I am researching Bokashi fermentation and came across your video. Thank you for the information. In my opinion, High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) fabricated plastic materials are more suitable for these types of applications. Cylindrical HDPE tanks with sealed heavy pressing lids on them may be better than metal fermenters. HDPE is resistant to most organic materials and extreme pH levels.
I’m interested in the process. I’d like to see a start to finish application. My thought is that I could gain food from local restaurants, use this to convert the food into biomass and then apply it to my pasture and build up the soil over time. I’m in Texas. I’m curious what all would go into that process.
Hi, would it takw the same amount of time to break down wood shavings, hay, bunny poop/pee and cardboard? I have bunnies and they produce so much great stuff for composting but it takes too long and i always have too much bunny compost to handle. My bunnies produce about 6-7 bags of waste a week. (50lb wood pellet stove bags) i usually end up giving it away for free in the summer but in the winter.. i have a surplus lol help!
I am researching Bokashi fermentation and came across your video. Thank you for the information. In my opinion, High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) fabricated plastic materials are more suitable for these types of applications. Cylindrical HDPE tanks with sealed heavy pressing lids on them may be better than metal fermenters. HDPE is resistant to most organic materials and extreme pH levels.
Excellent talk
I’m interested in the process. I’d like to see a start to finish application.
My thought is that I could gain food from local restaurants, use this to convert the food into biomass and then apply it to my pasture and build up the soil over time. I’m in Texas. I’m curious what all would go into that process.
G'day, nice bin, I'm looking to bokashi stable manure to feed compost worms. Will a hammer mill do the job? What do you use to granulise your compost?
I can't find anything on struvite being produced by Bokashi fermentation. Your mention is the only mention I've come across.
Hi, would it takw the same amount of time to break down wood shavings, hay, bunny poop/pee and cardboard? I have bunnies and they produce so much great stuff for composting but it takes too long and i always have too much bunny compost to handle. My bunnies produce about 6-7 bags of waste a week. (50lb wood pellet stove bags) i usually end up giving it away for free in the summer but in the winter.. i have a surplus lol help!
You could use bokashi. You could also look at EM flooring for your hutches. Korean Natural Farming details how to do this.
This is a video and you didn't show anything, a very disappointing video