Hey everyone, thanks for checking out our videos that No Till Growers put together! Scanning through the comments, there are a few consistent questions that we figured we'd answer here and maybe this comment can get pinned so everyone can see it. First off, an update. Shortly after filming this we upgraded our compost tea brewer to one with a 35 gallon capacity! We have been brewing one or two 25-30 gallon batches a week this summer and have covered the entire farm twice over. We also started offering compost tea for sale at our weekly Saturday morning farmstand. What has been really amazing is the feedback we've gotten from some of our customers who have been using it in their gardens! Because our soil is very healthy to begin with, we don't notice drastic changes from tea applications, but some of our customers have reported very noticeable changes even after one application. Still anecdotal evidence, but very cool to hear about nonetheless! Next, there's a lot of questions about our cucumber beetle management and some confusion about the protozoa tea as a control. A few years back, the cucumber beetle pressure (and thus the bacterial wilt) on our farm was so heavy that we were unable to grow cucumbers at all. That was obviously unacceptable, so we changed some things that have allowed us to have an amazing cucumber season this year! The first thing we did was cover the cucumber seedlings with insect netting after transplanting and keep them covered until the very last second (as in they were pushing up against the netting and needing to be trellised). We've found that seems to evade the initial spring wave of cucumber beetles. After the cover comes off and the trellis goes up, we spend about 10 minutes every morning using a cordless vacuum (modified with a small piece of tubing for precise suction) to suck up any beetles we find. The beetles are typically very slow moving in the cool mornings and they tend to congregate in the growing tips and flowers. Some people may think that sounds ridiculous, but a 10 minute investment everyday makes thousands of dollars difference in sales, so the math makes it a no brainier for us. We've also noticed a precipitous drop in the cucumber beetle population 2 years after planting our perennial hedgerows. Again with the anecdotes, but it does make sense that the hedgerows would provide habitat for predatory insects and birds, so perhaps there's a connection. Of course we also spray the cucumber plants regularly with compost tea which helps to alleviate disease such as powdery mildew or angular leaf spot. In the video, these are the diseases that we're referencing when talking about the protozoa-heavy tea being very effective in mitigating. When it comes to bacterial wilt, the only way to beat it is to go after the beetles since it's carried in their guts. Now that said, theoretically it should be possible to influence the gut biome of the beetles by using compost tea. By loading the plant surfaces with beneficial microbes, it seems feasible that the beetles would be ingesting all that good biology and it might have an influence on the prevalence of the wilt-causing bacteria they carry. Just a thought... Lastly, we learned about making compost, using a microscope, and identifying soil microbiology by taking Dr. Elaine Ingham's Soil Food Web foundation course. It's an investment for sure, but one that made a huge difference for our farm. Any compound microscope with 40x-1000x capability should be fine, ours is an OMAX trinocular which allows you to use a camera with it. 400x magnification is the most we ever use for our purposes.
Was watching videos to learn more about expanding my own family farm with my young son whos taken a big interest in farming/gardening and saw your local and got excited! Thanks for sharing!
Composting is one of the funnest parts of growing for me no matter how bad a crop might fail It just gets processed right back into gold for next time.
As "expected" another great video in this series. The more we watch the more we realize that we have to learn. THANK YOU and EVERYONE involved for these super informational and interesting and FUN videos!
The most profound part of this video is the red flag of big profit maximizing compost producers. There are brands with reputable quality and process and some others that are just criminal. Organic Certifications mean jack. I think vetting a compost supplier is a must these days. That mulch is genius! It would be interesting to test a batch for mineral content kind of like you would kelp meal.
That's really cool that they're able to support a whole acre's farming with such a small amount of compost. I've just got a 400 sq ft garden, and I compost my lawn clippings. It'd be cool to get to this level of compost management one day.
I have a similar situation, just be hyper-vigilant about what you put on your lawn as you can end up in a similar situation as you would with hay/manure and unintended consequences.
Great video, thank you! I'm a small lot city gardener with a similar sized single compost bin set up and no room to repile move the contents around. Last two year i've been using a 6" diameter post hole auger to mix the bins contents in place. One person job and can get finished compost in relatively short order.
Amazing. Never considered a microscope as a tool for this. Cucumber beetles were bad in my area this year and I had to rip up plants due to BW for the first time ever. To think you can spray protozoa-rich compost tea on them and save the plant!! Wow.
Really enjoyed this tour. Thank you for turning what can become very complex topics like soil biology and identification into sometime accessible to geek out on, even as a beginner. Love what you are doing on this farm ❤
Any chance you could interview someone who's had success with shallow soil depth, high winds, and extreme heat? I know that sounds ridiculous, but if they exist I'd like to see how they did it.
We're not on a scale yet to be worth interviewing 😆 and we're still learning but we're having pretty good success in our 3rd year in Southern New Mexico. Extremely high winds, high altitude with high heat, very little rainfall, poor initial soil quality. We share knowledge with two other farms in the region so there's pretty good communal knowledge.
I’m from Colorado and My advise is to go with sunken beds. Everyone always wants to go with raised beds. It’s more work digging holes in the ground but it makes a huge difference. Throwing wood in those holes works well, a sort of hugelkulture. And always mulch, mulch, mulch! Planting perennial bushes might help with blocking some of the wind.
I started to do the tea compost last year and also did the migration on the worms like the one you mentioned from a village project I learned 25 years ago to create composting at home. I have a dog so prefer this way of compost and it helped me to use that for all my plants to have a disease-free season. There was an abundance of tomatoes that sprouted from the rich compost pile and really love the no-till method. Thank you for sharing.
In the end, after years of trial and error and study and workshops, the answer for me is good compost and, apart from the double digging, John Jeavons' method (Grow Biointensive) of growing all your own compost materials seems to be the most sure and sustainable. Thanks Jesse and the Assawaga folks - so great to see what others are doing!
For us (large home garden), finding enough brown material to keep up with our garden pruning green material for the compost bin is the biggest challenge.
What a great farm, love it. This is a True Green Project that honors Life and Community! 🦋Great job, Well Done!🤗 Thanks Jesse for making this good news available. It’s also therapeutic to open our minds to what is right in front of our eyes. 😃 🎉
I love experimenting with compost. A couple of things I've found with leaves/compost is to firstly run any compost made through my worm bins, secondly I add spoiled milk/dairy which drives there microbes wild and in turn the worms produce there fluffiest, best compost I've ever seen, incredible! There needs to be a refinement of this process, but the soil produced is amazing.
Been using Neptunes harvest for years. Even the fish one has low odor and works AMAZING! I use it on my indoor plants and its totally bearable in smell and works just like the stuff I make for my outdoor plants! Highly recommended.
These farm videos are really good. I enjoy the little tidbits you get from different sources. It's really allowing me to see so many aspects to approaching even the beginnings of the the work I'll be doing. I think in tropical areas if you want to focus on creating a row farming system and have some extra land, generating the green and brown material could be pretty easy because there are a few fast growing plants that should allow you to grow a bit of your materials to compost. Or, that's what I'm thinking. I'll be lucky in that many land owners where we'll be are organic out of necessity. So getting materials for composting should be easier but I know there are still issues that come up because of raising animals and if they've been given doses of antibiotics. But I'm getting a much better feel for how I want to start now.
I always enjoy your content, that I get the time to see. Been a gardener my whole life and been fairly successful at each place I’ve lived. I just moved to 5,000 ft elevation in Long Barn Ca and would loved to hear other people’s thoughts on gardening in such conditions.
I’m preparing to embark on my second annual Great Leaf Assemblage-I get so amped up utilizing any materials I can to improve our soil quality. Thanks for this video of encouragement!
I sooo appreciate all of the info you put out, especially with all these likeminded souls. I bought your book.great stuff , all of it. I’m in deep with my closed loop compost making, powerful doings. Cheers y’all 🎉❤
Fascinating. I’d love you to revisit, specifically to explore the microscopy they are into. You could include footage of what they are seeing down the microscope.
That would be very interesting indeed. I'd love to see some videos - explaining the mircoscope's role in not-till, compost focused, organic gardening. It seems that there's so much opportunity to use natural biology to effect some common garden problems.
yup ive had that buying bags of so called organic compost ,with small pieces of plastics ,slivers of glass, as I dont wear gloves its amazing I never got cut.
I stopped buying compost…I use cover crops, I chop n drop. No till. Occasional natural fertilizer. Year round growing. Sometimes I use leaves. Seems to be working for my garden.
Thanks i use your methods on my backyard raised beds, wicking tubs, and self made compost made from prunning my own yard and garden waste that i can get to 160 degrees to cook and cure
Growing a ton of carrots on a 12 acre farm is easy - not so easy on one row. You are amazing. There is never enough compost! - maybe straw bales and cow slurry is an answer?.... or farm rabbits.
I had the same questions. I noticed that they had hardware mesh over the pallets, and it looked like they use bungees to keep the fence/cylinders together. Do they put down tarps and just take off the bungees, remix the contents and fork it back in?
@@kirstenclemente7033 I too graduated Dr. E's course... here's a big freebie for you. I do secure my bins with two bungee cords. Undo the cords, move the bin, redo the cords. Top third of pile goes on a tarp. middle third becomes bottom of next bin, Top third from tarp goes to middle layer. Bottom third goes on top. When you repeat this process for next turn, all three layers will have been in the hot centre. When turning do your best to put what was on the outside edges into the centre of the pile. Hope this helps. Draw it out as three layers... A, B, C
Appreciate the sharing of this knowledge. I'm learning something new all the time. We have been gardening for over 40 yrs. Not a source of income just for our personal use. Might be looking into expanding when I retire from my job as a side hustle to supplement our retirement.
I'm surprised more smaller growers aren't using the Johnson -Su method. Fungal dominant, static pile is the way to go. It has so many great attributes and is proven to work in lab & in field. It also makes sense since he uses the same process that nature does. In my decent soil it only takes one seed treatment pre planting and I'm done.
Yeah I was disappointed to see that they're just doing the Berkeley method of composting when the Johnson-Su method is so much less work and creates a much higher diversity of microbiology. I guess they couldn't wait a year to use their compost.
@@glen.simpson probably the first few seasons, but I'm breeding landraces so idl to baby them. If you are planting commercial seeds then likely you'd be better with 2 applications.
Ugh my cukes get hit by cucumber beetles every year. I try to have a lot of succession plants but all the cuke plants get hit eventually. I would love a information vid on management of the cuke pests.
I used Jesse's suggestion to plant radishes in with my cucumbers to discourage cucumber beetles, and that seemed to help a lot. I think trying to attract more birds to the garden has helped, too. I haven't got birdhouses up around my garden yet, but I'm finding that the more t-posts I put up (for trellises) as I expand my garden, the more birds I have in the garden.
Same exact experience with my OMRI certified compost supplier - plastic chunks, plastic bag pieces, and glass. It's that way every time. What an absolute joke. From now on, we will be depending on cover crops to build the soil.
Ugh, that's almost a written guarantee for problems for years to come. I don't have a farm or market garden but after seeing what persistent herbicides did, I went to vermiculture and know exactly what has benn through it. My worm farm is in my kitchen. No, it doesn't smell bad, it actually smell like rich spring earth. I use extracts (water without chlorine, chlorinates) poured through the castings in a fine sieve.
@@ninemoonplanetSeriously, I would benefit from some advice about how to have a worm bin that doesn’t smell bad and that I could keep in the kitchen. Mine has been through several versions and right now I am struggling a lot with flies of various kinds (fruit, fungus and some other type), and maggots. I have to keep a screen over the top.
Hi dear friend thanks so much for another great video full of Grace the tips and impression always doing great channel is hugs and kisses from grandma, Sandy and Debbie
I had a similar experience with trash being dropped off and the company's owner coming by to assure me that trash was just normal and all my previous deliveries from other companies were probably just as bad.
Us too outside of Santa Barbara many years ago before we moved to Montana. One year there was so much cheat grass that we literally started losing the garden. We sold the property to a guy who was going to cover the entire area until it died. It was awful.
I would love to see more of their operation and the layout of their grounds. Can you do more information on the bacteria protozoa manufacturing for disease prevention?
Great video & loaded with helpful information. After the first ‘cook’ & you turn it, how / what do you add to get the pile to return to a ‘cook’ temp? I had success following the method you use, but after turning the pile (for the 2nd ‘cook’ it rarely gets over 90-120*. We could add more chicken manure (from our flock), but does that throw-off the ratio of C:N? How to get that second heat-up? Thank you!
City, small farmers trying to stay away from the chemicals, herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, fertilizers can make the second form of compost shown in the video. It's worm compost, essentially two or three bins, worms (red wigglers also called tiger worms, others specifically used for compost) , bedding which is often shredded wet paper, coco coir, and some soil from the garden. Additions are any leafy greens, vegetable, soft fruits like squash, melons apples etc. I prefer to remove the seeds after I used my vermiculture compost and literally had about 100 tomato seedlings show up.
I have my "worm farm" in the kitchen. No, it doesn't give off bad smells. NO animal products, those do make the bin stinky. I prefer not to add allium or citrus if only because allium have high sulphur, citrus, acids. Leaf mold adds fungi to the compost, for example.
finding that using the green waste from garden to make compost that I then add back to the row where I will plant that same crop as I think that the nutrients needed by that crop is re-introduced into that row from the waste plants...
Could the authors of this video give an indication as to how long before a small farm like about 3/4 acre practicing organic and no till growing generate a net profit to justify the efforts of two farmers?
What are your thoughts on this method? Should a tarp be part of the method under these conditions? I use a hog wire cage for weed/grass, maple leaves and pine needles. I don’t have quite enough greens for the brown. The compost stays very wet due to the rain. Also, I can’t maintain the heat because I can only be there for a couple hours every other weekend. My solution is to add some dirt and worms to the mix in hopes to speed up the composting process.
Superb brilliant video. Any thoughts on crops to grow for composting, not cover crops. It's for the start of bed building. Moreton thesaurus pleasee. Many thanks
I am a city gardener less than 1/4 of a wooded lot cleared and gardened for about 20 yrs. 10 years practicing humanure compost but I mostly did it to conserve water for gardening... After quite a few years I felt comfortable adding some old piles to fall prep and it is good to go for spring. Still my piles sit for 3-4 years before I use them. I also do anaerobic bucket ferments of anything really seedy or invasive. In 2020 I was introduced to ivermectin to deal with "the thing" only I don't do anything halfway I got into months long IVM use to sort of reset some health issues and I felt great but quit as I didn't feel it wise to regularly over control the natural flora/fauna . Here is the burn, now I hear from my favorite regenerative rancher that Ivermectin in cattle grazing is ruining the good-guys in the fields. Wha!!? So now I have 2 piles which I gather are considered equal to "persistant herbacides"? While not really herbicides I do see a lower worm population in the compost pile and I am bummed. So I guess those piles will get used on the edges of the yard. Anyone familiar with this dilema? Great show and LOVE what those two are doing...
The dilemma was caused by you self medicating. Yes what you took is used as horse and cattle dewormer. Only use on non edible plants, and parts of the soil youndon’t care about
You medicated yourself with something being pushed by an orange baffoon who thought injecting himself with bleach would protect him from a virus and now you're surprised that you contaminated your humanure pile.
Hey everyone, thanks for checking out our videos that No Till Growers put together! Scanning through the comments, there are a few consistent questions that we figured we'd answer here and maybe this comment can get pinned so everyone can see it.
First off, an update. Shortly after filming this we upgraded our compost tea brewer to one with a 35 gallon capacity! We have been brewing one or two 25-30 gallon batches a week this summer and have covered the entire farm twice over. We also started offering compost tea for sale at our weekly Saturday morning farmstand. What has been really amazing is the feedback we've gotten from some of our customers who have been using it in their gardens! Because our soil is very healthy to begin with, we don't notice drastic changes from tea applications, but some of our customers have reported very noticeable changes even after one application. Still anecdotal evidence, but very cool to hear about nonetheless!
Next, there's a lot of questions about our cucumber beetle management and some confusion about the protozoa tea as a control. A few years back, the cucumber beetle pressure (and thus the bacterial wilt) on our farm was so heavy that we were unable to grow cucumbers at all. That was obviously unacceptable, so we changed some things that have allowed us to have an amazing cucumber season this year! The first thing we did was cover the cucumber seedlings with insect netting after transplanting and keep them covered until the very last second (as in they were pushing up against the netting and needing to be trellised). We've found that seems to evade the initial spring wave of cucumber beetles.
After the cover comes off and the trellis goes up, we spend about 10 minutes every morning using a cordless vacuum (modified with a small piece of tubing for precise suction) to suck up any beetles we find. The beetles are typically very slow moving in the cool mornings and they tend to congregate in the growing tips and flowers. Some people may think that sounds ridiculous, but a 10 minute investment everyday makes thousands of dollars difference in sales, so the math makes it a no brainier for us. We've also noticed a precipitous drop in the cucumber beetle population 2 years after planting our perennial hedgerows. Again with the anecdotes, but it does make sense that the hedgerows would provide habitat for predatory insects and birds, so perhaps there's a connection.
Of course we also spray the cucumber plants regularly with compost tea which helps to alleviate disease such as powdery mildew or angular leaf spot. In the video, these are the diseases that we're referencing when talking about the protozoa-heavy tea being very effective in mitigating. When it comes to bacterial wilt, the only way to beat it is to go after the beetles since it's carried in their guts. Now that said, theoretically it should be possible to influence the gut biome of the beetles by using compost tea. By loading the plant surfaces with beneficial microbes, it seems feasible that the beetles would be ingesting all that good biology and it might have an influence on the prevalence of the wilt-causing bacteria they carry. Just a thought...
Lastly, we learned about making compost, using a microscope, and identifying soil microbiology by taking Dr. Elaine Ingham's Soil Food Web foundation course. It's an investment for sure, but one that made a huge difference for our farm. Any compound microscope with 40x-1000x capability should be fine, ours is an OMAX trinocular which allows you to use a camera with it. 400x magnification is the most we ever use for our purposes.
Sir thank you for sharing
Was watching videos to learn more about expanding my own family farm with my young son whos taken a big interest in farming/gardening and saw your local and got excited! Thanks
for sharing!
Where do these farms buy their bulk seed and how do they store unused seed.
You have a very nice farm.
Great info (miigwetth) thank you
I am so grateful for farmers who share their stories. You will see me on the vlog in 2027. Can't wait.
I wish you the the best of luck! I'm hoping to be on that journey as well ! Have a good one !
Best wishes on your journey (s)!!
Composting is one of the funnest parts of growing for me no matter how bad a crop might fail It just gets processed right back into gold for next time.
TONS of great information here. I’ll be rewatching this one over and over.
Thanks!
Same this is number 4 for me now lol
I enjoyed the challenges they faced and addressed with composting 😀🇦🇺
As "expected" another great video in this series. The more we watch the more we realize that we have to learn. THANK YOU and EVERYONE involved for these super informational and interesting and FUN videos!
Loving these insights into how other farmers make their farms work. Thank you. ❤
Great video, Jackson. It was so helpful to learn about their compost and compost tea processes. Loving these farm tours. Thanks for what you do!
Don't forget the compost extracts... IV for the SoilFoodWeb
This has been a fantastic series. Really enjoy learning about different farms.
The most profound part of this video is the red flag of big profit maximizing compost producers. There are brands with reputable quality and process and some others that are just criminal. Organic Certifications mean jack. I think vetting a compost supplier is a must these days.
That mulch is genius! It would be interesting to test a batch for mineral content kind of like you would kelp meal.
That's really cool that they're able to support a whole acre's farming with such a small amount of compost. I've just got a 400 sq ft garden, and I compost my lawn clippings. It'd be cool to get to this level of compost management one day.
I have a similar situation, just be hyper-vigilant about what you put on your lawn as you can end up in a similar situation as you would with hay/manure and unintended consequences.
Great video, thank you! I'm a small lot city gardener with a similar sized single compost bin set up and no room to repile move the contents around. Last two year i've been using a 6" diameter post hole auger to mix the bins contents in place. One person job and can get finished compost in relatively short order.
Great information. I spend time in Putnam CT many times a year. Awesome to find out about a local organic farm.
Amazing. Never considered a microscope as a tool for this. Cucumber beetles were bad in my area this year and I had to rip up plants due to BW for the first time ever. To think you can spray protozoa-rich compost tea on them and save the plant!! Wow.
Indeed, the bacteria/protazoa tea discussion was fascinating! I could watch an hour long video on that aspect alone 😅💚
Or spray clay on the leaves
Would definitely love more info on cucumber beetles
Really enjoyed this tour. Thank you for turning what can become very complex topics like soil biology and identification into sometime accessible to geek out on, even as a beginner. Love what you are doing on this farm ❤
Any chance you could interview someone who's had success with shallow soil depth, high winds, and extreme heat? I know that sounds ridiculous, but if they exist I'd like to see how they did it.
Oh you from Colorado? You forgot the grasshoppers!
@@ronaldaguilar3832
🦗🦗🦗Colorado!🦗🦗🦗
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
We're not on a scale yet to be worth interviewing 😆 and we're still learning but we're having pretty good success in our 3rd year in Southern New Mexico.
Extremely high winds, high altitude with high heat, very little rainfall, poor initial soil quality.
We share knowledge with two other farms in the region so there's pretty good communal knowledge.
I’m from Colorado and My advise is to go with sunken beds. Everyone always wants to go with raised beds. It’s more work digging holes in the ground but it makes a huge difference. Throwing wood in those holes works well, a sort of hugelkulture. And always mulch, mulch, mulch!
Planting perennial bushes might help with blocking some of the wind.
Columbia Gorge area!
I started to do the tea compost last year and also did the migration on the worms like the one you mentioned from a village project I learned 25 years ago to create composting at home. I have a dog so prefer this way of compost and it helped me to use that for all my plants to have a disease-free season. There was an abundance of tomatoes that sprouted from the rich compost pile and really love the no-till method. Thank you for sharing.
In the end, after years of trial and error and study and workshops, the answer for me is good compost and, apart from the double digging, John Jeavons' method (Grow Biointensive) of growing all your own compost materials seems to be the most sure and sustainable. Thanks Jesse and the Assawaga folks - so great to see what others are doing!
For us (large home garden), finding enough brown material to keep up with our garden pruning green material for the compost bin is the biggest challenge.
Great experience. I also love they are careful’ahout the scientific claims they are making. Farm looks great !
What a great farm, love it. This is a True Green Project that honors Life and Community! 🦋Great job, Well Done!🤗
Thanks Jesse for making this good news available. It’s also therapeutic to open our minds to what is right in front of our eyes. 😃 🎉
I love experimenting with compost. A couple of things I've found with leaves/compost is to firstly run any compost made through my worm bins, secondly I add spoiled milk/dairy which drives there microbes wild and in turn the worms produce there fluffiest, best compost I've ever seen, incredible!
There needs to be a refinement of this process, but the soil produced is amazing.
Been using Neptunes harvest for years. Even the fish one has low odor and works AMAZING! I use it on my indoor plants and its totally bearable in smell and works just like the stuff I make for my outdoor plants! Highly recommended.
Glad you visited Assawara farm, i've learned so much from these visits. Thanks❤
These farm videos are really good. I enjoy the little tidbits you get from different sources. It's really allowing me to see so many aspects to approaching even the beginnings of the the work I'll be doing.
I think in tropical areas if you want to focus on creating a row farming system and have some extra land, generating the green and brown material could be pretty easy because there are a few fast growing plants that should allow you to grow a bit of your materials to compost. Or, that's what I'm thinking. I'll be lucky in that many land owners where we'll be are organic out of necessity. So getting materials for composting should be easier but I know there are still issues that come up because of raising animals and if they've been given doses of antibiotics. But I'm getting a much better feel for how I want to start now.
Great video. What an amazing garden. Its like a polished jewel!
I always enjoy your content, that I get the time to see. Been a gardener my whole life and been fairly successful at each place I’ve lived. I just moved to 5,000 ft elevation in Long Barn Ca and would loved to hear other people’s thoughts on gardening in such conditions.
I’m preparing to embark on my second annual Great Leaf Assemblage-I get so amped up utilizing any materials I can to improve our soil quality. Thanks for this video of encouragement!
Always interesting & helpful to hear the farmers point of view.
Love these videos! Thank you for making this info available
I sooo appreciate all of the info you put out, especially with all these likeminded souls. I bought your book.great stuff , all of it. I’m in deep with my closed loop compost making, powerful doings. Cheers y’all 🎉❤
Nerd farmer Jesse, you are awesome
Fascinating. I’d love you to revisit, specifically to explore the microscopy they are into. You could include footage of what they are seeing down the microscope.
That would be very interesting indeed. I'd love to see some videos - explaining the mircoscope's role in not-till, compost focused, organic gardening. It seems that there's so much opportunity to use natural biology to effect some common garden problems.
Is there any world in which you don't just like smart people - these guys are great. Thanks for the video.
yup ive had that buying bags of so called organic compost ,with small pieces of plastics ,slivers of glass, as I dont wear gloves its amazing I never got cut.
¡Gracias!
Amazing, thank you!
I stopped buying compost…I use cover crops, I chop n drop. No till. Occasional natural fertilizer. Year round growing. Sometimes I use leaves. Seems to be working for my garden.
I don’t trust sourcing of compost and it was expensive
Watched it three times. Can't get enough
Thanks i use your methods on my backyard raised beds, wicking tubs, and self made compost made from prunning my own yard and garden waste that i can get to 160 degrees to cook and cure
Love and appreciate you sharing your experiences! Thank
Absolutely loved this video! Will watch again and take better notes other than my scribbles on an envelope!
Growing a ton of carrots on a 12 acre farm is easy - not so easy on one row. You are amazing. There is never enough compost! - maybe straw bales and cow slurry is an answer?.... or farm rabbits.
super informative, another resource for folks to learn from; listen and take notes!
LOVED this one. Great size farm. Would love to see the AC actual whole composting process. How do they flip it? Do they take the screen apart?
I had the same questions. I noticed that they had hardware mesh over the pallets, and it looked like they use bungees to keep the fence/cylinders together. Do they put down tarps and just take off the bungees, remix the contents and fork it back in?
It might be more of a static compost like a Johnson-Su bioreactor
The bungee's holding the tarp. He explains how he takes apart the pile and mixes back together.
@@kirstenclemente7033 I too graduated Dr. E's course... here's a big freebie for you. I do secure my bins with two bungee cords. Undo the cords, move the bin, redo the cords. Top third of pile goes on a tarp. middle third becomes bottom of next bin, Top third from tarp goes to middle layer. Bottom third goes on top. When you repeat this process for next turn, all three layers will have been in the hot centre. When turning do your best to put what was on the outside edges into the centre of the pile. Hope this helps. Draw it out as three layers... A, B, C
@@esben181 No, static piles can't heat evenly,
It has been noted that farmers create most of their work... a fairly accurate observation.
Great story!
Absolutely beautiful lane!
Love the historical name!
Appreciate the sharing of this knowledge. I'm learning something new all the time. We have been gardening for over 40 yrs. Not a source of income just for our personal use. Might be looking into expanding when I retire from my job as a side hustle to supplement our retirement.
I think it’s why Rudy Steiner recommended the closed loop: it’s the only way to know for sure what is in your soil.
Great job to all. Thank you!
Fantastic info!
Please share how you treated the cukes to get past the flea beetles, etc!
Saved to come back again to refresh! Thank you 👵🏻👩🌾❣️
Great video, props to the gentleman for the aNaLoGmAn t-shirt! I share both his passions.
I'm surprised more smaller growers aren't using the Johnson -Su method. Fungal dominant, static pile is the way to go. It has so many great attributes and is proven to work in lab & in field. It also makes sense since he uses the same process that nature does. In my decent soil it only takes one seed treatment pre planting and I'm done.
Yeah I was disappointed to see that they're just doing the Berkeley method of composting when the Johnson-Su method is so much less work and creates a much higher diversity of microbiology.
I guess they couldn't wait a year to use their compost.
@@glen.simpson probably the first few seasons, but I'm breeding landraces so idl to baby them. If you are planting commercial seeds then likely you'd be better with 2 applications.
Awesome ❤
Please share how you successfully controlled the cucumber and flea beetles. I’m also struggling with squash and harlequin bugs 😢
Yes, would be great content. They can be a pain in the butt.. GL ✌🏼💚🙏🏻
Same here! Was it the protozoans working on the disease they can spread that worked?
Ugh my cukes get hit by cucumber beetles every year. I try to have a lot of succession plants but all the cuke plants get hit eventually. I would love a information vid on management of the cuke pests.
I used Jesse's suggestion to plant radishes in with my cucumbers to discourage cucumber beetles, and that seemed to help a lot. I think trying to attract more birds to the garden has helped, too. I haven't got birdhouses up around my garden yet, but I'm finding that the more t-posts I put up (for trellises) as I expand my garden, the more birds I have in the garden.
@@mslorischoolsocialworkerI have bird houses and bird baths. I have a decent population of birds but the cucumber beetles are relentless.
Same exact experience with my OMRI certified compost supplier - plastic chunks, plastic bag pieces, and glass. It's that way every time. What an absolute joke. From now on, we will be depending on cover crops to build the soil.
Ugh, that's almost a written guarantee for problems for years to come. I don't have a farm or market garden but after seeing what persistent herbicides did, I went to vermiculture and know exactly what has benn through it.
My worm farm is in my kitchen. No, it doesn't smell bad, it actually smell like rich spring earth.
I use extracts (water without chlorine, chlorinates) poured through the castings in a fine sieve.
@@ninemoonplanet make a video about your kitchen worms! People will watch!
@@ninemoonplanetSeriously, I would benefit from some advice about how to have a worm bin that doesn’t smell bad and that I could keep in the kitchen. Mine has been through several versions and right now I am struggling a lot with flies of various kinds (fruit, fungus and some other type), and maggots. I have to keep a screen over the top.
glad to see others using the "Johnson-Su method of compost making..
This is great info!!!
I wish u could do a video of flipping compost pile.
Thanks for the video it's encouraging to see what can be done with small scale intensive farms. Also, sick music!
Wonderful, generous and helpful! You guys are fantastic, and have pushed me to get my microscope out!
Thanks!
Amazing, thank you!
I'm also a small market garden using Elaine's methodology and adapting it to small scale market farming. I'm also using knf methods and jadam sprays.
Hi dear friend thanks so much for another great video full of Grace the tips and impression always doing great channel is hugs and kisses from grandma, Sandy and Debbie
I had a similar experience with trash being dropped off and the company's owner coming by to assure me that trash was just normal and all my previous deliveries from other companies were probably just as bad.
Us too outside of Santa Barbara many years ago before we moved to Montana. One year there was so much cheat grass that we literally started losing the garden. We sold the property to a guy who was going to cover the entire area until it died. It was awful.
Man! One day I will fulfill my dream to become a market gardener ♥ thanks to you
Impressive!!
Small farm success!!!
Thanks for sharing 👍 can guys show step by step 🚶♀️ how to make the conpose.
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing this great knowledge.
Beautiful farm. I would love to hear your strategy with the cucumber beatles. Thanks
This was very helpful!! Thank you!!
I wish i could avoid bringing in compost but the former owners of my place stripped the topsoil clean off so im on subsoil as my top soil
Today in the morning i'm wacthing this video make me feel relex😁👍
I love it, The Matthew McConaughey of humour or humus on serious matters
I would love to see more of their operation and the layout of their grounds.
Can you do more information on the bacteria protozoa manufacturing for disease prevention?
wow! so interesting! Thanks for the content👍
Great video & loaded with helpful information. After the first ‘cook’ & you turn it, how / what do you add to get the pile to return to a ‘cook’ temp? I had success following the method you use, but after turning the pile (for the 2nd ‘cook’ it rarely gets over 90-120*.
We could add more chicken manure (from our flock), but does that throw-off the ratio of C:N?
How to get that second heat-up?
Thank you!
Very impressive Assawaga Farms!
City, small farmers trying to stay away from the chemicals, herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, fertilizers can make the second form of compost shown in the video. It's worm compost, essentially two or three bins, worms (red wigglers also called tiger worms, others specifically used for compost) , bedding which is often shredded wet paper, coco coir, and some soil from the garden. Additions are any leafy greens, vegetable, soft fruits like squash, melons apples etc. I prefer to remove the seeds after I used my vermiculture compost and literally had about 100 tomato seedlings show up.
I have my "worm farm" in the kitchen. No, it doesn't give off bad smells. NO animal products, those do make the bin stinky. I prefer not to add allium or citrus if only because allium have high sulphur, citrus, acids. Leaf mold adds fungi to the compost, for example.
i would love to know what course did they took :) thank you for this super interesting video!
Your job is great
Well done brother ❤
Great work and beautiful land folks ✌🏼💚 from Vermont 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 #foliarsprayeveryday
finding that using the green waste from garden to make compost that I then add back to the row where I will plant that same crop as I think that the nutrients needed by that crop is re-introduced into that row from the waste plants...
Love this video, very informative!
I think you should look into vermicomposting. It’s a natural weed suppressant.
Flea beetles … grow nasturtium nearby. Totally solved my problems with infestations.
to create wood compost start a willow or a fast grown bush patch and make your own wood ships
Love it. Thanks for the info.
Could the authors of this video give an indication as to how long before a small farm like about 3/4 acre practicing organic and no till growing generate a net profit to justify the efforts of two farmers?
cool . thanks for the free content.
Bug lights at night for fruit flies. I clean the bug light with a Q-tip rarely needed.
Hold up, is this the guy that caused the King of Tone waitlist to slow down to 6 years? 🤣Cool stuff, keep it up guys
What are your thoughts on this method? Should a tarp be part of the method under these conditions?
I use a hog wire cage for weed/grass, maple leaves and pine needles. I don’t have quite enough greens for the brown. The compost stays very wet due to the rain. Also, I can’t maintain the heat because I can only be there for a couple hours every other weekend. My solution is to add some dirt and worms to the mix in hopes to speed up the composting process.
Great video ! Can you share the source of your compost hand spreader that I saw in the video?
Would love to know what you used for the cucumber beetles!? Love the videos thank you!
Superb brilliant video. Any thoughts on crops to grow for composting, not cover crops. It's for the start of bed building. Moreton thesaurus pleasee. Many thanks
Higher nitrogen plants, clovers and comfrey. Two that come to mind for composting.
John Jeavons grows crops for composting biointensive method
I'm looking forward to seeing this new video.
I am a city gardener less than 1/4 of a wooded lot cleared and gardened for about 20 yrs. 10 years practicing humanure compost but I mostly did it to conserve water for gardening... After quite a few years I felt comfortable adding some old piles to fall prep and it is good to go for spring. Still my piles sit for 3-4 years before I use them. I also do anaerobic bucket ferments of anything really seedy or invasive. In 2020 I was introduced to ivermectin to deal with "the thing" only I don't do anything halfway I got into months long IVM use to sort of reset some health issues and I felt great but quit as I didn't feel it wise to regularly over control the natural flora/fauna . Here is the burn, now I hear from my favorite regenerative rancher that Ivermectin in cattle grazing is ruining the good-guys in the fields. Wha!!? So now I have 2 piles which I gather are considered equal to "persistant herbacides"? While not really herbicides I do see a lower worm population in the compost pile and I am bummed. So I guess those piles will get used on the edges of the yard. Anyone familiar with this dilema? Great show and LOVE what those two are doing...
The dilemma was caused by you self medicating. Yes what you took is used as horse and cattle dewormer. Only use on non edible plants, and parts of the soil youndon’t care about
You medicated yourself with something being pushed by an orange baffoon who thought injecting himself with bleach would protect him from a virus and now you're surprised that you contaminated your humanure pile.
IVM is actualy made by a soil microbe, I am sure it will decompose without causing any problems
Have you looked into Natural Korean Farming's methods of using the compost in a wet soil enhansment form?
👍 no smell piggery. Inocculated beddings with indigenous microorganisms (IMO). That's powerful stuff!
Loved this video so much. Would love to have your book as well. Cost of sending to New Zealand would be helpful though,??
Compost compost compost!!!
Mulch mulch mulch!!!
The absolute most important things to do when planting.
you should become the minister of agriculture!