I’m a big fan of Korean natural farming. I read a book about it a few years ago and learned how fermenting all foods in liquid creates various pesticides and fertilizers for plants…. Dairy, fish, fruits, vege, even meat and bones and of course manure and compost… each produce various beneficial bacteria for the soil. I’ve now made a larger compost tea brewer to make tea at scale incorporating these methods and am finding success. Thanks for interviewing this farmer and broadcasting these methods!!
The most impressive part of this interview was the generosity of this man. He and his father developed the method and rather than be motivated to profit from this, he is sharing it with the world. Same for his natural pesticide formulations. Successful yet humble, something that is not often seen these days. People want to share, but only for a price. Makes you wonder what their true motivation is, helping others, or enriching themselves.
This is very interesting information. I was recently thinking after watching many gardening videos on UA-cam how expensive growing one’s own food can be. So glad I found this video ‼️Thank you🙏
Thanks for sharing this exciting organic system and the man (and family) with the goal of expanding organic gardening on a large scale. Hopefully this system can catch on here in the US and around the world.
We need these concepts here in Brazil, the food production here is disgusting, even small farmers use chemicals in their gardens, I hope I can bring these methods, I'm very amazed with these methods.
i know when i was volunteering in a small natural farm a local told me every time he bought veggie from market he soaked them in water for 30 mins before even consider cooking or eating them
I'll be working to incorporate this method this year. Can't wait to see the results. My biggest issue with no till has been grubs. I find I have too many grubs not to dig them out maybe twice a year. I'm buying some nematodes to see if I can get a better handle on it and not have to dig up my beds. Thanks for the video!
This is fascinating! Steven, it is so wonderful to showcase a technique or style like this! I am curious and want to know more! How about a Jadam Organic Farming book give away contest?
Yes I hope to show a lot more of the Korean methods and even others around the world. That's a great idea Jeannie, once he gets the book back in stock I'll have to do that!
Thank you for posting this awesome video, it's wonderful to see how many natural options we have for gardening/farming, the fact that ppl like this man go through all the painstaking trials & errors so that we can all benefit from this method without all the sacrifices is such a bonus for all of us. Thank you
Love this bro! Thanks for sharing this I'll definitely be incorporating some JADAM principles into my garden. Also just wanted to say thanks for all your vids brother it's been inspirational to me and beneficial to my little garden. I even built a coop and got chickens because of your setup. Shalom!
I'm interested as well. I find that by merely applying thick mulch around my young fruit trees, in my case pecan shells are the only woody mulch available, I'm seeing fungi begin deep down when I dig my hands in and it's only been down since spring. We've no topsoil (yet!) in the orchard area because of prior unwise farming strategies of previous owners. Terribly alkaline, sticky heavy clay with no organic matter left. I'm planting trees using Ellen White method, and brewing microbes to add to my watering solution.
Thanks for adding to his voice . I want to have this in my farm and my country. How do we get the product in Nigeria . I have requested for it I can help move the products to other farmers here . I like those who are liberal with the idea God bless them with. I want them to also benefit from that. God bless you.
I garden in SIP containers. Is there a way to incorporate this style with the soil in my containers? Should I plant less plants in them with this method and get more yeald per plant? The pestasides will be extremely useful.
JADAM is a very good way to cultivate organic, but sintropic agroforest is the future! And JADAM can be used in all the harvest of agroforests, improving more microorganisms in the system and creating a forest soil.
Excellent video! Thanks for posting. Ever since I watched your video I have been reading about JADAM and I am waiting on his book to become available again on Amazon. Have you considered a collaboration with him for some English versions of his videos? I have the subtitles on, but several show documentation slides still in Korean. Thanks again and I can’t wait to learn enough to start using this practice!
His son has been translating a lot of his lectures on his youtube channel. I'll be going back to visit him to make videos with him and I'll be doing how to JADAM on my new farm.
In my area of the south I have very heavy alkaline clay soil. I am so interested in these methods but I struggle with the no till especially in first establishing beds ... I’m still researching
I have all my supplies for the jadam sulfur spray and jadam wetting agent and plan to make them in the next week or two. I do have to admit that I’ve been a little apprehensive because I’m urban farming and needed to reduce the quantities quite a bit. I am hopeful I have reduced them accurately but it would be so great if someone would make a video with measurements for a 5 gallon batch. Hinty hint hint 😂🙏
So awesome you are taking the plunge, I'm sure you got it, test it out on a small area if you are worried. Will be doing a lot of JADAM content in the future for sure ;)
Haley G, for 5 gallons, just divide the amounts by 5. .4 pound is 6.4 oz, Divided by 5 is 1.26 oz. I would round things up a bit to make it much easier to do the math. Enjoy.
I can’t wait to see you implementing these things in your new local. I love your videos and would never normally say this, but when you describe the beyond organic pest solutions on your farm (basically having very healthy plants and nothing else, right?) i think to myself that that would never work where I live (Georgia) or at a large scale. I try to use bt, neem, and spinosad very sparingly and responsibly when I do use them, but I end up using a lot of row covers and insect netting to thwart our various pests, and some things are just a loss. I think I may have even discovered new pests! I have a ground cherry worm I can’t find info on on any county extension resource page! Anyway, I get torn about how much plastic all the row covers are and I try to be a good steward of them to prolong their use before they make their way to the landfill. Anyway, I would love responsible AND effective pesticides that would reduce my plastic use. I’ll keep watching and using the netting for now and you work out a foolproof pesticide system for those of us in the south😉 My biggest problems that you will probably see in Tennessee are squash vine bores, Mexican bean beetles and pickle worms. Oh and earwigs in winter crops. There are others but they are less problematic.
Yes I agree, growing in San Diego is one of the easiest places to grow in the world. I still stand by the methods I talked about for pest control but it's all about context, what I did is the foundation but more may be necessary of course. That's why I'm so excited about implementing JADAM and hope it can really help us in areas that do need to use pesticides and fungicides now and again. Especially at scale and in monoculture.
Mr Gabbo, at the rate the JMS is diluted, I don't think it would have much affect on the soil pH. It should help blueberries grow since it is really feeding the soil microorganisms. Try it and see.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight What a family :) by the way, it would be great if you could maybe make some videos about the differences and similarities between the JADAM and KNF
@@parriska Plus you can add in extracts from herbs or plants around your area that those bugs don't go after. I have a lot of hope that these techniques will revolutionize organic ag especially large scale.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight for sure. Not much but conventional corn and soybeans around here. It's hard convincing someone to try a completely different approach to their livelihood, but somebody needs to try it. I'm sure someone can spare 5 acres outta their couple thousand 🤷
@@parriska Well I'm gonna approach them and offer to give them the profit they would have made up front. I already know a couple farmer's in other states willing to let me experiment. This year is about taking my knowledge to the next level so I can do something like this and document it.
Very cool! I skipped your other video on KNF but I'm glad to find out what a mistake that was. I am going to repent and watch it today_ also go to his website. This is very interesting. 😃
That's so cool you got to meet him man! How do you think his microbe tea stacks up against a normal compost tea? Is he living and farming in the US now or just teaching over here?
Ya it was a real honor I was nervous! I think JMS is better than compost tea but they both have their place. Also depends how well the compost tea is made. He lives and farms in South Korea. This was his first time coming to the US to teach. Master Cho has been to the US many times.
brilliant, this guy is a visionary. glad someone else sees that AI will soon be a dominant factor in farming, but i think it will benefit smaller farmers. you can have automated intelligent agents to help with a lot of the repetitive and laborious tasks. it will be a good step for humanity and help us be independent. i can envision tesla selling a 2k small mobile 1x2 sized robot that can travel and identify something like a ripe raspberry and harvest it with some kind of tool that extends along with advanced image and positioning AI to know how to make the cut correctly. imagine having a couple of these constantly filling up containers throughout the day and that finally 'let nature / technology do the work' ecosystem has one of the biggest gaps filled. you could develop systems like this with current tech easily using some kind of in place rails, but what will be cool is when they can be mobile on their own and can be used for various environments.
sir,go check out diamonds youtube channel ...oppenheimer ranch project... he has a permaculture garden at sw colorado,he lives off the grid,you might learn some things from him.... he has a geothermo greenhouse
Great but this was very superficial information for the time spent listening to the video. I understand that he is promoting a book, but still, he should give away more about his research and method and show more evidence of results. He needs to be more generous before people buy into his method is my advice. I guess not every farmer is good at passing knowledge.
This was a short, introductory interview. Did you even try to search for more information? Just search "JADAM lectures" and you will find hours of free classroom-level content from Mr. Cho telling you how to do his methods without buying anything.
Buy Youngsang Cho's Books:
JADAM Ultra Low Cost Agriculture Book: amzn.to/2V8bxye
JADAM 100 Herbs for Making Pesticides - amzn.to/2ZJTxj5
I love jadem
Love luck and laughter Belfast Ireland love luck and laughter xxx 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏💖
Thanks 👍 you got me started on this path 🙏💚🌿🌏
thank you for posting the interview!
it was great to meet you in person!
Thank you for everything Youngsang I'm really looking forward to seeing you again soon :)
I’m a big fan of Korean natural farming. I read a book about it a few years ago and learned how fermenting all foods in liquid creates various pesticides and fertilizers for plants…. Dairy, fish, fruits, vege, even meat and bones and of course manure and compost… each produce various beneficial bacteria for the soil. I’ve now made a larger compost tea brewer to make tea at scale incorporating these methods and am finding success.
Thanks for interviewing this farmer and broadcasting these methods!!
Wow! I am Korean American but this is the first time I heard about KNF through American UA-camr. This is amazing!
The most impressive part of this interview was the generosity of this man. He and his father developed the method and rather than be motivated to profit from this, he is sharing it with the world. Same for his natural pesticide formulations. Successful yet humble, something that is not often seen these days. People want to share, but only for a price. Makes you wonder what their true motivation is, helping others, or enriching themselves.
I just ordered both books,arriving Sunday thru Amazon.....love you n your devotion to organic gardening. Stay well
I wish I could add 2 two thumbs up! There are so many innovative techniques yet to be more known! Love it
Oh ya it's totally next level!
I asked for the book for mothers day and my daughter got it for me, It just came in the mail today!!! YAY!!
This is very interesting information. I was recently thinking after watching many gardening videos on UA-cam how expensive growing one’s own food can be. So glad I found this video ‼️Thank you🙏
That man brings so much hope to me to a brighter future and you as well thanks for the videos and info. It's really priceless 💛
Thanks for sharing this exciting organic system and the man (and family) with the goal of expanding organic gardening on a large scale. Hopefully this system can catch on here in the US and around the world.
That's my hope and why I want to shine the biggest spotlight I can on the Cho family and their farming methods.
Thank you for the amazing people behind the new and practical approach of farming.More blessings to you guys ❤
We need these concepts here in Brazil, the food production here is disgusting, even small farmers use chemicals in their gardens, I hope I can bring these methods, I'm very amazed with these methods.
i know when i was volunteering in a small natural farm a local told me every time he bought veggie from market he soaked them in water for 30 mins before even consider cooking or eating them
-Fantastic! -Amazing! -Superb!
I think I'll dedicate a portion of my garden next season just for growing JADAM input crops. Glad I found this from you.
Thank you 🙏 this is just what I’ve been looking for…. Been struggling with gardening & using some permaculture methods, only takes you so far.
I'll be working to incorporate this method this year. Can't wait to see the results.
My biggest issue with no till has been grubs. I find I have too many grubs not to dig them out maybe twice a year. I'm buying some nematodes to see if I can get a better handle on it and not have to dig up my beds.
Thanks for the video!
I got jadam organic farming book coming on Sunday!!
This is fascinating! Steven, it is so wonderful to showcase a technique or style like this! I am curious and want to know more! How about a Jadam Organic Farming book give away contest?
Yes I hope to show a lot more of the Korean methods and even others around the world. That's a great idea Jeannie, once he gets the book back in stock I'll have to do that!
great info. I subscribed.
This guy is awesome. Buying his book soon. I also want his pesticide!!
Wow I'm amazed... went on the UA-cam channel and its got interesting stuff
Thank you for posting this awesome video, it's wonderful to see how many natural options we have for gardening/farming, the fact that ppl like this man go through all the painstaking trials & errors so that we can all benefit from this method without all the sacrifices is such a bonus for all of us. Thank you
Very Interesting. Looking forward to a follow up when you try it in Tennessee.
매우 감사합니다.
excellent! this should be the future....working with, and respecting the soil and its life
thanks for the links
ABSOLUTELY Beautiful!!!!
This man is 100 percent right on about where agriculture with AI is going. Thank you for this video.
Cool,,,🎯👌🍀🥂
Interesting video and thanks for their links! Yes, I did subscribe to learn more because, we're never too old to learn! :-)
Love this bro! Thanks for sharing this I'll definitely be incorporating some JADAM principles into my garden. Also just wanted to say thanks for all your vids brother it's been inspirational to me and beneficial to my little garden. I even built a coop and got chickens because of your setup. Shalom!
Oh wow that's awesome man, I'm stoked on that chickens are the best! That's great you are going to try out some JADAM techniques too!
Outstanding!
Can you make more videos about KNF? And these especif methods? This awesome!!!!
Exciting what the Lord is revealing to those who honour His creation. Awesome video!!
is there a way to multiply mycorrhizae fungi in this farming system ???
any videos about using this principles for fruit trees ???.
I'm interested as well. I find that by merely applying thick mulch around my young fruit trees, in my case pecan shells are the only woody mulch available, I'm seeing fungi begin deep down when I dig my hands in and it's only been down since spring. We've no topsoil (yet!) in the orchard area because of prior unwise farming strategies of previous owners. Terribly alkaline, sticky heavy clay with no organic matter left. I'm planting trees using Ellen White method, and brewing microbes to add to my watering solution.
soil texture is something that one can never change. Other than that! seems very interesting!
Thanks for adding to his voice . I want to have this in my farm and my country. How do we get the product in Nigeria . I have requested for it I can help move the products to other farmers here . I like those who are liberal with the idea God bless them with. I want them to also benefit from that. God bless you.
I garden in SIP containers. Is there a way to incorporate this style with the soil in my containers? Should I plant less plants in them with this method and get more yeald per plant?
The pestasides will be extremely useful.
JADAM is a very good way to cultivate organic, but sintropic agroforest is the future! And JADAM can be used in all the harvest of agroforests, improving more microorganisms in the system and creating a forest soil.
Great information! I'm eager to learn more from his book!
Every year my soil is worse...and snails and.slugs..a.d every year new horde of.bugs..i dont.till because i cant...but maybe.this will help
Shame the english version of the book is listed as unavailable. Good video, thanks for the information.
Oh wow I just noticed that, he said it is just out of stock and Amazon will receive a new shipment in 5 days.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight Thank you for the update. Look forward to the new release when it is available.
Thank you for this video. It's techniques like JADAM that can help people grow food with a limited amount of space. Much appreciated!
How to apply this method to Terrece garden where we grow in containers
Great video. Thank you
Excellent video! Thanks for posting. Ever since I watched your video I have been reading about JADAM and I am waiting on his book to become available again on Amazon. Have you considered a collaboration with him for some English versions of his videos? I have the subtitles on, but several show documentation slides still in Korean. Thanks again and I can’t wait to learn enough to start using this practice!
His son has been translating a lot of his lectures on his youtube channel. I'll be going back to visit him to make videos with him and I'll be doing how to JADAM on my new farm.
Nature's Always Right thanks for the info! Where do you buy your sodium hydroxide?
Nice 💯🙏💯💯💯💯
Can this be used for container fruit trees
Great Green Love from São Paulo, Brasil!
Great video an very helpful!
In my area of the south I have very heavy alkaline clay soil. I am so interested in these methods but I struggle with the no till especially in first establishing beds ... I’m still researching
all u need is biomas, i think
Very interesting!
What is the diff between em1 and jadam? Which one is better?
I have all my supplies for the jadam sulfur spray and jadam wetting agent and plan to make them in the next week or two. I do have to admit that I’ve been a little apprehensive because I’m urban farming and needed to reduce the quantities quite a bit. I am hopeful I have reduced them accurately but it would be so great if someone would make a video with measurements for a 5 gallon batch. Hinty hint hint 😂🙏
So awesome you are taking the plunge, I'm sure you got it, test it out on a small area if you are worried. Will be doing a lot of JADAM content in the future for sure ;)
Nature's Always Right awesome can’t wait to see more videos! You always present info in such an easy to follow well thought out way!
Haley G, for 5 gallons, just divide the amounts by 5. .4 pound is 6.4 oz, Divided by 5 is 1.26 oz. I would round things up a bit to make it much easier to do the math. Enjoy.
I can’t wait to see you implementing these things in your new local. I love your videos and would never normally say this, but when you describe the beyond organic pest solutions on your farm (basically having very healthy plants and nothing else, right?) i think to myself that that would never work where I live (Georgia) or at a large scale. I try to use bt, neem, and spinosad very sparingly and responsibly when I do use them, but I end up using a lot of row covers and insect netting to thwart our various pests, and some things are just a loss. I think I may have even discovered new pests! I have a ground cherry worm I can’t find info on on any county extension resource page! Anyway, I get torn about how much plastic all the row covers are and I try to be a good steward of them to prolong their use before they make their way to the landfill. Anyway, I would love responsible AND effective pesticides that would reduce my plastic use. I’ll keep watching and using the netting for now and you work out a foolproof pesticide system for those of us in the south😉 My biggest problems that you will probably see in Tennessee are squash vine bores, Mexican bean beetles and pickle worms. Oh and earwigs in winter crops. There are others but they are less problematic.
Yes I agree, growing in San Diego is one of the easiest places to grow in the world. I still stand by the methods I talked about for pest control but it's all about context, what I did is the foundation but more may be necessary of course. That's why I'm so excited about implementing JADAM and hope it can really help us in areas that do need to use pesticides and fungicides now and again. Especially at scale and in monoculture.
Amazing to see huan san cho (is that his name)? Where was that (his) market garden? In hawaii?
Can i use maize meal instead of potatoes?
I have his book. Amazing.
Me too! Glad you have enjoyed it.
Can anyone explain to me why salt is needed to make the IMO?
I am not sure but it make sense for the trace minerals and it's a known fermentation controller in baking.
His methods are being used here on Saipan, MP 96950
Steven, I have a question on the salt. Using the microbe solution once a week, doesn't that eventually build up salt in the ground?
🎊🎊🎊 wannabe organic farmer 😃👨🌾😃 you deserve more Subscribers 🎊🎊🎊
Great video, by any chance do you know the PH of the JMS solution and if it works for blueberries?
Mr Gabbo, at the rate the JMS is diluted, I don't think it would have much affect on the soil pH. It should help blueberries grow since it is really feeding the soil microorganisms. Try it and see.
So, he developed the JADAM and his father developed the Korean Natural Farming princeples right ?
Yes that is correct
@@NaturesAlwaysRight What a family :) by the way, it would be great if you could maybe make some videos about the differences and similarities between the JADAM and KNF
Ancient Miracle JADA promotes soil just as much
Difference is how JADAM has simplified it and added the anti pest agents
Nice
Awesome! I love the simplicity of JMS. Still need to complete JS in hopes of controlling squash bugs. Keep the natural farming content coming!!
Yes it is amazing! I really hope JS is able to help you with those bad buggies! I can't wait to experiment on the bad pests of the south.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight Central Illinois and they're bad enough. Hoping jwa + js can at least knock them back.
@@parriska Plus you can add in extracts from herbs or plants around your area that those bugs don't go after. I have a lot of hope that these techniques will revolutionize organic ag especially large scale.
@@NaturesAlwaysRight for sure. Not much but conventional corn and soybeans around here. It's hard convincing someone to try a completely different approach to their livelihood, but somebody needs to try it. I'm sure someone can spare 5 acres outta their couple thousand 🤷
@@parriska Well I'm gonna approach them and offer to give them the profit they would have made up front. I already know a couple farmer's in other states willing to let me experiment. This year is about taking my knowledge to the next level so I can do something like this and document it.
👍👍👍
Very cool!
I skipped your other video on KNF but I'm glad to find out what a mistake that was.
I am going to repent and watch it today_ also go to his website. This is very interesting. 😃
That's so cool you got to meet him man! How do you think his microbe tea stacks up against a normal compost tea? Is he living and farming in the US now or just teaching over here?
Ya it was a real honor I was nervous! I think JMS is better than compost tea but they both have their place. Also depends how well the compost tea is made. He lives and farms in South Korea. This was his first time coming to the US to teach. Master Cho has been to the US many times.
brilliant, this guy is a visionary. glad someone else sees that AI will soon be a dominant factor in farming, but i think it will benefit smaller farmers. you can have automated intelligent agents to help with a lot of the repetitive and laborious tasks. it will be a good step for humanity and help us be independent. i can envision tesla selling a 2k small mobile 1x2 sized robot that can travel and identify something like a ripe raspberry and harvest it with some kind of tool that extends along with advanced image and positioning AI to know how to make the cut correctly. imagine having a couple of these constantly filling up containers throughout the day and that finally 'let nature / technology do the work' ecosystem has one of the biggest gaps filled. you could develop systems like this with current tech easily using some kind of in place rails, but what will be cool is when they can be mobile on their own and can be used for various environments.
sir,go check out diamonds youtube channel ...oppenheimer ranch project... he has a permaculture garden at sw colorado,he lives off the grid,you might learn some things from him.... he has a geothermo greenhouse
S'il vous plaît sous titres en français
Make sure potatoes are organic. They are being sprayed with Glyphosate.
Want to farm organically
TFS
hi i don spek well inlis its neceri in spanish please
Sous titre s'il vous plaît en français
Clay and rock here. No till, no plant
No book availability
It's back in stock now :)
Great but this was very superficial information for the time spent listening to the video. I understand that he is promoting a book, but still, he should give away more about his research and method and show more evidence of results. He needs to be more generous before people buy into his method is my advice. I guess not every farmer is good at passing knowledge.
This was a short, introductory interview. Did you even try to search for more information? Just search "JADAM lectures" and you will find hours of free classroom-level content from Mr. Cho telling you how to do his methods without buying anything.
UN wants to move everybody into the cites by 2030.
I won't be going
@@NaturesAlwaysRight You may not have a choice.