Few things. In Finland the black water doesn't go to waste, there are two things which happen to it depending on the area. 1. Nutrients gets treated with bacteria and the biomass is collected along with the solid particulate. Then one of two things happen: If the area has a bioreactor facility (Operated by Finnish government owned company Gasum OY), they go to there to be turned in to biogas. After fermentation, they go to centrifugal processing to separate liquid and solids. Solids go to composting, and liquids go to nutrient recovery (they become nitrogen, phosphorus and other such fertilisers). 2. The material goes to be incinerate, and this ash is then used as a ash based filler or fertiliser (or processed further). Finland is basically an isolated island - everything needs to come here basically with a ship or plane (because of your geography and neighbours). We don't have fossil fuel recoursed, so we make do with other means. As every cent used in fossil products from some far away place, is a cent lost from our economy. Also you are in the Finnish archipelago. If you don't want to buy limestone, you can probably find it somewhere fairly close by. Its quite abundant and there are even mines and processing facilities for it here - well only anymore in Parainen.
I always told my students, feed your plants and they will feed you. Composting is vital for a happy healthy kitchen garden. Thank you for your lovely blog.
Feed the soil, and it takes care of the plants. The mistake everyone makes is feeding their plants. Soil is the most important part of growing food. Composting and worm farms are the way to go. Another amazing way to farm is using korean natural farming methods. Definitely worth looking into.
We bought an old house pretty close to you two years ago and composting has quickly become more of a hobby than a chore. There is something deeply rewarding about the process.
I don't get people who say "It's so much work..." but the one i am thinking of likes to spend his time sitting in front of the tv watching endless sports.
What a legend you are mate. I well up whenever I get to your musical outro. Don't think I've ever passed over one of your videos from begining to end. 🙏🏻
I echo your sentiments completely. As a Finn who lives in Canada, I was overjoyed to learn that Mossy Bottom moved to my native land! I watch every episode with love and admiration welling up in my heart.
I used to have chickens and I’d recommend wood shavings rather than straw for their bedding. I found cleaning their coup was a hell of a lot easier with wood shavings, as the shavings would soak up their poo (chickens poop a lot) and turn it into clumps. Straw wasn’t so easy to manage as the poop would sometimes seep through the stalks and soak into the wood of the coup, making cleaning troublesome.
I agree! I also use wood shavings that I get for free. That works way better than straw and is easier to clean. Also if I would keep up on adding more a bit more often than I do 😬, it completely eradicates smell. We've had a rainy summer so I really should have kept adding at a faster pace, but...
I tend to use whatever is available but yeah wood shavings and leaves are more absorbent than straw and hay. This year I've mostly just been using hay since it's so easy to produce for free and I've not been doing much woodwork. I think one of the reasons it gets a bit muckier is the hens don't scratch through it as much whereas a deep litter system with something more scratchable means the poo gets stirred in and covered rather than sitting on top. It's possible chopping the hay/straw would let them do that
Hi 👋 Daniel. Wow, your homestead looks wonderful 👍.! Glad to see you back. Your friend in the panhandle of Florida, USA I like your video today is very very informative. I learned quite a few things that I didn't know and I know that that will help my composting work itself even better. God bless you and your family and keep you safe.🎉❤🎉
A tiny nugget of knowledge to add ...... Ash! It makes a great cleaning agent for your glass fronted burners. A damp rag dipped in the ash gives enough grit to cut through the carbon and not too much that it scratches the glass!
Always inspirational ❤️ Thank you for promoting humanure so eloquently, I mention it all the time in gardening conversations ( here in Scotland) and it is always met with wide eyes. Common sense needs verbalising at every turn because the further away from the land the population gets the less context they have.
What a great video, i wish composting and self sufficiency could be taught in schools, i think its absolutely insane that we flush our toilets with drinking water, if only rain water storage tanks were added to all new builds, i think it could help with our huge water problem here in the Uk, it could help take the pressure off drain systems which in turn could reduce sewage being pumped into our rivers and seas, maybe one day the people at the top will realise its not all about profits, at least some people are doing what they can for the planet, looking forward to seeing your next videos, hopefully about how you prepare for the upcoming winter, my favourite season
I put my humaure in wheelie bins, layered with straw for a little longer than a year, then move it to the compost area when pathogens have been eradicated. Gardens looking great, we had a terrible year in Ireland, wet and cold.
I like using an iron rod to perforate the pile periodically, introducing oxygen to new areas of activity. I find that faster and easier than turning. Totally agree about layering.
Excellent video. It feels so right to be living this way closer to the land, no UPFs and piles of plastic packaging. I’m naturally making big changes to what I buy and eat and definitely feel the benefits.
"A good compost area is more a beating heart at the centre of your enterprise than a bulging heap at the edge". - Mossy Bottom Thanks for a great video on compost! 24:29 Here in Norway, I think outhouses are associated with nostalgia for a simpler time. At least among people who still have them at their summer house. However, most Norwegians look down upon it, as in Britain. Many traditional outhouses have been replaced by fancy incinerating ones that cost a fortune. But the old outhouses with a heart in the door and photographs of the king on the wall (don't ask why) are still around. There are plenty of people who keep using them and love them. I'm one of those people. I lived in an 1800s house without plumbing and loved going to the outhouse, even in winter (I only wished it was closer to the house). There's just something about it, the fresh air and a warm cork seat. It's not at all unhygienic, as many people think, wood and cork is naturally antibacterial. If anything, it can be _more_ hygienic than flushing, which releases aerosols of whatever you flush down. The "outhouse smell" comes from mixing urine and solids. If you separate the urine and provide enough ventilation (that's what the ❤ is for), there won't be any smell or flies. By keeping the outhouse clean and tidy, it can even become cosy. It's a wonderful place to sit and think, something I'm sure everyone who has one appreciates. I think people are missing out, I love outhouses ❤ If you don't fancy digging out the partly composted solids with a shovel (who does), the Finnish have come up with a great solution, Pikkuvihreä's Green Toilet. It's possible to DIY using trash bins, but their bins have some clever design features that would be hard to copy. Having moved to an area where outhouses are prohibited, I bought the 330L kit that I intend to install indoors with a separating seat (protip: HepVo waterless valve). The fan ensures no smell on the inside, and the separation of solids and liquids ensures no noticable smell on the outside. That's another topic. All that valuable nitrogen that we mix with potable water and flush out to sea. Or, at best, spend lots of energy to extract from a toxic sludge. By collecting urine at the source and storing it in a tight container in the dark for a few months, it becomes a sterile and highly potent liquid fertiliser (protip: SSWM has all the info you need). I _will_ be diverting it down the drain to begin with, simply because it's so much more than I need, but the option to collect it in barrels is there should the need arise. To take it one step further, one could even extract struvite, a granulated slow-release, long-lasting fertiliser that's rich in nitrogen and phosphorus (MgNH 4 PO 4 · 6 H 2 O) and more benign for soil life than urine (again: SSWM for the win). Most developments in this area appears to happen in less "developed" countries. Another interesting development worth mentioning is worm-based sanitation (IWBSA) for dealing with the solids, although it does require heating in the winter in our climate. To end this rant with a fun fact: Each of us produce enough fertiliser to grow the food we need to survive. Not so fun fact: We mix it with potable water, producing toxic waste that ends up polluting rivers and oceans. If that's not madness, I don't know what is.
Hi! Greetings from west Ireland, it’s wonderful to see you flourishing in Finland! You’ve been a huge inspiration to me and my partner, as we have always strived to be (and finally are!) on a very similar journey. I must request more content on humanure composting. I think you mentioned it in one of your first videos while you were in Ireland. We’ve read the humanure handbook and all, but we would love to see you talk about it more (and learn from the variations you’ve tried!). It’s not discussed enough and you always provide such delightful insight. Many thanks and all the best!
Daniel, thank you so much for posting as you do. You share your experience and knowledge in such a measured and beautiful way. Every episode leaves me educated and feeling at peace. Looking forward to the next episode already. Cheers to you and your family.
Thank you! I love the educational stuff you share! Honestly, it's hard for me to find a lot of truly useful articles and videos online, when my search engines seem geared to prioritize clickbait instead. Your videos always are and have been a breath of fresh air! It's obvious that you all do both the mental hard work as well as the physical - who would have considered ergonomics applied to composting systems? But it makes so much sense! Please don't ever stop the educational vids, Daniel. Those will have enduring value. Congrats on your successes in the garden this year, and happy fishing!
Thank you for mentioning John Seymour! I found his book, in Swedish, in Akademen bookstore in Helsinki, in the 70’s. It quickly became my “bible”, my mentor and teacher. I still follow his teachings from that very inspirational book. And so do my children! I also spread the knowledge in my new home in America. I guess he is the reason I love listening to you! 😁
The timing of this video could not have been better, we're just in the middle of planning our own garden compost and your build is actually quite genius, though simple. I think we will do something similar. Thanks for all the tips! I've been going through all of your old videos this summer and eagerly waiting for a new one. I know from experience that summer is a busy time for an outdoor person, so there's not much time for videos, but hopefully you'll find more time to edit and upload in the autumn 🍂 Your style is extremely captivating to follow. Good storytelling with lots of tips but also humour and real life stuff. Keep it up!
Living on the side of a hill in Wales, your gem of a tip will save me much work 😊 I have put - re positioning and configuring of the compost heap on my autumn project list alongside building a garden privvy - this will save me the treck back up to the house and taking off shoes and the same in reverse. All in all a very enjoyable and informative video 👍. Looking forward to the fishing video. I will also check out Angela's blog.
Your videos are joy, support, knowledge and are bringing me pleasure while I process tons of apples in the kitchen at this very moment.... best wishes from county Tipperary to you and your family and thank you for doing those videos 🤗
Oh and that Quote will go down in history ! "A good compost area is more a beating heart at the centre of your enterprise, than a bulging heap at the edge " ... Mossy Bottom !
Daniel you are so inspiring...I remember my grandfather using the humanure from the privy he had in his garden in the North of France...I am now in Australia and making my own though small compost heap...sending Love to you and your family...
Very nice and inspiring video. We have the same hot composter as you do, but also a second one that is insulated and stays hot over the winter. Both have been working great, but the latter works all year round. Thanks to the warm May, we got an excellent pear crop this year. Hopefully the next winter will be easier as this became very expensive energy wise. Greetings from the upper part of South-West Finland!
Job well done Daniel… Wow do you ever stop? I admire how you put so much thought into all you plan and accomplish. I don’t find. Compost boring.. I’m all for learning… glad to know you and your family are doing well… its so wonderful watching your videos… take care till next time , can’t wait to see your harvest.
This video is great timing for me. We’ve just moved into an off grid house with a large garden. I need to update/replace our compost area - which includes our in-house compost toilet waste. So it’s really interesting to see your arrangement- and the labour saving ideas!! Thank you for all your videos - I aspire to a fraction of what you achieve!!
Hi great video with lots of useful facts and tips , I find that most Cafe and petrol stations in New Zealand were I live put the coffee grounds outside free to anyone , they make a great addition to composting system.
These videos are really lovely! I grew up in a similar place in Finland. We weren't aiming for self sufficiency, we just lived in a house like this in the middle of a forest and my parents just liked to grow some plants, berries and fruits. We even had a classic outhouse. To me that was all just normal life
Really appreciate your using the hillside as a ramp to the tops of your bins. I have property with a lot of sloping sides, really hoping I can copy that idea. 🙏😊👍
We always joke, that our vegetables and potatoes "come from own behind". :D It is a bad translation of Finnish "omasta takaa", which means "home made". See, we also have an outhouse and a compost.. "Food from own behind is very nutritious", ha ha .
Lovely to see how your plot is flourishing! I'd love to hear more on what you use as the dry material in the composting toilet. Store bought "huussikuivike" (especially the one without peat) is quite expensive, and I'd like to learn how to make it myself.
We use a mix of birch chips which I make myself (you can see the large green containers of it later in the video), mixed with dried lavender, which we grow just to neutralise any scent. Just avoid pine/spruce to prevent the acidity being too high if you intend to use the resulting compost for vegetable growing. The bark chips you buy in stores here is generally made from coniferous species which would make the compost unsuitable for veggies.
There is nothing better than a good composting-video! 💚 Would love more of them. Please follow up! I live in a cottage in Sweden and I compost everything! 👍
@@lorettamargaret2243 They don't break down as they are. I first put them in to get clean. When I use the fireplace in winter I throw them in the fire. When cooled down I crush them up and put them back in the compostbin. I also use the ashes. 💚
Good to see you are not afraid to use human manure in composting system. Also wondering what kind of wood chipper you are using? The size of the chips in your piles are so much smaller than many I have seen. Really a nice size for your composting needs. Love seeing what your doing on your homesteading journey......keep up the great work. I'm jealous.
Great to see so much progress in your garden. I have never turned a compost stack in my life. Then again, when you're used to creating them from running 17 horses, who has the time for that kind of faff when you can just it correctly! Lovely system you've got going on.
@@rayvin357 it help's to keep somewhat track of how much different kinds of waste people produce, including compost, so we could be even more efficient in recycling. Something like that.
I always aim to produce 1-2 videos per month, but it's been so hard lately due to the amount of work we're doing just to get everything set up on the land. I still loving making content though. :)
Lovely to see a video Daniel this rainy morning, great to see how busy you’ve been over the summer , your composting area is impressive I have to say ! Your garden is looking fantastic , all those lovely Veggies 😊
If you're planning on an outhouse I would seriously recommend a hot composting toilet. There is a bigger model that would be great. No need to shovel raw stuff.
Always glad to see what you have been doing. Full summer garden patch is wonderful! That compost system looks great as well. We learn by doing something, and then figuring out what would be better. You have an introverts dream there, with your own bit of shore, and a private forest. Best of luck with your next list of chores for the autumn. Cheers!
Just subscribed after watching the composting video. I have had John Seymour’s book since I went to university in the U.K in the 1980s. I am much later in life than you and I live in Ottawa, Canada, after retirement in 2020. I have a 25ft by 50ft allotment that I am establishing and I help several other people with theirs too. I loved the video thanks for doing that - no new knowledge for me but I certainly appreciate the content and style. I wish you all the best and I will be watching you and your progress :). Fantastic!
I have a diverter composting loo which separates liquids and solids. The urine goes directly into the soil and the solid waste (like yours layered with wood shavings) is composted. A small fan from a computer powered by a small solar panel ventilates this solid waste and dries it out while in the loo. This minimises any odour. Impressed as always by your explanations.
I started saving my pee over a year ago (it's not too inconvenient). Last year, I experimented with a couple of rows of corn, dividing each row in half, and applying diluted pee to one half. There was an obvious and amazing difference. Now I use the pee on crops which need nitrogen, or I put it on my compost pile.
Idea: The cement cistern at 22:00 could be turned over and turned into a vermicomposting container. Buy some composting worms and you'll have an additional way to create fertility and reuse that object.
When you said the wood structure was made of treated lumber I think you need to provide details on what type of treatment. I would be hesitant to get treated lumber at the big box store because it may have toxins which might leach out. However if you treated it yourself somehow that would be good to know.
Heartfelt congratulations for the amazing results of your gardening work, Daniel and Angela 😍😍 I really enjoyed the presentation of your composting system - very thoroughly planned lay-out and process. Good luck with your fishing projects!
Nice. I started composting two months ago using cow dung and donkey droppings, to which I added kitchen scraps and 2 litres urine once a week. Today, it looks almost ready - the kitchen scraps are breaking down nicely, but the dung is broken down. I will be making another compost heap this week to ensure I have compost all year round. There is lots of cow dung all around where I live since livestock is kept free range.
I've been using 'recycled beer' to add moisture to compost for years. I also compost waste from the fish I catch, the deer, rabbits & pigeons I shoot. I've found a 1.2m cube is plenty hot enough (70°C for a couple of weeks) to deal with those, plus any weed seeds.
Thank you, this video is perfect timing for me. I was just researching and planning to make a compost area at our home in California. Very informative and approachable. Saving this video.
Thanks Daniel for another top class and informative video. It's always impressive the depth of knowledge and research that goes into them, and also how you predict and counter the inevitable naysayers that always come up with reasons why things won't work, when you have years of tried and tested experience to show that they do. Well done indeed.
Lovely to see you back on my screen Daniel. You've been very busy and everything is looking great! One day your daughter will be starring and also passing on her knowledge to her generation, wouldn't that be fantastic! Regarding composting, I've just a little garden and am using a domestic green compost bin. I bet the mix is all wrong and it will end up a mess. Maybe I should just take it all out and ditch the bin. Anyway, looking forward to your next video. and welcome back!
Saludos from Mexico to Daniel Angela and the little one and of course our hosts the Finns. It always makes me smile to see a glimpse of our Founder and Protector, Moss. I'm glad you're back to making videos without so much ice and snow in them (hehehe just kidding. it reminds me of growing up in NJ). The garden looks fabulous, enjoy the fruits of your labor. I enjoy your analysis of composting, I'm sure many newcomers to your channel will go away with lots of good information. Well I'm off to my Carob pudding, made with hard boiled eggs, a pinch of coffee and sweetener. All the best to everyone, Jim
There is nothing boring about composting. It's fascinating and practical.
Wow. You two have been so productive this summer! Very impressive.
You are so competent! Wonderful results you have got in your garden.
Thanks
Few things. In Finland the black water doesn't go to waste, there are two things which happen to it depending on the area. 1. Nutrients gets treated with bacteria and the biomass is collected along with the solid particulate. Then one of two things happen: If the area has a bioreactor facility (Operated by Finnish government owned company Gasum OY), they go to there to be turned in to biogas. After fermentation, they go to centrifugal processing to separate liquid and solids. Solids go to composting, and liquids go to nutrient recovery (they become nitrogen, phosphorus and other such fertilisers). 2. The material goes to be incinerate, and this ash is then used as a ash based filler or fertiliser (or processed further).
Finland is basically an isolated island - everything needs to come here basically with a ship or plane (because of your geography and neighbours). We don't have fossil fuel recoursed, so we make do with other means. As every cent used in fossil products from some far away place, is a cent lost from our economy.
Also you are in the Finnish archipelago. If you don't want to buy limestone, you can probably find it somewhere fairly close by. Its quite abundant and there are even mines and processing facilities for it here - well only anymore in Parainen.
They have actually made one of those biogas reactors in Australia now
Kemiö,Sauvo,Salo,Lohja come to mind for limestone of course you would need a landowners permission to collect any
I always told my students, feed your plants and they will feed you. Composting is vital for a happy healthy kitchen garden. Thank you for your lovely blog.
Feed the soil, and it takes care of the plants. The mistake everyone makes is feeding their plants. Soil is the most important part of growing food.
Composting and worm farms are the way to go.
Another amazing way to farm is using korean natural farming methods. Definitely worth looking into.
We bought an old house pretty close to you two years ago and composting has quickly become more of a hobby than a chore. There is something deeply rewarding about the process.
That compost on a slope idea is great! Thanks Daniel! And what a lovely garden you have, you have been busy.
I don't get people who say "It's so much work..." but the one i am thinking of likes to spend his time sitting in front of the tv watching endless sports.
What a legend you are mate. I well up whenever I get to your musical outro. Don't think I've ever passed over one of your videos from begining to end. 🙏🏻
I echo your sentiments completely. As a Finn who lives in Canada, I was overjoyed to learn that Mossy Bottom moved to my native land! I watch every episode with love and admiration welling up in my heart.
Composting is not boring at all. It's so amazing to see how you can grow beautiful soil.
Wow! Your veggie garden looks amazing, Daniel! Thank you for sharing😊
I used to have chickens and I’d recommend wood shavings rather than straw for their bedding. I found cleaning their coup was a hell of a lot easier with wood shavings, as the shavings would soak up their poo (chickens poop a lot) and turn it into clumps. Straw wasn’t so easy to manage as the poop would sometimes seep through the stalks and soak into the wood of the coup, making cleaning troublesome.
I agree! I also use wood shavings that I get for free. That works way better than straw and is easier to clean. Also if I would keep up on adding more a bit more often than I do 😬, it completely eradicates smell. We've had a rainy summer so I really should have kept adding at a faster pace, but...
me too deep litter using sawdust wood shavings eliminates smell and is great for my compost heap
True. And they love it!
I tend to use whatever is available but yeah wood shavings and leaves are more absorbent than straw and hay. This year I've mostly just been using hay since it's so easy to produce for free and I've not been doing much woodwork. I think one of the reasons it gets a bit muckier is the hens don't scratch through it as much whereas a deep litter system with something more scratchable means the poo gets stirred in and covered rather than sitting on top. It's possible chopping the hay/straw would let them do that
Awesome progress! I hope you have had an enjoyable first summer here and Finland has treated you well.
He's learning! Respect to him.
The garden looks healthy and alive for a first attempt. Enjoy your harvest!
Hi 👋 Daniel.
Wow, your homestead looks wonderful 👍.!
Glad to see you back.
Your friend in the panhandle of Florida, USA
I like your video today is very very informative.
I learned quite a few things that I didn't know and I know that that will help my composting work itself even better.
God bless you and your family and keep you safe.🎉❤🎉
Thank you so much. Lovely comment. :)
So glad you and the family are thriving in Finland
A tiny nugget of knowledge to add ...... Ash!
It makes a great cleaning agent for your glass fronted burners. A damp rag dipped in the ash gives enough grit to cut through the carbon and not too much that it scratches the glass!
Always inspirational ❤️
Thank you for promoting humanure so eloquently, I mention it all the time in gardening conversations ( here in Scotland) and it is always met with wide eyes. Common sense needs verbalising at every turn because the further away from the land the population gets the less context they have.
What a great video, i wish composting and self sufficiency could be taught in schools, i think its absolutely insane that we flush our toilets with drinking water, if only rain water storage tanks were added to all new builds, i think it could help with our huge water problem here in the Uk, it could help take the pressure off drain systems which in turn could reduce sewage being pumped into our rivers and seas, maybe one day the people at the top will realise its not all about profits, at least some people are doing what they can for the planet, looking forward to seeing your next videos, hopefully about how you prepare for the upcoming winter, my favourite season
Happy to see your hard work is bringing delight and wonderful crops! Beautiful!
I put my humaure in wheelie bins, layered with straw for a little longer than a year, then move it to the compost area when pathogens have been eradicated. Gardens looking great, we had a terrible year in Ireland, wet and cold.
I like using an iron rod to perforate the pile periodically, introducing oxygen to new areas of activity. I find that faster and easier than turning. Totally agree about layering.
This is way more exciting than house renovations IMHO lol 😂 Thank you so much for sharing your experience and plans here, very helpful!
Excellent video. It feels so right to be living this way closer to the land, no UPFs and piles of plastic packaging. I’m naturally making big changes to what I buy and eat and definitely feel the benefits.
Love a good compost video. This was excellent. Thank you.
me too! :)
Lovely to hear someone other than me talking so enthusiastically about composting😀😀😀Jinxy
"A good compost area is more a beating heart at the centre of your enterprise than a bulging heap at the edge".
- Mossy Bottom
Thanks for a great video on compost!
24:29 Here in Norway, I think outhouses are associated with nostalgia for a simpler time. At least among people who still have them at their summer house. However, most Norwegians look down upon it, as in Britain. Many traditional outhouses have been replaced by fancy incinerating ones that cost a fortune. But the old outhouses with a heart in the door and photographs of the king on the wall (don't ask why) are still around. There are plenty of people who keep using them and love them.
I'm one of those people. I lived in an 1800s house without plumbing and loved going to the outhouse, even in winter (I only wished it was closer to the house). There's just something about it, the fresh air and a warm cork seat. It's not at all unhygienic, as many people think, wood and cork is naturally antibacterial. If anything, it can be _more_ hygienic than flushing, which releases aerosols of whatever you flush down. The "outhouse smell" comes from mixing urine and solids. If you separate the urine and provide enough ventilation (that's what the ❤ is for), there won't be any smell or flies. By keeping the outhouse clean and tidy, it can even become cosy. It's a wonderful place to sit and think, something I'm sure everyone who has one appreciates. I think people are missing out, I love outhouses ❤
If you don't fancy digging out the partly composted solids with a shovel (who does), the Finnish have come up with a great solution, Pikkuvihreä's Green Toilet. It's possible to DIY using trash bins, but their bins have some clever design features that would be hard to copy. Having moved to an area where outhouses are prohibited, I bought the 330L kit that I intend to install indoors with a separating seat (protip: HepVo waterless valve). The fan ensures no smell on the inside, and the separation of solids and liquids ensures no noticable smell on the outside.
That's another topic. All that valuable nitrogen that we mix with potable water and flush out to sea. Or, at best, spend lots of energy to extract from a toxic sludge. By collecting urine at the source and storing it in a tight container in the dark for a few months, it becomes a sterile and highly potent liquid fertiliser (protip: SSWM has all the info you need). I _will_ be diverting it down the drain to begin with, simply because it's so much more than I need, but the option to collect it in barrels is there should the need arise. To take it one step further, one could even extract struvite, a granulated slow-release, long-lasting fertiliser that's rich in nitrogen and phosphorus (MgNH 4 PO 4 · 6 H 2 O) and more benign for soil life than urine (again: SSWM for the win). Most developments in this area appears to happen in less "developed" countries. Another interesting development worth mentioning is worm-based sanitation (IWBSA) for dealing with the solids, although it does require heating in the winter in our climate.
To end this rant with a fun fact: Each of us produce enough fertiliser to grow the food we need to survive.
Not so fun fact: We mix it with potable water, producing toxic waste that ends up polluting rivers and oceans. If that's not madness, I don't know what is.
So nice to see you! Hope you and the family had a wonderful summer at Mossy Bottom ❤ another great video
Hi!
Greetings from west Ireland, it’s wonderful to see you flourishing in Finland! You’ve been a huge inspiration to me and my partner, as we have always strived to be (and finally are!) on a very similar journey.
I must request more content on humanure composting. I think you mentioned it in one of your first videos while you were in Ireland.
We’ve read the humanure handbook and all, but we would love to see you talk about it more (and learn from the variations you’ve tried!).
It’s not discussed enough and you always provide such delightful insight.
Many thanks and all the best!
It's wonderful to see the very tangible progress you've been making. Very admirable work, and an even more admirable outlook.
Daniel, thank you so much for posting as you do. You share your experience and knowledge in such a measured and beautiful way. Every episode leaves me educated and feeling at peace. Looking forward to the next episode already. Cheers to you and your family.
So pleased to see how things are going.
O lovely 08:19 in Ireland and you uploaded. Love when you upload
Thank you! I love the educational stuff you share! Honestly, it's hard for me to find a lot of truly useful articles and videos online, when my search engines seem geared to prioritize clickbait instead. Your videos always are and have been a breath of fresh air! It's obvious that you all do both the mental hard work as well as the physical - who would have considered ergonomics applied to composting systems? But it makes so much sense! Please don't ever stop the educational vids, Daniel. Those will have enduring value. Congrats on your successes in the garden this year, and happy fishing!
Thank you for mentioning John Seymour!
I found his book, in Swedish, in Akademen bookstore in Helsinki, in the 70’s. It quickly became my “bible”, my mentor and teacher. I still follow his teachings from that very inspirational book. And so do my children! I also spread the knowledge in my new home in America.
I guess he is the reason I love listening to you! 😁
I agree! I think it was the first self-sufficiency book i bought with great excitement in the early 80’s!! I still check in it every now and again😂
Your videos are just peak comfort. So interesting aswell!
Love from Vaasa, Finland.
The timing of this video could not have been better, we're just in the middle of planning our own garden compost and your build is actually quite genius, though simple. I think we will do something similar. Thanks for all the tips! I've been going through all of your old videos this summer and eagerly waiting for a new one. I know from experience that summer is a busy time for an outdoor person, so there's not much time for videos, but hopefully you'll find more time to edit and upload in the autumn 🍂 Your style is extremely captivating to follow. Good storytelling with lots of tips but also humour and real life stuff. Keep it up!
Yes! Compost is the beating heart of the garden.
What a beautiful garden! Amazing how much you managed to do in such a short time! Congratulations! 🙂
great vid again. and the choice of words is exquisite as always: "delicious read" 23:04 😊
Compost is very exciting and interesting! I've been composting 3 years and I learn more every year!!
Impressive progress! I love your words about humanure.
Living on the side of a hill in Wales, your gem of a tip will save me much work 😊 I have put - re positioning and configuring of the compost heap on my autumn project list alongside building a garden privvy - this will save me the treck back up to the house and taking off shoes and the same in reverse. All in all a very enjoyable and informative video 👍. Looking forward to the fishing video. I will also check out Angela's blog.
Compost is incredibly based, turns bad things into good things. Bad rep is undeserved. Building it by a slope is megamind-stuff
Bravo Daniel! Looking fabulous! Both the garden, the compost and not to forget yourself as well :D
Greetings from Berlin :)
Your videos are joy, support, knowledge and are bringing me pleasure while I process tons of apples in the kitchen at this very moment.... best wishes from county Tipperary to you and your family and thank you for doing those videos 🤗
You are a great talker...it helps when you have great knowledge of what your talking about ! 😊👍
Plus,have ye many deer calling at night ,I presume that's what the high fence around yer veggie plot is for ?!
Oh and that Quote will go down in history ! "A good compost area is more a beating heart at the centre of your enterprise, than a bulging heap at the edge " ... Mossy Bottom !
Very nice setup and a good amount of produce already.
It's clear that you don't just do this for TH-cam! Well done on your way of life!
Yep. There are TH-camrs who do gardening and gardeners who do TH-cam. The Mossy Bottoms are definitely gardeners.
All your dedication & hard work is beginning to pay dividends.., well vegetables really. Well done 👍👍👍
Daniel you are so inspiring...I remember my grandfather using the humanure from the privy he had in his garden in the North of France...I am now in Australia and making my own though small compost heap...sending Love to you and your family...
the "toilette sèche" is in trend again in France too, at least in organic farms i've visited.
Very nice and inspiring video. We have the same hot composter as you do, but also a second one that is insulated and stays hot over the winter. Both have been working great, but the latter works all year round. Thanks to the warm May, we got an excellent pear crop this year. Hopefully the next winter will be easier as this became very expensive energy wise. Greetings from the upper part of South-West Finland!
Job well done Daniel…
Wow do you ever stop? I admire how you put so much thought into all you plan and accomplish. I don’t find. Compost boring.. I’m all for learning… glad to know you and your family are doing well… its so wonderful watching your videos… take care till next time , can’t wait to see your harvest.
This video is great timing for me. We’ve just moved into an off grid house with a large garden. I need to update/replace our compost area - which includes our in-house compost toilet waste. So it’s really interesting to see your arrangement- and the labour saving ideas!! Thank you for all your videos - I aspire to a fraction of what you achieve!!
Hi great video with lots of useful facts and tips , I find that most Cafe and petrol stations in New Zealand were I live put the coffee grounds outside free to anyone , they make a great addition to composting system.
These videos are really lovely! I grew up in a similar place in Finland. We weren't aiming for self sufficiency, we just lived in a house like this in the middle of a forest and my parents just liked to grow some plants, berries and fruits. We even had a classic outhouse. To me that was all just normal life
Really appreciate your using the hillside as a ramp to the tops of your bins. I have property with a lot of sloping sides, really hoping I can copy that idea. 🙏😊👍
We always joke, that our vegetables and potatoes "come from own behind". :D It is a bad translation of Finnish "omasta takaa", which means "home made". See, we also have an outhouse and a compost.. "Food from own behind is very nutritious", ha ha .
So among your veggies your cauliflower would in Spanish "Cola-flor". I can eat every vegetable but If I can avoid "Cola-flor" the better. :)
Haha, a few hours ago i just told my son that the tomato he was eating grew in chicken shit...
And he smiled and told me it was delicious 😂
Lovely to see how your plot is flourishing! I'd love to hear more on what you use as the dry material in the composting toilet. Store bought "huussikuivike" (especially the one without peat) is quite expensive, and I'd like to learn how to make it myself.
We use a mix of birch chips which I make myself (you can see the large green containers of it later in the video), mixed with dried lavender, which we grow just to neutralise any scent. Just avoid pine/spruce to prevent the acidity being too high if you intend to use the resulting compost for vegetable growing. The bark chips you buy in stores here is generally made from coniferous species which would make the compost unsuitable for veggies.
@@MossyBottomdried lavender addition is brilliant idea 😮
There is nothing better than a good composting-video! 💚
Would love more of them. Please follow up!
I live in a cottage in Sweden and I compost everything! 👍
It´s not just me then 😂
Do you compost bones from meat you have eaten
@@lorettamargaret2243 They don't break down as they are.
I first put them in to get clean.
When I use the fireplace in winter I throw them in the fire.
When cooled down I crush them up and put them back in the compostbin.
I also use the ashes. 💚
Good to see you are not afraid to use human manure in composting system. Also wondering what kind of wood chipper you are using? The size of the chips in your piles are so much smaller than many I have seen. Really a nice size for your composting needs.
Love seeing what your doing on your homesteading journey......keep up the great work. I'm jealous.
Excellent video and content Daniel and Angela, great work and progress on the land.👌
Absolutely wonderfully presented, Daniel; thank you!
Best of luck to you and your home!
That's a very engaging and colourful description of the cornerstone of home veg growing. Keep it lit bro
Great to see so much progress in your garden. I have never turned a compost stack in my life. Then again, when you're used to creating them from running 17 horses, who has the time for that kind of faff when you can just it correctly! Lovely system you've got going on.
Composting is so mainstream in Finland that we (and probably you too) had to register our composts to the municipality. Serious business.
I also had to fill a form to register my compost in Finland. It is a rather new requirement in urban areas.
this sounds so stupid-registration! not so in us of a.
Registering poo? 😅
@@rayvin357 it help's to keep somewhat track of how much different kinds of waste people produce, including compost, so we could be even more efficient in recycling. Something like that.
Whooohoooo......wondered where you had gone!
I always aim to produce 1-2 videos per month, but it's been so hard lately due to the amount of work we're doing just to get everything set up on the land. I still loving making content though. :)
I wish I had your health and knowledge of the land, you are a true inspiration 😊😊❤
I really love your videos - I think I could watch them all day
An upload finally. Thank you, It feels like I have waited for months but it has been only a month😂
Lovely to see a video Daniel this rainy morning, great to see how busy you’ve been over the summer , your composting area is impressive I have to say ! Your garden is looking fantastic , all those lovely Veggies 😊
If you're planning on an outhouse I would seriously recommend a hot composting toilet. There is a bigger model that would be great. No need to shovel raw stuff.
Always glad to see what you have been doing. Full summer garden patch is wonderful! That compost system looks great as well. We learn by doing something, and then figuring out what would be better. You have an introverts dream there, with your own bit of shore, and a private forest. Best of luck with your next list of chores for the autumn. Cheers!
Just subscribed after watching the composting video. I have had John Seymour’s book since I went to university in the U.K in the 1980s. I am much later in life than you and I live in Ottawa, Canada, after retirement in 2020. I have a 25ft by 50ft allotment that I am establishing and I help several other people with theirs too. I loved the video thanks for doing that - no new knowledge for me but I certainly appreciate the content and style. I wish you all the best and I will be watching you and your progress :). Fantastic!
Mr frostbottom managed to capture the 30 minutes of finish summer in one video 🥶
We've actually had a lovely summer this year 😊 none of those cloudy skies or constant rain like in the UK
I have a diverter composting loo which separates liquids and solids. The urine goes directly into the soil and the solid waste (like yours layered with wood shavings) is composted. A small fan from a computer powered by a small solar panel ventilates this solid waste and dries it out while in the loo. This minimises any odour. Impressed as always by your explanations.
Nice work Daniel. Thanks for sharing. You are amazing. Hard work but living the dream with your family. 👍🌻
Gosh, you are doing so well, and in so little time !
Garden looks great. Well done, a lot of work.
Compost and compositing is my absolute favourite
I started saving my pee over a year ago (it's not too inconvenient). Last year, I experimented with a couple of rows of corn, dividing each row in half, and applying diluted pee to one half. There was an obvious and amazing difference. Now I use the pee on crops which need nitrogen, or I put it on my compost pile.
Nice to see you too now ..nice to see my near old town 😊 YOU DO IT GOOD 😊
Only a non-gardener would consider composting boring.
Great idea! I wish I had a hill, haha.
I love that you said you'll be saving up for your tractor rather than getting into debt!!
Beautiful setup!
Idea: The cement cistern at 22:00 could be turned over and turned into a vermicomposting container. Buy some composting worms and you'll have an additional way to create fertility and reuse that object.
Yes, I had in mind to do something like that with it. It's very heavy though, so I'll need a tractor first to reposition it. :)
Great to pop in and catch up Daniel. Veggie garden & compost area are looking great. Look forward to next time ❤, Michelle
Happy for your condensed version of composting expertise.
Loving the progress you are making! :)
Great to see how productive you have been and great to see you have Angela to share the load & the rewards
When you said the wood structure was made of treated lumber I think you need to provide details on what type of treatment. I would be hesitant to get treated lumber at the big box store because it may have toxins which might leach out. However if you treated it yourself somehow that would be good to know.
Beautiful vlog as ever! I benefitted from the compost vlog to refresh the ratios, etc. Thank you.
Heartfelt congratulations for the amazing results of your gardening work, Daniel and Angela 😍😍 I really enjoyed the presentation of your composting system - very thoroughly planned lay-out and process. Good luck with your fishing projects!
Nice.
I started composting two months ago using cow dung and donkey droppings, to which I added kitchen scraps and 2 litres urine once a week. Today, it looks almost ready - the kitchen scraps are breaking down nicely, but the dung is broken down. I will be making another compost heap this week to ensure I have compost all year round. There is lots of cow dung all around where I live since livestock is kept free range.
I've been using 'recycled beer' to add moisture to compost for years.
I also compost waste from the fish I catch, the deer, rabbits & pigeons I shoot.
I've found a 1.2m cube is plenty hot enough (70°C for a couple of weeks) to deal with those, plus any weed seeds.
Thank you, this video is perfect timing for me. I was just researching and planning to make a compost area at our home in California. Very informative and approachable. Saving this video.
Thanks Daniel for another top class and informative video. It's always impressive the depth of knowledge and research that goes into them, and also how you predict and counter the inevitable naysayers that always come up with reasons why things won't work, when you have years of tried and tested experience to show that they do. Well done indeed.
Lovely to see you back on my screen Daniel. You've been very busy and everything is looking great! One day your daughter will be starring and also passing on her knowledge to her generation, wouldn't that be fantastic! Regarding composting, I've just a little garden and am using a domestic green compost bin. I bet the mix is all wrong and it will end up a mess. Maybe I should just take it all out and ditch the bin. Anyway, looking forward to your next video. and welcome back!
Saludos from Mexico to Daniel Angela and the little one and of course our hosts the Finns. It always makes me smile to see a glimpse of our Founder and Protector, Moss. I'm glad you're back to making videos without so much ice and snow in them (hehehe just kidding. it reminds me of growing up in NJ). The garden looks fabulous, enjoy the fruits of your labor. I enjoy your analysis of composting, I'm sure many newcomers to your channel will go away with lots of good information. Well I'm off to my Carob pudding, made with hard boiled eggs, a pinch of coffee and sweetener. All the best to everyone, Jim
Great video! 😊
Thanks for the solid basic info and the great idea of two-level mulch piles!🤗
I recommend adding starch to your compost toilet to eliminate odours. The creator of JADAM trialled this, and it works like a charm
Thank you. Superbe video full of clear accessible information. Very motivating.