CedarTrailsLiving
CedarTrailsLiving
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Making a Martial Arts Bo Staff with Hand Tools
I experimented with making a bo staff using a draw knife and plane. The plane worked best and I developed a technique to get the taper to be uniform.
This approach could be used for a variety of tapers both round and square.
Переглядів: 95

Відео

Worm Farming: 1 Year Later
Переглядів 12 тис.5 місяців тому
In this video I talk about how I got started with worm farming and why. The system has grown and is very low maintenance but that wasn't always the case. It has been great to put our food waste to good use and I look forward to brewing worm tea and enhancing out garden productivity all thanks to a colony of hungry worms. I hope you enjoy.
Building a New Worm Bin
Переглядів 59510 місяців тому
After raising worms (vermicomposting) for about a year, it was time to build them a larger home. I tried some new woodworking methods to get some practical experience for future projects.
Episode 73: Biltmore Wood Burning Fireplace and Chimney Installation
Переглядів 568Рік тому
We are installing a 36" Biltmore wood burning fireplace insert which is the largest we could fit since we have a steel column to work around. We ordered this from Woodland Direct and had a great experience with them. They were very helpful in planning the chimney and helping me get all the dimensions correct. I lined the chase with Mineral Wool insulation which was no easy task. It looks great ...
Milling a Salvaged Cherry Log
Переглядів 353Рік тому
I took a trip up to Crescent City (about an hour north) to pick up a cherry log. I ended up with 1x8x6 boards out of the cant. It has beautiful wood grain and I can't wait until it's dry enough to put through the planer. Now we wait... Thanks to someone in the Woodland Mills Facebook group for suggesting 2 in PVC pipe over the log stops to help with rolling logs. I gave it a try and although th...
Side Project: Putting the Machines to Work Planting Cedar Trees
Переглядів 65Рік тому
We put the Bobcat 325 and Bobcat 753 to work clearing vines that are smothering out the native scrub. Then I put the Ford 2000 and Ford 8n to work smoothing out the land. Then back to the excavator for planting some trees. We have a great time playing with our toys.
Aquapeutics Heated Massage Tub Arrives
Переглядів 322Рік тому
We ordered a heated massage tub now in our process so that we have all the details for installation like valves, drains, and power requirements. This tub can be a standalone but we will be removing the sides and framing in around it. We decided on a heated massage tub because hot tubs require a lot of maintenance and we will likely not use it often and without the heating element, the water in ...
Tough Cut: Sawing Red Cedar Storm Tree
Переглядів 185Рік тому
This was a very irregular shaped tree. I did the best I could and got a few real beautiful boards out of it. Now I just need to think up a project to put them to good use.
First Wood Project with Milled Wood: Standing Desk Build
Переглядів 37Рік тому
I took on my first project using wood I milled on my HM130Max Sawmill. These were southern yellow pine logs and are the pith boards from the logs. I didn't have a lot of spare time so I rushed on the building of the legs and feet. I also didn't film as much as I wanted to but I do talk about what I learned using milled wood and hand planing. The rest of the story... I cut down the sides and con...
Episode 72: Plumbing Supply and Pressure Testing
Переглядів 273Рік тому
I plumbed the supply line for the house into the well using a garden hose adapter. This allowed me to test the lines with actual water line pressure instead of doing an air test. The only leaks on the pressure side were from valves that were open. On the drain side I didn't glue one fitting and I had trouble with the toilet flanges. Next episode I will build shower walls and try to build a show...
Hurricane Ian Hits: Wind Damage and Rain
Переглядів 63Рік тому
See how our Worldwide Steel house held up to tropical storm force winds. The pond fills up with all the rain and we lose power after a few trees take out the power lines.
Hurricane Prep: Taking Care of Leaning Trees as a Family.
Переглядів 260Рік тому
We had some trees leaning toward some of our cedar trees and one towards the neighbors house. Hurricane season is nearing so we wanted to get these taken care of. We had the whole crew working and quite a few machines in action. Using our Woodland Mills WC68 chipper and the old Ford 2000, we filled a good bit of the dump trailer with chips and put them around some of the bushes we recently plan...
Episode 71: Plumbing Drains and Vents with Some Demolition
Переглядів 91Рік тому
In this episode we are transitioning into plumbing phase. We are venting all the drains into a single stack at the peak of the trusses. We hired out the underground plumbing but did all the above ground work ourselves. We needed to make some minor modifications. The shower drain was missing a trap and we weren't sure about putting the drain right against the wall so we broke out some slab and m...
Episode 70: Block Wall for Electrical Service
Переглядів 762 роки тому
Building the service wall where we will relocate our meter for the existing house and eventually feed power to the new house. This will eventually become a well house and location for future generator if we ever decide to add one. I am terrible at laying block but there is only one way to get good at something...do more of it.
1970 Ford 2000 Running WC68 Woodland Mills PTO Chipper
Переглядів 3092 роки тому
Watch this WC68 Woodland Mills chipper chew through some oak branches behind my 1970 Ford 2000. The tractor has 31 PTO HP and doesn't have any trouble chipping 3 in branches. Anything bigger than that we use for firewood. If you've been thinking about buying a chipper, I also talk about the usefulness of features and why you might consider buying a chipper like this for your needs.
Sawmill Lumber Rack Build
Переглядів 8752 роки тому
Sawmill Lumber Rack Build
Landscaping and Clearing Land
Переглядів 822 роки тому
Landscaping and Clearing Land
Episode 69: Building Sturdy Railing Walls
Переглядів 762 роки тому
Episode 69: Building Sturdy Railing Walls
Episode 68: More Interior Framing
Переглядів 1232 роки тому
Episode 68: More Interior Framing
Building a Rock Garden for Our House Entry
Переглядів 462 роки тому
Building a Rock Garden for Our House Entry
Saw Milling a Tree Hit by Lightning and Full of Pine Beetles
Переглядів 6512 роки тому
Saw Milling a Tree Hit by Lightning and Full of Pine Beetles
Tool Tips: Magnetic Bit Holders and Free Bits
Переглядів 7062 роки тому
Tool Tips: Magnetic Bit Holders and Free Bits
Potting Cedar Sprouts
Переглядів 332 роки тому
Potting Cedar Sprouts
Building a dream...house.
Переглядів 4452 роки тому
Building a dream...house.
Episode 67: Finishing our Certainteed Insulated Siding
Переглядів 6192 роки тому
Episode 67: Finishing our Certainteed Insulated Siding
Episode 66: Siding Layout Tips and Electrical Trim Details
Переглядів 762 роки тому
Episode 66: Siding Layout Tips and Electrical Trim Details
Horizontal Lap Siding on Woodland Mills HM130Max
Переглядів 13 тис.2 роки тому
Horizontal Lap Siding on Woodland Mills HM130Max
Finally Sawing Old Pine Logs on the Woodland Mills HM130Max
Переглядів 4,9 тис.2 роки тому
Finally Sawing Old Pine Logs on the Woodland Mills HM130Max
Sawing Mystery Logs and Why Banding Wet Wood Doesn't Work
Переглядів 7272 роки тому
Sawing Mystery Logs and Why Banding Wet Wood Doesn't Work
Episode 65: Still More Siding...
Переглядів 832 роки тому
Episode 65: Still More Siding...

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @scottdillard1764
    @scottdillard1764 5 днів тому

    What size was the nut on the rod

  • @jbreawilliams4507
    @jbreawilliams4507 17 днів тому

    New to the hobby looks very interesting from South Carolina was thinking about doing this for fun do you keep your worms outside because I was looking to do an outside barrel was wondering if the heat or the cold will kill them outside do to me living in South Carolina And do you have to use table scraps or can I use uncle Jim’s worm food only

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Welcome to the hobby. SC will be a bit different climate but my brother is in NC and he has a small bin that I believe he just put under his house in the crawl space and they made it through the winter. If you need to keep it a little warmer, you can buy seed starter mats that would probably work great. I tried them out but probably didn't need them. For summer here, I believe shade all day is the key. I keep mine under a roof. If we have hot dry stretch of days then I keep an eye on the moisture and I avoid rain here (we have some heavy downpours) to avoid too much moisture. I feed scraps since that was the goal and although I do feed them the worm food too, I'm not entirely sure what all is in there. I was worried about minerals and additives they were not getting from the food scraps. Since they will even consume rotting paper or wood, I'm sure they would survive but not sure if they would thrive. I hope that helps. Thanks for watching and for the comment.

    • @jbreawilliams4507
      @jbreawilliams4507 17 днів тому

      @@CedarTrailsLiving thanks so much good to know the info given can’t wait to start

  • @cwallcw
    @cwallcw 19 днів тому

    You guys know that worms don’t have mouths and don’t eat that food, right? Like ur allll just pranking me. It’s ALL done by microorganisms, they power the whole of life. Silly primates.

  • @kirbyn2010
    @kirbyn2010 22 дні тому

    Excellent, thank you! I always removed the cylinder but your way is better.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Glad to have helped. I have done quite a few cylinders now on different machines and it always seems easier to use the machine and pin to hold things like the rod or cylinder. Wish I would have started doing it sooner. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @timmcilraith8762
    @timmcilraith8762 29 днів тому

    Do you think that adding biochar or yeast to the food scraps or the soil helps the worms ?

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      As an amateur that is a question way out of my league. I have started adding calcium dust that I make from egg shells since I was worried about them having enough grit in their gut. I also purchased some worm food which I understand helps them with other necessary nutrients and minerals but I'm not sure I have seen any significant difference in populations as a result. Sorry I couldn't help. Thank you for watching and for taking the time to comment.

    • @timmcilraith8762
      @timmcilraith8762 17 днів тому

      Thanks for answering. I will trial some different feed spots and see what happens.

  • @mp-zf4ur
    @mp-zf4ur Місяць тому

    I have 4 containers and hundreds of thousands of worms because I just empty and mix stuff in from my juicer + dry leaves. Im thinking I can just cut some big holes in the bottom and stack the containers and let them migrate but I need their p00 :D

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      I tried that method without success. I stacked the bins with large holes in the bottom and only fed on the top bin. I still had a large population of worms that just stayed in the bottom bins. Even today, only feeding on one side I still have hundreds of worms on the non-feeding side when I sift for castings. Some worms must not like to venture too far from home. Thank you for watching and for the comment.

  • @alihamdouchi
    @alihamdouchi Місяць тому

    Can you please tell me what is the part # for the seal kit 🙏 am having a hard time getting it off line Thanks a bunch

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving Місяць тому

      Go to the Bobcat parts website. You can put in your serial number and make sure you get the right one. Let me know if that helps.

  • @BillsCountrysideAdventures
    @BillsCountrysideAdventures Місяць тому

    14.19 voice over seems weird

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Yes, sorry about that. After trying to fix it for over 4 hours I gave up. It sounded fine in the editor and every time I rendered the video it came out messed up.

  • @JustMakinDoFarms
    @JustMakinDoFarms 2 місяці тому

    Great set up. Thanks for info.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Thank you for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @plmbtired
    @plmbtired 2 місяці тому

    No holes in the lid

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 2 місяці тому

      Good question. The boards don't cover the whole bed so the end is open. The shower curtain is also short so lets air in from the end. The boards helped keep the racoons from getting in there until I can make a proper lid. Thanks for watching.

  • @lesondra3127
    @lesondra3127 3 місяці тому

    I love your soil bedding method. It seems like you have better casting results with less debris (shredded cardboard). Bc as we all know, the most challenging thing for vermicomposters is harvesting castings.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 2 місяці тому

      Thank you. I will admit, I would not feel comfortable selling them as pure castings but since I use the castings for planting and in the garden, this method is acceptable. Thanks for the comment and for watching.

  • @haroldgray5811
    @haroldgray5811 3 місяці тому

    Do you have freezing temps in winter?

    • @laurelpickens3364
      @laurelpickens3364 3 місяці тому

      I do. We live at 6k feet in western Montana. My compost pile, really just a pile of spent mushroom strata and is covered with snow all winter long, maintains a worm population year round. The worms in bins stay in the heated bath house, 50°F or better, through the winter.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 2 місяці тому

      Thank you for the reply. Great to hear about other climates. Here in FL we didn't even get a hard freeze this year so they stayed warm. If we do dip into the 40's it is for a very brief time and in the day we are usually back up into the 60-70 degree range. For us I generally worry more about the heat. It has been very hot and humid this year and this is the first year they are out in the open. So far there is so much material in the bed that it seems to regulate the temp well and much of our "heat" is from the humidity and the "feels like" factor.

  • @anakronistical1
    @anakronistical1 3 місяці тому

    Great video! I'm looking to get started with worm farming and I'm also in Florida. I was curious about how they handle the heat. What are your thoughts on doing a large, in-ground bin rather than a raised bin? I was wondering if that might help regulate the temperature in the environment better (along with shade).

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 2 місяці тому

      Thanks for the question. This is my first summer so I am in the "gaining experience" phase on this topic but so far with it under covering and in the shade it seems to be regulating well. I think having a lot of material helps and we only hit into 90's for a bit until the rain sets in and cools it off a bit. Based on my past experience with ground composting I always struggled with fire ants. I treat the legs of the bed with spray if I see any ants building mounds near the base and it keeps them out of the bin. Fire ants are a huge problem. I had them get into a bin on the ground once and they chewed the worms in half. I had to keep treating the top layer of the bed with DE and after a few days the ants vacated the bin. After that I kept them on a table. Hope this helps and good luck and thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.

    • @anakronistical1
      @anakronistical1 2 місяці тому

      @@CedarTrailsLiving That makes sense. I hadn't even thought about fire ants. I haven't seen any around the yard, but I know they're in the area (we're in Ocala). It probably does make sense to move to something aboveground then. I've got a small greenhouse (just a metal frame with a white plastic cover, really) that I can use. It gets really warm in there, but maybe adding frozen water bottles and freezing the food will help regulate temp in the container. Something to work toward anyway! Thanks and I appreciate the insight!

  • @charlesdougherty7128
    @charlesdougherty7128 3 місяці тому

    What color is the siding? Nice color we are trying to pick out colors now. Going between a blue or gray color.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 2 місяці тому

      It was labeled Flagstone. Turns out, it's almost a direct match of the basic Rustoleum Gray Primer. We chose this in case it does fade, we wouldn't likely notice it as much.

  • @victorm7274
    @victorm7274 3 місяці тому

    FYI: the worms eat bacteria. Bacteria eat sugar. Bacteria love banana and melon. and which is why the worm are on food that have high content of sugar.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Agree entirely. I also feel like softer foods break down faster so they favor those. They cluster in old avocados too. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @christaylor7539
    @christaylor7539 3 місяці тому

    This was the most honest and matter of fact video, THANK YOU

  • @wt455
    @wt455 3 місяці тому

    My bucket keeps slowly dropping. Would this be because of the tilt cylinder?

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving Місяць тому

      It could be but in my experience, when the internal seals go bad it leaks oil out the wipers since they don't do anything to hold back fluid. The other possible culprits might be leaking hose from the controls or depending on the model, the valves at the controls. Even after the rebuild, mine will very slowly drift down so it is probably in the valve part.

  • @robintan6489
    @robintan6489 3 місяці тому

    I just use a pvc pipe with badminton racket grips in the the middle...

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      The grips are probably nice. These were for my son's karate place so I tried to match them to the other staffs they have so that all the kids have similar staffs. Thanks for the idea and for taking the time to watch and comment.

  • @MississippiPrepper
    @MississippiPrepper 3 місяці тому

    Do they not get too hot in the summer months? It gets up to 100 degrees here in the summer. I would love to have an outdoor bin, but I dont think they would survive.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      This will be my first summer in this bin. So far we have hit 96 but it usually stays cooler in the shade so I have them under a roof. I did start adding moisture more often since it dries out faster lately. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.

  • @freshstart5804
    @freshstart5804 3 місяці тому

    Can you tell me what you do for marketing for sale

  • @yokechan2765
    @yokechan2765 3 місяці тому

    great teaching

  • @rodsredwormsgrubs8098
    @rodsredwormsgrubs8098 3 місяці тому

    Excellent, excellent. The more you do, the bigger it grows! You're doing it youngster. I made mine out my final worm bins out of old deep freezers called CFT's. I also stated w eggs or cocoons! Now I'm back in the game! I now breed over 80 species of arthropods! I use the arthropods to grow vegetables! I am the Bug/Farmer! I am Black Soldier Fly Man! I'm Domu!

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 17 днів тому

      Funny you mention the BSF. I had a pretty heavy infestation of those in my worm bin so I had to learn about them recently. They seem to be a popular method for composting and I can see why. Those things eat a ton! I just let them run their course since they didn't hurt anything. I'd say they are more aggressive feeders in the bin so the worms were not on the food that the BSF were eating but since they don't eat worms and my goal is to compost food it was fine. Thank you for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @rdraffkorn3184
    @rdraffkorn3184 3 місяці тому

    i too had failed to keep worms alive. twice lol ... then i figured out i live in the south and they don't like the summer heat. I needed a larger bin (half a 55 gallon plastic drum ) and they've been doing good for two years now. they are outside sheltered from the sun but have screened drain holes on each end. I compost my food scraps to get rid of the initial heat of decomposition (important in the summer) then use that as food and bedding. though i feed some azomite and dried molasses to help out. recently that the weather is warm i get a five gallon bucket of castings that i sift from each bin. (i have six now ) The garden is doing better this year too for all the castings applied but i'm still working on that. thanks for the video .

  • @danmcdonald3270
    @danmcdonald3270 3 місяці тому

    I rebuilt mine because was leaking out the rod but now don’t leak anymore but drifts off real bad so assume I’ll have to pull back off n check piston seal

  • @taomaserve7825
    @taomaserve7825 3 місяці тому

    ive been stealing ideas in the process of making one myself. Just a quick tip, a drill and jig saw would save you time on the corners and back end. my anxiety when in overdrive watching you do it with a chisel lol..... Nice work!!!

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      Very true. I have been trying to so more woodworking with hand tools and testing out techniques on things where it wouldn't be terrible if I messed something up. In this case I tried to follow grain slightly in from my cut line and then shave down to the line. It worked pretty well but I would only feel good using it on rough projects. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @dmbrookfield
    @dmbrookfield 4 місяці тому

    I put all my food through a blender and just pour it in, everything goes in tea bags coffee ground all the waste food, it all goes so much quicker as the worms I believe find it easy to eat it all, I started my worm bin about the size of 1 ton bag added some old compost and went round the garden and picked up worms and 6 months later I went back and there were a a load of worms and then I started feeding them. This winter I added a themomiter to see how cold the now 2 bins I've got went and they never went below 12 degrees and they kept munching away. And voila I'm not buying compost anymore.. Great work there :)

    • @lena_4466
      @lena_4466 3 місяці тому

      You give me hope to tie in my garden & worming through winter months. Thanks for sharing!

  • @kissdirt
    @kissdirt 4 місяці тому

    I’m going on a year and over half… Experimenting… My worms eat everything meat dairy everything…

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      Thanks for the comment. I have seen other videos where people have fed them everything. I guess anything that can break down naturally, they can eat.

  • @roywarriner8441
    @roywarriner8441 4 місяці тому

    They do self regulate and if you are only processing your own waste and getting all the castings you need, you want a stable population, castings finish much faster if the worms aren't producing cocoons. Throw the lid away and cover the bin with landscape fabric instead. The worms can breath and keeps gnats and flies out. Compost the food first.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      Thanks for the comment. I used to just put a sheet over them but I have to be careful about animals getting into the bin since it's outside. Long term I want to build a lid with mesh but that part of the project is still in queue.

  • @regenerativelifewayne
    @regenerativelifewayne 4 місяці тому

    Nice video

  • @agentredhasretired5450
    @agentredhasretired5450 4 місяці тому

    My red wigglers LOVE carrots. Chop them up in a blender so they are small and soft. The worms will be happy. Thanks for all the great information.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      Great tip. My dad has been juicing and bringing me the carrot pulp. They seems to enjoy it. Thank you watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @funkybongo00
    @funkybongo00 4 місяці тому

    Don't know if it's just my phone but audio is jumbled around the 14 minutes mark for a little section , appreciate the video man , thank you !

    • @WD-41469
      @WD-41469 4 місяці тому

      Yep

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 3 місяці тому

      Sorry about that. I thought it was the editor but I think it was the camera or file and I couldn't fix it.

  • @timcoates3821
    @timcoates3821 4 місяці тому

    Leaves are a great bedding. But you don't need to soak them just wet them a bit. European night crawlers are a better worm for fishing

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 4 місяці тому

      Thanks for the tip. Funny you mentioned the night crawlers because everyone that likes fishing complains that my red wigglers are too small. I don't fish very often but I feed all our house food to these so the worms are perfect for my application. Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.

  • @hortusandersgarten3574
    @hortusandersgarten3574 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for this video. It is very interesting and exciting. I learnt a lot. Best regards, Gitta

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 4 місяці тому

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.

  • @tlnelson7598
    @tlnelson7598 4 місяці тому

    freeze the carrot first, it works for me

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 4 місяці тому

      Thanks for the tip. I cooked them in a crock pot last time I had some and that worked well too. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @mattrobinson6594
    @mattrobinson6594 4 місяці тому

    very good video......fall leaves (maple,oak) soaked in water for 24/48 hours then drained good makes a very good bedding for worms. the minerals in the leaves from the roots going deep into the soil make your garden veggies taste so much better. hope someone enjoys this tip.

    • @lena_4466
      @lena_4466 3 місяці тому

      Thanks for posting this. We're learning to live with all of these leaves & I asked my husband for the leaves out of the vacuum. I did just what you said & covered it with moist newspaper and cardboard. They seem very happy & as a first-timer, you've helped confirm my technique. Thanks!!! Happy worming!!!

    • @mattrobinson6594
      @mattrobinson6594 3 місяці тому

      @@lena_4466 i forgot to mention using some kind of Grit, worms have gizzards like birds. i crush washed eggshells and its worked for me for years. i also add sand

    • @lena_4466
      @lena_4466 3 місяці тому

      @@mattrobinson6594 yes, thanks. I've tossed in some old potting mix, along with a light shovel of our gritty, gravelly pile of dirt. I've also threw in some crushed oats I didn't eat before they became stale tasting, egg shells, etc. Another thing I'm learning & will leave here in case it's of help to anyone else is that they've loved the banana peels I've added after breaking them down/cutting up. Shredded paper, etc... along with my fruit/veg scraps and other compostable goods. Tried to balance moisture & brown/greens. Lastly, threw in a handful of castings generously gifted to us for our gardening this year. Hoping for the best but it looks like it's working & I am grateful for this community. I hope to get the hang of this, in order to build up the soil & growing mediums around our new home. We had a large, productive garden in the past. Our soil now needs some loving. Worms are going to help. I believe I'm working my way up towards 1000+ worms in my bin... Goal: build my population to sustainable numbers in garden & collecting castings. I've also loved working with our young child with the worms, love how it peaks their attention & interest in the garden. Thanks for the relatable video. Thanks for sharing your success & promoting the community. Just do it!

  • @rhondamontiel3827
    @rhondamontiel3827 4 місяці тому

    Frozen foods also break down much faster as if cooked.

  • @NanasWorms
    @NanasWorms 4 місяці тому

    Looks like you found the right system and feeding regime. My largest system is a converted children's turtle shaped sandbox. I harvest it all at once after the worms have worked through the the material. My other systems include indoor totes, a four tray stacking system and in ground garden worm towers. ~ Sandra

  • @frednobles2485
    @frednobles2485 4 місяці тому

    I've watched a bunch of UA-cam about worm compost and really I don't think any of them help me but I learned a lot from this one I think I can do it now really appreciate it

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 4 місяці тому

      Glad to have helped. It's easier than one might think.

  • @bch9124
    @bch9124 5 місяців тому

    As a kid living on a busy street, I had an earthworm farm that I would utilize to sell by the dozen to fisherfolks. It was a fun hobby that netted me some money for '80s-era entertainment. Thank you for reminding me of a fond memory!

  • @eholmberg
    @eholmberg 5 місяців тому

    Worms are invasive to most of North America and will mess with the soil PH levels, affect tree production and have negative impact on the native animals. Please do not release into the ground.

  • @MasterBuilderofTruth
    @MasterBuilderofTruth 5 місяців тому

    I just shat myself

  • @MartinEngelbrecht-ey3rl
    @MartinEngelbrecht-ey3rl 5 місяців тому

    I had very similar containers, ended with a big plywood box, much bigger space, my worms are also small.

  • @genewileyopa
    @genewileyopa 5 місяців тому

    Interesting.

  • @mandmmilling3716
    @mandmmilling3716 5 місяців тому

    Your mill head needs to be turned 180 on the track. Your band should be cutting towards the stops, not the clamps.

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 5 місяців тому

      You are correct. This was my temporary setup until I could build a home for it. In the more recent videos you can see the mill in it's new home and it is oriented properly. Thanks for watching and for taking the time to comment.

  • @airesrebelo6242
    @airesrebelo6242 6 місяців тому

    A minha não desbloqueia os hidraulicos, fica com a luz tilf a piscar e por vezes apagada, já nao sei mais o que fazer

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 6 місяців тому

      I'm not a proper mechanic and not sure which machine you have but check all the lock switches and fuses. There is the lap bar that has to be down, the parking brake, the green button in the cab. I had a fuse go out once that disabled my aux hydraulics. That is in a little box in the back as you open the door. Also check the wiring under the cab where the manifold is. That assumes electrical issue but otherwise check for pressure from the pump and make sure fluid level is good inside the tank. There may be a leak somewhere. Hope this gives you some ideas. Good luck.

    • @airesrebelo6242
      @airesrebelo6242 6 місяців тому

      @@CedarTrailsLiving Thank you very much for responding!

  • @airesrebelo6242
    @airesrebelo6242 6 місяців тому

    🤙

  • @jss_in_2024
    @jss_in_2024 6 місяців тому

    I gotta know, are you finished with it?!

    • @CedarTrailsLiving
      @CedarTrailsLiving 6 місяців тому

      Not yet...I'm behind on videos. Just finished HVAC Rough In. Before we cover it all up with insulation I will be doing a video or series on the frame and system.

  • @OffGrit
    @OffGrit 7 місяців тому

    we have a lot in common, just different weather. I watched some of your videos of the building trusses and a few others. I am finishing a stem wall on a 2000 sq ft lean to style steel frame building that I have mostly fabricated and the biggest challenge are the 40+ ft steel trusses that I am fabricating. the lifting was hard to figure out because I am building mostly solo and it is tricky. I ended up welding a couple cranes that will sit on top of the uprights and using remote control hoists to raise the truss from both sides.... we will see how it works, I am testing on a smaller solar carport first to put it to the test with 20 ft trusses. anyways thanks for the videos-

  • @Devoneakapimp
    @Devoneakapimp 7 місяців тому

    What size are the purlins? I plan on installing metal purlins very soon on a pole barn

  • @wyominghome4857
    @wyominghome4857 7 місяців тому

    I wish you showed more of the insert itself. I have one of these in my new house and it smokes like crazy, even with the window cracked. The interior of the insert where the fire brick panels are looks flimsy and misaligned and I don't know whether it's the installer or the manufacturer.