Hi Charles, my uncle and his family came over Mother’s Day to see my mom (his sister) and they wanted to see the garden, well one question they asked was how I got my soil so black? I said a little trick I learned from a dude in the UK. Adding compost every year has helped my garden so much. Thanks Charles. God bless y’all. (Old guy from Arkansas)🇺🇸
I might have an idea for video, but it would be a LONG one. How about going through the insects that are in compost piles? It always amazes me how much life there is, it would be great to learn what it is, what it does.. :) But thank you for all your videos and your books. Love my Salad leaves for all seasons, Organic gardening, Vegetable garden and Gardening Myths
@@stepheneastwood4524 Very true, but it all starts with the micro organisms. If they do well and when they are happy with the conditions where they live, all the other living creatures will do well too.
Let's not forget about Fungi. My favorite. I am doing a hack using Forrest compost in small amounts which has a very dense Fungi/ microorganism food web. That seems to simulate compost piles.
I do the no dig method now and I can honestly say its so much easier. In early Spring I get compost from the bin and just apply on the beds and rake it so all areas are covered. I dont think it matters too much if there are still decaying matter, the worms in the soil will do rest of the work. Worms are a barometer of the health of your soil, they will carry any matter down into the soil. Worms are just as important as bees are, they get little credit when both species are just as important
Been enjoying your videos for years now. I've been keeping a worm farm for a few years now and thought I'd share a tip that works well for me. When you are ready to harvest the compost and you want to separate the worms to start again, pick a bright sunny day. Take the black plastic you are using for a cover and uncover all but one corner of the worm farm. The worms hate the light and will all migrate away from the sun. Within a very short time, they will all be huddled up under the plastic in the corner.
I want to thank you again for all you teach us! I'm so grateful to have a no dig garden, especially this week. We've had so much rain this week, it caused flash flooding in our area. Because of no dig, I've been able to walk in my garden and plant (I plant even in the rain as there's so much to set out right now) without sinking into mud. The beds were squishy and saturated with water (8 inches of rain in two days), but if I had been doing traditional gardening with bare soil, I wouldn't have been able to walk in there at all. We didn't have mud caking on our boots! I rejoice often over this method, and I just taught my first gardening class two weeks ago. I suggested my class learn from your UA-cam videos as well. Keep up the good work. Dane and I appreciate you! God bless you Charles!
Hello Janet and Dane. Thank you so much for sharing this. It's an amazing thing isn't it, how doing this one simple thing of no dig has such amazing results. That's a huge amount of rain you've had and I'm so happy that you've been able to continue planting. It could be the difference between harvest or no harvest. Thank you also for recommending my videos, and I hope they help your students.
Yay! A wormery! You can also sink buckets with holes into a garden to create worm towers. I have four and they work very well to create castings in a growing garden.
My grandfather had big giant compost heaps on the farms where he worked, this was just on the open ground and easily measured 8m by 30m and 5m high. He would just pile it on one side and add to it on the other side. He turned where it started once a month and just carried on this way using what he put in first and then just starting over.
I love how creatures find a way to be somewhere that is habitable for them. Even my containers are no dig, and I never change the compost. I just add to it, and amend it each year. Even though some of them are on very thick pavers, or concrete, I still find that worms have managed to move in to them. I'm constantly puzzled by what drives them to move out of the ground, over the surface, and into a tub. Obviously, one could assume a bird had dropped a catch, but it's all of them. Still, I'm always happy to see them there! Edited to add that I would be thrilled if I found a Slow Worm had moved in. Apparently, we do have them around here. It's wonderful that your gardens are so rich.
I started a compost heap quite some time ago. I added some clay and some heavy soil. The soil was the base. So as I’m back into my composting, I’ve created a free standing pile using the soil from that heap against a Cyclone mesh fence. I find I don’t have a lot of Muscle Power when it comes to turning the pile, I do however managed to turn the top of the pile and move it from side to side. At the bottom of the pile is rich humus which I scrape away to use as Potting mix. I always say with Gardening, you find your own style and your own method.
We are also from Poland, we bought a plot a year ago and we are setting up a garden, vegetable garden and fruit orchard. We run a family channel, generally about a healthy lifestyle, about relaxing with nature and spending time with the family :) Unfortunately, in the garden we have a problem with voles and snails, so we decided to make raised beds :) We invite you and greetings :)
i am experimenting with leftover food, worms and some soil - then another bucket with soil, bokashi compost and worms. will add some grass and leaves as well. it's just fun to see what does well and what doesn't
I'm happy to see you're starting a worm composting pile. I've been running an indoor bin to process kitchen scraps and it's a fascinating but relatively simple process.
Charles, your garden is amazing! I have watched since your early time on UA-cam and enjoyed how you have transformed your parcel into abundance. Bravo and compost forever!!!
I have a similar set up with different compost bins and piles in various states etc. The plastic compost bin is great for a small garden if you can manage your garden waste effectively and get the mix right. If you get the mix right you’ll be surprised how quickly you can generate compost. I have more than one plastic bin to help manage various states of decay.
I have 3 plastic bins, shaped the same as the one he showed. I’m still figuring out my proportions of green & brown to prevent pockets of stinky clumps. But usually I mostly fill one & then turn it, twice a year: spring I turn it and again in fall. I’m hoping this year, by adding more weeds & general garden clippings, the yellowing lower leaves of vegetables, etc, to maybe speed it up and fill & turn a third time (creating more compost). I usually have to turn each pile twice, before it’s broken down enough to not have slimy stink pockets. So it’s difficult to make enough to cover my garden. I usually have enough to sprinkle a thin layer over 1/4-1/3 of my garden. But I did find a friend with safe manure this year, so that helped. Still wasn’t a thick enough layer, but plants are growing decently- I just have plenty of weeding to do ☹️. We’ve had so much rain, I’m having a hard time keeping up! But I’m determined not to give up this time (I’ve done no-dig several years in the past with straw/hay -the source of many of my grassy weeds now!). But after watching a few of these videos with me my husband agrees to give it a chance to have gardens as beautiful & productive as these and not make me till it again, like before. I just need a thicker layer of compost/manure in the future.
Jen Bear you know you are getting really deep into composting when you start eyeing up other People’s waste and looking at things in the form of it’s carbon nitrogen value (c:n)😂 but we can never have enough compost.
Thank you Charles for another compost tour, looking wonderful. The worm bin would definitely benefit from some added food like banana peels and household waste to feed on those microbes and the composting materials. Charles please try an experiment put 3 banana peels spread apart on top of the worm bin under the plastic and check in weekly to watch the worms go crazy on them.😀🇦🇺
Thank you Charles for sharing this informative video. Compost is the food for soil life, which in turn nourishes the plants. Every day I enjoy the NoDig knowledge in my own vegetable and herb garden. The food is delicious and my body remains healthy and vital.
What makes this content such high quality is the bioecological reasoning behind what he has happening in the garden. And getting to see results that can't be translated in words or pictures. Really helpful. I love that you don't mind the mice as part of the compost biodiversity, makes sense. But how to make sure I'm not handling unsanitary material or encountering rodents is a pretty high priority for me at this stage. For now, I make sure the food scraps are well to the interior so nothing furry is drawn by smell.
I sure NEED a big fat load of beautiful compost. I have SO much that NEEDs done around here, I just can NOT seem to do it ALL in a timely manner. I do way more than I should NOW, do to my auto accident injury, its been yrs but it is still healing. Graphs take a very long time to fully heal. Ohoo... And I NEED a wheelbarrow/wagon to carry the heavy stuff. Right NOW I am using 5 a gallon bucket to carry mulch, dirt, soils and such.
Thank you Charles. I’ve been very nervous by all the so called rules for compost. It just seemed so difficult. You have taken the difficulty right out of it.
I find that my composting worms stay in a hot heap, even when it reaches 70 degrees - as the temperatures rise, they just move to the very edges of the (lined, four- pallet) bay where it's cooler, or (more commonly) the very bottom of the heap (the base of each bay is also lined, with sheet metal, to keep the roots of nearby trees out). As soon as the temperature drops, they begin to repopulate the entire pile and, once it's fully cooled, they congregate on the surface, under the tarp that covers the compost. At that point, it becomes a massive wormery, enriching the heap further with worm castings as the compost cures.
I've three bays connected together & the worms seem to move into whichever one is at the stage they find most attractive, either heat or decomposition wise.
I had a bag of manure with a few holes in it laying off to the side of garden for 6 months and when I just cut it open to spread it it was full of worms. A new way of collecting worms !
Charles, I learned from you that I can compost weeds and everything you recommend on your videos. I adjusted my bin and added cardboard sides and reduced the size to make it more tighter. I access the bin and dig from the bottom and a treasure of black gold. I usually bag it with old bags to have them ready to use as the summer progresses. I am covering my bin with black plastic to keep the rain off it, but slowly getting more organize and efficient. I can never get enough videos from you about composting. Thank-you! Rafael
I have a bin with grass and cuttings etc and a separate food bin I put everything from the kitchen in. It gets smelly, but the worms love it and I take out the most decomposed parts once a year and mix it in to the beds and the plants seem to love it 🤷🏼♂️
🙂👍soy mecanico, no huertero, pero compostar se vuelve una manera de vivir. Crear nueva tierra pa plantas, y estos videos ayudan mucho Saludos desde patagonia Sir Charles.
Here in the US Pacific Northwest we have literally hundreds of large, native sword fern on the property. I’ve started including the old trimmed-off fronds in our compost heaps. They break down quicky with the rest of the ‘greens and browns’. They seem more brown than green after a short drying period and so far I haven’t had fern spores germinate out of the end product.
@@dianeladico1769 While we do have an amazing amount of rain (including temperature rain forests), we’re challenged by months and months of gray (grey) skies and a very cool maritime climate…
@@lmrandlette This is where I'm the odd one out-my favorite weather is 60 and cloudy/drizzle. 80s and sunny is boring. The only good thing about our hot summers is how well tomatoes, peppers, and corn grow. I relish our cool, overcast days. I was born on the wrong side of the country. Glad you are able to compost your ferns so you don't have too much of a good thing. Happy Gardening.
Hola Charles, estoy agradecida de tus videos preciosos he aprendido y los he puesto en práctica y me ha dado resultado en varias ocasiones, muchas gracias por tu enseñanza 🌷🇨🇱
Very nice composting station there , Charles ! I think that our crawly friends are smart enough to escape the heat , and the enter when it cools down .Cheers 🍻🌱
Thanks, Charles. Gardening season just beginning here in Alberta (mid-May). Much of this kind of composting doesn't work well here because the summer is short although very hot, and it means we don't have time to 'cook the compost' in one year ... but I still bins. Will have compost maybe for next year. Plastic barrels are an answer too. Compost is an excellent way of getting rid of household waste and making new soils. Your work is admirable.
I am in Manitoba, also short season but find that if you turn the piles weekly and pay some attention to the brown/green ratio you can get compost in one season. Cheers
In Florida where I am-you have to buy worms. Earth worms that is. Worms are not attracted to sand. 😊 So I was planning on incorporating a few hundred to help my composting out.
Sorry to hear that. The terminology is interesting because I wonder whether you mean Lumbricus terrestris, which are earthworms and they live in soil, eating and excreting and moving up and down, but they do not live in compost heaps. The compost worm is Esenia fetida (tiger worm), and that one is smaller, bright red, and does a great job of decomposing.
Appreciated that. "For many gardens, these would be too big"--looks like those bays take up more half of a typical British garden, especially a terraced house :') Would love to be able to do that some time. Got my large plastic bin with mixed success, started ripping up the cardboard and cutting up the banana peels now... Lots of coffee grounds, leaves and tree blossom. It seems that there are a lot of weed seeds within, although I am keeping weed clippings in a separate pile.
Good morning 🙂 I am collecting materials for my new compost so your video came in perfect time, thank you 😊. And of course have more greens than browns like always 😀. Have a great day in your beautiful garden, Charles 🙂💚💚
I just divided my worm farms and to make them build back up faster I’ve added besan flour so maybe you could give that’s a go Charles! Can’t wait to see how yours goes. X
Whilst I agree that it shouldn't be necessary to turn compost heaps, I suspect that in a normal "domestic" situation turning the pile once helps with both the speed and quality of composting because in a home garden situation we tend to have lots of similar material going in at once meaning the heap gets a bit "layered". I'm coming to think that turning once helps to mix everything up a bit better than might otherwise be the case, giving the microorganisms involved better access to all the nutrients they need. My favourite animal to visit one of my compost heaps was a grass snake that used it (presumably because it was warm and she could hide away) to incubate some eggs. I only found out when I finally emptied the bay and discovered the empty egg cases (probably just as well because I'd not have wanted to frighten her off).
@@CharlesDowding1nodig I forgot to add and then was reminded because I've been doing exactly this myself today... As you have bees, you'll presumably at some point be cycling out frames of brood comb then they get old and black. A few may be useful to keep if you want to set up bait hives, but otherwise I extract the wax from mine. The remains of the comb (which is mostly a mixture of wax, propolis and pupa cases) then composts very nicely, though I'd recommend burying it under other a few inches of other material so the bees aren't attracted to it.
Composting is as much fun as growing veg. Love the science of it. Also its interesting how small growers are really pushing no-dig with compost as a way to save money and not use peat. Its hard imagine commercial farmers producing and spreading enough compost that's cost effective, but maybe this will change. I saw a huge mechanical composter at a restaurant with its own veg growing area called 'the rocket'. It looked like an old steam engine.
I got some tiger worms last year to put in my compost bin they all left lol tbh i should have collected some to keep for this year but thought they wouldn't leave the bin you live and learn
Ive just emptied my first compost heap after two years, definitely did not get hot enough as the weed seedlings are coming up by the hundreds, luckily I bagged it up for future use so hopefully they will all die of x
Really interesting regarding how decomposed the compost needs to be before using!!! I sieved all my compost for 5 X 19' beds this year😂 Next year I'll be a little more gung ho!!! I really look forward to your videos, I learn something every time!! 😀
I have 'wildlife' in my compost heaps, as that's where the occasional rat carcase is disposed of, along with rabbit skins, pheasant & pigeon remains (after I've eaten the rest), fish bones & heads. Buried in the centre of one of my 1m³ bays, there's rarely anything left & certainly nothing more than bones. In my last garden, the bank behind was full of slow worms & also grass snakes & a nesting area for skylarks.
It's funny with the worms, because I have a compost container where we put all our kitchen scraps and some cardboard as brown material, and it is full of compost worms. I have never bought a single worm, they somehow managed to find it by themselves. Very odd as all gardens around here are lawns with leylandii hedges and not much else.
Just a heads up on the paper cup (6:00). Paper cups are typically coated with plastic. Even if it is "biodegradable" it may not be compostable, and may even contain nasty pollutants.
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Even if it's coated with "biodegradable" PLA instead of plastic, it requires industrial composting facilities to fully break down. After 60 days at 58°C only about half is broken down into water and CO2, the remaining bits could take as long as plastic to fully decompose. Paper cups may also be coated with paraffin wax. I looked into this when sourcing compostable paper cups for a café. My conclusion was that it's best to treat all paper cups as plastic cups 😕
If you can get some forest floor. Just a little bit of leaf litter with a little soil it will have good fungi to brake down wood fibers. More so than dirt from a field
Not only do I always learn something new from each new video - but the celebration of gardening, altogether, feeds me anew!!! A question: If you are building new compost bins, but not using pallets, I'm assuming you wouldnt leave the gaps between planks, and so wouldnt need to use the cardboard to keep the warmth in? From memory I think you have already taken us through that process.
In the Arizona desert- I struggle with composting!!! No grass, no leaves, most green veggie waste leaves go to the farm animals. I cleared out my compost pile and removed cardboard that I placed in there over 3 years ago. I added water everyday but obviously it was operator error.
Another great video, thank you Charles! I think you need to get a few chooks! They would love those cauliflower leaves! And you could add their bedding, egg shells and manure to your compost piles!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig so do we! (Imported from England with the first fleet haha). A sturdy enclosed run with a wire skirt with bluestone pitchers around the perimeter means they can’t dig in or under 😊 Food for thought!
Thank you .I use many of your techniques on my Lotties . As I work I need to be reasonably efficient in time .....no dig fits that perfectly ..... Without being a smug sod I see my good neighbor s spending 75 percent of their time digging weeding digging and exposing more seeds . I reckon with mulching and no dig I can hoe my plot in a third of the time my neighbours take. IMHO .a lot of gardening techniques hail from an earlier (,perhaps Victorian age) when the head gardener and his 20 staff had far more time?
This is good to hear Neil, and I so agree with your conclusion. The gardening authorities and teachers are slavishly copying old-fashioned methods. They are not taking new ideas and methods on board, until recently. Now in the UK the main teaching garden for Head gardeners of the future, Kew Gardens in London, give all the new students a no dig bed. They learn how to manage it. It used to be that the students were marked on how well they dug the new bed. So there are signs of change!
I'm trying to imagine the amount of materials you need to make to fill up a bay. I'm so curious about it and hope you will make a vlog of this one day. Even if it a timelapse one!!
A question if you have time to answer (you may be too busy in May!) - if compost dries out does it lose all effectiveness? Thank you for all the inspiration and information!
13:24 Charles, there were tonnes of worms in there! I think you siked yourself out due to the camera ... we saw 'em, though, we saw the worms. Mate, thanks a billion for continuing to produce and share this amazing content, I've turned on so many people around me to the CD way of doing things, and I'm always amazed at how many haven't heard of you yet (they must not be as sincere of gardeners as I'd assumed), but they always come back to me later grateful for me pointing them to you 👍 👊
Hi wonderful Ted and thanks so much for this really reassuring comment. I guess it's because I'm not on television, that there are not huge numbers of people who know about me, but we are getting word out!
Just starting our first no dig and compost this year. Need to buy compost to get us started and have the cardboard ready and will wet before we add compost. It sounds like 4 inches of compost is a good start to cover but what kind of compost do we get to start? Just organic compost, manure, or what kind? At a loss for where to go and get (USA). Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you for sharing all your content, it's all I've been watching to help me in my year of learning.
Best of luck Emily and any decomposed organic matter is good. From what I hear you do not have a huge choice. Spent mushroom compost is excellent if you can buy that one. Yes 4 inches to start with!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig We have a mushroom grower at our farmer's market, but he does not grow organically. Should I try getting spent mushroom compost from him if I'm trying to be all organic? I'm concerned about any herbicides or pesticides or fertilizer he may have used.
Hi Charles, great video, and you’ve had lots of comments, so sorry if I’m repeating an earlier one - there was a larger slow worm under the cover, visible top right under the cover when you took it off and before you noticed the smaller one on top. Lovely creatures ... I just seem to attract mice to mine! Regards, Gerry
No worries Gerry and they are amazing creatures, so shiny and unreal almost. Hang in there and I'm sure one will arrive! Meanwhile, mice are not so terrible… Quite cute 💚
I cannot imagine throwing away kitchen scraps. It's like gold for a gardener! 😂 Thank you again for such a useful video with many tips. ❤ I have a small bin so it was nice to also see that in your garden. 😁 Maybe an idea to try out a tumbler bin? Insects or rodents cannot get in so maybe useful for people who want to make compost in a city garden? 🤔
I love watching your videos over and over, I simply cant get enough of Charles Dowding.
Hi Charles, my uncle and his family came over Mother’s Day to see my mom (his sister) and they wanted to see the garden, well one question they asked was how I got my soil so black? I said a little trick I learned from a dude in the UK. Adding compost every year has helped my garden so much. Thanks Charles. God bless y’all. (Old guy from Arkansas)🇺🇸
That is so nice Steve to imagine you having that conversation! I'm happy to be the dude supplying your information 😅
I might have an idea for video, but it would be a LONG one. How about going through the insects that are in compost piles? It always amazes me how much life there is, it would be great to learn what it is, what it does.. :) But thank you for all your videos and your books. Love my Salad leaves for all seasons, Organic gardening, Vegetable garden and Gardening Myths
Compost is all about micro organisms.
Thanks for the idea Eliska, and I'm happy you like the books 🥬
@@insAneTunA And woodlice, ants, earwigs, millipedes, mites, beetles... they all help the decomposition process in their own way.
@@stepheneastwood4524 Very true, but it all starts with the micro organisms. If they do well and when they are happy with the conditions where they live, all the other living creatures will do well too.
Let's not forget about Fungi. My favorite. I am doing a hack using Forrest compost in small amounts which has a very dense Fungi/ microorganism food web. That seems to simulate compost piles.
I do the no dig method now and I can honestly say its so much easier. In early Spring I get compost from the bin and just apply on the beds and rake it so all areas are covered. I dont think it matters too much if there are still decaying matter, the worms in the soil will do rest of the work. Worms are a barometer of the health of your soil, they will carry any matter down into the soil. Worms are just as important as bees are, they get little credit when both species are just as important
Great to see this Chris and I so agree with you, such noble creatures
"And now for something completely different"😂 made me lol. Thank you for doing a audio book, now I can listen and garden👍
You're so welcome Bily, hope you like the book
Saw a guy in the US chopping up leaves and veg waste in a bucket with a garden strimmer, works really well, can’t wait to try it!
Been enjoying your videos for years now. I've been keeping a worm farm for a few years now and thought I'd share a tip that works well for me. When you are ready to harvest the compost and you want to separate the worms to start again, pick a bright sunny day. Take the black plastic you are using for a cover and uncover all but one corner of the worm farm. The worms hate the light and will all migrate away from the sun. Within a very short time, they will all be huddled up under the plastic in the corner.
What a lovely tip and thank you so much for sharing this!
Geoff lawton talks about this. 👍
Good Idea!
Thank you for that helpful hint!
Hello Charles! Im excited to say my compost pile is at 100 degrees with air temp 50. Glad i bought a nice compost thermometer.
So interesting! Watching for the 3rd time!
I want to thank you again for all you teach us! I'm so grateful to have a no dig garden, especially this week. We've had so much rain this week, it caused flash flooding in our area. Because of no dig, I've been able to walk in my garden and plant (I plant even in the rain as there's so much to set out right now) without sinking into mud. The beds were squishy and saturated with water (8 inches of rain in two days), but if I had been doing traditional gardening with bare soil, I wouldn't have been able to walk in there at all. We didn't have mud caking on our boots! I rejoice often over this method, and I just taught my first gardening class two weeks ago. I suggested my class learn from your UA-cam videos as well. Keep up the good work. Dane and I appreciate you! God bless you Charles!
Hello Janet and Dane. Thank you so much for sharing this. It's an amazing thing isn't it, how doing this one simple thing of no dig has such amazing results.
That's a huge amount of rain you've had and I'm so happy that you've been able to continue planting. It could be the difference between harvest or no harvest.
Thank you also for recommending my videos, and I hope they help your students.
The GOAT, no filler, no nonsense just good content
Yay! A wormery! You can also sink buckets with holes into a garden to create worm towers. I have four and they work very well to create castings in a growing garden.
Thanks for the tips!
6:23 i am so enchanted, that mistletoe is incredible!
My grandfather had big giant compost heaps on the farms where he worked, this was just on the open ground and easily measured 8m by 30m and 5m high. He would just pile it on one side and add to it on the other side. He turned where it started once a month and just carried on this way using what he put in first and then just starting over.
How amazing, I love this, he was fit and strong :)
I love how creatures find a way to be somewhere that is habitable for them. Even my containers are no dig, and I never change the compost. I just add to it, and amend it each year. Even though some of them are on very thick pavers, or concrete, I still find that worms have managed to move in to them. I'm constantly puzzled by what drives them to move out of the ground, over the surface, and into a tub. Obviously, one could assume a bird had dropped a catch, but it's all of them. Still, I'm always happy to see them there!
Edited to add that I would be thrilled if I found a Slow Worm had moved in. Apparently, we do have them around here. It's wonderful that your gardens are so rich.
Yes it's a great feeling Suzanne :)
Thanks for all you do Charles.
I bought some worms 14 years ago, 3 house moves and a move to the allotment, all good.👍 Tiger worms reproduce in 3 months.👍
Loved the slow worm. I have only seen one in the wild in real life. How cute that he has found a home there.
💚
Wow. Your 5 week old compost looks better than my 1 year old compost.
I know- me too!
I started a compost heap quite some time ago. I added some clay and some heavy soil. The soil was the base. So as I’m back into my composting, I’ve created a free standing pile using the soil from that heap against a Cyclone mesh fence. I find I don’t have a lot of Muscle Power when it comes to turning the pile, I do however managed to turn the top of the pile and move it from side to side. At the bottom of the pile is rich humus which I scrape away to use as Potting mix. I always say with Gardening, you find your own style and your own method.
So true, nice job Wendy
Year 3 of making my own compost and No Dig Gardening, thanks to you! Thank you for all that you do and that you share, have a great week🌿
Wonderful!
Your videos are relaxing me. Greetings from poland
Awesome! Thank you!
We are also from Poland, we bought a plot a year ago and we are setting up a garden, vegetable garden and fruit orchard. We run a family channel, generally about a healthy lifestyle, about relaxing with nature and spending time with the family :)
Unfortunately, in the garden we have a problem with voles and snails, so we decided to make raised beds :)
We invite you and greetings :)
Спасибо, сэр Чарльз!👍 Много полезных знаний преобретаю, просматривая ваши видео!
i am experimenting with leftover food, worms and some soil - then another bucket with soil, bokashi compost and worms. will add some grass and leaves as well. it's just fun to see what does well and what doesn't
Excellent!
"If there's a bustle in your hedgerow, don't be alarmed now".... 🎼🎶🎵😎Love your compost videos SOOOoooo much ! 💟👍👍
😀 It's just a spring clean for the May queen
Thanks! Love that song, just put it on
I'm happy to see you're starting a worm composting pile. I've been running an indoor bin to process kitchen scraps and it's a fascinating but relatively simple process.
Thanks, sounds good
Charles, your garden is amazing! I have watched since your early time on UA-cam and enjoyed how you have transformed your parcel into abundance. Bravo and compost forever!!!
So nice of you Geir, thanks
I'm very excited about the wormery! (11:37)
Can't wait to know how the experiment went :)
Thank you Charles for your dedication.
It's looking good so far, thanks
Charles, you’re brilliant!
💚! thanks
I have a similar set up with different compost bins and piles in various states etc. The plastic compost bin is great for a small garden if you can manage your garden waste effectively and get the mix right. If you get the mix right you’ll be surprised how quickly you can generate compost. I have more than one plastic bin to help manage various states of decay.
Great tip!
I have 3 plastic bins, shaped the same as the one he showed. I’m still figuring out my proportions of green & brown to prevent pockets of stinky clumps. But usually I mostly fill one & then turn it, twice a year: spring I turn it and again in fall. I’m hoping this year, by adding more weeds & general garden clippings, the yellowing lower leaves of vegetables, etc, to maybe speed it up and fill & turn a third time (creating more compost). I usually have to turn each pile twice, before it’s broken down enough to not have slimy stink pockets. So it’s difficult to make enough to cover my garden. I usually have enough to sprinkle a thin layer over 1/4-1/3 of my garden. But I did find a friend with safe manure this year, so that helped. Still wasn’t a thick enough layer, but plants are growing decently- I just have plenty of weeding to do ☹️. We’ve had so much rain, I’m having a hard time keeping up! But I’m determined not to give up this time (I’ve done no-dig several years in the past with straw/hay -the source of many of my grassy weeds now!). But after watching a few of these videos with me my husband agrees to give it a chance to have gardens as beautiful & productive as these and not make me till it again, like before. I just need a thicker layer of compost/manure in the future.
Jen Bear you know you are getting really deep into composting when you start eyeing up other People’s waste and looking at things in the form of it’s carbon nitrogen value (c:n)😂 but we can never have enough compost.
Thank you Charles for another compost tour, looking wonderful.
The worm bin would definitely benefit from some added food like banana peels and household waste to feed on those microbes and the composting materials.
Charles please try an experiment put 3 banana peels spread apart on top of the worm bin under the plastic and check in weekly to watch the worms go crazy on them.😀🇦🇺
Thanks Rick, shall do, just ate a banana!
Not seen. Thank you in advance.
Greetings from Germany.
Thank you Charles for sharing this informative video. Compost is the food for soil life, which in turn nourishes the plants. Every day I enjoy the NoDig knowledge in my own vegetable and herb garden. The food is delicious and my body remains healthy and vital.
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What makes this content such high quality is the bioecological reasoning behind what he has happening in the garden. And getting to see results that can't be translated in words or pictures. Really helpful.
I love that you don't mind the mice as part of the compost biodiversity, makes sense. But how to make sure I'm not handling unsanitary material or encountering rodents is a pretty high priority for me at this stage. For now, I make sure the food scraps are well to the interior so nothing furry is drawn by smell.
Thanks Alicia and I wish you health
I have a couple of trellises in my garden that I bought years ago.
I sure NEED a big fat load of beautiful compost. I have SO much that NEEDs done around here, I just can NOT seem to do it ALL in a timely manner. I do way more than I should NOW, do to my auto accident injury, its been yrs but it is still healing. Graphs take a very long time to fully heal. Ohoo... And I NEED a wheelbarrow/wagon to carry the heavy stuff. Right NOW I am using 5 a gallon bucket to carry mulch, dirt, soils and such.
Wow good luck with all that
Love your composting vlogs Charles, always something new to learn about making the black gold!! Thankyou.
Hi Charles I always enjoy your videos compost is very interesting thank you lv Irene 😘 xx
You are always perfect in your teachings.
Thank you! 😃
Thank you Charles
Thank you Charles. I’ve been very nervous by all the so called rules for compost. It just seemed so difficult. You have taken the difficulty right out of it.
Glad it was helpful Pamela and that is my aim!! 😀
I find that my composting worms stay in a hot heap, even when it reaches 70 degrees - as the temperatures rise, they just move to the very edges of the (lined, four- pallet) bay where it's cooler, or (more commonly) the very bottom of the heap (the base of each bay is also lined, with sheet metal, to keep the roots of nearby trees out). As soon as the temperature drops, they begin to repopulate the entire pile and, once it's fully cooled, they congregate on the surface, under the tarp that covers the compost. At that point, it becomes a massive wormery, enriching the heap further with worm castings as the compost cures.
Nice explanation 😀
I've three bays connected together & the worms seem to move into whichever one is at the stage they find most attractive, either heat or decomposition wise.
A hot heap of earthworms. Just what I need to lighten up my red clay soil.🐉🐉🐉😆(couldn't find a worm)
I had a bag of manure with a few holes in it laying off to the side of garden for 6 months and when I just cut it open to spread it it was full of worms. A new way of collecting worms !
Charles, I learned from you that I can compost weeds and everything you recommend on your videos. I adjusted my bin and added cardboard sides and reduced the size to make it more tighter. I access the bin and dig from the bottom and a treasure of black gold. I usually bag it with old bags to have them ready to use as the summer progresses. I am covering my bin with black plastic to keep the rain off it, but slowly getting more organize and efficient. I can never get enough videos from you about composting. Thank-you! Rafael
How wonderful Rafael 😀, thanks for sharing
I have a bin with grass and cuttings etc and a separate food bin I put everything from the kitchen in. It gets smelly, but the worms love it and I take out the most decomposed parts once a year and mix it in to the beds and the plants seem to love it 🤷🏼♂️
Thanks for sharing your worm bin secrets!
Thank you Charles, your composter are awesome, and really are great compost producers. Ive started a made up hot composter. Thanks for sharing this.
Lovely, and best of luck with that Lorraine
Hola mi amigo que gusto de verlo. Gracias por sus enseñanzas ❤️
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🙂👍soy mecanico, no huertero, pero compostar se vuelve una manera de vivir. Crear nueva tierra pa plantas, y estos videos ayudan mucho Saludos desde patagonia Sir Charles.
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I do love your compost videos. You're almost as enthusiastic as me about composting!!
😂!
This inspired me to create more compost pile for my backyard garden. Take good care of your health Sir! Stay safe.
Happy to hear that and thanks!
Fascinating, as always Charles. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
Here in the US Pacific Northwest we have literally hundreds of large, native sword fern on the property. I’ve started including the old trimmed-off fronds in our compost heaps. They break down quicky with the rest of the ‘greens and browns’. They seem more brown than green after a short drying period and so far I haven’t had fern spores germinate out of the end product.
Sounds highly worthwhile!
Here in the US Midwest I am insanely jealous of your bountiful ferns.
@@dianeladico1769 While we do have an amazing amount of rain (including temperature rain forests), we’re challenged by months and months of gray (grey) skies and a very cool maritime climate…
@@lmrandlette This is where I'm the odd one out-my favorite weather is 60 and cloudy/drizzle. 80s and sunny is boring. The only good thing about our hot summers is how well tomatoes, peppers, and corn grow. I relish our cool, overcast days. I was born on the wrong side of the country. Glad you are able to compost your ferns so you don't have too much of a good thing. Happy Gardening.
Как всегда - прекрасное мотивирующее видео о здоровом земледелии👍.
Thanks so much Olga
Hola Charles, estoy agradecida de tus videos preciosos he aprendido y los he puesto en práctica y me ha dado resultado en varias ocasiones, muchas gracias por tu enseñanza 🌷🇨🇱
Me alegra mucho escuchar esto ximena y tambien me ayuda saber que vale la pena pagar por los subtitulos en español
Very nice composting station there , Charles ! I think that our crawly friends are smart enough to escape the heat , and the enter when it cools down .Cheers 🍻🌱
Thanks and this makes sense :)
Love this ! Thanks Charles 💚
Thank you, Charles. Always love your videos on compost. From a fan in Wisconsin, USA.
💚 You are very welcome
Thanks, Charles.
Gardening season just beginning here in Alberta (mid-May). Much of this kind of composting doesn't work well here because the summer is short although very hot, and it means we don't have time to 'cook the compost' in one year ... but I still bins. Will have compost maybe for next year. Plastic barrels are an answer too. Compost is an excellent way of getting rid of household waste and making new soils. Your work is admirable.
Sounds great Joe, hope summer lasts a bit!
I am in Manitoba, also short season but find that if you turn the piles weekly and pay some attention to the brown/green ratio you can get compost in one season. Cheers
@@jackdubois5564 Yep. But we had to wait until late April for our compost to thaw out before we could stick a fork in it. Oh well.
In Florida where I am-you have to buy worms. Earth worms that is. Worms are not attracted to sand. 😊 So I was planning on incorporating a few hundred to help my composting out.
Sorry to hear that. The terminology is interesting because I wonder whether you mean Lumbricus terrestris, which are earthworms and they live in soil, eating and excreting and moving up and down, but they do not live in compost heaps. The compost worm is Esenia fetida (tiger worm), and that one is smaller, bright red, and does a great job of decomposing.
Never too much compost:-) Lost of ways to do it! I think it is good to try a few ways and treat the first couple as learning experiences.
Very true!
Grazie della traduzione, sempre interessanti ì suoi video
Nice thanks
Perfect lesson... thanks for sharing knowledge
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Appreciated that. "For many gardens, these would be too big"--looks like those bays take up more half of a typical British garden, especially a terraced house :') Would love to be able to do that some time. Got my large plastic bin with mixed success, started ripping up the cardboard and cutting up the banana peels now... Lots of coffee grounds, leaves and tree blossom. It seems that there are a lot of weed seeds within, although I am keeping weed clippings in a separate pile.
Thanks Ruby, good to hear
Always something to learn from your videos!
Good morning 🙂
I am collecting materials for my new compost so your video came in perfect time, thank you 😊. And of course have more greens than browns like always 😀. Have a great day in your beautiful garden, Charles 🙂💚💚
Thanks Ula, enjoy that
thaks for sharing
I just divided my worm farms and to make them build back up faster I’ve added besan flour so maybe you could give that’s a go Charles! Can’t wait to see how yours goes. X
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This is great! Can't wait to check our container compost which we over-wintered. I hope we get good compost out of it just like yours.
Best of luck!
Whilst I agree that it shouldn't be necessary to turn compost heaps, I suspect that in a normal "domestic" situation turning the pile once helps with both the speed and quality of composting because in a home garden situation we tend to have lots of similar material going in at once meaning the heap gets a bit "layered". I'm coming to think that turning once helps to mix everything up a bit better than might otherwise be the case, giving the microorganisms involved better access to all the nutrients they need.
My favourite animal to visit one of my compost heaps was a grass snake that used it (presumably because it was warm and she could hide away) to incubate some eggs. I only found out when I finally emptied the bay and discovered the empty egg cases (probably just as well because I'd not have wanted to frighten her off).
How lovely, and good points James
@@CharlesDowding1nodig I forgot to add and then was reminded because I've been doing exactly this myself today... As you have bees, you'll presumably at some point be cycling out frames of brood comb then they get old and black. A few may be useful to keep if you want to set up bait hives, but otherwise I extract the wax from mine. The remains of the comb (which is mostly a mixture of wax, propolis and pupa cases) then composts very nicely, though I'd recommend burying it under other a few inches of other material so the bees aren't attracted to it.
Composting is as much fun as growing veg. Love the science of it. Also its interesting how small growers are really pushing no-dig with compost as a way to save money and not use peat. Its hard imagine commercial farmers producing and spreading enough compost that's cost effective, but maybe this will change. I saw a huge mechanical composter at a restaurant with its own veg growing area called 'the rocket'. It looked like an old steam engine.
Yes so interesting. Rockets are intriguing, need careful managing.
I got some tiger worms last year to put in my compost bin they all left lol tbh i should have collected some to keep for this year but thought they wouldn't leave the bin you live and learn
Ah so sorry, worm migration
I needed a composting video so much and here it is
Ive just emptied my first compost heap after two years, definitely did not get hot enough as the weed seedlings are coming up by the hundreds, luckily I bagged it up for future use so hopefully they will all die of x
I am sure it's good
Спасибо огромное🙏🙏🙏 очень познавательно😊🌷🌸🥬🌱🥦🥒🌾🌿
Great!
Really interesting regarding how decomposed the compost needs to be before using!!! I sieved all my compost for 5 X 19' beds this year😂 Next year I'll be a little more gung ho!!! I really look forward to your videos, I learn something every time!! 😀
Nice to hear Maria!
You had me at audiobook… 🎉
I have 'wildlife' in my compost heaps, as that's where the occasional rat carcase is disposed of, along with rabbit skins, pheasant & pigeon remains (after I've eaten the rest), fish bones & heads.
Buried in the centre of one of my 1m³ bays, there's rarely anything left & certainly nothing more than bones.
In my last garden, the bank behind was full of slow worms & also grass snakes & a nesting area for skylarks.
That sounds fantastic
Good job 👍.
Another amazing video from the no digging guru 😎
Thanks 👍
so valuable vids u make Charles! thnx a lot!
It's funny with the worms, because I have a compost container where we put all our kitchen scraps and some cardboard as brown material, and it is full of compost worms. I have never bought a single worm, they somehow managed to find it by themselves. Very odd as all gardens around here are lawns with leylandii hedges and not much else.
What a wonderful result!
Just a heads up on the paper cup (6:00). Paper cups are typically coated with plastic. Even if it is "biodegradable" it may not be compostable, and may even contain nasty pollutants.
Oh dear!!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Even if it's coated with "biodegradable" PLA instead of plastic, it requires industrial composting facilities to fully break down. After 60 days at 58°C only about half is broken down into water and CO2, the remaining bits could take as long as plastic to fully decompose. Paper cups may also be coated with paraffin wax.
I looked into this when sourcing compostable paper cups for a café. My conclusion was that it's best to treat all paper cups as plastic cups 😕
@@ximono oh dear! Thanks for sharing this
Super interesante el vídeo. Gracias por ayudarme con su explicación. Felicidades.
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If you can get some forest floor. Just a little bit of leaf litter with a little soil it will have good fungi to brake down wood fibers. More so than dirt from a field
Drinking game: Take a drink every time Charles says "woodchip"
Cheers Jamie, no woodchip though 😀
Спасибо 👍🏻
Not only do I always learn something new from each new video - but the celebration of gardening, altogether, feeds me anew!!! A question: If you are building new compost bins, but not using pallets, I'm assuming you wouldnt leave the gaps between planks, and so wouldnt need to use the cardboard to keep the warmth in? From memory I think you have already taken us through that process.
Thank you Annie, and yes exactly I would not use cardboard in that case.
In the Arizona desert- I struggle with composting!!! No grass, no leaves, most green veggie waste leaves go to the farm animals. I cleared out my compost pile and removed cardboard that I placed in there over 3 years ago. I added water everyday but obviously it was operator error.
Oh dear, that sounds extremely difficult and maybe it's not appropriate for you to make compost!
hello charles how nice I composed in different compositions a wonder for the plants I send you greetings
Wonderful!
Another great video, thank you Charles! I think you need to get a few chooks! They would love those cauliflower leaves! And you could add their bedding, egg shells and manure to your compost piles!
Haha - but we have foxes here
@@CharlesDowding1nodig so do we! (Imported from England with the first fleet haha). A sturdy enclosed run with a wire skirt with bluestone pitchers around the perimeter means they can’t dig in or under 😊
Food for thought!
Thank you .I use many of your techniques on my Lotties . As I work I need to be reasonably efficient in time .....no dig fits that perfectly ..... Without being a smug sod I see my good neighbor s spending 75 percent of their time digging weeding digging and exposing more seeds . I reckon with mulching and no dig I can hoe my plot in a third of the time my neighbours take. IMHO .a lot of gardening techniques hail from an earlier (,perhaps Victorian age) when the head gardener and his 20 staff had far more time?
This is good to hear Neil, and I so agree with your conclusion. The gardening authorities and teachers are slavishly copying old-fashioned methods. They are not taking new ideas and methods on board, until recently.
Now in the UK the main teaching garden for Head gardeners of the future, Kew Gardens in London, give all the new students a no dig bed. They learn how to manage it. It used to be that the students were marked on how well they dug the new bed. So there are signs of change!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig 👍....you have a convert here Sir ....... enjoy your day
I'm trying to imagine the amount of materials you need to make to fill up a bay. I'm so curious about it and hope you will make a vlog of this one day. Even if it a timelapse one!!
That is quite a thought and would be interesting indeed!
Great stuff! I’m going to think about building one of those wor art compost hybrids you’ve created, looks great!
Try bokashi treating the green material in pails before adding to wormery
"It's early May such a lovely time of year"
Me - *looks outside to assess the amount of snow left on the ground*
Ah nooo, hope it goes today!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig more is gone today! The weather is looking good 🌞🇨🇦 appreciate it and the content
A question if you have time to answer (you may be too busy in May!) - if compost dries out does it lose all effectiveness? Thank you for all the inspiration and information!
Temporarily, but it's still protecting the soil below. Microbes go dormant then live again when damp
Beautiful compost! Can we have more garden tours please charles?
Haha thanks, they are coming
13:24 Charles, there were tonnes of worms in there! I think you siked yourself out due to the camera ... we saw 'em, though, we saw the worms. Mate, thanks a billion for continuing to produce and share this amazing content, I've turned on so many people around me to the CD way of doing things, and I'm always amazed at how many haven't heard of you yet (they must not be as sincere of gardeners as I'd assumed), but they always come back to me later grateful for me pointing them to you 👍 👊
Hi wonderful Ted and thanks so much for this really reassuring comment. I guess it's because I'm not on television, that there are not huge numbers of people who know about me, but we are getting word out!
Just starting our first no dig and compost this year. Need to buy compost to get us started and have the cardboard ready and will wet before we add compost. It sounds like 4 inches of compost is a good start to cover but what kind of compost do we get to start? Just organic compost, manure, or what kind? At a loss for where to go and get (USA). Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you for sharing all your content, it's all I've been watching to help me in my year of learning.
Best of luck Emily and any decomposed organic matter is good. From what I hear you do not have a huge choice. Spent mushroom compost is excellent if you can buy that one. Yes 4 inches to start with!
@@CharlesDowding1nodig We have a mushroom grower at our farmer's market, but he does not grow organically. Should I try getting spent mushroom compost from him if I'm trying to be all organic? I'm concerned about any herbicides or pesticides or fertilizer he may have used.
Hi Charles, great video, and you’ve had lots of comments, so sorry if I’m repeating an earlier one - there was a larger slow worm under the cover, visible top right under the cover when you took it off and before you noticed the smaller one on top. Lovely creatures ... I just seem to attract mice to mine! Regards, Gerry
No worries Gerry and they are amazing creatures, so shiny and unreal almost. Hang in there and I'm sure one will arrive! Meanwhile, mice are not so terrible… Quite cute 💚
@@CharlesDowding1nodig …..not when they migrate to your kitchen! Eek! That put an end to my composting…. But you’ve convinced me ….lm starting again!
@@churchviewwishart8873 😀
I cannot imagine throwing away kitchen scraps. It's like gold for a gardener! 😂 Thank you again for such a useful video with many tips. ❤ I have a small bin so it was nice to also see that in your garden. 😁 Maybe an idea to try out a tumbler bin? Insects or rodents cannot get in so maybe useful for people who want to make compost in a city garden? 🤔
You are so welcome Monique.
Tried a tumbler, was not impressed!