I met someone who grew up on a farm in the midwest . He said "We were good dirt farmers." My grand father bought a 50 acre farm in Pittsburgh , Pa. Him and my father grew tomatoes for HJ Heinz during WWII . The soil was depleted when he bought it. He got bones from the local slaughter house and manure from the stockyard. Two good books to have "Myclelium Running" by Paul Stamets and of course "Permaculture" by the late Bill Mollison.
My neighbor always uses mushroom soil that's already been used to grow mushrooms (so 2nd hand M.S) and lays roofing rubber down on the ground with holes cut in it to grow his plants through.. Best producing garden I've ever seen, never needs extra water and really produces. Prob has good microrizzal fungi in that mix.. I started using that method last year and it has doubled the size of my harvest
I knew Elaine Ingham decades ago when I worked in the soil microbiology lab at Colorado State where she did her post doc. Elaine is the bee's knees and I am SO PROUD of her and her life's work.
@ 6:10 or so he uses the word decomposes to speak of what the micro-organisms are doing and i tend to see this as recomposing. Nothing decomposes while everything is recomposing. I feel this is important because from the point of view of the microbe ,it is eating the grasses or carrots or whatever it is finding in what we are calling compost, the tiny critters are having lunch. I know this could be seen as semantic. On the other hand seeing our selves from within the food soil web, as participants, and our bodies as somewhat sophisticated mobile composing units the idea of that carrot you just ate recomposing in our system and becoming part of us makes me feel better.
Thanks for the insight.. This makes me wonder when everyone is touting all the mycorrhiza bacteria in their woodchip mulch next to their plants, but now I question if that is just saprophytic fungi eating the woodchips…
Check out other of these guys videos: I watched one recently where a watermelon grower was losing up to 40% of his plant starts to damping off. He inoculated his planting soil with the right mycelium, and his damping off problems disappeared. Sorry, I have watched so many these last few days I do not remember which episode it was. One of the beginning ones. They implied that having fungi in the potting soil controls the mold.
Get a soil test from you Univ Extension service.. Be careful adding amendments other than organic matter if your pH is balanced & mineral content is adequate. Be cautious with gypsum. It may not be necessary. www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/soil-fertilizers/using-gypsum-in-garden.htm
Thank you all. Please feel free for any other info.. My boy left the drip irrigation on last night and my planting holes were filled with water this morning... 3am🙄
@@earacheselbowsenoch6251 Let it drain down. Chuck a big handful of finished compost in the bottom of the hole. Tamp in seedling & water in. Cover with finshed compost & or mulch. It will likely be fine.
I do want to add this... Some day I would like to see someone produce Soybean or corn or wheat or... at the scale of thousands of acres using this composting methods.
@@MB-vw1qo You should look at the Johnson-Sue results from USDA, as well as some of the regenerative agriculture pioneers, they use methods such as spraying aerated compost tea extract into dead soils to "kickstart" biology. They showed that, with the right methods, using as little as a 10 ml/m² (only 100 L/hectare !!!) of aerated compost tea (that is, microbial/fungal spores inoculum), you achieve results similar to applying 20 tonnes of compost/hectare. Really profitable contrary to what john smith is saying, but it does require a lot more knowledge than chemical monoculture model. Once the desired fungal/ratio balance is achieved, they then use the now proven method of no-till + cover crops/multiculture, getting quite impressive results, drastically lowering inputs (tiny amounts of herbicides to control cover crop and favor main crop sometimes used) + similar or even higher yields compared to chemical monoculture. Instead of buying the entire array of pesticides/herbicides/fertilizer, they buy seeds, really an elegant and effective solution.
I met someone who grew up on a farm in the midwest . He said "We were good dirt farmers." My grand father bought a 50 acre farm in Pittsburgh , Pa. Him and my father grew tomatoes for HJ Heinz during WWII . The soil was depleted when he bought it. He got bones from the local slaughter house and manure from the stockyard. Two good books to have "Myclelium Running" by Paul Stamets and of course "Permaculture" by the late Bill Mollison.
My neighbor always uses mushroom soil that's already been used to grow mushrooms (so 2nd hand M.S) and lays roofing rubber down on the ground with holes cut in it to grow his plants through.. Best producing garden I've ever seen, never needs extra water and really produces. Prob has good microrizzal fungi in that mix.. I started using that method last year and it has doubled the size of my harvest
I knew Elaine Ingham decades ago when I worked in the soil microbiology lab at Colorado State where she did her post doc. Elaine is the bee's knees and I am SO PROUD of her and her life's work.
Very nice lecture, I learned a lot of new and useful information
Thanks to Living Web Farms for sharing these valuable lectures....❤️❤️❤️
love this!!
@ 6:10 or so he uses the word decomposes to speak of what the micro-organisms are doing and i tend to see this as recomposing.
Nothing decomposes while everything is recomposing. I feel this is important because from the point of view of the microbe ,it is eating the grasses or carrots or whatever it is finding in what we are calling compost, the tiny critters are having lunch. I know this could be seen as semantic. On the other hand seeing our selves from within the food soil web, as participants, and our bodies as somewhat sophisticated mobile composing units the idea of that carrot you just ate recomposing in our system and becoming part of us makes me feel better.
Well that was interesting, looking forward to part two.
Great lecture.
Thanks for the insight.. This makes me wonder when everyone is touting all the mycorrhiza bacteria in their woodchip mulch next to their plants, but now I question if that is just saprophytic fungi eating the woodchips…
Yes, but what's left behind is probably good stuff.
I add wine cap fungi to mine wood chips, and also get mushrooms to eat.
@@john-smith. yes.. both beneficial, but for different reasons..
Loving your channel ❤
Is part 2 also available?
Coming up next, very soon!
@@livingwebfarms Good... Elaine is awesome...
@@livingwebfarms I just asked the same question before I saw this thread. Thank you and if you want to disregard my question I posted, no worries.
Any update on when part two will be available? I'm ready to start composting 👍🏻
Any links to the documentaries talked about
When is part 2 coming out or is it already available? I searched youtube for part 2 and did not see it. Thanks.
You didn’t look hard enough
it's out
why not do the imo1 for your fungi?
Does anyone else watching this feel like they are taking a lesson at Hogwarts by Severus Snape? This composting presentation is brilliant & magical!
You might try adding some mineral oil to the microscope slide to slow down the movement of the organisms present.
How can we get rid of mold in my potting soil
Check out other of these guys videos: I watched one recently where a watermelon grower was losing up to 40% of his plant starts to damping off.
He inoculated his planting soil with the right mycelium, and his damping off problems disappeared. Sorry, I have watched so many these last few days I do not remember which episode it was. One of the beginning ones. They implied that having fungi in the potting soil controls the mold.
It's nice to see that Dave Grohl shaved and took up farming. Awesome lecture!
Dave Grohl is a superstar, and a very talented one.
I was going to say Marilyn Manson!
💛
I'm on my 3rd batch... 35 gallons... I've got clay soil in N CA.. Any advice on clay soil and how to improve?
Keep it covered, preferably with compost or woodchips then come back in a year.
Get a soil test from you Univ Extension service.. Be careful adding amendments other than organic matter if your pH is balanced & mineral content is adequate.
Be cautious with gypsum. It may not be necessary.
www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/soil-fertilizers/using-gypsum-in-garden.htm
Thank you all. Please feel free for any other info.. My boy left the drip irrigation on last night and my planting holes were filled with water this morning... 3am🙄
@@earacheselbowsenoch6251 Let it drain down. Chuck a big handful of finished compost in the bottom of the hole. Tamp in seedling & water in. Cover with finshed compost & or mulch. It will likely be fine.
👍👍👍👍
Fantastic Fungus!!! I've watched it 5 times! Check it out!!
I do want to add this... Some day I would like to see someone produce Soybean or corn or wheat or... at the scale of thousands of acres using this composting methods.
I hope not.. we’ve destroyed enough soil and forest and wildlife habitat planting those crops that are mainly used for processed foods…
If everyone grew even 25% of their own food world hunger would end.
@@tcotroneo since Americans grow crops at a large scale already, it would seem like doing it in a possible more sustainable way could have benefits
@@MB-vw1qo It's not profitable in today's standards, with Monsanto, and gmo crops....It would be nice though, but I agree with the above posters.
@@MB-vw1qo You should look at the Johnson-Sue results from USDA, as well as some of the regenerative agriculture pioneers, they use methods such as spraying aerated compost tea extract into dead soils to "kickstart" biology.
They showed that, with the right methods, using as little as a 10 ml/m² (only 100 L/hectare !!!) of aerated compost tea (that is, microbial/fungal spores inoculum), you achieve results similar to applying 20 tonnes of compost/hectare. Really profitable contrary to what john smith is saying, but it does require a lot more knowledge than chemical monoculture model.
Once the desired fungal/ratio balance is achieved, they then use the now proven method of no-till + cover crops/multiculture, getting quite impressive results, drastically lowering inputs (tiny amounts of herbicides to control cover crop and favor main crop sometimes used) + similar or even higher yields compared to chemical monoculture.
Instead of buying the entire array of pesticides/herbicides/fertilizer, they buy seeds, really an elegant and effective solution.