Benefits and Dangers of COFFEE GROUNDS and WOOD ASH in the Garden // Beginning Gardening

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  • Опубліковано 4 тра 2024
  • If you are just beginning gardening, you might not know that coffee grounds and wood ash are two really beneficial additions to your vegetable garden. Use as a thin sprinkled mulch or in your compost, this gardening 101 video will show you more of the benefits and a few of the problems you might encounter with certain soils.
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  • @normbograham
    @normbograham 2 роки тому +669

    Funny coffee grounds story. I decided I could throw the coffee grounds over the deck, and eventually go collect it. And I got up, brewed, and drank my coffee at the same time everyday. I started noticing a mouse near the coffee grounds, no problem, I just ignored him. One day I slept in. He was outside waiting, and was yelling at me. i had a coffee addicted mouse.

  • @robynlarue1815
    @robynlarue1815 2 роки тому +836

    garden and coffee ground story..
    I used to have an open compost pile where I would put food scraps including coffee filters full of coffee grounds.
    One day when I went to dump more I noticed that some critter had cleaned out ALL the grounds leaving only the paper filter.
    I kept an eye on the pile and witnessed the local flock of crows taking turns cleaning out every spec of grounds.
    I then dubbed the pile "The Crow Cafe".
    One day when returning from town I got out of the car and was accosted by a barrage of screaming crows gathered around the Crow Cafe.
    I then realized I had not taken out the compost for 3 days and I was being informed that I was slacking on my duties..
    After further thought I decided to enclose the compost pile so local wildlife could not get to the pile.. for their health reasons and because the last thing the neighborhood needed was a flock of caffeine addicted crows.

  • @DMLondon
    @DMLondon 2 роки тому +137

    We struggled with blueberries on my property for many years, my husband simply gave up on them. Then, I discovered a nice trick. In the fall, I mulched the blueberry beds with a thick layer of green pine needles. Then, in the springtime when the buds are starting to fatten up, I “wake up” the blueberries by watering them with water steeped in one cup of fresh coffee grounds. The coffee brings the ph right to the perfect level. They’ve never looked better!

    • @georgewashington3555
      @georgewashington3555 Рік тому +2

      nice thanks

    • @davidjudd951
      @davidjudd951 Рік тому +8

      Folgers, or Maxwell House?

    • @bonnieparsons8526
      @bonnieparsons8526 Рік тому +4

      ​@@davidjudd951 😃😄😁😄🤪

    • @countryvita
      @countryvita Рік тому +11

      ‘Perked’ them right up. Huh? 😂

    • @KO-tr2cj
      @KO-tr2cj Рік тому +5

      I use watered down (approximately 1 cup fresh brewed coffee/espresso to 1 gallon water) coffee to "fertilize" my flowering plants. Started doing it many years ago with African violets and had the most beautiful constant bloomers you can imagine. I don't have too many flowering plants now, but whenever I end up with extra coffee, rather than throw it out, I water it down and feed it to the plants. Decided to try it on an orchid that hasn't bloomed in three years--the first bud opened sometime yesterday or this morning and there are at least six more to go. Never guessed that would happen, but figured there was nothing to lose after all this time. I'd given up on it doing more than just putting out a new leaf every so often. Purslane also appears to enjoy it as well.

  • @stevenstreet7513
    @stevenstreet7513 Рік тому +26

    My wife has been dumping coffee grounds off the back porch, in the same spot for 20 years. Underneath are the largest night crawlers you have ever seen. Good fishing bait.

    • @neclark08
      @neclark08 Місяць тому

      Wow -- that works to DIS-prove the notion that the remaining caffeine in brewed coffee grounds is toxic to worms !

    • @terroristcam
      @terroristcam 17 днів тому

      No birds or mice ?

  • @sharononeal7183
    @sharononeal7183 3 роки тому +320

    One year I added homemade compost which had coffee grounds under a hydrangea. The resulting pH balance gave blooms that were half pink and half blue on the same blooms! Very beautiful and happy accident!

    • @Sense2024
      @Sense2024 2 роки тому +13

      See! Coffee grounds DO change pH

    • @xXxKingjonxXx
      @xXxKingjonxXx 2 роки тому +8

      Would love to see pictures

    • @Sense2024
      @Sense2024 2 роки тому +4

      @Gretchen K. ☕️

    • @donaldaustin7973
      @donaldaustin7973 2 роки тому

      @@Sense2024 ]]p

    • @tamijoiskewl
      @tamijoiskewl Рік тому

      Do not use coffee that is flavored the oils are toxic

  • @TheBigRedChef
    @TheBigRedChef 11 місяців тому +12

    I actually got in trouble with my landlord a little, using coffee grounds as an amendment. I was just using my grounds from my morning filter press coffee, pouring it around the base of some fruit trees we had in the back yard.
    The rental contract had the landlord taking care of the trees, and he came to me a couple months later, asking what the hell happened to the trees, as they were fruiting so prodigously, some of the branches were close to breaking. When I told him what I had been doing, he was just like, "please stop".

  • @donnakennell5111
    @donnakennell5111 6 днів тому +1

    You & Noah are great together. You're blessed to have each other. Thanks for the info and the smiles.

  • @mystsilver9331
    @mystsilver9331 2 роки тому +271

    Many years ago I lived in Tennessee and decided I was going to plant a dogwood tree in my yard. I dug a hole 4 in deeper than necessary, mixed used coffee grounds with rich soil to put in the bottom of the hole. I covered that with 2 in of soil and then made a mound to set my baby tree on. I think covered the rest of the root of the tree and watered well. With minimum maintenance I grew the most outstanding dogwood tree with the most brilliant pink flowers. It grew fast, tall and wide.
    All of those neighbors who told me that I could not grow a dogwood tree in that area of Tennessee were forever humbled because I told them I could and I did

    • @EvilSearchEngine
      @EvilSearchEngine 2 роки тому +14

      Don't tell me no!
      'Murica!

    • @sidmac50
      @sidmac50 2 роки тому +21

      I live in East Tennessee and we are known for Dogwood trees- we even have a Dogwood Arts festival...not sure why people told you that.

    • @mystsilver9331
      @mystsilver9331 2 роки тому +8

      @@sidmac50 I lived in Wayne County and the soil there did not seem very hospitable for dogwood at the time

    • @ValerieDee123
      @ValerieDee123 2 роки тому +8

      Tennessee is known for "Dogwood Winter". C'mon man!

    • @debbieclark4726
      @debbieclark4726 2 роки тому +2

      @@ValerieDee123 haha 👍

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 4 роки тому +558

    My Dad had a wonderful vegetable garden when I was a kid. The first year we lived there he rented a rototiller and taught us how to turn a 1/4 acre of our property into a garden breaking up the old sod that used to be part of the meadow out back. The soil was rich, nearly black and we discovered it went down about five feet before we hit a three foot layer of orange clay followed by all sand under that. We learned this when he dug the well. Fortunately he only had to dig down about nine feet before we hit water. Then my Dad went insane and started doing things that were absolutely crazy. Now we had moved in September so it was too late to plant that year. Everything we were doing was to prepare for the first year. When the town advertised that they were accepting bids to clean up the old bonfire pit behind the high school my dad underbid everyone and basically only bid enough to rent the truck. My brother, Dad and I spent every weekend until October shoveling ash into that truck. Then we'd drive home and dump it all into the garden and do it again. Before the first snow we hit another part of the property and my brother and I had to rake away about 1/4 acre of pine needles to expose what was under the needles. He called it pine "humus" but I'm not sure if that's the correct term. We must have made hundreds of trips with the wheel barrow dumping all that into the garden. Next my dad found out about a poultry farm that supplied most of the eggs to the town as well as powdered eggs to the military. When you are in the business of making powdered eggs you end up with a lot of shells. My Dad went to talk to the owner and nest thing I knew my brother and I were shoveling tons of broken chicken egg shells into drums. I'm glad we were only a quarter of a mile away. That's a long way to roll a 55 gallon steel drum for an 11 year old but egg shells don't weight much so it wasn't that heavy. finally the following February my mother had become friends with a woman who had horses. She'd kept horses there for a dozen years and had mounds of horse poop for each year she was there. She ran out of space and was going to hire someone to lug it all away. Well you guessed it. Dad made a deal with her and got the whole load and got paid for it to boot. We put the newest three mounds into our newly formed compost pile an took the other nine years worth and spread it into our garden. My Dad called the above mixture "Super Dirt." So anyways, between a heavier than usual early spring rain and a sunnier than usual late spring by July we were growing 7 foot tomato trees with two inch diameter stalks, Cucumbers the size of Zucchini and Zucchini the size of Watermelon. We had foot long green beans and Roma tomatoes that were six inches long. My mom had three foot marigold bushes. Our strawberries were the size of small apples and deep red to the core. And out of only about twenty corn stalks we got about 60 huge ears of corn. When my uncle came to visit (he's from Nebraska) he exclaimed that our garden was impossible and that he demanded to know from which secret government lab my Dad stole the corn seeds from. Dad grew about twenty other vegetables that I don't remember all of them and he mixed the soil additives differently for each patch of the garden. He did the whole thing very scientifically despite being functionally illiterate having struggled through six years of high school to come out with a C- average before being drafted for the Korean War. He had been raised on a farm with poor Cape Cod sandy soil and apparently learned a few tricks. One thing though. In subsequent years he always dumped the contents of the barbecue grill into the garden with no ill effects and he always grilled with charcoal briquets and that leads me to a question, why do you recommend not using charcoal briquets? You merely say don't use them but you don't explain why.

    • @lsb9073
      @lsb9073 4 роки тому +33

      They usually have all kinds of crap in them to help them burn. Depends what kind you buy, I guess. Briquettes are made of compressed wood shavings that will need some kind of binding agent which may or may not be undesireable, with additives to make them light quickly, burn hotter or longer.

    • @honestyfaithful
      @honestyfaithful 4 роки тому +110

      Your dads story is WONDERFUL,,, my grandpa was the same way... I just wish I could remember what I would see him doing. His garden grew so much food he and my grand ma sold it to the locals, the garden was about 20x30..... it would be such a blessing to go back and learn the true old ways of gardening... have a blessed day 😊🌻😊Robin

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому +54

      Thanks for sharing that story! The charcoal bricketts have lots of chemicals in them

    • @barbarabachman5268
      @barbarabachman5268 4 роки тому +46

      nunya biznez my grandma used to throw her used dishwater into the garden. It was always a very productive area!

    • @klincecum
      @klincecum 4 роки тому +3

      @@NextLevelGardening They don't.

  • @williampolk8009
    @williampolk8009 Рік тому +10

    Love when you two hang out doing videos.

  • @DankDadReviews
    @DankDadReviews 2 роки тому +4

    I go to the local Cumberland Farms and get the full trash bags of grounds. They are more then happy to give them to you. I add this bag to my compost pile and allow it to be worked in over the next few months.

  • @russellchevrette8467
    @russellchevrette8467 3 роки тому +688

    Just want to say that everything presented here is fully substantiated by various scientific papers coming out of agricultural colleges and county extension agencies. You have obviously done your homework. We need more presentations like this. Keep up the good work.

    • @crazysquirrel9425
      @crazysquirrel9425 3 роки тому +25

      I would like to point out that coffee plants are beginning to be sprayed with herbicides and pesticides.
      Getting harder to find truly organic coffee anymore.

    • @shexdensmore
      @shexdensmore 3 роки тому +4

      Could you produce the links to these papers?

    • @crazysquirrel9425
      @crazysquirrel9425 3 роки тому +3

      @@shexdensmore Here is one out of MANY: www.shearwatercoffeeroasters.com/toxic-pesticides-used-conventional-non-organic-coffee-farms/

    • @timjones8210
      @timjones8210 2 роки тому +5

      No we don’t. Think for yourself.

    • @davidsorrells736
      @davidsorrells736 2 роки тому +4

      Would like to see the biochar making video.

  • @Grow_With_April
    @Grow_With_April 3 роки тому +73

    I homeschool and we’re doing this next week. Howwww awesome!

    • @huntersharddrive6951
      @huntersharddrive6951 3 роки тому +5

      Good on you for homeschooling, your kid/kids are very lucky!

    • @SoldrfMfortune
      @SoldrfMfortune 3 роки тому +2

      Good on you! What curriculum, or combination of curricula? I believe abecca and Saxon are still leaders in english and math, respectively. I was raised on the LifePac (Alpha Omega) curriculum.

    • @lanafalana
      @lanafalana 2 роки тому +1

      Great job Mom. Homeschooling and experiments!

  • @vickimelior1368
    @vickimelior1368 Рік тому

    Luv that you include and involve your kiddo!

  • @p.collins6251
    @p.collins6251 11 місяців тому +7

    Nice to see you and your son. He's adorable You are both very lucky.

  • @Tygydyk17
    @Tygydyk17 6 місяців тому +4

    Great father and awesome son. Priceless.

  • @robertdouglas8895
    @robertdouglas8895 3 роки тому +10

    I make many layers in my compost: hay from Craig's list for free...cold, old manure, not fresh... forest soil because of the microorganisms... sand for the worms...coffee grounds from the coffee shop... worms from an old pile... weeds,early summer weeds if you want to keep out the seeds... mulched leaves...algae scrapped off the surface of my pond... greens the local grocery store throws out. Keep it damp. You don't have to turn it. Add lots of greens just before winter and in any pile that the worms have depleted of them. Put layers of plastic and hay on top in the winter. I put three layers where I live because it gets down to 15 below zero. Use the piles you started first last Summer and you'll have great potting soil and compost.

  • @dn744
    @dn744 3 роки тому +60

    Who needs a TV, when you can be doing this. Free fun, with education

    • @lewislinzy3437
      @lewislinzy3437 3 роки тому +4

      I got rid of WORTHLESS add ridden TV 6 years ago & don't EVER intend to pay good money for that garbage again.

    • @mariap.thisislife8735
      @mariap.thisislife8735 3 роки тому +2

      Drama free! On some of these channels...

    • @ruthsmith6920
      @ruthsmith6920 3 роки тому +1

      Thank you all, very good on teaching a dummy like me. Thank all yall, God bless you and yours.

    • @mariap.thisislife8735
      @mariap.thisislife8735 3 роки тому

      @@ruthsmith6920 Oh, your A-ok!! We all learn something new everyday ☺️👍❤️🌄

    • @ruthsmith6920
      @ruthsmith6920 3 роки тому

      @@mariap.thisislife8735 , thank you sir.

  • @NevadaScrubJay
    @NevadaScrubJay Рік тому +9

    After planting a number of new pines in my backyard, I heard pines love coffee grounds. I started collected the grounds for a couple days at a time and then threw them on top of the soil under these new plantings. After just a couple years, the pines went from about 5 ft to 25 ft. I was amazed. I stopped after two or three years and started putting them, along with other vegetable scraps, into vermiculture compost bins. Those bins turned into a 5 ft diameter leaf, grass, and kitchen scrap pile. This large compost pile has now survived a couple cold winters. It creates enough heat to stay above 50 degrees which is fine for the worms. The only problem is the decomposition heat during the summer. When it gets to hot, I try breaking it up to slow down the chemistry. Several times, the temps have gotten as high as 140 degrees. I figured my worms were all dead. But, no, some seem to migrate to a bit cool spot where they survive. The final compost is fabulous.

  • @juliamontoya4153
    @juliamontoya4153 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you for the information. I’m definitely a beginner gardener, so this comes at a good time.
    You make a good team!

  • @christinepemberton5077
    @christinepemberton5077 2 роки тому +136

    My Grandfather always grew a huge garden. He used egg shells, coffee grounds, tea leaves, vegetable peels and ends from the kitchen, and leaves. He would let them sit and compost after each growing season until the next growing season.

    • @hugowiberg1843
      @hugowiberg1843 Рік тому +3

      Sounds about right...
      I have to store it in the kitchen trash and smuggle it out of the house under cover of darkness of the whole fandamily will bag it & tag it.

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 11 місяців тому

      ​@@hugowiberg1843 so where do you compost if you have to sneak and hide the compost?

    • @hugowiberg1843
      @hugowiberg1843 11 місяців тому +2

      @@brianfitch5469 I think I am wearing them down! I recycle used 1 gallon zip lock bags & pull it to the top of the trash. Some times it gets to sit in the sink.
      Yesterday, my wife put two of her teabags on it!!
      As of today, all this year's compost is used up, under pumpkins, beets, carrots and 30 tomatoes!
      HAPPY GARDENING!

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 11 місяців тому

      @@hugowiberg1843 Don't take this the wrong way. But grab your balls and tell your wife your going to set up a compost bin. Married for ten years and there's no way my wife would tell me or would I let her I couldn't have a compost bin. Take your balls back from her.
      Get a couple 35 gallon trash cans and drill some holes and turn them once a week or whenever. She doesn't have to deal with it or smell it. When done right it doesn't really stink.
      Best of luck

    • @glow1815
      @glow1815 11 місяців тому +4

      Christian Pemberton same here I mixed coffee ground with eggshell. I don't compose it I jus
      t throw in to the soil so as fruits peels I cut it in pieces. I never knew Orange peels also helps with insects from eatting my basil and mint.

  • @functionsteacher4176
    @functionsteacher4176 3 роки тому +117

    I had lots of snails in my garden when I moved into our house... read in an old garden book that coffee grounds repel snails. I have been sprinkling our used coffee grounds on the garden over the last 3 years and it works a treat! No more snails 👍🐌

    • @SW-ii5gg
      @SW-ii5gg 2 роки тому +11

      Worked in my backyard, used to be a lot of slugs there, they have been gone for a while now, they came back after I stopped throwing them out back for about 8 months because I put them in a compost container so I started throwing them out again and they are gone again.

    • @AVSgirl1985
      @AVSgirl1985 2 роки тому +6

      Do you just throw them into the grass too? Or only in garden areas?
      TONS of snails here!

    • @hjd832
      @hjd832 2 роки тому +11

      That’s great to know…. I’ve had snails on the scale of a biblical plague !

    • @SW-ii5gg
      @SW-ii5gg 2 роки тому +4

      @@AVSgirl1985 I just throw them out in the grass wherever I think it needs some and pick up the paper after it's dry and the grounds are scattered.

    • @rosainecalmeyer4428
      @rosainecalmeyer4428 2 роки тому +1

      I fill up the coffee pot with the used grounds in with water and just chuck it over the garden. Is this ok

  • @bonniespruin6369
    @bonniespruin6369 Рік тому

    Thanks! I'm a beginner, we just started container gardening yesterday! I'm enjoying learning lots of new information about gardening!

  • @margaretdecker8128
    @margaretdecker8128 2 роки тому

    What a joy to see your happy son with you! Many thanks for all the info!

  • @BrettCrystal
    @BrettCrystal 4 роки тому +49

    It is so much fun to watch you with Noah in your videos. Your smile shows how proud you are as a father, and inspires me to do more gardening with my children. And we are absolutely going to do this soil test this weekend! Thank you for another great video!

  • @jyi5506
    @jyi5506 4 роки тому +16

    Love, love, love all you teach us! Thank you. I’ve learned sooo much in just one of your videos-again. Hey Noah! Hope you share with us more! Great team!
    A Big “Stay Well!” to your family

  • @mrf5347
    @mrf5347 2 роки тому +3

    VERY practical and well done!
    I love the soil testing experiment

  • @blessingsflow8648
    @blessingsflow8648 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for this and the compost link! Very organized- I love that!

  • @judedewitt2169
    @judedewitt2169 4 роки тому +17

    I always add the coffee grounds to my compost pile. But you are correct...the worms love them! They also help to loosen, or lighten my clay soil.

  • @softgoodsint
    @softgoodsint 3 роки тому +24

    Sensible, informative, interesting and how cute the segment with your son. Gardening for decades yet there's always more to learn.

  • @ddhughes13
    @ddhughes13 2 роки тому +1

    Ahhh. Thank you for explaining the how, why, and data. Very enlightening info for beginner to a lifer gardener.

  • @cedrichassell7902
    @cedrichassell7902 2 роки тому +1

    I have been doing this for years!
    Thanks for confirming the benefits 🙏🙏

  • @tammytamz3046
    @tammytamz3046 4 роки тому +15

    I’m a new watcher. Loved that you got your son involved. He’s a natural!

  • @bigweirdchick
    @bigweirdchick 4 роки тому +79

    I work in a grocery store with a small coffee shop inside of it and I have them save all the grounds in a bucket for me. I've been spreading them in my garden for years. My 67 year old aunt who's a veteran gardener tells me she's never seen plants grow so big and get so many flowers.

    • @themaximusone
      @themaximusone 3 роки тому

      agreed does your Grandmother do any videos I would sit and wait at the edge of her driveway for 24 hours just to talk to her for an hour and pick her brain ;)

    • @garynaylor6494
      @garynaylor6494 3 роки тому

      Ggsknaylor

  • @dougmorissette459
    @dougmorissette459 Рік тому +73

    Another great video! For 4 years I had an extreme ant infestation inside my greenhouse. I decided to put a layer of coffee grounds from my coffee machine onto the surface of the soil as a mulch to see what would happen as I had 5 gallons of coffee grounds saved. To my surprise after one month there was only the odd ant that I found in my greenhouse. I did not mix the coffee grounds into the soil at all and cleared them from each planting hole when transplanting my vegetable starts. After 6 months I have only found about 4 ants in the greenhouse and for the first time in 5 years I have a bumper crop of tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and my basil, chives, Italian parsley, Greek oregano, Rosemary and thyme are massive plants. Just thought that I would share my experience with you. Thanks again for the information.

    • @carlandersonlll6861
      @carlandersonlll6861 Місяць тому

      Did you have any Coffee Bean Weevils from the coffee grounds? I did in my container with a Sweet Pepper plant that was fully grown.

    • @quenemoend
      @quenemoend Місяць тому

      Ants don’t like the smell of peppermint oil either. When I get ants entering the house I just put peppermint oil in the area or around the entrance and boom, they disappear.

  • @debraharrow3733
    @debraharrow3733 2 роки тому

    Love that you are teaching your own kid while you teach us❣️

  • @bingsterdc
    @bingsterdc 3 роки тому +182

    When I was a teenager, my father used to save up the coffee grounds and sprinkle them under our azaleas. I don't know what was going on chemically, but the azaleas absolutely loved it. The bloom production increased and the rate of growth increased as well. We had the most beautiful azaleas on the block, and it was mainly because of the regular depositing of coffee grounds beneath them.

    • @a0flj0
      @a0flj0 3 роки тому +31

      Most plants dislike acidic soils - azaleas love them. Only, not overly acidic, just slightly so. Coffee grounds may have lost most of their acidity during brewing, but do remain slightly acidic. Also, as bacteria break down the coffee grounds, the resulting nitrogen compounds further increase acidity - slightly. The resulting constant flux of nitrogen compounds and acidic compounds washed into the ground when you water the plant is just perfect for azaleas. If you spread some ground egg shells on top of the grounds, from time to time, this kind of fertilization works well for plants that don't like acidic soils too - provided they aren't also lime intolerant. Lime, unfortunately, is everywhere. However, it's less in softwood ash than it is in hardwood ash, and since ash in general is strongly alkaline, a tiny amount is enough to neutralize the very low acidity of coffee grounds.

    • @thomas2782
      @thomas2782 2 роки тому +6

      Imma try this... I usually throw coffee grounds into the compost bin

    • @lindyswanson1
      @lindyswanson1 2 роки тому +12

      Lol! That explains why my plants were so stunted. I mixed lots of coffee grounds into the soil. My mom always warned my brother, "Don't drink too much coffee or your growth will get stunted." So I just assumed I'd planted too much, but IDK why because that brother turned out taller than everyone in the family! Haha!

    • @percybyssheshelley8573
      @percybyssheshelley8573 2 роки тому +1

      That's been my experience here in California, too.

    • @TriciaAgnew
      @TriciaAgnew 2 роки тому +6

      My mama did the same thing with azaleas around a pine tree in our front yard and a daily dose of used coffee grounds. The plants were absolutely covered with the brightest fuchsia blooms and the plants were at least 6 feet tall. I wish I had a photo I could share.

  • @grannybee
    @grannybee 3 роки тому +18

    I live in the Fraser Valley where it's always raining. I have been spreading coffee grounds on my lawn. I've actually noticed a huge improvement. This is what attracted me to your channel.

  • @jett888
    @jett888 Місяць тому +1

    What a sweet boy- I hope
    he realizes how lucky he is to have a
    knowledgeable dad around who can teach him about plants!!

  • @aussiepressconferences.4755

    Good to see your son was happy and interested in helping.

  • @lillylover151
    @lillylover151 3 роки тому +6

    That’s so cute that your son is willing to talk on the video 👏👏👏👏

  • @lt2339
    @lt2339 2 роки тому +7

    Bell, subbed, comment.
    Having your son help made my day. Mine is off to the world now, enjoy your time together, it goes by quick.

  • @ngreen1596
    @ngreen1596 Місяць тому +2

    Your soil pH test is ingenious! So obvious to do, but I never thought of it. Thank you. Great show. Very informative. 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @lindacannon1354
    @lindacannon1354 2 роки тому

    Old knowledge both have been in use for years! Thanks for the tips!

  • @suzannelowell8062
    @suzannelowell8062 3 роки тому +9

    First time gardening in pretty complicated conditions where I live. Just discovered your channel and appreciate your knowledge and expertise. I will be watching more of you!! Thank you!!

  • @grape1829
    @grape1829 4 роки тому +13

    Such a complete set of info, not just a "hey I use this and it works, follow what I do" that kills my plants.

  • @nobodyknows3180
    @nobodyknows3180 Рік тому +7

    Pretty cool to let your kids be involved in your gardening and in your videos!

  • @eternalfearless4532
    @eternalfearless4532 11 місяців тому +1

    Very informative video, including the soil-PH test. Thank you.

  • @tirusew
    @tirusew 3 роки тому +18

    Great father and son. I actually lit up when I saw your son came up. Great work both, I learned something.

  • @suepetersen9725
    @suepetersen9725 4 роки тому +7

    Thanks for the information , I will try your suggestion to testing my soil. Great job both of you. Nice to see a parent encourage the next generation.

  • @pattytrollip2473
    @pattytrollip2473 2 роки тому

    Live in South Africa.
    Thanks for all the info.
    Will use both in compost.

  • @miaj5118
    @miaj5118 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks so much for this video. I have so much wood ash and coffee grounds processed in my home. I know how to use them now 🧡

  • @r.j.sigmund2424
    @r.j.sigmund2424 3 роки тому +77

    i've been using 1000 to 2000 pounds of coffee grounds from our local coffee shop on my large garden for several years and have encountered no problem, even though my soil is excessively acidic to start with...i also mulch heavily with maple leaves that i save over the winter & my yields far exceed those of conventional gardeners...

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 2 роки тому

      My soil gets hydrophobic if I put too many coffee grounds. How do you avoid that? I use leaves and coffee grounds...checkout my channel!

    • @hawkvalleyherbs6065
      @hawkvalleyherbs6065 2 роки тому +1

      Nonorganic coffee has bad chemicals and pesticides in it. I don't recommend adding it to a garden unless its organic.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 2 роки тому +1

      @@hawkvalleyherbs6065 I heard this too. Do you know of any studies/reports etc that quantifies the danger?

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 2 роки тому

      I mean people drink it, but maybe it gets more concentrated in plants? Not sure.

    • @natashanonnattive4818
      @natashanonnattive4818 2 роки тому

      @TheRainHarvester add The Natural raised bed top soil and worm castings

  • @ambadale
    @ambadale 2 роки тому +22

    Loved the acidic vs alkaline test and using your young helper to demonstrate the Ph level of the soil.

  • @TriadNCLiving
    @TriadNCLiving Рік тому

    Videos always informative and straight to the point.... Perfect. Just loved seeing the addition of your son!! Adorable!

  • @mohamed33129
    @mohamed33129 Рік тому

    I have been looking for a while for a simple way to know the type of soil if it is acidic or alkaline. And I just discovered this video now, thanks man

  • @kaserrex9509
    @kaserrex9509 3 роки тому +16

    I have been composting for at least 15 years. Adding used coffee and tree leaves bring the most improvement!

  • @WmTyndale
    @WmTyndale 4 роки тому +181

    Houston: collected bags of coffee grounds from the HEB supermarket. spread on the soil during the fall for two weeks then turned it under. Rotate the soil, several times before planting at beginning of March. Explosive improvement in growth, greenness and output which I attribute to the trace minerals as many coffees are grown in rich, mountain or volcanic soils.
    cherry tomatoes, squash, basil, cilantro.

  • @always_b_natural703
    @always_b_natural703 Рік тому

    Noah is definition of 'chip off the old block'
    What a lovely thing to see. I loved gardening with my Dad.

  • @justatitle
    @justatitle Місяць тому +1

    What a doll! Your son is so fun, like you. Loved this video. What great tips!!! Thanks!

  • @tmaa4bk949
    @tmaa4bk949 4 роки тому +3

    Thanks! I've been using Coffee Grounds for a few years now...will try the wood ash next spring. Cool Kid...HE ADDED to A GREAT ENDING😎

  • @adrianne7355
    @adrianne7355 3 роки тому +15

    your son is a rock star...I'm subbing because he was hysterical!

  • @ChristopherWelty
    @ChristopherWelty Рік тому +1

    New subscriber, first time gardener. Thanks for all your wisdom and walk through advice!

  • @DeborahCaldwell77
    @DeborahCaldwell77 2 роки тому

    Well THANK you. Add many decades of small time gardening I just didn’t know, but wondered

  • @Hi-fe2rg
    @Hi-fe2rg 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you so much for the science lesson. I'll pass this along to my teacher friends. I enjoyed this so much. Very informative. I've seen some other videos on coffee grounds and ash but they didn't explain the pros and cons and mixing things very well.

  • @dawnruhl8405
    @dawnruhl8405 3 роки тому +8

    My grandparents were off the boat Germans & had 2 acres that they planted mostly gardens. Maybe half an acre of grass. My grandmother had me taking stuff out to the compost bin when I was 6. I remember her sprinkling fresh ground coffee around the azaleas by her front door. I had forgotten so much that this video reminded me of. Thank you. They were happy memories.

  • @lynnodonnell4764
    @lynnodonnell4764 2 роки тому

    I am blown away by your presentation. Your speaking skills are clear, consice and even spaced

  • @hollistantang9469
    @hollistantang9469 11 місяців тому

    Thanks... I now learn about the positives and negatives part with coffee grounds..

  • @MsRosalyn3
    @MsRosalyn3 3 роки тому +6

    Thank you so much on showing me how to tell if my soil is Alkaline or Acidic!!!!❤️ And all the other info that you share was great as well.

  • @kathypollari7122
    @kathypollari7122 2 місяці тому +3

    I would love to see more current videos and your son would be a marvelous bonus. 3 years older, of course. I love the informative videos you share. Thank you.

  • @madelinedelvalle3666
    @madelinedelvalle3666 Рік тому

    I love your son, he is wonderful. The experiment was sooo cool too. Thanks 4 sharing that knowledge with us.

  • @lindaripp5902
    @lindaripp5902 Місяць тому

    I thank you so much for the information I am going to do this myself to test my little garden plot and it was really fun for you to have your boy in there with you thank you

  • @Liendoelcm
    @Liendoelcm 3 роки тому +4

    Had good success this summer with used coffee grounds and tea leaves around my roses this year lightly scratched into the top soil.

  • @kipgarwood-tull3173
    @kipgarwood-tull3173 3 роки тому +33

    red cabbage is also a great pH indicator. Red cabbage contains a water-soluble pigment called anthocyanin that changes color when it is mixed with an acid or a base. The pigment turns red in acidic environments with a pH less than 7 and the pigment turns bluish-green in alkaline (basic), environments with a pH greater than 7.

    • @toneenorman2135
      @toneenorman2135 2 роки тому +3

      Would you please explain how you use the cabbage? Thank you.

    • @kipgarwood-tull3173
      @kipgarwood-tull3173 2 роки тому +8

      @@toneenorman2135 you cook red cabbage and use the red water and a pH indicator as described above.

    • @daala6698
      @daala6698 Рік тому +2

      blueberries too. beets too.

  • @DsHomeyGarden
    @DsHomeyGarden 2 роки тому

    YEAAAAAA!!! Finally You gave me information I needed. I was always wondering how to test my soil since I have 8 different beds and thought what the soil in each bed could be. So now I will test each bed with your cool process....Thanx Man and Son..
    .

  • @a.nefertiti6980
    @a.nefertiti6980 Рік тому

    Very goodfather and son duo! Wonderfully refreshing!

  • @teresasanchez8853
    @teresasanchez8853 4 роки тому +33

    First time here, and I just loved your son... he is soooooo cute and he makes a great assistant.

  • @reliablyrandomoutdoors
    @reliablyrandomoutdoors Рік тому +3

    I have been adding ash and coffee grounds to my garden for years, but I learned a little more about it today. Nice vid, very thorough.

  • @mariamurphy8551
    @mariamurphy8551 2 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge!!

  • @verleejenkins
    @verleejenkins Рік тому

    Just watched this from 2 years ago! Thanks for the info as there were a few things I didn't know. Thanks for the testing diy. I will test tomorrow.

  • @steveslack5721
    @steveslack5721 4 роки тому +22

    I've used coffee grounds in my garden and around trees for years. Luckily I've not had any negatives. I now know how to properly apply thanks to Brian.

  • @alexhoward9684
    @alexhoward9684 3 роки тому +9

    Thanks for sharing! I especially use organic coffee grounds in my raised beds. Seems to work well.

  • @bbrosser694
    @bbrosser694 2 роки тому

    Thank You for sharing your great ideas with valuable instructions.

  • @dawnvittorio244
    @dawnvittorio244 2 роки тому

    This was great. I saw it last year and I couldn't find it again when I was ready to try it.. Thanks so much!

  • @BrightestBlessings7899
    @BrightestBlessings7899 2 роки тому +45

    I have been using both in my compost for ages. I put compost tea under my new transplants and it seems to help them not go into shock too badly. Have not had any coffee grounds for over a year, seeing way more pests but also added some new plants. Brassicas don't do well here. Great info , thanks. I did not know blueberries love coffee grounds.
    Our dogs would also try to eat my gardens soil. They gave it up, when I took them off kibble. They eat whole foods now. No more eating the soil.

  • @leiaclark8388
    @leiaclark8388 3 роки тому +43

    I add coffee grounds to my hydrangea bush regularly, and it has huge deep purple blooms. It’s a rock star!

    • @mattiwilson6542
      @mattiwilson6542 3 роки тому +2

      Good to know, thanks

    • @u.synlig
      @u.synlig 3 роки тому

      @Meta Thinking A Dutch friend used to bury a small copper coin (low denomination) in the hydrangea’s pot. That was all that it took, to keep the blooms blue.

    • @eriknichols4148
      @eriknichols4148 3 роки тому +5

      I add coffee grounds to my coffee maker

    • @scoop2591
      @scoop2591 2 роки тому +1

      @@eriknichols4148 LOL ! Genius! Why didn't I think of that???😂

  • @br4653
    @br4653 Рік тому

    I read to not put coffee grounds in compost, so good to know! Thank you! I bought your book for myself & a friend.

  • @BernadinePrice
    @BernadinePrice Місяць тому

    Oh hi, I love this video so educational. Thanks.
    I think that you can help a lot of people with their gardening young and our starlights.

  • @SalmonKing52
    @SalmonKing52 2 роки тому +11

    THANK YOU!!!
    I have been wanting to find an easy, inexpensive way to test my soil for a long time.
    Your timing is perfect!
    Thanks again!
    Great job Noah!!

    • @summerrain431
      @summerrain431 2 роки тому

      I got no reaction with vinegar, and only slight reaction with b.soda. So is my soil acidic?

  • @emptynestlife1889
    @emptynestlife1889 4 роки тому +6

    Good to know the pH test method. Thank you!

  • @thomasreto2997
    @thomasreto2997 2 роки тому

    First time I saw that simple test. Thank you

  • @akesha4138
    @akesha4138 Рік тому

    OK i'm impressed that you have worked this out to this degree. Pray to have more time and space for gardening in the near future

  • @carriecraiger3929
    @carriecraiger3929 4 роки тому +124

    I had a “run away” cherry tomato, that rolled over to a pile of wood ash from my non fires. And it grew massive right next to the pile and much better than any of other tomatoes.

    • @EdLillywhiteNorton
      @EdLillywhiteNorton 4 роки тому +4

      I've used ash around tomatoes too. But I do add pine straw and maybe it all balances out.

    • @percyisland
      @percyisland 3 роки тому

      I found ash great for the toms on middle Percy island . Thanks for the reminder 👍🎉🐝

    • @margaritamannanova51
      @margaritamannanova51 2 роки тому +2

      Is there any probability you have acidic soil? Maybe ash just corrected the soil into more alcaline?

  • @juliabourque1825
    @juliabourque1825 3 роки тому +7

    I sprinkle use spent coffee grind on each side of my carrots to repel rust flies. Since I've been doing this, I no longer have problems with wormy carrots.

  • @msseasailor5731
    @msseasailor5731 Рік тому

    I really appreciate your wonderfully informative and engaging videos!

  • @dinosanchez8528
    @dinosanchez8528 2 роки тому

    That could've been the most useful gardening video I've seen yet, thanks!

  • @melissacraig8982
    @melissacraig8982 3 роки тому +6

    Great informative video! Will definitely try this experiment with my son. Great teaching moment while having fun making a mess :)

  • @deeferry6520
    @deeferry6520 Рік тому +23

    I occasionally mix coffee grounds, egg shells and banana skins, whittled down in my blender, mixed with a little water to feed my indoor plants with. Its not something I do regularly, just every now and again and they seem to appreciate it. I have very healthy house plants lol. I never thought to do it in my garden but now I know. Thanks for sharing.

    • @dirtpoorchris
      @dirtpoorchris Рік тому

      If you have ANY house plants that are dying pretty much just add ANY dead plant matter to the top soil and let it rot away and your plant will form a bacteria symbiosis and get what it needs. 1 spoonfull of coffee grounds can turn a dying houseplant into a green super spreader. Alot of poeple are just scared of the white webby mycelium layer it forms for a few weeks.

  • @robertabessey7990
    @robertabessey7990 2 роки тому

    Just found your channel. Very happy that I did. Wanted to Thank you for sharing. Your very informative and down to earth. Thanks again, can't wait to watch all your other videos. Bless you and your family.

  • @maryannn.1108
    @maryannn.1108 2 роки тому

    Very informative and your son did such a good job! great personality and smile!❤