@Aisha Williams To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com
I'm a new age farmer from India. A country where the son of a farmer no longer wants to take up the old man's occupation. The people that actually farm here, use tremendous amounts of chemicals to grow things. Thank you so much for educating people for free. It surely is going to help me grow healthy and sustainable food. 🙏🏼 Feed the soil, not the plant!!
I have heard others say than many Indians now view agrriculture as a profession to avoid, it might be that policies make the occupation unpopular. Everybody wants to eat!
I am a forklift operator.. I have been using the internet as the tool that it is and I have applied myself to things that i am interested in and completely stopped the mindless scrolling and have used my time wisely. I do not have the money to take the course yet but I am going to buy a microscope and I am going to study and use this amazing tool to help me along the way. Thank you Elaine for this information given so freely to the hungry minds. I look forward to taking this course and launching my own worm farm in North Carolina!
From Portugal can not thank you enough. I am a Family doctor trying to pass the knowledge that we and the universe are one. Key Imune system. Our microbiome depends on marvelous fruits and vegetables and all that comes directly alive from Mother Nature. Now I can begin to go a little further. Going to see and listen all I can from you and team. Once again Thank you so much
Spiritual doctors will be of great importance, keep up with educating,.keep an open mind free from ego. There more possible then most can imagine including out Of body traveling. I can't yet but I'm awake after attempted murder I was shot. I've been visited 2x i knew for sure and it's just the beginning of our abilities. We all come from the planet- dirt/ water. 🙂🤗
Hi! I’m in Foley, Alabama. Been here now for almost two years, after moving from Ventura, California. My 30 year old garden there was in containers .Trying my hand at gardening in the South. Started with vegetable seeds and marigolds and the flowers were stupendous but everything attacked my organic garden.So, I switched to raising Monarch Butterflies and milkweed which was a huge success. Today , at the end of January 25, I’m just growing soil in a beautiful raised bed. Layering up great soil…adding small amounts of kitchen scraps in little mounded piles covered with more soil and dried leaves. Waiting for the soil to cure and plan to add more soil, then plant with lots of flowers and vegetables….This time I’m hoping the soil will be successful for all, including worms. My huge yard was poisoned on a schedule before I moved here. I planted lots of mini clover and started to nourished the yard, adding more organic soil. No poison in my yard. Life is welcome….Love my bees and butterflies.
@@ABplusOriginal Hi, Foley is bustling. People coming and going to the local attractions and the sugar white beaches. The steady traffic of tourist is great for the real estate. Love it here except for the mosquitoes and hurricanes.
Hey neighbor im just next door in mississippi welcome to the south and our wet muggy heat. You can grow almost anything here though. We have like a 10 month growing season. Actually year round for alot of things.
Have found the use of pine needles as a mulch around my strawberries plants has greatly increased their yields, down here amongst the gum trees in Central Victoria, Australia. Included a layer of leaf mold this season and now seeing a mass of white flowers for the insects to pollinate.
No.Calif. 18 yrs homesteader with full-time job, now full-time small rancher. (About. Another 20 yrs.) Garden, about 20 assorted fruit trees, About 15 acres of dryland pasture. Have raised most of my food And a small income Have always been interested in sustainability ,fertility and doing whatever can be done to help things out.
I’m in central New Mexico. The previous owner of my 1.25 acre lot scraped the surface off every year for 10 years and called it weed control. My “garden plot” was an adobe floored horse corral, compacted as the dickens. It’s only saving grace was that he never cleaned out the corral so all that dung was stomped into the adobe when it rained. I decided to leave it in place. Since then, I’ve laid out a 40’x50’ garden and begun laying down layers of aged manure, wood chips, massive amounts of leaves and straw. I’m building raised beds on top of the base layers and using the rest of the area as walkways. My plan is to surround the entire garden with perennial plants that are edible. It’s all in full, desert sun so all that vegetable material is holding water in the soil as I try to bring the soil back to life. I’m hoping to bring it back so it can begin to spread out from my garden area.
Hello from north Rio Rancho! I love seeing other gardeners here in the high deserts of New Mexico, we have such a unique climate that can support so much life if you just help it out a bit. If you're ever in need of some local help I'd be happy to hold a brainstorming conversation or even analyze soil samples for you as a hobbyist microscopist.
Hello from texas. I own a microbial matrix company that does incredible things with abiotic stressors and locations like yours. I love people trying to reverse desertification and do their part. If you ever need any help on restoring your microbes health I would love to be that person.
I keep skipping these videos but I ran out of native plant webinars to watch so I rounded back to microbiology and it’s actually a lot more fascinating that I initially thought it would be.
Southern California, 45 miles north of the U.S./Mexico border, Slab City. My goal is to plant desert loving perrineals. Grow food for egg laying poultry and milk goats, and provide a variety of nutritional food. It's been said that Imperial County California is the most impoverished County in the United States. Slab City must be the most impoverished "city" in the United States. The Moringa tree will be the most prominent in what I plan to be a food oasis.
You should forget the goats because they will strip the bark off of your trees and eat your crops if you do not keep them unhappily confined and penned. There is no forage for them in the desert especially with the ongoing drought as goats are from the beautiful lush valleys of the European Alps. They won't survive. Moringa is a bad choice of crop for the desert. You need crops from the desert. You cannot be disappointed if you plant Carob trees there. Thornless Prickley Pear, Figs, Dates, Olives and things designed for that growing condition. Chickens will need expensive grain and will be preyed upon by neighbors and other desert predators as they must have a very well trained intelligent dog to keep them safe. They are 100% defenseless.
@@riverside321 I've had an easy time of growing purslane. It handles the heat well, reseed quickly and easily. I've enjoyed nibbling in it when I water my plants and the chickens like it too. It's slow going to get mulch, I'd rather create mulch from what I grow and I'm willing to have wood chips hauled in from a local tree trimming busses, I'm a bit reserved about wood chips because it's possible that the landscape business could bring in much that has been exposed to pesticides and herbicides. Currently we are having temperatures averaging 100 degrees for the highs. I'm doing okay with moringa, ironwood, Palo Verde and mesquite.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 people never actually think things out. It's always selfish and from their perspective. Move to see someone thinking about the animals! I truly hope SHE DOESN'T bother getting animals as she sounds a little too self-absorbed for them to be an adequate Caretakers anyway.
For rodent control it's best to work towards a system where you're providing habit for native non-venomous snakes and barn owl houses. Doing this will keep the rodent population in check.
@@meok6305 I've seen documentaries about the rodent problem that Australia has some years. It's almost apocalyptic in scale, so you also need to seal up those grain bins really tight with zero gaps.
Actually it was their agressive killing of all preditors such as foxes, snakes, etc. coupled with a bumper harvest that created the perfect conditions for the rodent outbreak.
I subscribed because this channel has so much that the viewers need to learn about growing healthy plants or foods for human being and of course of the nature. if we do all of these or even the very basic composting then we can cure our sick or unhealthy soil that produces unhealthy foods to human.
I'm glad I found this channel, I do not use chemical fertilizers or pesticides or any type of poison to kill weeds, I want to learn about soil, I have a 40 acre homestead, I'm trying to grow a natural echo system to produce food for human consumption and my livestock. I'm in the high desert at 4,500 feet above sea level. My place is unique in some ways, for one I have an enormous amount of water, a year around creek the comes off a reservoir, there are multiple natural springs that feed this reservoir, we allow 1,100 gallons of water per minute to come out of the reservoir all year and the reservoir never drops. It is always full, 1,100 gallons per minute is almost 2 million gallons of water per day. The water is distributed to my homestead and the ranch next to me. We get all the water. I have clay soil, it is my understanding that clay soil has a lot of minerals, we do have springs coming of this mountain with warm water, it produces steam in the winter, my creek is cold water, I also have a shallow water table or a huge underground spring, I can dig anywhere on my property and hit water at 2 feet in the winter, 4 feet in the summer. I know we are facing massive food shortages in the coming months, I knew this was coming so I started preparing 12 years ago, I bought this property, it had not been touched in fifty years. So all soil and plant materials are organic. I raise dairy and meat goats, sheep, pigs, chickens and horses, goats are great, they are foragers so they don't over graze the land like cattle, sheep's are grazers but my goats taught my sheep to be foragers, they eat and move, constantly moving, horses graze but plenty of land for them to graze, that's another unique thing about my property, I have thousands of acres that border my property that is open range. I need a volunteer mentor, I know a lot but want to be the best.
Hej.. Thank you for this learning y.. from a Zimbabwean grower in Sweden.... I was blessed to be born in my village and brought up by very traditional grandparents and we lived off the land before the invasion of modern agriculture.. No one in my village ever talked about organic food.. I only understood the term organic food in my thirties in Europe.. I just assumed all food was grown naturally.. I was most shocked with farming in the west.. mainly that farmers do not grow for their own food security and are just as dependent on supermarkets as the landless people.. My late unschooled grandfather used to always say.. "You can not call Yourself a farmer when you lack food security from your land, how then can you be trusted to feed the nation"?.. I am lucky to have grown up at this time because I do no recognize my community's farming practices.. Most of our ancient traditional seeds thousands of years old have been lost..
I have a perfect ground cover system at the end of my garden under a canopy of 13 oak trees, in the falls (Autumn) all the leaves fall off the oak tree and all the fungi begins to grow. I do harvest 3 different edible fungi in my garden, there are a whole rotation of plant that come up under those oak tree through the year many of them are ground cover all low growing. It was planted by a plants man who had the garden before me The whole system is older than 80 years.
Hi, Arable farmer in the UK. Have you done any work on pelleting compost and sowing it along with the seed? Most modern no till drills can sow fertliser etc along with the seed so this would be a handy way to help the soil, whilst using conventional techniques and equipment? Great work guys thank you very much. All growers and farmers should know about this stuff
The comment about the bad press that bacteria have received is truely pervasive in the American lexicon. I would say that is due to a large amount of misinformation that is drilled into our culture and then transferred into the way we express knowledge about microbes in the english language. The common exposure that most people have with the simplest forms of life is through the possibility of danger. This triggers fear that, in turn, triggers your fight or flight response, and for most Americans, flight is much easier than their want or need for the availability to positive information concerning bacteria, fungi, and the importance of large mycelial biomasses. WE MUST CHANGE OUR USE OF THE LANGUAGE concerning microflora through education. I believe this does take the re-education of how we collectively view our microscopic biomasses. Controlling bacterial community is taught in some cultures usually in communities who have a stronger tie than most have to agricultural. It is not being taught on a grassroots level. This knowledge that use to be passed down generationally but now people buy chemicals that mimic the nutrients that plants need but those chemicals will not grow the microfauna that is necessary to create living soil. TEACH PEOPLE WHOM YOU CAN INFLUENCE how to influence the Microfauna around themselves.
I got really annoyed when I realized how much disgust sensitivity was def a trait that evolved but not based on science. Look up disgust sensitivity triggers.
The Zia pits filled with compost to form a nucleus of bio activity reminds me of something Joel Salatin said. When looking at a depleted farm to rent, the owner offered to bring in a tractor or dozer to pull out the multi-flora rose bushes. Joel declined because under them was the only vibrant soil on the place.
I live on a 15 acre horse farm in central Florida and have always been interested in making my pastures stronger and greener. Also have a private vegetable garden. So many farms around me. Would love to share this info with them.
@Beckie Wolf I would like to invite you to watch the replays of our January 2023, FREE webinar series titled, The Soil Food Web Movement. In this 4-part webinar series we featured three amazing Soil Health Success Stories. We met some of the farmers out there who have benefited from working with Soil Food Web Consultants, and took a look under the microscope at some of the critters that should be in the soil under your feet. We also met some of the people who are helping farmers make a smooth transition to Regenerative Agriculture by healing their soils. Register here for our FREE webinar series: promo.soilfoodweb.com/reg-webinar-the-soil-food-web-movement Also, you might enjoy this new Case Study film from Peru, where the farmer reported increasing yields by over 100% in the first year and nearly 100% in year 2: promo.soilfoodweb.com/jan23s-consultant-va/#case-peru
That concentrated compost in one small section before moving on to the rest, is called starting change by identifying a bright spot, or in this case creating and committing to one
Great to hear that you are promoting IMO since I get tempted to add products to inoculate since it sounds like the products would be better than what I have in my system.
I collect IMOs from under trees on my property. Under the leaves that haven’t been touched for decades. That soil is black and filled with microbes. Or go to a local forest. And it’s really easy. I grow these in 5 gal buckets. Takes 2 days and 5 gals are diluted 100:1 so you can make 500 gals in 2 days. Free. Want to learn how see Chris Trump on collecting IMOs.
I live in Houston Texas. I started to collect leaves around the neighborhood and pile it at my backyard. After a few month, the leaves break down and many earthworms.
I'm looking at a parcel of land that was purchased by a sand and gravel company that proceeded to strip 4" of topsoil off of the land for use as landscaping topsoil and gravel pit reclamation. The real estate agent claimed that there are still 6-7" left on the parcel. I have a hard time believing that there was 10" to begin with. Needless to say, most of the organic matter is gone. If I buy this property I am looking at some intensive soil regeneration to bring it back to life. Sadly the owner thinks he's sitting on a gold mine.
I didn’t buy it. It was listed for the same amount the buyer paid for it before ripping off the topsoil. I offered 1/2 of asking. Someone else came around and bought it for asking price. When the snow cleared they found out how bad the soil was. The buyers moved in a house trailer and tried to pasture sheep. The land grew nothing but weeds
Rhode Island here. SE New England is fairly decent for agriculture. I’ve discovered no till and bio char. I’m finding the micro biology fascinating. Thank you!!
I did experience using horse manure that contains straw that had been sprayed with glyphosates long time ago never bought horse manure after that, it is why I started keeping chicken at least I know what I feed my chicken and what bedding I use for them when it ends up in the compost pile.
I love these folks, so deeply rooted in the scientific community, so fascinated by the structures created for them to study, manipulate, and rave over how fantastically fascinating the entire system is, but incapable of thanking the creator for any of it. Science owes it's very existence to God and at the same time frowns on the very mention. God loves us all. Even those that refer to him as "Nature".
@@nathaliewilson1817 for one thing, there are probably a wide range of soaps that call themselves biodegradable. I can also imagine variables like the amount of synthetic fabrics you use.
@@Mystbilly That still doesn't answer the question. Whether there is one biodegradable soap or an infinite number of biodegradable soap, I would imagine they share something similar. The similarity or the differences could be something that could have briefly been discussed. And if the moderator or whoever answer the questions on this forum wanted specific answer as to which biodegradable soap, then they should ask the person to tell the name of the soap and list the ingredients. In this way, the person and others who might have a similar biodegradable soap could benefit from the information for as long as this UA-cam video and the comments are visible. My people perish because of lack of knowledge.... yet the Scribes and Pharisees have the answers, they cross over great depth to gain a convert, they won't enter the kingdom and they keep others from entering the kingdom. The above is a mix from Christian Bible Old Testament (Hosea 4:6) and New Testament (mashing up Matthew 23:13-15). How many of these people are practicing the knowledge that they have? Why are they hoarding it for a profit while people perish from lack of knowledge? I guess the "ask and you shall receive" was lost on them. To each their own.
hi. love this information thank you. i have a question, im 28 and live in a dry part of spain i am just getting into permaculture ive started digging swales to slow the water on my land witch is mostly clay. is digging bad? i see mycelium in the undisturbed ground
There is the “ONE HEALTH” concept of how to consider efforts for improvment, I hope one day the science gets to a point where we can have a “one biome” sort of interconnected understanding of how these different areas all interact. Prob going to need some ai and faster computers but it be great to get to that point😊
Wow, being a steward, or a leader, in what is to be put in the ground, is great to know. But as being humans, we need the creator's help to help us learn how to maintain the earth, as a people, as a whole. We are on our way, slowly.
East Texas! I want to educate myself on regenerating the land from a depleted or desertified state to permaculture or agroforestry inspired agriculture.
Fungal composting is the way to go. Natural Farming has a saying that is more truth than saying...manage the Fungi and everything else falls into place. You should look at the Johnson Su Bioreactor. Peace.
Love the videos the folks here are producing. I think we are missing some of the picture in forgetting the water and magnetic side of things. I became aware of the water and other living energies by becoming familiar with viktor schaubergers works.
I Live In Corcoran CA, As you can imagine the soil here is very bad, at the end of winter/ beginning of spring of 2022, I started my first ever veg garden. I live in a rental and the yard here was nothing more than compacted dirt with weeds. The first step I took in order to enrich the soil was to start a worm composting bin, Secondly, I was fortunate that there was a covered 55-gallon heavy-duty Plastic drum on the property that I filled with weeds and water. I also started my first compost pile. My intention was to have a container garden so I bought one five-pack of 15-gallon material pots and one five-pack of 25-gallon material pots. I didn't have a clue, I had no idea of what I was doing and I was running out of money, so I had no money for what was needed to fill these pots and containers for my garden, so real fast it went from just a container garden to a container and in-ground/plot garden. I now come to the point, This year, my second, I have seen at least five times, two different types of mushrooms/fungi throughout the garden. I hope that's a good indicator that the dirt is being turned into good soil. I'm also making and applying microbial solutions. I make the solutions, one with potatoes, one with rice, and when I make Greek yogurt in my instant pot, so three different types. I also make biochar myself. I don't have money for cover crops so I've been collecting cardboard boxes and covering the ground with those, I try to make sure everything stays moist. I'm worried about the over-wintering vegetables I planted, I think I planted too soon even though I waited a week or two, It's still in the upper eighties and nineties here and they are getting big, I'll just have to figure something out. Thanks for letting me vent.😃
All the people in the antarctic are climate researchers, biologists, and archaeologists. I'm pretty sure some of them would be interested in this information.
Alot of hay and straw, and manures from animals that eat hay, are contaminated with graz-on or other aminopyrilate type herbicides. Those herbicides are extra bad because they're persistent and last up to three years in the soil even after being eaten, digested, and composted. They'll kill any plant that isn't a grass. Some corn is also sprayed with that stuff.
Didn’t make the live stream. I’m from sc zone 7. I live on a river. Lots of water, but sandy soil. This is my second year of growing . I did ok last year, but I wasted a lot of time decorating, it was beautiful.
I know this video is a year old, but I just found it, and am an avid backyard gardener, and very much interested in soil life. I’m in Northwest Florida, and we get a lot of rain in the spring and summer. Often we’ll get over 20 inches in a week, and occasionally that much in a day. I have raised beds and make a lot of compost but it seems my production has dropped off this last year. I’ll be interested in your information.
@Big Rich To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com
Cyprus knees and some root collars are known to be involved in moving oxygen down to the roots. Rice is so good at surviving low oxygen that paddies are flooded for weed control. Are some plants known to move oxygen to immediately outside their roots? It would be handy to have a plant selection that would help break up a low O2 plow pan or to recover from flooding. (My guess is that they could be found originally in wet areas. Celery?)
Thank you as an amateur gardener and I got some food from my 10X10 plot, but it was so low comparing it to my personal garden in CT, but this is a community garden, so the plot was used over and over again. So, I put compost over the garden when closing the plot over the winter and I am hopeful this year will have better yield. I would love to take this class, but I have so much going on right now.
✅ Learn more about Soil Regeneration Classes 👉 promo.soilfoodweb.com/
I wish I could afford this! Thank you for what you offer on UA-cam, much love from Trinidad.
@Aisha Williams To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com
😊zkjz😅u
@@aishawilliams5933jju
I'm a new age farmer from India. A country where the son of a farmer no longer wants to take up the old man's occupation.
The people that actually farm here, use tremendous amounts of chemicals to grow things.
Thank you so much for educating people for free. It surely is going to help me grow healthy and sustainable food. 🙏🏼
Feed the soil, not the plant!!
I have heard others say than many Indians now view agrriculture as a profession to avoid, it might be that policies make the occupation unpopular. Everybody wants to eat!
much respect!
Food security is power in the hands of the people verses someone else controlling your food supply. Food = Life
I am a forklift operator.. I have been using the internet as the tool that it is and I have applied myself to things that i am interested in and completely stopped the mindless scrolling and have used my time wisely. I do not have the money to take the course yet but I am going to buy a microscope and I am going to study and use this amazing tool to help me along the way. Thank you Elaine for this information given so freely to the hungry minds. I look forward to taking this course and launching my own worm farm in North Carolina!
Next step learning microscopy skills for compost
From Portugal can not thank you enough. I am a Family doctor trying to pass the knowledge that we and the universe are one. Key Imune system. Our microbiome depends on marvelous fruits and vegetables and all that comes directly alive from Mother Nature. Now I can begin to go a little further.
Going to see and listen all I can from you and team.
Once again Thank you so much
Spiritual doctors will be of great importance, keep up with educating,.keep an open mind free from ego. There more possible then most can imagine including out
Of body traveling. I can't yet but I'm awake after attempted murder I was shot. I've been visited 2x i knew for sure and it's just the beginning of our abilities. We all come from the planet- dirt/ water. 🙂🤗
Growing what I can and giving away the excess is what I've tried to do for many years. It's a hobby with a win-win outcome, in my old eyes.
Hi! I’m in Foley, Alabama. Been here now for almost two years, after moving from Ventura, California. My 30 year old garden there was in containers .Trying my hand at gardening in the South. Started with vegetable seeds and marigolds and the flowers were stupendous but everything attacked my organic garden.So, I switched to raising Monarch Butterflies and milkweed which was a huge success. Today , at the end of January 25, I’m just growing soil in a beautiful raised bed. Layering up great soil…adding small amounts of kitchen scraps in little mounded piles covered with more soil and dried leaves. Waiting for the soil to cure and plan to add more soil, then plant with lots of flowers and vegetables….This time I’m hoping the soil will be successful for all, including worms. My huge yard was poisoned on a schedule before I moved here. I planted lots of mini clover and started to nourished the yard, adding more organic soil. No poison in my yard. Life is welcome….Love my bees and butterflies.
I helped build that water park in Foley. How's it going? 👋🏿👋🏿👋🏿👋🏿
@@ABplusOriginal Hi, Foley is bustling. People coming and going to the local attractions and the sugar white beaches. The steady traffic of tourist is great for the real estate. Love it here except for the mosquitoes and hurricanes.
@@suziperret468 lol I don't miss either of the two. Moved to Washington but I'm coming back lol
Hey neighbor im just next door in mississippi welcome to the south and our wet muggy heat. You can grow almost anything here though. We have like a 10 month growing season. Actually year round for alot of things.
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Hi from Germany and as a phytopathologist I learned something today.
Please teach me a thing, would love to know what connects for you?
Have found the use of pine needles as a mulch around my strawberries plants has greatly increased their yields, down here amongst the gum trees in Central Victoria, Australia. Included a layer of leaf mold this season and now seeing a mass of white flowers for the insects to pollinate.
I might have to try that for my strawberries next year I wonder if the acidity of the pine needles is driving it
No.Calif. 18 yrs homesteader with full-time job, now full-time small rancher. (About. Another 20 yrs.) Garden, about 20 assorted fruit trees,
About 15 acres of dryland pasture. Have raised most of my food
And a small income
Have always been interested in sustainability ,fertility and doing whatever can be done to help things out.
I’m in central New Mexico. The previous owner of my 1.25 acre lot scraped the surface off every year for 10 years and called it weed control. My “garden plot” was an adobe floored horse corral, compacted as the dickens. It’s only saving grace was that he never cleaned out the corral so all that dung was stomped into the adobe when it rained. I decided to leave it in place. Since then, I’ve laid out a 40’x50’ garden and begun laying down layers of aged manure, wood chips, massive amounts of leaves and straw. I’m building raised beds on top of the base layers and using the rest of the area as walkways. My plan is to surround the entire garden with perennial plants that are edible. It’s all in full, desert sun so all that vegetable material is holding water in the soil as I try to bring the soil back to life. I’m hoping to bring it back so it can begin to spread out from my garden area.
Hello from north Rio Rancho! I love seeing other gardeners here in the high deserts of New Mexico, we have such a unique climate that can support so much life if you just help it out a bit. If you're ever in need of some local help I'd be happy to hold a brainstorming conversation or even analyze soil samples for you as a hobbyist microscopist.
Hello from texas. I own a microbial matrix company that does incredible things with abiotic stressors and locations like yours. I love people trying to reverse desertification and do their part. If you ever need any help on restoring your microbes health I would love to be that person.
@@danielcortese4595how do you make money being a microbial matrix specialist with your own business?
Minute 52:26 describes exactly how to improve arid poor soil, how to get started in an easy way to add organic matter.
I keep skipping these videos but I ran out of native plant webinars to watch so I rounded back to microbiology and it’s actually a lot more fascinating that I initially thought it would be.
Pennsylvania 💚! Saving now for your courses. I hope nurses make good soil food web nerds.
Southern California, 45 miles north of the U.S./Mexico border, Slab City. My goal is to plant desert loving perrineals. Grow food for egg laying poultry and milk goats, and provide a variety of nutritional food. It's been said that Imperial County California is the most impoverished County in the United States. Slab City must be the most impoverished "city" in the United States. The Moringa tree will be the most prominent in what I plan to be a food oasis.
So howd it go
Don’t forget pomegranate
You should forget the goats because they will strip the bark off of your trees and eat your crops if you do not keep them unhappily confined and penned. There is no forage for them in the desert especially with the ongoing drought as goats are from the beautiful lush valleys of the European Alps. They won't survive. Moringa is a bad choice of crop for the desert. You need crops from the desert. You cannot be disappointed if you plant Carob trees there. Thornless Prickley Pear, Figs, Dates, Olives and things designed for that growing condition. Chickens will need expensive grain and will be preyed upon by neighbors and other desert predators as they must have a very well trained intelligent dog to keep them safe. They are 100% defenseless.
@@riverside321 I've had an easy time of growing purslane. It handles the heat well, reseed quickly and easily. I've enjoyed nibbling in it when I water my plants and the chickens like it too. It's slow going to get mulch, I'd rather create mulch from what I grow and I'm willing to have wood chips hauled in from a local tree trimming busses, I'm a bit reserved about wood chips because it's possible that the landscape business could bring in much that has been exposed to pesticides and herbicides. Currently we are having temperatures averaging 100 degrees for the highs. I'm doing okay with moringa, ironwood, Palo Verde and mesquite.
@@inharmonywithearth9982 people never actually think things out. It's always selfish and from their perspective. Move to see someone thinking about the animals! I truly hope SHE DOESN'T bother getting animals as she sounds a little too self-absorbed for them to be an adequate Caretakers anyway.
Such knowledge and work is noble prize worthy and more....you guys are defenders of earth, my salute.
For rodent control it's best to work towards a system where you're providing habit for native non-venomous snakes and barn owl houses. Doing this will keep the rodent population in check.
In an orchard, forest or mixed forest setting removing brush either manually or through controlled burns can go a long way.
u need to fight fire with fire.... get yourself a ferret and put them in the rat hole and see them go crazy
Australian farmers found that out the HARD way.
@@meok6305 I've seen documentaries about the rodent problem that Australia has some years. It's almost apocalyptic in scale, so you also need to seal up those grain bins really tight with zero gaps.
Actually it was their agressive killing of all preditors such as foxes, snakes, etc. coupled with a bumper harvest that created the perfect conditions for the rodent outbreak.
Anytime I hear/see a question about how to improve (enter soil type here) the answer I always give is organic matter through a good, living compost.
I subscribed because this channel has so much that the viewers need to learn about growing healthy plants or foods for human being and of course of the nature. if we do all of these or even the very basic composting then we can cure our sick or unhealthy soil that produces unhealthy foods to human.
I'm glad I found this channel, I do not use chemical fertilizers or pesticides or any type of poison to kill weeds, I want to learn about soil, I have a 40 acre homestead, I'm trying to grow a natural echo system to produce food for human consumption and my livestock. I'm in the high desert at 4,500 feet above sea level. My place is unique in some ways, for one I have an enormous amount of water, a year around creek the comes off a reservoir, there are multiple natural springs that feed this reservoir, we allow 1,100 gallons of water per minute to come out of the reservoir all year and the reservoir never drops. It is always full, 1,100 gallons per minute is almost 2 million gallons of water per day. The water is distributed to my homestead and the ranch next to me. We get all the water. I have clay soil, it is my understanding that clay soil has a lot of minerals, we do have springs coming of this mountain with warm water, it produces steam in the winter, my creek is cold water, I also have a shallow water table or a huge underground spring, I can dig anywhere on my property and hit water at 2 feet in the winter, 4 feet in the summer. I know we are facing massive food shortages in the coming months, I knew this was coming so I started preparing 12 years ago, I bought this property, it had not been touched in fifty years. So all soil and plant materials are organic. I raise dairy and meat goats, sheep, pigs, chickens and horses, goats are great, they are foragers so they don't over graze the land like cattle, sheep's are grazers but my goats taught my sheep to be foragers, they eat and move, constantly moving, horses graze but plenty of land for them to graze, that's another unique thing about my property, I have thousands of acres that border my property that is open range. I need a volunteer mentor, I know a lot but want to be the best.
How do I get in contact with you? I live in the salt lake valley. also high desert. Jared
Yes! Go Elaine! Keep making videos I loved this!
Texas here. We need to this discussion badly.
Ireland, absolutely love these talks! thank you so much 😁🌱💚🙏✨
You're so welcome!
Hej.. Thank you for this learning y.. from a Zimbabwean grower in Sweden.... I was blessed to be born in my village and brought up by very traditional grandparents and we lived off the land before the invasion of modern agriculture.. No one in my village ever talked about organic food.. I only understood the term organic food in my thirties in Europe.. I just assumed all food was grown naturally.. I was most shocked with farming in the west.. mainly that farmers do not grow for their own food security and are just as dependent on supermarkets as the landless people.. My late unschooled grandfather used to always say.. "You can not call Yourself a farmer when you lack food security from your land, how then can you be trusted to feed the nation"?.. I am lucky to have grown up at this time because I do no recognize my community's farming practices.. Most of our ancient traditional seeds thousands of years old have been lost..
I have a perfect ground cover system at the end of my garden under a canopy of 13 oak trees, in the falls (Autumn) all the leaves fall off the oak tree and all the fungi begins to grow. I do harvest 3 different edible fungi in my garden, there are a whole rotation of plant that come up under those oak tree through the year many of them are ground cover all low growing. It was planted by a plants man who had the garden before me The whole system is older than 80 years.
Oak trees were revered by the Druids for good reason.
You should post a video showing it and what you do with it during the year. A few people may find it interesting.
So much knowledge in one place, thank you for sharing your truths 🙏💫
More to come!
Greatest compilation of knowledge. May these outlast our generations. Kudos!
For tropical soils make terra preida. Lots of charcoal , baked clay and fish parts .miles of it exists still
Thank you. What richness in details. Elizabeth from Brazil
Thank you all for sharing your knowledge!!!
🌿💚🌎💚🌿
Hi, Arable farmer in the UK. Have you done any work on pelleting compost and sowing it along with the seed? Most modern no till drills can sow fertliser etc along with the seed so this would be a handy way to help the soil, whilst using conventional techniques and equipment? Great work guys thank you very much. All growers and farmers should know about this stuff
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
The comment about the bad press that bacteria have received is truely pervasive in the American lexicon. I would say that is due to a large amount of misinformation that is drilled into our culture and then transferred into the way we express knowledge about microbes in the english language. The common exposure that most people have with the simplest forms of life is through the possibility of danger. This triggers fear that, in turn, triggers your fight or flight response, and for most Americans, flight is much easier than their want or need for the availability to positive information concerning bacteria, fungi, and the importance of large mycelial biomasses. WE MUST CHANGE OUR USE OF THE LANGUAGE concerning microflora through education. I believe this does take the re-education of how we collectively view our microscopic biomasses. Controlling bacterial community is taught in some cultures usually in communities who have a stronger tie than most have to agricultural. It is not being taught on a grassroots level. This knowledge that use to be passed down generationally but now people buy chemicals that mimic the nutrients that plants need but those chemicals will not grow the microfauna that is necessary to create living soil. TEACH PEOPLE WHOM YOU CAN INFLUENCE how to influence the Microfauna around themselves.
I got really annoyed when I realized how much disgust sensitivity was def a trait that evolved but not based on science. Look up disgust sensitivity triggers.
Hi, I'm India. I'm interested to know about these soil microbes
The Zia pits filled with compost to form a nucleus of bio activity reminds me of something Joel Salatin said. When looking at a depleted farm to rent, the owner offered to bring in a tractor or dozer to pull out the multi-flora rose bushes. Joel declined because under them was the only vibrant soil on the place.
Also roses and other flowers bring in the pollinators!
I live on a 15 acre horse farm in central Florida and have always been interested in making my pastures stronger and greener. Also have a private vegetable garden. So many farms around me. Would love to share this info with them.
@Beckie Wolf I would like to invite you to watch the replays of our January 2023, FREE webinar series titled, The Soil Food Web Movement.
In this 4-part webinar series we featured three amazing Soil Health Success Stories. We met some of the farmers out there who have benefited from working with Soil Food Web Consultants, and took a look under the microscope at some of the critters that should be in the soil under your feet. We also met some of the people who are helping farmers make a smooth transition to Regenerative Agriculture by healing their soils.
Register here for our FREE webinar series: promo.soilfoodweb.com/reg-webinar-the-soil-food-web-movement
Also, you might enjoy this new Case Study film from Peru, where the farmer reported increasing yields by over 100% in the first year and nearly 100% in year 2: promo.soilfoodweb.com/jan23s-consultant-va/#case-peru
That is an awesome movement! Come to Washington
A lot of knowledge information!!!! Thanks for teaching us how to safe the planet!!!!❤
That concentrated compost in one small section before moving on to the rest, is called starting change by identifying a bright spot, or in this case creating and committing to one
Great to hear that you are promoting IMO since I get tempted to add products to inoculate since it sounds like the products would be better than what I have in my system.
I collect IMOs from under trees on my property. Under the leaves that haven’t been touched for decades. That soil is black and filled with microbes. Or go to a local forest. And it’s really easy. I grow these in 5 gal buckets. Takes 2 days and 5 gals are diluted 100:1 so you can make 500 gals in 2 days. Free. Want to learn how see Chris Trump on collecting IMOs.
@@kicknadeadcat Chris Trump has a lot of good videos. Thanks for reply.
Thank you for this wonderful webinar & information from Stephen in CapeTown!
Neither.it's just very interesting!
I live in Houston Texas. I started to collect leaves around the neighborhood and pile it at my backyard. After a few month, the leaves break down and many earthworms.
I'm looking at a parcel of land that was purchased by a sand and gravel company that proceeded to strip 4" of topsoil off of the land for use as landscaping topsoil and gravel pit reclamation. The real estate agent claimed that there are still 6-7" left on the parcel. I have a hard time believing that there was 10" to begin with. Needless to say, most of the organic matter is gone. If I buy this property I am looking at some intensive soil regeneration to bring it back to life. Sadly the owner thinks he's sitting on a gold mine.
Did you buy it? What happened?
I didn’t buy it. It was listed for the same amount the buyer paid for it before ripping off the topsoil. I offered 1/2 of asking. Someone else came around and bought it for asking price. When the snow cleared they found out how bad the soil was. The buyers moved in a house trailer and tried to pasture sheep. The land grew nothing but weeds
@@jamesharder5643 well, sounds like you dodged a bullet.
Rhode Island here. SE New England is fairly decent for agriculture. I’ve discovered no till and bio char. I’m finding the micro biology fascinating. Thank you!!
#SaveSoil lets make it happen!
I did experience using horse manure that contains straw that had been sprayed with glyphosates long time ago never bought horse manure after that, it is why I started keeping chicken at least I know what I feed my chicken and what bedding I use for them when it ends up in the compost pile.
I love these folks, so deeply rooted in the scientific community, so fascinated by the structures created for them to study, manipulate, and rave over how fantastically fascinating the entire system is, but incapable of thanking the creator for any of it. Science owes it's very existence to God and at the same time frowns on the very mention. God loves us all. Even those that refer to him as "Nature".
Does gray water from washer with biodegradable soap affects microbes negatively?
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
I am curious as to why the answer wasn't a simple yes or no and for more in depth information contact us.
@@nathaliewilson1817 agree, not sure either.
@@nathaliewilson1817 for one thing, there are probably a wide range of soaps that call themselves biodegradable. I can also imagine variables like the amount of synthetic fabrics you use.
@@Mystbilly That still doesn't answer the question. Whether there is one biodegradable soap or an infinite number of biodegradable soap, I would imagine they share something similar. The similarity or the differences could be something that could have briefly been discussed. And if the moderator or whoever answer the questions on this forum wanted specific answer as to which biodegradable soap, then they should ask the person to tell the name of the soap and list the ingredients. In this way, the person and others who might have a similar biodegradable soap could benefit from the information for as long as this UA-cam video and the comments are visible.
My people perish because of lack of knowledge.... yet the Scribes and Pharisees have the answers, they cross over great depth to gain a convert, they won't enter the kingdom and they keep others from entering the kingdom.
The above is a mix from Christian Bible Old Testament (Hosea 4:6) and New Testament (mashing up Matthew 23:13-15).
How many of these people are practicing the knowledge that they have? Why are they hoarding it for a profit while people perish from lack of knowledge? I guess the "ask and you shall receive" was lost on them.
To each their own.
I would LOVE the guys in the Antarctic to participate in your webinars. They may learn something. ;)
you have a great channel here man.i'm from Philippines and i think you have such interesting topic
East Bay California
Chicopee , Western Massachusetts
We are so thankful for this 🙏. Thank you so much. In Suisun and a student that has fallen in love with soil chemistry.
Thank you so much. I learned a lot from your webinar.
Michigan, thanks for sharing!
From Zambia
Am following , am a farmer and a composted...
hi. love this information thank you. i have a question, im 28 and live in a dry part of spain i am just getting into permaculture ive started digging swales to slow the water on my land witch is mostly clay. is digging bad? i see mycelium in the undisturbed ground
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
There is the “ONE HEALTH” concept of how to consider efforts for improvment, I hope one day the science gets to a point where we can have a “one biome” sort of interconnected understanding of how these different areas all interact. Prob going to need some ai and faster computers but it be great to get to that point😊
Thank you so very much for sharing this information...
Glad it was helpful!
great educational contents thank you v much
Very welcome!
Trying to restore soil to help rare Garry oak habitat, Hi from Victoria Canada
FANTASTIC, Thank you love you :)
You are so welcome!
Thailand! Thanks for sharing
Our pleasure!
Northeastern Colorado. I see a lot of videos about warmer States but, not very many in colder states.
México! Gracias por la información!!
I'm a home gardener in a small town 45 minutes outside a large city.
Thank you #SaveSoil #Consciousplanet
Hi there coming from California
Wow, being a steward, or a leader, in what is to be put in the ground, is great to know. But as being humans, we need the creator's help to help us learn how to maintain the earth, as a people, as a whole. We are on our way, slowly.
Amen!
East Texas! I want to educate myself on regenerating the land from a depleted or desertified state to permaculture or agroforestry inspired agriculture.
Fungal composting is the way to go. Natural Farming has a saying that is more truth than saying...manage the Fungi and everything else falls into place. You should look at the Johnson Su Bioreactor. Peace.
Thank you so much for your Insight!!!
Hello from Nuxalbari Tea Estate, India
Love the videos the folks here are producing. I think we are missing some of the picture in forgetting the water and magnetic side of things.
I became aware of the water and other living energies by becoming familiar with viktor schaubergers works.
Johannesburg, South Africa
Thanks for your good tips! Watching from Philippines.
I Live In Corcoran CA, As you can imagine the soil here is very bad, at the end of winter/ beginning of spring of 2022, I started my first ever veg garden. I live in a rental and the yard here was nothing more than compacted dirt with weeds. The first step I took in order to enrich the soil was to start a worm composting bin, Secondly, I was fortunate that there was a covered 55-gallon heavy-duty Plastic drum on the property that I filled with weeds and water. I also started my first compost pile. My intention was to have a container garden so I bought one five-pack of 15-gallon material pots and one five-pack of 25-gallon material pots. I didn't have a clue, I had no idea of what I was doing and I was running out of money, so I had no money for what was needed to fill these pots and containers for my garden, so real fast it went from just a container garden to a container and in-ground/plot garden. I now come to the point, This year, my second, I have seen at least five times, two different types of mushrooms/fungi throughout the garden. I hope that's a good indicator that the dirt is being turned into good soil. I'm also making and applying microbial solutions. I make the solutions, one with potatoes, one with rice, and when I make Greek yogurt in my instant pot, so three different types. I also make biochar myself. I don't have money for cover crops so I've been collecting cardboard boxes and covering the ground with those, I try to make sure everything stays moist. I'm worried about the over-wintering vegetables I planted, I think I planted too soon even though I waited a week or two, It's still in the upper eighties and nineties here and they are getting big, I'll just have to figure something out. Thanks for letting me vent.😃
Perú. Thanks for the webinar
All the people in the antarctic are climate researchers, biologists, and archaeologists. I'm pretty sure some of them would be interested in this information.
Toronto. Canada
Alot of hay and straw, and manures from animals that eat hay, are contaminated with graz-on or other aminopyrilate type herbicides. Those herbicides are extra bad because they're persistent and last up to three years in the soil even after being eaten, digested, and composted. They'll kill any plant that isn't a grass. Some corn is also sprayed with that stuff.
Central Virginia and Northern PA
Great chemistry with the panel , hhmmm i mean biology 😉
Wales, diolch yn fawr iawn am seminars!
Thanks for sharing, happy to be learning so much fron Chilean Patagonia.
Pennsylvania USA
Didn’t make the live stream. I’m from sc zone 7. I live on a river. Lots of water, but sandy soil. This is my second year of growing . I did ok last year, but I wasted a lot of time decorating, it was beautiful.
Hello From Sacramento, California USA
Greetings from Atacama, Chile
Hi, thanks for the video from BC Canada!
Thanks for watching!
I know this video is a year old, but I just found it, and am an avid backyard gardener, and very much interested in soil life. I’m in Northwest Florida, and we get a lot of rain in the spring and summer. Often we’ll get over 20 inches in a week, and occasionally that much in a day. I have raised beds and make a lot of compost but it seems my production has dropped off this last year. I’ll be interested in your information.
@Big Rich To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com
Legal, muito legal. Baraúna,-RN, Nordeste semiárido Brasil
Hi I'm from St Lucia
watching from Oriental Negros, Philippines.
I am from madurai, india
Cyprus knees and some root collars are known to be involved in moving oxygen down to the roots. Rice is so good at surviving low oxygen that paddies are flooded for weed control. Are some plants known to move oxygen to immediately outside their roots?
It would be handy to have a plant selection that would help break up a low O2 plow pan or to recover from flooding.
(My guess is that they could be found originally in wet areas. Celery?)
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
Sorry to be so late...just found you. I'm in France!
thanks this is garden gold!
Thank you as an amateur gardener and I got some food from my 10X10 plot, but it was so low comparing it to my personal garden in CT, but this is a community garden, so the plot was used over and over again. So, I put compost over the garden when closing the plot over the winter and I am hopeful this year will have better yield. I would love to take this class, but I have so much going on right now.
Awesome stuff, brain melted.
Hi,Goik Taylor From England
Oilmont, Montana
I’m in NW Florida, HOT HUMID AND KNOT NOD NEMATODES
I'm in dominica great info