They Dump 12,000 Tons Of Orange Peels In the Forest - Years Later, They Return To See The Results

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 291

  • @irishhi8333
    @irishhi8333 18 днів тому +161

    Had a housemate in 1980 who for a few years buried food scraps (no meat, just veggies and egg shells) throughout the backyard and turned a barren dusty lot into a lush garden. Composting rules! 😊

    • @deekang6244
      @deekang6244 18 днів тому +10

      We did the same thing

    • @richardbarber4444
      @richardbarber4444 18 днів тому +7

      Properly composted, and we have B & D Farm Services, animal carcasses create quality safe compost.

    • @irishhi8333
      @irishhi8333 13 днів тому +1

      @@richardbarber4444
      Oh, yeah. He just, personally, didn't feel competent to handle that.

    • @richardbarber4444
      @richardbarber4444 13 днів тому

      @@irishhi8333 Didn't, perhaps; does do so now!

  • @KatieReadsKoziesAndMore
    @KatieReadsKoziesAndMore 19 днів тому +74

    What a hopeful, healthy way to heal our environment and skip the trash dump. Bravo!

    • @ElCid48
      @ElCid48 17 днів тому +7

      look at our ancestors who were farmers. they did not waste anything even the waste of the animals or theirs and they even used the ash from the wood burners.

    • @berrywine-l9c
      @berrywine-l9c 16 днів тому +4

      Anything that rots can make a good fertilizer.

  • @a.sobriquet6220
    @a.sobriquet6220 17 днів тому +67

    This is wonderful! So tragic that the entire world is not yet embracing the necessity of projects like this.

    • @Pink_Alien
      @Pink_Alien 16 днів тому

      We all embrace it. The "🌎's owners" are the ones who are against it, and unfortunately, they own the Media, the Courts, etc etc etc

    • @einfelder8262
      @einfelder8262 12 днів тому +2

      Here in Melbourne Australia all food waste is now collected from households every week and composted. Previously it went to landfill. That alone is a bigger project than the Costa Rica oranges. I'm not bagging the Costa Rica project - far from it, just pointing out that you are not aware of what you criticise.

    • @christinequinn5355
      @christinequinn5355 10 днів тому

      @@einfelder8262 That is wonderful to hear.

  • @patriciasmith7074
    @patriciasmith7074 15 днів тому +45

    When I was in high school we had an exchange student a boy from Costa Rico and his locker was right next to mine, we talked a little whenever we were there at the same time. I tried to make him feel welcome, I know he missed his homeland and family so I tried to treat him kindly. If they are worried about carbon dioxide, just plant and nurture more Forrest’s. The trees produce more oxygen. What these people did was brilliant and they encourage by composting the orange peels which provided nourishment to the trees. This was brilliant and they should do it in another location. They could grind up the waste into smaller particles to speed up the process. These scientists should have received a Noble Prize.

  • @josephjames9302
    @josephjames9302 14 днів тому +21

    Not only orange peels all the vegetable waste and egg shells can be used for plants growth

    • @MikeA15206
      @MikeA15206 11 днів тому

      15:03

    • @tomdavidson5719
      @tomdavidson5719 10 днів тому +1

      We all need to do this instead of concreting our gardens!

  • @nancygilliland4002
    @nancygilliland4002 18 днів тому +62

    Has no one ever heard of composting? Good grief😮

    • @drew-shourd
      @drew-shourd 17 днів тому

      I love it when narrow minded people make comments, allow me to expand your mind:
      This was12,000 TONS, I have never heard of 'composting' as you call it, on such a massive scale. Composting ONLY works when many different types of waste is used, which allows their individual chemicals to break down other waste. PLUS, a true composting area needs to be stirred up, mix well, to oxygenate the bacteria, to speed the decomposition, which helps to entire process. THIS was just an experiment, that happen to work.
      Let me share my comment to this video:
      "Humans, what an arrogant bunch. Their egos filled with knowledge, yet they lack wisdom. Wisdom is knowledge used wisely, knowledge comes from experience, experience takes action and an open mind.
      Nature, which is billions of years old, doesn't listen to the voices or actions of mere infants, meaning humans. Nature is always there to teach us valuable lessons. Look at earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, mood slides, forest fires, etc., so just when humans think they know everything, nature teaches us even more."
      I can tell, you are a human Nancy or should I say, 'Karen'....

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому +3

      I know. That's what I kept saying. It's unfortunate so much ignorance on how ecology works. One issue I have though is Orange juice ...or any juices ..are no better than drinking soda with it's high sugar content. So much nutrition is in the pulp and inner skin of the fruit. At least it's going back into the soil.

    • @debbyrose646
      @debbyrose646 15 днів тому +4

      American Education system. If we can’t teach math because it is too hard, could we at least teach environment science.

    • @richardgadoury8452
      @richardgadoury8452 13 днів тому +2

      Nancy,
      It is impossible to compost a "single source" type of organic. The orange juice factory produces way too much produce to compost it by itself. I have no idea what they do with their waste. Check out the "Lunenburg Composting Facility" in Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia. I was the Project Manager for building it and doing the biological commissioning. One hell of a learning experience...

    • @theresabu3000
      @theresabu3000 13 днів тому +1

      Did they mention how they got rid of the toxic oil on the surface of the peel?
      It normally prevents plant growth - that's why you don't throw citrus waste in the compost.
      If it's less expensive to get rid of the oil - then the peels in general, then this would be a great idea. Also with other plant waste not composted.

  • @shelbykuenning2575
    @shelbykuenning2575 16 днів тому +12

    Most people who complete their garbage for their gardens know this works. Grinding up the orange peels first will accelerate the process.

  • @jamesdietz29
    @jamesdietz29 15 днів тому +12

    Who'da thunk composting plant waste would make for rich soil.

  • @davidtaylor657
    @davidtaylor657 12 днів тому +11

    Thank-you, sir, I really think you did an excellent job narrating this documentary. I grew up in the Caribbean so this has been of particular interest to me.

  • @marijkegroothuis3814
    @marijkegroothuis3814 18 днів тому +101

    Now if the photos were actually showing the REAL growth of 26 years, this story would have had a lot more impact imo

    • @Lionello-da
      @Lionello-da 18 днів тому +13

      some photos are of a northern forest, what it has to do with Costa Rica? Is his all an AI work?

    • @virtuallifter2438
      @virtuallifter2438 17 днів тому +11

      it's a bot account meant to generate money

    • @Emy53
      @Emy53 16 днів тому +3

      In 26 years, Elon will have us all on Mars, and humans will destroy that too. I love my planet, and I never hurt it.

    • @Emy53
      @Emy53 16 днів тому +5

      My goodness...in a jungle, the peels return to the earth as fertilizer. That was such a pullshit case.

    • @niniv2706
      @niniv2706 15 днів тому +4

      @Woodstock-ct1li - Allow me to use the word in context . "I called pullshit as soon as the pair of woke activists were presented inthe first minute of this pullshit clip." Glad to help ... Good day Wood

  • @carlairiel-g1l
    @carlairiel-g1l 14 днів тому +7

    very good content. congratulations!

  • @brianlawrence1939
    @brianlawrence1939 16 днів тому +17

    I used to grow new potatoes in the garden, and put the tops in my large compost heap. I always got a few potatoes in the compst in the next year, and now I have given up planting seed potatoes in the garden. I just put some new potatoes that have started to sprout in the compost in the spring, and get a crop of clean potatoes when I use the compost in the autumn

  • @janj2902
    @janj2902 18 днів тому +24

    This could not be possible in Belgium. Almost all of our oranges are treated with a sort of petroleum-wax which is not biologically broke down. This to conserves them during their often long transport time. I have a flourishing vegetable garden and make compost out af all my kitchen waste (except meat and cooked food, that goes to the chickens, afterwards I do add the droppings of the chickens to the rest). It enriches the soil every year, this soil is of an amazing quality using this method and I hardly need to add biological fertilizers. I hardly have bugs in the garden en never destroy them (only snails when it is a wet summer). Those i pick by hand a few days at night. Every year i have beautiful crops. Except all citrus peels, those i dump in the garbage because they are treated. You can buy untreated but they are very expensive and only last a few days and buy a few of them when I need them for a recipe. Compost proces goes very slow here because of the colder climate in winter. But as soon it is March it restarts at an amazing tempo...

    • @jules5811
      @jules5811 16 днів тому +3

      Oranges are grown in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Africa A day down the road in transit time and spoilage unlikely. Something else going on

    • @gillesb763
      @gillesb763 14 днів тому

      ​Also florida,california,south america and i probably forgot a few​@@jules5811

    • @monakw
      @monakw 13 днів тому +3

      It sounds like you have a beautiful system of gardening and working with nature.. I used to hand-pick snails off of my plants at night too. These snails were voracious munchers and they loved to eat what I call my gourmet plants. I live in the subtropics, the snails were incredibly prolific. Literally hundreds of snails would come out in the evening. I speak of the snails in past tense because they are all gone now! In 2017 hurricane Irma came through here with a 4-foot flood of ocean water. Since then I've only seen ONE snail. The lack of snails doesn't seem to have affected the environment in a negative way and it made me very happy. No more bites out of the foliage.No more snail trails or snail poop and no more snail hunting!!
      🐌🌙 🐌
      PS the entire Garden was also destroyed in the process and took years to come back from scorched Earth. Now it is lush again.
      In conclusion not having snails is great but a hurricane is not the best solution to get rid of them. Lol ✌️

    • @vps1014
      @vps1014 13 днів тому

      umm..natural compost is biological fertiliser.

    • @monakw
      @monakw 13 днів тому

      @vps1014
      Umm nothing about my snails though? 🐌
      I kid. 😏

  • @stephenwilliams6451
    @stephenwilliams6451 19 днів тому +11

    Super. It is also healthy for humans to consume orange peels. Admittedly, some don't taste very nice, but mangarine and others taste quite nice.

    • @rjb7569
      @rjb7569 18 днів тому +2

      You're also consuming the pesticides, insecticides, etc. from the skin. Most will not wash off.
      Go organic. Costly but much better for your survival.

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому +1

      Yeah, we throw away so much of our edible produce. I now eat the green parts of strawberries and kiwi skin and try to eat as much of the inner skin of citrus fruits as I can...and the seeds too. When I cook with lemons, I cook with the entire peel and eat it afterwards.

    • @petertaysum8947
      @petertaysum8947 11 днів тому

      Dried out orange peel makes excellent fire starters.

  • @margaretmacneill3133
    @margaretmacneill3133 12 днів тому +1

    In Zimbabwe at Nottingham Estates (dont know why the link doesnt work) they give all the orange shells and pulp to the wildlife, particularly Elephants, Eland and baboons. Everything is eaten and what isnt digested goes back to the soil😊😊
    Nottingham is an ECO managed estate and tourists love seeing the feeding of the eles.

  • @Bill-im6nt
    @Bill-im6nt 18 днів тому +25

    WOW from the pictures in 25 years, 50 to 100 year old trees grew!! 😛

  • @kamaeq
    @kamaeq 12 днів тому +3

    Missing the point that rain forests tend to recycle everything and isn't the most nutritional soil.

    • @thomasmacdiarmid8251
      @thomasmacdiarmid8251 11 днів тому +1

      Yeah, I was annoyed with the repeated assertion that it was the cattle grazing that depleted the soil. Rather, in a tropical rain forest, the plants take up the nutrients as fast as the decomposers can release it. The soil is poor. When the biomass is removed, the nutrients of that place are removed with it. Some grass can grow, and the manure from the cattle probably helps, so it is not the grazing, but the removal of the biomass that left a nutritionally impoverished area. The peels returned what burning or clear-cutting had initially removed.

  • @plantladygrant1
    @plantladygrant1 19 годин тому

    That was one of the best short documentaries.I have ever seen and congratulations to those scientists even though they were stopped early on.Someone else picked up the ball.And ran all the way to the goal post with it.
    Much thanks to god for people like this. Some of my neighbors do not like my black bags.Full of leaves that I have in my yard but I turn them back into soil a lot of them.Do not understand.
    I love to video❤

  • @EdSeyfert
    @EdSeyfert 12 днів тому

    This is why I mulch when I mow my grass and also much the leaves that fall in autumn, is good for the lawn and keeps the residue out of the landfill!!

  • @MichaelArledge-i5f
    @MichaelArledge-i5f 24 дні тому +10

    Love the video

  • @24tanksalot
    @24tanksalot 9 днів тому

    This should be done everywhere

  • @Claude-h8d
    @Claude-h8d 16 днів тому +3

    Interesting story... Thank you

  • @max-q7129
    @max-q7129 18 днів тому +140

    This is 10 minutes too long. So much rambling made it hard to get through the video. Just horrible editing. Good story but stop all the stupid add on crap

    • @virtuallifter2438
      @virtuallifter2438 17 днів тому +9

      it's an ai generated bot story. you can usually tell because the bot always rambles.

    • @ryuuguu01
      @ryuuguu01 16 днів тому +5

      I switched to 2x play speed after a minute when I realized it was going to be a bot story.

    • @Ethan.s..
      @Ethan.s.. 16 днів тому +2

      We had to imagine how it would fill up a soccer stadium though. Ha

    • @Icuh8n911
      @Icuh8n911 16 днів тому

      ​@@virtuallifter2438yep. I always knew trump was ai. I couldn't agree with more for saying that

    • @Thomas-h4n5h
      @Thomas-h4n5h 14 днів тому +4

      They try to milk their audience for time.

  • @StarLight-v4z
    @StarLight-v4z 17 днів тому +3

    Thank u, very good info and movie

  • @JW-hf9ev
    @JW-hf9ev 14 днів тому +1

    Hero’s in my opinions. Cheers to ORO and the Teams

  • @dougward6590
    @dougward6590 14 днів тому +1

    This is a great story. As an old man prone to view such experiments with some skepticism, I'd remind us SOME such well intentioned "experiments" have gone terribly wrong. Looks like a win here. Great. All I'm saying is simply use caution

  • @brendabiffibaldovino8306
    @brendabiffibaldovino8306 11 днів тому

    Thanks so much for sharing ❤ ❤ ❤

  • @doncook2054
    @doncook2054 19 днів тому +5

    so cool to see this, this morning....

  • @shawnrhyme5831
    @shawnrhyme5831 16 днів тому +4

    I've heard this story about the orange peels, some years ago and if I remember, it was better than the way you told it. I'm not into mono.

  • @warrenwilson4818
    @warrenwilson4818 22 хвилини тому

    Terrific! Excellent production! Mo. Nov. 25, 2024. St. Joseph, MO. USA

  • @Lovetheducks
    @Lovetheducks 13 днів тому

    I remember when this was first done so smart. I love Costa Rica.

  • @Nsibidiimohtep-pf9gh
    @Nsibidiimohtep-pf9gh 6 днів тому +1

    It can be done anywhere in the world.just dig the Earth and dump veggie and fruit waste then cover it with earth dirt and leaves it for the Micro Earth animals to take care

  • @cherylmontcrief7600
    @cherylmontcrief7600 13 днів тому

    I love this story.Thanks for sharing.My Compst s growing a watermelon.

  • @jimallen1186
    @jimallen1186 13 днів тому +3

    Those trees are way more than 16 years old

    • @nigelkingify
      @nigelkingify 12 днів тому

      I agree. The pictures do not make sense.

  • @jameseast7966
    @jameseast7966 14 днів тому +1

    The Florida citrus industry feeds some peels to cattle
    Rich in many vital nutrients.

  • @grahamfoulkes7321
    @grahamfoulkes7321 16 днів тому +3

    I'm a little confused. Orange fruit processors, if efficiency and utilization of feedstock materiel is important, (they usually go out of business if not), they SELL the peel to orange oil distillers. Orange oil is a very good alternative to hydro carbon, terpenes and chlorinated compounds, eg. carbon tetra chloride, solvents for removing sticky gunk and labels from waste streams before further processing. Also used in perfumary and soft drinks manufacture etc, etc.

    • @VitoAnthonyD.-ow7oo
      @VitoAnthonyD.-ow7oo 12 днів тому

      Interesting!

    • @petertaysum8947
      @petertaysum8947 11 днів тому

      Neroli from the blossom, Pettigrain from the leaves and stalks, and Orange Oil from the peel. Like grapes, one of Nature's finest gifts.

  • @joncan2348
    @joncan2348 14 днів тому +1

    Put your household veggie and fruit scrap into your garden or local trees. You will be shocked at how fast your garden and local trees will grow.
    This would reduce the fuel required to haul away your veggie and fruit scraps by the city garbage collecting trucks.

  • @rickemmet1104
    @rickemmet1104 18 днів тому +3

    Why not compost the orange rinds with Aerated Static Piles and then cover the poor soil with the compost? There are NO negative effects from compost. Said compost could also be place on any land, private land, farms, ESA lands, which would be a benefit.

  • @joycemcallister9509
    @joycemcallister9509 23 дні тому +3

    Awsome love !!!!!

  • @carolhieronymus8816
    @carolhieronymus8816 23 дні тому +2

    If this is true, it’s wonderful.

  • @monakw
    @monakw 14 днів тому +9

    Composting is thousands of years old. Please put the orange man there the next time around. You know, to sweep the forest floor. ✌️

  • @henniegrobler5164
    @henniegrobler5164 23 дні тому +2

    Thamk you very good

  • @ronhammant7309
    @ronhammant7309 10 днів тому

    I'm glad of the really big red arrows, I would not know where to look without them. 👈👈👈👈👈👈👈👈👈👈

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 16 днів тому +1

    But who's to say that being made to stop dumping {when they did}, and leaving the land alone for twenty years wasn't a significant factor in the return of growth to that chunk of forest.

  • @daniels7907
    @daniels7907 12 днів тому

    Amazing that so many people failed to believe in the well-known use of compost.

  • @johnwang9914
    @johnwang9914 18 днів тому +1

    So they proved that composting worked...
    The soil enrichment lasting 26 years is notable though as most of the carbon in composting turns into CO₂ within a few short years.
    Now, what would be interesting is if they had fed the agricultural wastes into gasifiers producing syngas and charcoal then used the syngas either to produce electricity for the grid or to synthesize diesel, number 2 heating oil and gasoline and use the charcoal as biochar which has been known to enrich the spil for two thousand years as well as sequestering the carbon.
    Yes, a fair bit of the carbon would become CO₂ in the gasification process and what is turned into syngas will also eventually become CO₂ as it's used as a fuel but what remains as biochar would be sequestered carbon.
    Composting is short term sequestration but biochar is potentially long term sequestration (we only have two thousand years of ancient use of biochar with the Brazillian Terra Preta to go by).

  • @lckoolg622
    @lckoolg622 14 днів тому

    We live in a remote and isolated semi desert region where only grain crops and hardy mallee vegetation grows. I will try this method on a small section of calciferous soil on our property.

  • @flamindigo
    @flamindigo 11 днів тому

    great story

  • @phillipbailey9615
    @phillipbailey9615 9 днів тому

    Please believe it, some dont know the narural science, and are ignorant of the positives and negatives they dont even wonder at it, and are not even amazed.😮

  • @hubertrobinson8825
    @hubertrobinson8825 15 днів тому +1

    Some animals feed on the orange peels too mainly agoutis and pecaries and coaties birds too feeds on the insects it's like a super food store in the jungle

  • @birdolla4441
    @birdolla4441 18 днів тому +5

    A little visually exaggerated here don't you think in only 25 years growth

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому

      Fig and banyon trees tend to grow very fast.

  • @user-dw2dr6zf3n
    @user-dw2dr6zf3n 11 днів тому

    Why are restaurants putting all vegetable scraps into compost? Cuts down garbage disposal costs and helps the growing of lawns and pastures. Will help your lawn and grass become so much more greener and healthier.

  • @jeemjeem6190
    @jeemjeem6190 14 днів тому

    You can put your fruit and vegetable peels in with your yard waste if you have yard waste pickup in your community as long as you didn't cook it. Used Halloween pumpkins, watermelon rinds, etc. can all be composted with yard waste.

  • @nancydelu4061
    @nancydelu4061 15 днів тому

    Good show!

  • @spacelemur7955
    @spacelemur7955 16 днів тому +1

    The first and last time I watch this channel. It treats the viewers like grade schoolers. The channel goes straight to the _Do not recommend_ list.

  • @BobbyStanaland
    @BobbyStanaland 19 днів тому +3

    I wonder what happens to the peels if they are not dumped.

    • @dolinaj1
      @dolinaj1 17 днів тому

      Composting is a no-brainer. They are dumped into a land fill, most likely, and some fed to animals if not treated with petro-derived products.

    • @mattroberts86
      @mattroberts86 16 днів тому

      Garbage treated with oil.... lol

  • @longrider42
    @longrider42 12 днів тому

    Orange peels will break down, or will get eaten. I suspect that is what happened to all those orange peels. But in the end, the decayed and or eaten peels, returned to the soil, one way or another. Its simple composting. They only thing that would have sped up the process, would have been to shred the peels, then spread them out and not dumped them into mounds. But hey, it did work.

  • @markgarin6355
    @markgarin6355 18 днів тому +1

    And then they ran out of room, and they still had orange peele....
    Oh yeah, those GPS locations can be confusing. Ah...their non peel tree study was a bit off.

  • @careymitchell4731
    @careymitchell4731 14 днів тому

    Orange peels today are crushed and distilled to recover limonene and some other solvents. Thhe leftover pulp can then be composted.

  • @XmasEve64
    @XmasEve64 15 днів тому

    If the stuff is clean it helps growth af course.
    It works with salmon for instance as well, left by bears.
    The trees grow bigger than the other one

  • @robertcarter4649
    @robertcarter4649 12 днів тому

    If they have access to them mix rice hulls with the soil it does wonders have seen it work

  • @scotchpak
    @scotchpak 14 днів тому

    These peels are used for making gunpowder

  • @tonymcgeachin9906
    @tonymcgeachin9906 13 днів тому +1

    Wow, the Orange peel turned to soil. No shine Sherlock, who'd a funk it...

  • @jeanyluisa8483
    @jeanyluisa8483 13 днів тому

    Turning orange peels into plastic for plastic bottles min: 14:31) could make that method much more cost efficient.
    Instead of spending gas and money to dump the orange peels into the forrest by trucks, they could utilize those millions of people who dump plastic bottles into the landscape, forrests and oceans for free.

  • @robertwalsh1724
    @robertwalsh1724 18 днів тому

    Thanks!

    • @touchofgrey5372
      @touchofgrey5372 16 днів тому

      You actually took the effort to donate a whopping $2.00. Bless you. Are you sure you can afford it!

    • @robertwalsh1724
      @robertwalsh1724 16 днів тому

      @@touchofgrey5372 Actually I can. WTF is it to you?

  • @Icecrys
    @Icecrys 15 днів тому +2

    Composting on a massive scale. 👍

  • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
    @StanTheObserver-lo8rx 18 днів тому +2

    I doubt that in 16 years large fluted trunk Ficus could reach that size. None of the film or photos are of that plot of land. It's another case of "If it sounds to good to be true"..

    • @jooproos6559
      @jooproos6559 17 днів тому

      Yes!They only let you see the orange piles,but not wat it is turnt into..

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому

      Trees in the Fig family tend to grow very fast...like the Banyan tree.

  • @jimthar17
    @jimthar17 16 днів тому

    Whatever happened to the plastic bags that were being made from cauliflower? I remember it being a thing a few years back but it kind of disappeared. Maybe that should be the subject of a future video.

  • @eileenhetherington3704
    @eileenhetherington3704 12 днів тому

    Anyone with a yard can improve their soil by dumping food scraps outdoors. We are too lazy to maintain a composting pile. Yes, in some areas, this is not safe as it may attract bears or mice/rats. We have none of these problems. We live on a large lot with very sandy soil. We had to bring in topsoil to garden. We started dumping our fruit and veg table scraps under a few inches of sand. Within a few years all of our trees and plants became healthier. We saved a couple of trees which had been dying. We can now plant flowers and they actually come up. Our neighbors think we are strange, who cares? I wish we had started this 20 years ago.

  • @scottmcshannon6821
    @scottmcshannon6821 14 днів тому

    to bad its illegal to do so in the country. how much did the second company waste canceling the first company? did the second company even try to get the same deal?

  • @johnrupe3279
    @johnrupe3279 13 днів тому

    Something seems off about this story. If you have ever visited a citrus processing plant here in the U.S., not one bit of the orange or grapefruit go to waste. The oil is skimmed off for use in household products like cleaners. The peels are dried and processed into feed additives for livestock. The pulp is collected for use in different blends of the juice. And the juice is batched and graded for blending to create consistent tasting juice for packaging. Nothing goes to waste. I don't buy it.

  • @jandamskier6510
    @jandamskier6510 10 днів тому

    Were the peels from organically grown fruits?

  • @JasonOrefice
    @JasonOrefice 11 днів тому

    I cant believe that they would expect to find orange peels 16 years later

  • @phillipbailey9615
    @phillipbailey9615 8 днів тому

    One way or another any plant waste is useful for encouraging other plants to thrive, so long as , said plants arent toxic, some are , naturally, the only negative with vegetation waste, is when you have to transport it many miles for use in another manufacturing process, so any composting is good, even better keeping it local, otherwise, you transporting it may outweigh its beneficial, process.

  • @JonasSmith1823
    @JonasSmith1823 10 днів тому

    Interesting

  • @nosecondplace6833
    @nosecondplace6833 14 днів тому

    I must have missed the time when composting natural waste did not help other plants grow. These "experts" must have not just tried this in their home garden...

  • @xxxxxx-tq4mw
    @xxxxxx-tq4mw 16 днів тому

    Going in that new growth, i’d be scared bleep-less, of stepping on a fer-de-lance snake, or some other same such extremely dangerous viper, of which Costa Rica has a few.

  • @virtuallifter2438
    @virtuallifter2438 17 днів тому +3

    Can't believe there are almost 300k subs watching videos created by an AI bot

  • @markrindt8730
    @markrindt8730 14 днів тому

    1:23.. Most definitely Old-world buildings.

  • @touchofgrey5372
    @touchofgrey5372 16 днів тому

    Now, you're going to have every Tom, Dick & Harry dump their orange peels in forests, hoping to help it.

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому

      I hope so! I used to throw my organic waste in a hole in my backyard and cover it with dirt. Within weeks I had so many fruits and vegetables growing out of it!!!

    • @Icuh8n911
      @Icuh8n911 16 днів тому

      Unless you threw old orange trump in then everythings gonna die​@@vazquezcarlos

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому

      ​@@Icuh8n911organic waste includes some seeds. When I composted them, some of those seeds germinated and grew. I'm not sure if that's what you're referring too.

    • @vazquezcarlos
      @vazquezcarlos 16 днів тому

      ​@@Icuh8n911let me also add that the other organic matter adds nutrients to the soil that helps the seeds grow into plants. Similar to how the composting/decomposing Orange peels helped fertilize any seeds that were under them.

  • @JonathanMallard-k9f
    @JonathanMallard-k9f 13 днів тому

    . . . why weren't there any orange trees growing ? There must have been a seed or two in the peel waste . . .

  • @franklesser5655
    @franklesser5655 18 днів тому +1

    Why not return the orange peels to the groves where the oranges were grown?

    • @MrPortajohn
      @MrPortajohn 18 днів тому

      Before decay? That's a huge risk to the health of the trees and production quality. Orchards and groves require a lot more work and care than most people understand. No one is going to experiment on their livelihood like that. Even if they're just composting it on the same property they would run the risk of attracting more of every pest and disease orange trees get attacked by. It wouldn't be a wise decision. There are tons of profitable uses these factories could explore like extracting compounds, food uses, cosmetics, or even something db like potpourri among other things. They wouldn't even have to ship it all somewhere if they just looked into expanding their production beyond just juice.

  • @solapowsj25
    @solapowsj25 19 днів тому

    Can food cook without heat 🔥from a fire. No. The wastes from the kitchen degrade well when there's flowing water (rain) and the microbes. This is good.

  • @John-jl9de
    @John-jl9de 11 днів тому

    I put all of our food scraps into our foliage instead of the trash can or disposal.

  • @davidelplaneta272
    @davidelplaneta272 12 днів тому

    Seems strange that cow manure would make the forest soil unproductive when cattle manure has been used for centuries to enrich soil. Composting is good for providing nutrients also, but the nutrients from manure are beneficial as long as you don’t use too much. Maybe there was a corral or feedlot at the location previous to the orange peel experiment, and that could have damaged the undergrowth. This story seems like one of those “let’s make cattle the new scapegoat for global warming” collaborations. Do vegans really think that growing vegetables is simple without pesticides and using lots of water? Birth control is probably the only answer to saving the planet from overpopulation until we can actually travel to other planets, maybe in a few hundred years.

  • @jethroPDiddy
    @jethroPDiddy 12 днів тому

    They miraculously discovered compost. Hold the presses.

  • @dontworrydon
    @dontworrydon 18 днів тому

    What a great deal!

  • @wesley-j1c1z
    @wesley-j1c1z 11 днів тому

    proven fact, coffee grounds and banana peels make rose bushes thrive , never waste money on expensive fertilizer when your morning pot of joe n a few banana peels will work wonders!

  • @lynnhubbard844
    @lynnhubbard844 13 днів тому

    why wasn't this done LONG time ago?

  • @ddpeak1
    @ddpeak1 11 днів тому

    So all the orange peel goes in the forest full of nutrient that has been taken from the orange grove so that soil must becoming depleted.

  • @arsnotorious
    @arsnotorious 19 днів тому +6

    It's misrepresented... the site of the signs showed soil layer debris... of a brown substance...
    Then they show deep rooted trees that are much older than 15 years old... just by judging the bark discoloration.
    Also your trucks full of orange peels... are dumping on flat surfaces, the lush trees you depicted are on steep inclines and gullys a dump truck?.. especially a low bed... wouldn't make it into.😅😅😅

  • @newagetemplar6100
    @newagetemplar6100 12 днів тому

    I’m trying something similar by taking a leak in the garden at least 4 times a day . 😂

  • @vickistewart1924
    @vickistewart1924 16 днів тому

    Orange peel is one of the healers for cancer

    • @Icuh8n911
      @Icuh8n911 16 днів тому

      Unless that orange peel is djt

  • @DerParsifal
    @DerParsifal 15 днів тому

    What do other countries do with their orange peels?

  • @MatAK49
    @MatAK49 13 днів тому

    It's called COMPOST.
    People have been doing it for thousands of years.

  • @kellyswoodyard
    @kellyswoodyard 13 днів тому +2

    That fig tree DID NOT grow to the size you allude to isnt 16 years old. That tree in your report is hundreds of years old. I call bullshit. By the way, i lived in Australia's tropics for 30 years.

  • @daviduhr4941
    @daviduhr4941 18 днів тому +2

    So uhh, you just made a video to tell us that composting works… cool 👍🏽

    • @harvinderubhi5540
      @harvinderubhi5540 17 днів тому +1

      Think laterally of the processes involved in killing an experiment that eventually proved to be valuable

  • @StanleypeterDickinson
    @StanleypeterDickinson 16 днів тому

    Costa Coffee Costa Packet
    Costa Brava What A Palaver.

  • @SageVishwamitra
    @SageVishwamitra 18 днів тому +1

    imagine how much orange peel tea they missed out on. What a great loss.

    • @FanNy-ku6wt
      @FanNy-ku6wt 18 днів тому

      It's not lost, it goes to the micro-organisms.

  • @Lawrence1203-f7s
    @Lawrence1203-f7s 13 днів тому

    I hope this is true and not fake news.