Just watched your video a few days ago...and I just want to say thank you for saving the hassle of buying a 55gal and 30 gal barrel. Dug a pit..I put both wood and bone in..followed the steps..and AWESOME CHAR! Thank you for correct advice. Peace & plenty
Your videos are short, concise, informative and to the point. This type of production will help your channel grow. Including any failures in your videos is also a bonus as we learn more from our failures, then our successes. Well done.
You are my hero! I love your very informative and yet uncomplicated videos. I shall be applying some if your techniques to my small farm in Portugal. Thank you!
I’ve found that stacking a large pile and burning top to bottom works just as well and you don’t have to worry about digging a pit.. I put my charcoal in my chicken coop deep litter bed. It acts as an odor neutralizer and gets inoculated at the same time..
I think that might work too and this sound like a convinient way to do it, but it`s not as controlled as in the pit! You also don`t have the option to extinguish the fire from below. But great if that works well for you, also the idea of simply using it as deep litter is cool!
I just learned about this tip of using it in a chicken run/coop. Genius! I also have heard that if it’s small enough, chickens sometimes consume it and it is good for their gut.
Thank you so very much for this video and for simplifying the process for me 🤗 The more videos I watched, the more complicated it was becoming 🥴 Yours is, by far, the simplest method I've seen 👍 so thank you for that! ❤ When it was time to douse the charcoals, I'm not sure if you used the pond water because it was readily available or specifically because it's nutrient rich. I'm thinking that's just an added bonus? So what are your thoughts regarding using compost tea to douse the fire? I don't have a pond but I do have a thriving worm farm and it wouldn't be much of an effort to make tea from the castings to use to douse the fire... Is this a great idea or not necessary? 🤔 Would this serve to inoculate the biochar at the same time or would it still need a separate step of inoculating?
Thanks a lot for your comment! I used the water because it was near to my pit, I would not use compost tea for that. Better use normal water for that and then inoculate the water with compost tea!
Do you know that they use activated charcoal at the veterinarian when a dog eats chocolate, to absorb the bad chemical that is poisonous to dogs....plus charcoal is good for your digestive system, supposedly it absorbs some of the bad stuff in your food like toxins and heavy metals.
I only have a very small garden, so my pit would be rather close to my flowers and vegetables. Safe enough distance for the fire. I read that the undiluted „flood water“ is extremely alkaline? Did you notice any damage to the soil and plants around such pits?
The fire during this process gets very hot and it happens often that half a meter of grass around the pit gets dried out during the process. I would recommend to have at least 2-3 meters safty distance to plants of value. I did not notice any alkaline soil damage around the pit but it for sure the water is very alkaline.
Thanks for your quick reply :) That‘s valuable information, looks like I don’t have enough room then. But better safe than sorry always. Thanks again, you made a great video and your voice is a joy to listen to. Could have been German for me as well ;) but you reach more people in English, of course. Greetings from the Rhineland :)
I like making Bamboo Leaves, Leaves, Twigs, and Pine Needles as my Biochar Material. I cook them in used aluminum cans and let them cool inside. No need watering, just add with eggshells, compost or dried manure or JADAM liquid. Or even none at all. No need grinding too with this materials, any light materials. Also if youve got diseased plants, you might want to consider using them as material. Kill the disease, use the matter for biochar
@@bandurasmodelas far as I understand, charcoal still has oils and biochar doesn’t due to high temperatures when is produced. I guess microbiology doesn’t like oils. Normally, When you touch charcoal it leaves your hands stained and not biochar.
Small batches could be done on a BBQ. Old paint can, clean in out, fill with material to char, close lid, add a couple of small vent holes, fire over BBQ. Pit would be much easier if you have the space and are able to given your location.
@@bandurasmodel charcoal is created when burning with oxygen. Biochar is created when it is slowly cooked with very few oxygen and therefore no emissions. Actually the biochar stores the carbon which is not emitted back to the atmosphere. The biochar has a very high importance because it gives shelter and nutrients to lots of bacteria. Normally this doesnt happen in charcoal
Just watched your video a few days ago...and I just want to say thank you for saving the hassle of buying a 55gal and 30 gal barrel. Dug a pit..I put both wood and bone in..followed the steps..and AWESOME CHAR! Thank you for correct advice.
Peace & plenty
Your videos are short, concise, informative and to the point.
This type of production will help your channel grow.
Including any failures in your videos is also a bonus as we learn more from our failures, then our successes. Well done.
Thanks a lot for the feedback!
You are my hero! I love your very informative and yet uncomplicated videos. I shall be applying some if your techniques to my small farm in Portugal. Thank you!
I’ve found that stacking a large pile and burning top to bottom works just as well and you don’t have to worry about digging a pit.. I put my charcoal in my chicken coop deep litter bed. It acts as an odor neutralizer and gets inoculated at the same time..
I think that might work too and this sound like a convinient way to do it, but it`s not as controlled as in the pit! You also don`t have the option to extinguish the fire from below. But great if that works well for you, also the idea of simply using it as deep litter is cool!
I just learned about this tip of using it in a chicken run/coop. Genius! I also have heard that if it’s small enough, chickens sometimes consume it and it is good for their gut.
This is how I make Biochar as well. Simple and practical. Why do people want to over complicate it? Haha great content
I think so too! It`s such a simple process that does not need to be complicated. Thanks!
wow the best how to so far thanks for a great video !
Do more videos please, this is great channel with great projects. Regards from Šibenik (Dalmatia), Croatia.
Thanks a lot! I'll do more videos this year, still waiting for the plants to grow :)
Great information!
Great video! Thanks for sharing. Love the chickens that are watching you at the end of the video :-)
Thanks :)
Thank you for posting .
That chicken in the beginning sounds like it’s having the laugh of its life.🤣
Thank you so very much for this video and for simplifying the process for me 🤗 The more videos I watched, the more complicated it was becoming 🥴
Yours is, by far, the simplest method I've seen 👍 so thank you for that! ❤
When it was time to douse the charcoals, I'm not sure if you used the pond water because it was readily available or specifically because it's nutrient rich. I'm thinking that's just an added bonus?
So what are your thoughts regarding using compost tea to douse the fire? I don't have a pond but I do have a thriving worm farm and it wouldn't be much of an effort to make tea from the castings to use to douse the fire... Is this a great idea or not necessary? 🤔 Would this serve to inoculate the biochar at the same time or would it still need a separate step of inoculating?
Thanks a lot for your comment! I used the water because it was near to my pit, I would not use compost tea for that. Better use normal water for that and then inoculate the water with compost tea!
thank you so much! @@manuelangerer-permaculture
Great stuff and great channel! Do you live on the farm or is it more like a hobby?
Thanks a lot! I live 2 minutes by bike away from our garden! But it`s defenitly more than a hobby! :)
Dude did you just lick the biochar lol. New sub for that alone haha. Respect and thanks for informative video
Haha no need for testing in a laboratory if you have your senses! :) Thanks!
Do you know that they use activated charcoal at the veterinarian when a dog eats chocolate, to absorb the bad chemical that is poisonous to dogs....plus charcoal is good for your digestive system, supposedly it absorbs some of the bad stuff in your food like toxins and heavy metals.
Wonderful
I only have a very small garden, so my pit would be rather close to my flowers and vegetables. Safe enough distance for the fire. I read that the undiluted „flood water“ is extremely alkaline? Did you notice any damage to the soil and plants around such pits?
The fire during this process gets very hot and it happens often that half a meter of grass around the pit gets dried out during the process. I would recommend to have at least 2-3 meters safty distance to plants of value. I did not notice any alkaline soil damage around the pit but it for sure the water is very alkaline.
Thanks for your quick reply :)
That‘s valuable information, looks like I don’t have enough room then. But better safe than sorry always. Thanks again, you made a great video and your voice is a joy to listen to. Could have been German for me as well ;) but you reach more people in English, of course. Greetings from the Rhineland :)
What is the name of this method
I do not know if it has a certain name, I call it the pit method
💚👍
I like making Bamboo Leaves, Leaves, Twigs, and Pine Needles as my Biochar Material. I cook them in used aluminum cans and let them cool inside. No need watering, just add with eggshells, compost or dried manure or JADAM liquid. Or even none at all. No need grinding too with this materials, any light materials. Also if youve got diseased plants, you might want to consider using them as material. Kill the disease, use the matter for biochar
👍🌞
sad you cant harvest the energy.
That is not bio char but rather charcoal which is not the same thing🤔
Please explain, what is the difference between the two and how do you tell the difference between the two? Thanks?
@@bandurasmodelas far as I understand, charcoal still has oils and biochar doesn’t due to high temperatures when is produced. I guess microbiology doesn’t like oils. Normally, When you touch charcoal it leaves your hands stained and not biochar.
How the urban home owner can make biochar. 1) Buy a farm 2) go make your biochar
Small batches could be done on a BBQ. Old paint can, clean in out, fill with material to char, close lid, add a couple of small vent holes, fire over BBQ.
Pit would be much easier if you have the space and are able to given your location.
It's not biochar
it's charcoal
What's the difference? Please explain, thanks
@@bandurasmodel charcoal is created when burning with oxygen. Biochar is created when it is slowly cooked with very few oxygen and therefore no emissions. Actually the biochar stores the carbon which is not emitted back to the atmosphere. The biochar has a very high importance because it gives shelter and nutrients to lots of bacteria. Normally this doesnt happen in charcoal