lawns, you can mow them the same.
You mentioned layering grass and leaves or other carbon-rich materials. Can you please elaborate on the specifics of that layering, such as how thick each layer should be, the amount of grass vs leaves in each layer, etc.?
We just make a rough pile with roughly equal amounts and let it rot. Maybe a few inches of material in each layer.
❤ this channel
Me too. Positive, helpful vibes are just what the world needs.
otro awesome video! saludos desde Costa Rica :)
7:18mins that was a cool shot!
Love your videos...but your water intensity is large. Can you come up with ways to do this without so much input...we collect water in barrels off the barn. Field layout and electrical supply make it prohibitive to run water lines so we carry water anywhere we need..can use tractor but then there is the foot print issue. Would love to see how you would think about it. Perhaps a tarp to prevent evaporation during the day??? Not sure but love your ideas.
Watching rainwater is ideal. We used to have a 600-gallon tank at a previous house, but have not gotten set up here yet.
My neighbour is my enemy, so i composted him, now he's a jack fruit
Is that song original? Love it!
Ok the Russian lens made the video. 😂😂😂. We use our grass for all 3 of those uses. Just the swamp water makes me want to🤮 every time I open it up. Thank y'all and have a blessed day.
I’m so glad you have brown (Jersey?) cows instead of Holsteins!
Thanks. They are Dexters. Sweet cows.
My chickens love eating my grass, and rabbits too. And then i use their used grass to feed my gardens
Where can I listen to this song? 😂 it’s the best!
Make hay for bunnies (meat rabbits) which might be easier for a small two person family to manage than a whole cow when they can just hunt moose (Alaska homestead)
Where can I buy fresh cut grass?!
Also colored cardboard yuck lol... I'm probably too picky but i only use non colored boxes with no tape
I am hoping the dyes provide vitamins and minerals.
@@davidthegood 🤣 i know I'm being very picky lol because I'm growing a million things in my tiny backyard and using every square inches so i even stopped using the weed whacker cause i don't want all those bits of plastic from the string going everywhere 🤣 that lead me to compost all the giant weeds like burdock and thistles and now i dump 5 gallon buckets full of compacted weeds in my compost several times a weed as a result... i got really inspired by your weed compost videos last year so i use EVERYTHING! Burdock is awesome as it gives almost a lbs or weeds in one quick easy pull
Dave I read you could put a oz of olive oil on the swamp water to keep tge mosquitos out. Do you know if the oil would affect the verm tea or compost tea?
I tried, and it really gooed up the barrel and my watering cans, like a varnish
Link to the soundtrack?
How can I grow grass from grass?
Use a mulching mower. The clippings create a mulch layer so the grass doesn't need as much water, and as the clippings decompose it provides a third of the nitrogen your grass needs over the course of the year. Source - worked in lawn care for a decade.
This makes me not so afraid to have yard cows. What breed are these? Theyre so docile!
Thank you for the wonderful video during this hot dry weather.
To the commenter who said Dave reminded him of STP, that'd be incorrect. Obviously David is lead singer of Spin Doctors. 👍 OH, and Scag mower police say put your roll bar back on. 😂
Here for the Muzak.
Are those Dexters??
Yes
My grass is full of weeds in various states of flowering… but I’m trying out making fetid swamp water out of it
grass is cow and sheep food but is nice to walk on, my paths are grass because I don't have cows or sheep.
I just discovered that the lawn care company we signed up with used “traditional” herbicides instead of organic (!!!!!!!😭😭😡😡😡)
Does anyone know how long it will be before we can use our grass clippings and weeds for composing again? I’m so mad I could chew nails.
Had the same problem a few years back (UK). First 2 cuts probably not good for much (too high loads of pyralids), next 2 - compost for at least 6 months, but I'd probably be careful using the finished product on the pyralid-sensitive crops. From the 5th cut, I mulched my chilli plants without adverse effects. Good luck!
I just watched your Russian version...now I'm watching this...😂