Hi! Thank you for sharing this! I am an environmental educator and am doing a lesson on composting this Saturday to celebrate Earth day! I am totally gonna work in your story of composting in Siberia to produce usable heat! That is a-mazing! :) Thank you for helping the people of Siberia. :) Maybe you could present the results of your experiments to the UN and see if they would be interested in starting and funding projects like these in other developing countries. :)
Thank you very much. Throughout Siberia are the world's largest hydroelectric power plant For example, Krasnoyarsk 20.4 million kWh, the Sayano-Shushenskaya hydroelectric 23.5 million kWh ))) See, for interest, how near you the power plant produces energy)))
I don’t understand why there’s 1 video of you speaking English only and it’s one of the very first videos haha. Then it’s all Russian. What a tease. I’m so devoted to learning about this and I neeeeed to understand your videos 😭
ahah I SAW A VIDEO WITH YOU ODDLY ON RT LIKE THE OTHER DAY A MODERN ONE now we cross paths on a video from 9 years ago Russia is becoming a smaller place i'm sure any updates on how this system worked ?
My compost pile is not heating up. Here (Where I live) is very cold weather (2°c) and day time is too short. So my compost is not breaking down. After 5 days the green material remained green. What should I do now ? Please help me.
Oxygen perhaps? Is the pile raised off the ground? The outside temp shouldn’t affect the compost to the point of it not heating up at all, much like if you are working in cold temps you create heat as do the bacteria breaking down the compost, but they need food and oxygen
Opposite, it it cools briefly then heats up more, but the compost breaks down quicker and heat dies out much faster, you can make usable compost very quickly that way. Like 1 cu meter will break down over winter without rotation, but with rotation it can break down in as little as 18 days.
I find this very interesting. Living i cold scandinavia I also want to run tests on this. How do you turn the pile during the winter and how long does the heat last?
In eine German Videos search "Biomeiler", ist said depending in heapsize it can work from 2 month up to 18 month . So the shown in this Video might work minimum one year.
I’ve been working on the same thought two years now. Start with just “minced carbon” (I use leaves minced very fine) then liquify all “your nitrogen” (manures, house compost) into a slurry and pour it into the carbon base composting bin. I feel your pile would not need to be so big, easier to manage, and regulate with higher continuous heat. Great video thanks for sharing! ua-cam.com/video/tLm7N231aTs/v-deo.html
Hi! Thank you for sharing this! I am an environmental educator and am doing a lesson on composting this Saturday to celebrate Earth day! I am totally gonna work in your story of composting in Siberia to produce usable heat! That is a-mazing! :) Thank you for helping the people of Siberia. :) Maybe you could present the results of your experiments to the UN and see if they would be interested in starting and funding projects like these in other developing countries. :)
Hi! Thank you for sharing this! I am an environmental educator and am doing a lesson on composting this Saturday to celebrate Earth day! I am totally gonna work in your story of composting in Siberia to produce usable heat! That is a-mazing! :) Thank you for helping the people of Siberia. :) Maybe you could present the results of your experiments to the UN and see if they would be interested in starting and funding projects like these in other developing countries. :)
thanks for showing this..good luck on future projects..
Thank you very much. Throughout Siberia are the world's largest hydroelectric power plant For example, Krasnoyarsk 20.4 million kWh, the Sayano-Shushenskaya hydroelectric 23.5 million kWh ))) See, for interest, how near you the power plant produces energy)))
I'm gonna try this to. Well done.
I don’t understand why there’s 1 video of you speaking English only and it’s one of the very first videos haha. Then it’s all Russian. What a tease. I’m so devoted to learning about this and I neeeeed to understand your videos 😭
Thanks for posting this vid!
You took the moderator serious xD Love that. Good Guy.
ahah I SAW A VIDEO WITH YOU ODDLY ON RT LIKE THE OTHER DAY A MODERN ONE now we cross paths on a video from 9 years ago Russia is becoming a smaller place i'm sure any updates on how this system worked ?
My compost pile is not heating up. Here (Where I live) is very cold weather (2°c) and day time is too short. So my compost is not breaking down. After 5 days the green material remained green.
What should I do now ?
Please help me.
Oxygen perhaps? Is the pile raised off the ground? The outside temp shouldn’t affect the compost to the point of it not heating up at all, much like if you are working in cold temps you create heat as do the bacteria breaking down the compost, but they need food and oxygen
From what I have seen you don't turn the pile like you would your normal compost pile. I would think that turning the pile would cause a loss in heat.
Opposite, it it cools briefly then heats up more, but the compost breaks down quicker and heat dies out much faster, you can make usable compost very quickly that way. Like 1 cu meter will break down over winter without rotation, but with rotation it can break down in as little as 18 days.
ахах, похудел за 3 года))
Всем добра,жаль что не понимаю по английски
How did the second year go?
Interesting video btw.
More more !
Привет,всё на английском ничего не понятно получился эксперемент или нет. Что там вообще вышло раскажи.
При температуре на улице в -23 градуса, куча внутри была +30.
@@shkaffsergeevich на протяжении какого периода температура держалась?
👍
I find this very interesting. Living i cold scandinavia I also want to run tests on this. How do you turn the pile during the winter and how long does the heat last?
In eine German Videos search "Biomeiler", ist said depending in heapsize it can work from 2 month up to 18 month . So the shown in this Video might work minimum one year.
а он ещё был похож на американца
I’ve been working on the same thought two years now.
Start with just “minced carbon” (I use leaves minced very fine) then liquify all “your nitrogen” (manures, house compost) into a slurry and pour it into the carbon base composting bin. I feel your pile would not need to be so big, easier to manage, and regulate with higher continuous heat. Great video thanks for sharing!
ua-cam.com/video/tLm7N231aTs/v-deo.html
Do you make slurry of minced carbon ?
@@ainulhudamallick3181 no mostly from food waste, or manures.
@@evegrowing7749 Do you put "minced carbon" on the bottom of compost bin ?
ахахах
Hi! Thank you for sharing this! I am an environmental educator and am doing a lesson on composting this Saturday to celebrate Earth day! I am totally gonna work in your story of composting in Siberia to produce usable heat! That is a-mazing! :) Thank you for helping the people of Siberia. :) Maybe you could present the results of your experiments to the UN and see if they would be interested in starting and funding projects like these in other developing countries. :)