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Menoken Farm
Приєднався 11 вер 2017
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If both heat up and u put relatively the same stuff in it. U don't turn it I guess but what makes something more fungal than bacterial
Why not inoculate it with edible mushrooms then? I understand what biodiversity means, but you can have more benefits from the bioreactor.
I would like someone knowledge to answer this question too.
Love hearing about your work and other successes in the world through biologic farming practices. Thank you to both of you❣️🙏❤️
27:00 Profit over yield, what is a plant made of?
The question at 1:33:44 is what I've always wondered about as well. Savory answers it so well! I've never heard him say that in any other talk!
What? A bong hit transplant? 😂😂😂 thanks. Make america inate again
The cows did an amazing job!!! 🤣 great video!!!
Are you currently using this method at Menoken Farm? I live in Bismarck and I am wondering how manageable this system is when it's -20f for weeks on end. Is it doable? Does the thermo mass in this design keep it sufficiently warm even in cold harsh conditions?
sound is not worth it.
Does he ever explain his planned grazing? I don’t think he ever answered that women’s question
OMG so humiliating, I always thought that was cow shit in a pasture not french pastry on dinner table. Really very interesting and helpful , you Mr. Judy are not typical. Thank you
Due to bad sound and child disturbing, i could watch 31 minutes only.
What is the best beef cattle you suggest for grass finished in Ontario
Why aren't the governments of every country touting this man to their citizens? Stop legislation, educate the citizenry, and let them start working on fixing this $h!t.
I am very proud to call you my Junior and a brother. Keep it up
Has anyone tried placing the bioreactor inside a greenhouse, if so what were the results?
Great stuff. Should be required reading for everyone-everywhere.
The bioreactors work I’ve built 7 piles in the last two years and I love adding a variety of different materials from soaked leaves and wood chips insect Frass kelp chicken bedding mixed with leaves and Wood chips bone and wood char fresh hay from the back yard variety of rock dust including gypsum and clay powder bokashi waste homade fish hydrolysate and fish waster EM1 leaf mold aged compost bamboo vinegar and for my next pile I’ll add IMO from a nearby forest to inoculate all the layers I age my piles for two years and I’m getting good results
There is NO AUDIO for the most recent Dan Kittredge interview you posted. I'd have left a comment there, but, you can't.
We done Gabe.
I've been trying to heat up my compost but it's not been working. 😮💨 I don't have manure so that might be the reason.
Restart the process again. Add 25% of any green foliage evenly throughout the mixture, (which Is the nitrogen content). Maintain 70% moisture. This should work.
Hui is a vulgar way of saying cock/dick in Russian.
Dont forget, if unfiltered city water kills the micro critters in the soil than it would make sense that it would do the same thing in our gut ! It shuld be the law to use a water filter .
15:30 Make sure it's got enough moisture. And whatever you do, DON'T LET IT DRY OUT, because if you let it dry out, YOU HAVE TO DO A REDO. Microbes will coat all the material with a HYDROPHOBIC SUBSTANCE, and you can't get water into it; they're protecting themselves.
Can you use a different nitrogen source than manure? Grass clippings for example
One question I have is, what do you do with the worms in the compost when you harvest it or make compost tea. Do you strain them out to use in the next one or what?
There it is. At about 14:20 I've been looking for the exact words by Dr Johnson that describes his opinion of the importance of fungi in healthy soil. It seems that his understanding of healthy soil, and in particular what is produced by the Johnson-Su bioreactor is defective. As part of the recommended process of the Johnson-Su bioreactor, worms are thrown into the pile as a last stage processing of the compost, but here's the catch... Worms are known to be voracious predators of bacteria, virus, single celled fauna and... fungi. Dr Johnson needs to more fully explain the dichotomy of the importance of fungi and promoting the consumption of fungi. Beneficial bacteria is a bit more understandable, consumption of bacteria can probably be explained away by the beneficial worm castings providing a superior breeding environment that produces a net positive growth of bacteria. But, fungi don't grow so quickly and it's common to see mold and various fungus disappear completely from worm bins. In general, practically everyone who has ever observed and studied soils have remarked that worms are a typically good sign of healthy soil so Dr. Johnson needs to resolve this issue in what he promotes... Does he favor worms or a mycelium network? You can't favor fungi if you promote worms that consume the fungi. Also, regarding the Johnson-Su bioreactor... I generally consider it a pretty common cold compost method, especially since it's recommended to run for a full year. That's compared to the proper hot compost method that requires only 90 days to produce compost of such high quality that the results are jet black, the color of pure carbon, and there is no indication what the original materials in the pile were. With a Johnson-Su bioreactor, after a period of time 4x longer you still see branches, twigs, fibrous strands and a medium tan color. Additionally, it seems to me that the cold compost time is mostly a waste, if the final worm stage is what really is producing the compost, then adding those worms should be done as soon as the pile cools below 90 degrees F from the initial thermophilic process which likely would be about 10 days after getting the pile started. The entire pile should probably be as ready in about 6 mths compared to the regular Johnson-Su steps which last an entire year.
from my understanding after the thermophillic stage a lot of the fungi will produce spores which lie dormant, these pass though worms, you can see them in the finished compost via microscopic analysis, if this is used as a feedstock for compost tea the spores germinate, again visible via microscopic analysis, but it is now common to use the compost as a feedstock for compost extract, the extract is applied in conjunction with fungal foods so rather than 'brew' a compost tea for 36-48hrs all the inputs are applied to the soil mixed in the extract at seed planting stage allowing the plants to feed the microbiology via root exodates. Hope that helps!
You can’t cure autism. I question this “doctors” credentials.
This guy says it soooo simple! Easy to understand, even for a thick-headed, stubborn old mule like me!
Gregg Judy sent me 👍🏻
Only heard about it while watching a Greg Judy Video. We are following all Regenerative Ag. attempts to improve Soil and water household in South Asia. Nice info looking forward the soil development
Can you tell me why you have to drill holes in the drainage pipes?
The idea is to introduce necessary air circulation into a "no turn" pile. Ordinarily hot compost piles need to be turned to introduce air into the center of the pile when an unturned pile has literally burned all the oxygen by aerobic bacteria. The Johnson-Su bioreactor is one design that attempts to avoid the hard manual work of turning by providing a way for fresh air to be introduced in the center of the pile.
@@tonysu8860 Yes, but you remove the pipes don't you, so why the holes?
@@andrewhague1521 the holes is just extra but not absolutely necessary
The pipes came with holes when we purchased them.
Allan Savory: "He advocated for slaughtering large numbers of elephants up until 1969 based on the idea that they were destroying their habitat.[16][17] His research, which he claims was validated by a committee of scientists, led to the government culling approximately 40,000 elephants in following years. However, this did not reverse the degradation of the land. He has called the decision to advocate for the slaughter of large numbers of elephants "the saddest and greatest blunder of my life."
At first I thought, okay it's just a composter that doesn't need turning. But this allows fungus network to set up as well to participate in the composting. Good stuff.
Any undisturbed compost pile will produce a fungi community. The Johnson-Su bioreactor is not special in creating the conditions for fungi.
i do not know that this is true - that no tillage operation benefits the soil. i actually totally disagree - there is a place for tillage to get there faster - grow great plants and your soil with be immediately helped in the right direction cos then your plants will give lots of carbon to the soil - i mean one does not have to wait 2, 3 years. there is a way to get immediate results, the first time one growns...blessings to all
You can till, then build biology, and then till less. But if you're a big acre farmer I see why it's harder to try something new.
Thank you Cal have a great day I love you bye
👍🏻
Agreed......when a farmer is on the road......hes not farming !
Can anyone tell me if the introduction of charcoal to this system would help or hinder the process if using the compost as an amendment?
Charcoal would only add risk to your compost pile, possibly making the pH alkaline. If you want more carbon in your compost, you can add more "browns"(dead material) in the beginning. The only issue is that normally the pile is somewhere between 50/50 to 60/40 greens to browns so that there is enough green to feed the bacteria that breaks down both greens and browns. If you add too much browns, then it might not get all broken down. The optimal result for any composting is that you can't identify what you put in the pile in the first place.
Can I add shrimp shells & guts from wild caught shrimp?
المواد اليش تخفوها مواد تخمير
Does a harsh cold winter affect this process?
No. The thermophilic bacteria will generate sufficient heat no matter what the ambient temperature is if the pile is large enough to provide its own insulation to prevent heat loss. But mind you that I personally feel the Johnson-Su bioreactor is fundamentally insufficient to create good compost so I wouldn't be happy with the results whether the weather was favorable or not.
Yes, it will. Please keep it above freezing and around 70% moisture content. Happy composting!
@@davidjohnson1910 So this can or cannot be done efficiently in a harsh North Dakota winter? Where can one find information on how to do this in -20f winters? How to keep it moist in sub zero? Is this system only for climates that don't experience harsh winters?
Great Pyrenees dont know the difference between 5 acres and 500 acres. Cant stand them.
I live in a tropical area, the majority of the trees on the property are palms, I would like to stop taking the fronds to the tip, where they mulch them, and take care of them myself onsite, I've got roughly 200 palms and take a 8x5x4 trailer to the tip every 3 weeks, so plenty of material. Any tips for breaking this material down. Hi from Broome, Western Australia.
Use a woodchipper or if you've got a tractor with a P.T.O and 3 point linkage look around for a BED FORMING PLOW, you can mulch it all very fast using this method without digging deep at all.
A woodchipper won't work, palm fronds are too fibrous. I've seen nothing except a proper hot compost pile decompose fibrous materials like palm fronds, and it can be done well. A hot compost pile works because it achieves sustained temperatures just under boiling for weeks. The Johnson-Su bioreactor doesn't do that so won't break down those palm fronds.
Have you try using a crushing shredder?
Whether you farm/ranch or not, everyone should listen to Greg, Gabe, Ray, etc. to obtain a wealth of knowledge on how our planet is being destroyed by monocultural plantings; isn't the "environmental movement" basically about the overabundance of carbon in the air. All of these issues, carbon in the air, lack of moisture in the aquafers, and soil health is solved by these basic natural principles. MOTHER NATURE KNOWS BEST.
You are a big picture rancher. You have all the disciplines covered to efficiently produce livestock. From animal health and efficiency to controlling quallity of grazing and other feeds. You understanding and improving soils is just an important part of this.
Thank You Sir Judy!
Doesn't Greg make you feel better about life and America? Better than a whole herd of politicians.
Love this! It’s great to see the kids on the farm and learning about nutrition as well 👍🏻
I noticed some ground that we rented and be around Circle were they crop really did well. When I asked my dad what he thought it was he would say that's must be where they had the the old straw pile butts. And it was just all over the farm like that
Great information!