www.seedballs.us shows Natural Farmer Masanobu Fukuoka as he conducts a workshop for making seed balls at his natural farm and forest in Japan. for more information and options see www.seedballs.us
Siento mucho nostalgia viendo este video. Después de haber conocido de Fukuoka y su filosofía no he visto igual la naturaleza. Ahora una simple hoja seca se ha convertido en un tesoro maravilloso. Gracias maestro Fukuoka.
Mix one part seeds with one part dry compost.Next, add one part dry clay andmix.Then spray in water a little at a time and mix it together until you have just enough water to hold everything together without crumbling.After that, form the mixture into balls 2~3 cm in diameter.Finally, dry the balls for later use.Once dried, the balls are ready to be spread over land that you want to plant. When the rains come, the seeds will germinate.
Thanks for the recipe. Only found this video now! Can you tell me for which reason these clay balls with seeds inside are made for? Thanks for any reply. 🙏
Using this method along with other Natural Farming techniques, Fukuoka san was able to produce 590kg (1300lbs) of winter grain (barley or wheat) and 22 bushels of rice per quarter acre of land. Moreover, these techniques require the labour of just two people working a few weeks a year to attain the crop. There is no plowing, no weeding, no application of biocides in any form, and no fertilising
I wonder if he's ferro-acidified the water he's irrigating the clay balls with. I'm eyeballing the handling of the colloids for application around briar bush cutting. This deserves a translation. This Chap's a maverick.
To make them, simply select the seeds to be used - thick-skinned seeds will need to be scarified, and some seeds need heat or cold to bring them out of dormancy. Legumes will require inoculant if they are to fix nitrogen. Also, for species that can benefit from mycorrhizal relationships, adding the spores of mycorrhizal fungi such as the genus Glomus and/or Rhizopogon, species Gigaspora margarita, and/or Pisolithus tinctorus would be beneficial, though not necessary.
@themightyscythe Hi there! Fukuoka books from abebooksdotcom. There's two; One Straw Revolution and The Natural Way of Farming. I read the second one. In all my life, I've read two books that felt like I was drinking pure, clear water as I was reading. The Natural Way of Farming was one. In case you'r einterested, the other was Power versus Force by David Hawkins. Fukuoka was a living Buddha. Luckily for us we are living Buddhas too!
Lo veo en 2019 cuanto tiempo sin tener estabsabiduria para sustentarnos a todos caray muchavtristeza nunca esbtarde vamos con las manos a la obrasaludos desde tabasco Mexico tierra fertil
Notice how fast and hard the people are working. This isn't just for the camera. I lived in japan in the late 1950s and that is how they work. "Lazy" doesn't translate well into Japanese.
“I do not particularly like the word 'work.' Human beings are the only animals who have to work, and I think that is the most ridiculous thing in the world. Other animals make their livings by living, but people work like crazy, thinking that they have to in order to stay alive. The bigger the job, the greater the challenge, the more wonderful they think it is. It would be good to give up that way of thinking and live an easy, comfortable life with plenty of free time. I think that the way animals live in the tropics, stepping outside in the morning and evening to see if there is something to eat, and taking a long nap in the afternoon, must be a wonderful life. For human beings, a life of such simplicity would be possible if one worked to produce directly his daily necessities. In such a life, work is not work as people generally think of it, but simply doing what needs to be done.” ― Masanobu Fukuoka, The One-Straw Revolution
sir i am from india . first of all i am sorry beacause my english not good but sir i think you understand me and reply me about my problem . sir my problem is i love natural farming because it's the truth of our life . i knew this before 5 months when i saw masanobu fukuoka in TH-cam doing natural farming. first i was think is it true . sir in our village all people doing farming with till the soil with tracktor and ploughing and then planting . if i telling him about natural farming people laghing at me. they told me that without tilling the soil , with weeds farming is not possible . but i don't agree with them . i am starting natural farming in a small area to see that plant grow or not . i put the seed without weeding without ploughing into the soil and other people doing ploughing with tractor and then planting .and give chemical fertilizers . i am waiting for results . everytime my mind say it's not grow but still i wait for the result . and the result is disturb my mind . after one and half month i saw that my plant not growth but those peoples plant well growth . i am feeling very sad and searching what the problem in my cultivation . when masanobu fukuoka doing farming with weeds and no ploughing why my farming not success , what the reason . is that my soil not good or anything else sir please please please reply me i request you . i love natural farming 🙏
Clay powder. And seeds This is natrual farming. Phosphorous products is an extracted product of industrial agriculture very commonly contaminated through production and just straight an un-natural approach. Natural meaning the plants and its natural proccess the roots release exodates in the soil for the micro organisms and which release waste and then bugs and fungi feed on that life to feed and excrete which then the plants aslo use to grow. Progressivly becoming more enriched over time. Becoming easier to grow crops then previously. An example is this is how forests grow. Established nurishment is required to kick start this Using a nutritional bounce such as plant and animal manures/ compost. This is a video on two methods of seed ball making on how to let this process of nature and its abundance flourish to its divine possibilities. Which will in turn lead to heathy crops to feed the anlife above the soil.
Watch the Seed Ball Story video about seed balls and you can figure out the different ways he makes them from pulverizing the clay, to mixing the seeds and clay, to adding a liquid mushroom extract, to the various methods of rolling. www.seedballs.us The Seed Ball Story HD Video
It's the same as making fireworks stars, candy coated objects, or coating farm seed with scary protective "chemicals" like lime. Here's how it works: The seed is encased in dry compost powder (for water holding) and clay powder (binder) using water as an accretion facilitator (makes it sticky) to make a pellet core. It's tumbled with alternating layers of water and powder to build up layers (like a jawbreaker), and covered with lime as a protective "certified organic substance".
It's pitty that the picture here is so unclear, I even a japanese cannot make out how this is really carried out. hmm..... , hard..... But, thanks for sharing this, anyway.
Siento mucho nostalgia viendo este video. Después de haber conocido de Fukuoka y su filosofía no he visto igual la naturaleza. Ahora una simple hoja seca se ha convertido en un tesoro maravilloso. Gracias maestro Fukuoka.
what an inspiration he was.his one straw revolution did stir many a heart.
Siento mucho nostalgia viendo este video.
Después de haber conocido de Fukuoka y su filosofía no he visto igual la naturaleza. Ahora una simple hoja seca se ha convertido en un tesoro maravilloso. Gracias maestro Fukuoka.
Mix one part seeds with one part dry compost.Next, add one part dry clay andmix.Then spray in water a little at a time and mix it together until you have just enough water to hold everything together without crumbling.After that, form the mixture into balls 2~3 cm in diameter.Finally, dry the balls for later use.Once dried, the balls are ready to be spread over land that you want to plant. When the rains come, the seeds will germinate.
Thanks for the recipe. Only found this video now! Can you tell me for which reason these clay balls with seeds inside are made for? Thanks for any reply. 🙏
Thanks
@@cutechiangelsgrowing plants for food or for bees , insects flowers enrichment of soil without plowing herbicides...
Thanks for the explanation
Using this method along with other Natural Farming techniques, Fukuoka san was able to produce 590kg (1300lbs) of winter grain (barley or wheat) and 22 bushels of rice per quarter acre of land. Moreover, these techniques require the labour of just two people working a few weeks a year to attain the crop. There is no plowing, no weeding, no application of biocides in any form, and no fertilising
THANK YOU!!
Not to mention its purpose which was to reforest lands and save soil!!🙏
What a beautiful film
Este maestro si fue un verdadero defensor de la tierra......mis respetos señor masanobu fukuoka.........
Happy to see Masanobu Fukaoka san!!
This is the old master at work. Watch many times and learn.
Aye aye captain 👍🏼
@@elizabeth2621 dont just listen. Try and see for yourself. Something truer then any words will answer.
I wonder if he's ferro-acidified the water he's irrigating the clay balls with. I'm eyeballing the handling of the colloids for application around briar bush cutting. This deserves a translation. This Chap's a maverick.
福岡正信指導年輕人做黏土丸子。前半段是純手工的,9:36秒開始是用圓錐形的水泥攪拌機製作。
影片中一開始可以看到,他們準備了非常多樣的種子混和在一起。然後將黏土塊敲成粉,接著開始混和種子與黏土粉。然後開始噴上細細的水珠,用手攪拌,慢慢地,丸子就成型。
影片後半部是機器攪拌,原理大致與手工的一樣。
To make them, simply select the seeds to be used - thick-skinned seeds will need to be scarified, and some seeds need heat or cold to bring them out of dormancy. Legumes will require inoculant if they are to fix nitrogen. Also, for species that can benefit from mycorrhizal relationships, adding the spores of mycorrhizal fungi such as the genus Glomus and/or Rhizopogon, species Gigaspora margarita, and/or Pisolithus tinctorus would be beneficial, though not necessary.
Father of natural farming
@themightyscythe
Hi there! Fukuoka books from abebooksdotcom. There's two; One Straw Revolution and The Natural Way of Farming. I read the second one. In all my life, I've read two books that felt like I was drinking pure, clear water as I was reading. The Natural Way of Farming was one. In case you'r einterested, the other was Power versus Force by David Hawkins.
Fukuoka was a living Buddha. Luckily for us we are living Buddhas too!
Lo veo en 2019 cuanto tiempo sin tener estabsabiduria para sustentarnos a todos caray muchavtristeza nunca esbtarde vamos con las manos a la obrasaludos desde tabasco Mexico tierra fertil
Notice how fast and hard the people are working. This isn't just for the camera. I lived in japan in the late 1950s and that is how they work. "Lazy" doesn't translate well into Japanese.
***** + 1 :-)
“I do not particularly like the word 'work.' Human beings are the only animals who have to work, and I think that is the most ridiculous thing in the world. Other animals make their livings by living, but people work like crazy, thinking that they have to in order to stay alive. The bigger the job, the greater the challenge, the more wonderful they think it is. It would be good to give up that way of thinking and live an easy, comfortable life with plenty of free time. I think that the way animals live in the tropics, stepping outside in the morning and evening to see if there is something to eat, and taking a long nap in the afternoon, must be a wonderful life. For human beings, a life of such simplicity would be possible if one worked to produce directly his daily necessities. In such a life, work is not work as people generally think of it, but simply doing what needs to be done.”
― Masanobu Fukuoka, The One-Straw Revolution
No sabrían donde puedo encontrar este video con subtitulado en español muchas gracias
Search "One Straw Revolution", it's described in detail.
Can this be found translated to english anywhere?
I read a 'One Straw Revolution' a long time ago - it talks about this technique.
Muy bueno el sr
hi!!! ill like to konw, what kind of ingredents used... and something about the results
Vielen Dank
Good jod nature made public
How long can you store these for? Couple years?
Can we use seed balls for rice also
They're making seed balls and scattering them in the field of clover to grow crops.
Can one use this technique to make mashed potatoes?
can I put diferent seeds together,or one kind of seeds..
Owens Rayfeilds different plants have different germination rates and so most likely they’re gonna outcompete one another
It is necessary for example corn and beans are complementary.
sir i am from india . first of all i am sorry beacause my english not good but sir i think you understand me and reply me about my problem . sir my problem is i love natural farming because it's the truth of our life . i knew this before 5 months when i saw masanobu fukuoka in TH-cam doing natural farming. first i was think is it true . sir in our village all people doing farming with till the soil with tracktor and ploughing and then planting . if i telling him about natural farming people laghing at me. they told me that without tilling the soil , with weeds farming is not possible . but i don't agree with them . i am starting natural farming in a small area to see that plant grow or not . i put the seed without weeding without ploughing into the soil and other people doing ploughing with tractor and then planting .and give chemical fertilizers . i am waiting for results . everytime my mind say it's not grow but still i wait for the result . and the result is disturb my mind . after one and half month i saw that my plant not growth but those peoples plant well growth . i am feeling very sad and searching what the problem in my cultivation . when masanobu fukuoka doing farming with weeds and no ploughing why my farming not success , what the reason . is that my soil not good or anything else sir please please please reply me i request you . i love natural farming 🙏
Can any one give contact information on this farming in India. Pl send details.
If you put sub title in English that would be helpful to understand well.
Seed balls… 🤔 probably mostly still ahead of it’s time. I’ve thought about planting seeds with their fruit or whole things. Similar thing.
Is he using phosphorous or bone meal powder in the clay balls? is that just water? are all types of seeds done this way?
Clay powder. And seeds This is natrual farming. Phosphorous products is an extracted product of industrial agriculture very commonly contaminated through production and just straight an un-natural approach. Natural meaning the plants and its natural proccess the roots release exodates in the soil for the micro organisms and which release waste and then bugs and fungi feed on that life to feed and excrete which then the plants aslo use to grow. Progressivly becoming more enriched over time. Becoming easier to grow crops then previously. An example is this is how forests grow. Established nurishment is required to kick start this Using a nutritional bounce such as plant and animal manures/ compost. This is a video on two methods of seed ball making on how to let this process of nature and its abundance flourish to its divine possibilities. Which will in turn lead to heathy crops to feed the anlife above the soil.
king
what is the white... on the hormigonera?
👍👍👍
Watch the Seed Ball Story video about seed balls and you can figure out the different ways he makes them from pulverizing the clay, to mixing the seeds and clay, to adding a liquid mushroom extract, to the various methods of rolling. www.seedballs.us The Seed Ball Story HD Video
catfishbones
Does anybody know how the sludge which appears at 10:11 is used?
It's the same as making fireworks stars, candy coated objects, or coating farm seed with scary protective "chemicals" like lime.
Here's how it works: The seed is encased in dry compost powder (for water holding) and clay powder (binder) using water as an accretion facilitator (makes it sticky) to make a pellet core. It's tumbled with alternating layers of water and powder to build up layers (like a jawbreaker), and covered with lime as a protective "certified organic substance".
In the beggining of video, what exactly they do? What are they hitting
I think it is pieces of clay, being made into powder
@EbolaV1rus Thank you
It's pitty that the picture here is so unclear, I even a japanese cannot make out how this is really carried out. hmm..... , hard..... But, thanks for sharing this, anyway.
master roshi is wiser!
be nice to know what the hell they are doing !
awfully rude, camera is drunk, the viewer is left to guess what they are doing, at least someone translate to or add sub-titles in english .....
Tony this information is beyond you. You belong at a home depot saturday class or go read the readers digest gardening manual for info. Just go away
put in 360p and i think its better
Siento mucho nostalgia viendo este video.
Después de haber conocido de Fukuoka y su filosofía no he visto igual la naturaleza. Ahora una simple hoja seca se ha convertido en un tesoro maravilloso. Gracias maestro Fukuoka.