Broadfork: How and Why to Use it & Why We Stopped Using Ours

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  • Опубліковано 15 чер 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 142

  • @morningharvestmarketgarden2439
    @morningharvestmarketgarden2439 4 роки тому +21

    A great explanation for no-till. It's the little details that you show (not stepping in the beds, for example) that make these vlogs so helpful. Thank you!

  • @SuperPussyFinger
    @SuperPussyFinger 2 роки тому +2

    Best explanation of the broadfork on UA-cam. Exquisite overview.

  • @yeahnahsweetas
    @yeahnahsweetas 3 роки тому +9

    Hey mate thanks for the video, for me the biggest thing I took from it is the idea of not disturbing the soil too much and being mindful of how you're affecting the microbiology when tilling the soil.

  • @bob.hudson
    @bob.hudson 4 роки тому +7

    You are the first gardener that I actually see not walking on the beds, here we don't use it because it is too expensive, a simple garden fork will do the job.

    • @stevehatcher7700
      @stevehatcher7700 4 роки тому +3

      I use a garden fork/pitch fork as well. It means i have to go down the beds twice as it is about half as wide as a broad fork. The tines are not quite as long either. I get about 5 inches deep where the broadfork might do 10. It works but the broadfork would be even better. May purchase one later this season

  • @growhand6148
    @growhand6148 2 роки тому +4

    You're the best! Articulate and knowledgeable and very experienced. I can see you will be a one-stop-shop for all my gardening lessons. Thank you for sharing your methods, they will come into good use for me in the future!

  • @LovelynYerro2020
    @LovelynYerro2020 3 роки тому

    I like the way you are doing. It's very helpful.
    Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
    I really love your clean garden.

  • @LandElevated
    @LandElevated 3 роки тому +2

    Great video. We will share this with our customers for sure :) We sell land in rural areas and this will help generate some great ideas. Thanks for creating this!

  • @LandElevated
    @LandElevated 4 роки тому

    Great information! We surely share this to our customers! Keep going!

  • @mianrshah4429
    @mianrshah4429 3 роки тому +4

    I love your garden...i myself grow garlic and vegetables under trees 🌳.

  • @elleneyman5716
    @elleneyman5716 Місяць тому

    I'm inspired to get out and do this Thanks!

  • @almareynoso6579
    @almareynoso6579 9 місяців тому

    And you are a very good father and you have a beautiful family ❤

  • @organicyouth_garden
    @organicyouth_garden 3 роки тому

    You are The best my Friend. I will Try what You Teach in my Garden.

  • @teresaoftheandes6279
    @teresaoftheandes6279 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you! I didn't realize not to pull it all the way down.

  • @maxmrmagical
    @maxmrmagical Рік тому

    Thank you for the knowledge, sir!

  • @marcosbacas7169
    @marcosbacas7169 4 роки тому +14

    Great job!!! I’m still waiting on the video you’re going to explain the facts of growing under trees.

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +16

      Thanks! If everything goes by plan I'll post the first video (of 3) where I'll talk about farming under trees next Friday!

    • @marcosbacas7169
      @marcosbacas7169 4 роки тому +3

      Awesome, Can’t wait!!! I have 10/30 inch by 50 feet beds under two big Pecan trees in my backyard so it’s gonna be very helpful for me. I’m a little bit concerned about squirrels because I there are a lot in my backyard too

    • @nineallday000
      @nineallday000 4 роки тому +2

      @@marcosbacas7169 if you have trouble with the potato family (tomatoes peppers etc:) it is because of the allelopathy of the pecans. Not such a great tree to grow under for certain crops, though most things should be fine.

    • @marcosbacas7169
      @marcosbacas7169 4 роки тому

      nineallday000 thanks for the advice

  • @C5Rose3
    @C5Rose3 Рік тому

    Great instructions! Thanks so much!

  • @taragettig2125
    @taragettig2125 Рік тому +4

    Thank you so much! I really enjoyed the little educational narrative about the forest ecosystem and the humor about someone hiking with a broad fork. 😂 I’m trying out no-till this growing season and nervous to get started because it’s hard for me to envision my plants surviving in my previously compacted soil. I’m definitely getting myself a broad fork!! Thank you!!

  • @pacopoveda9329
    @pacopoveda9329 4 роки тому +1

    Great information 👌🏽

  •  3 роки тому

    Amazing.
    God bless you

  • @vennilavennila9433
    @vennilavennila9433 3 роки тому

    Great job wonderful idea bro

  • @miguelrequena8393
    @miguelrequena8393 2 роки тому

    Greetings from Uruguay.! Thanks for the video 🙏🐢

  • @smyledixie1955
    @smyledixie1955 4 роки тому

    Here again ❤❤ nice and wonderful farm😍 watching again from phillipine

  • @javcarvao
    @javcarvao 4 роки тому

    excelent video.

  • @dayglowfunkyjunky
    @dayglowfunkyjunky 4 роки тому

    Another good one! Thanks!

  • @marciol.correa1567
    @marciol.correa1567 3 роки тому

    Great Scott !!! Thank you so much

  • @alexquiles1995
    @alexquiles1995 4 роки тому +1

    Nice video. I've learned a lot.

  • @josephkatebe8809
    @josephkatebe8809 3 роки тому

    Thank you video very helpful

  • @Sandra-Armstrong
    @Sandra-Armstrong 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you for showing that a broad fork should be used gently in the soil!!! 😊

  • @LaraGr8
    @LaraGr8 3 роки тому

    Hi Moreno, een vriend van mij wil voor mij zo eentje maken. mag ik van jou de afmetingen van deze tool. dankjewel! ik vind dat je een geweldige instructeur bent! heb vandaag jouw boek gekregen. ga binnen de komende dagen lezen. nogmaals dankjewel!

  • @mitortuga1161
    @mitortuga1161 2 роки тому

    Thanks for all the contents clear and right the goals your videos are. For inputs of compost and woodchip, how do you process to provide those big amounts you need and how much time a year you lowering them to ground level ?

  • @syeduddin3114
    @syeduddin3114 3 роки тому

    Very informative

  • @lasseholtzer8590
    @lasseholtzer8590 2 роки тому

    geweldig, zo mooi als je bedden zijn. en dat allemaal zonder ploeg of tillerwerk!! mooie video!!

  • @rortizdu
    @rortizdu 4 роки тому +5

    Thanks for another great video! I'm trying to figure out how to to plant cover crops or green manure in a no tilling system. Do you plant green manure? How often do you include it in the rotations? I'm starting in a new project and I'd like to plant green manure. I only cut weeds using the scythe and the soil is not naked, so I'm not sure how to plant the green manure in this situation.

  • @dannyhughes4889
    @dannyhughes4889 3 роки тому

    Excellent.

  • @permaculturaensecano8644
    @permaculturaensecano8644 4 роки тому +1

    In Spain that marvelous tool is called Horca de doble mango. Hear is absolutely necessary to have spongy soils and save water when occasionally rains.

  • @oshofarmHokkaido
    @oshofarmHokkaido 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Moreno,
    i have been market farming for 30 years and no-till for the last 4 years. I did a test, broadforking one bed and not on the next bed. The vegetable grown was daikon, a root vegetable. The harvest in the not broadforked bed was larger. I repeated the test the next year and got the same results. Great to hear that you got the same results. Any explanation?

  • @jamesmcallister3878
    @jamesmcallister3878 4 роки тому +9

    once again a great video, great information and facts. love the video layout too very earthy ;)

  • @farmingbusinesstv9079
    @farmingbusinesstv9079 4 роки тому +1

    Incredible👍

  • @constantinosshouftas1224
    @constantinosshouftas1224 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Moreno. Thanks for this excellent video. How do you incorporate organic matter? Or do you use organic matter only as mulch?

  • @bastianschroder5391
    @bastianschroder5391 4 роки тому +6

    My biggest Take-Away: The broadfork is only a tool for a certain period in preparing the beds and for starting a healthy soil. Thx for the Video Moreno! Would be very interesting if you can give some insights on how your financial income developed in the first year. I think it would encourage a lot of upcoming farmers. Greetings from Germany!

  • @johanydelacruz.s4315
    @johanydelacruz.s4315 4 роки тому

    Excelente.

  • @charlespatterson8457
    @charlespatterson8457 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you
    I’m farming..... as you

  • @georgebalaur
    @georgebalaur 2 роки тому +1

    Very good explanations! Where do you get the woodchips from?

  • @lynnmoser6918
    @lynnmoser6918 2 роки тому

    Gee, I have used my broadfork to take out sod, rocks...all sorts of junk. Also to ready my grow tunnels but now I see how I should refine my use. Thanks. P.S. It sure is fun to use. And I'm old.

  • @andreabeccaro9668
    @andreabeccaro9668 4 роки тому

    Wow belle riprese quasi quasi le faccio anche nei miei video

  • @Daniel-nf8pp
    @Daniel-nf8pp 3 роки тому

    Enjoyed the content. One question. Are those 12 inches TINES on the broadfork ??? Thank you.

  • @mistryer
    @mistryer 4 роки тому +1

    Also could you recommend the best compost to buy in please 👍

  • @lozza2272
    @lozza2272 2 роки тому +1

    Just wondering, do you grow in the same plot after harvest time and again or do you let the soil have a chance to replenish and if so, how do you replenish your soil. I know farmers with stock rotate their fields frequently. Do you add compost and manure?

  • @timothiabalentine5344
    @timothiabalentine5344 Рік тому

    Thank you for your knowledge. A broad fork is a better gardening tool to use.

  • @Bentonendflowerfarm
    @Bentonendflowerfarm 4 роки тому +2

    Brilliant video, our soil is currently so hard, we can’t even get our broad fork in!! We have to allow our first season compost to naturally work into the soil (solid sand/stone) and then broadfork next spring to really start our beds. So, frustrating yes, but a necessary step. Great video.

    • @moi7748
      @moi7748 4 роки тому +2

      I feel your pain. It's been quite hot recently and my soil is baked rock hard. Only possibility would be to hire a tiller...

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +6

      Thank you! Compost will definitely help a lot with your soil structure. Another possibility to try is using a garden fork or pitch fork. It's smaller than the broadfork and usually easier to handle. Ultimately with large inputs of organic matter it's just a matter of time before the soil becomes 'loose'.

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +6

      @@moi7748 Hey Andrew, mulching your garden beds will help a lot with this! There's a lot of different sorts of mulch you could use depending on your climate. But generally, covering your garden beds will prevent your soil from 'baking'. A tiller can definitely be used but preferably in a way of 'kick-starting' the system, not as an ongoing practice.

    • @Bentonendflowerfarm
      @Bentonendflowerfarm 4 роки тому +5

      @@TheDutchFarmer Yes, we did our first ever bed on the site last October to put some garlic in, we couldn't get the broadfork in at all, so just did the 'no did 'bed, planted and hoped for the best! we actually just harvested the garlic, bumper crop, we hadn't done anything on that bed at all as we have been building no-dig beds on the main plot, anyway, as it had dropped lots, we thought we'd try the broadfork and to our surprise, it went in! not all the way (this was back in March I think) but most of the way. I may try it again today! so that's why I am trying not to worry about it, my main beds hopefully will go the same way by winter, and so, I will try and restart the plot once it's all settled, so hoping for better success next year here. We have been hit so hard by the Covid stuff, and all our markets stopped, so, with a new farm, no government help available because we only started earning just before the Covid hit. We are hanging on by the skin of our teeth. But determined to succeed!!!

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +7

      @@Bentonendflowerfarm The compost and no dig style beds have such an amazing effect on the overall soil condition. It surprises me every time how quickly we are able to create favorable growing conditions for the plants we grow! I'm sorry to hear that you guys have been negatively impacted by the current situation. I wish you all the best! Something that really works well for us lately is doing home delivery services. We send out a list with available produce to the local community (can be either done through social media/websites/email/phone), they place their order and a couple of days later we deliver their order. Works really well at the moment. Maybe something to consider? Otherwise wholesale has been really stable as well for us. Obviously crop selection will have to be adapted to serve that market profitably, but is a solid way of selling large quantities of produce. Anyways, you guys have the right attitude going forward and I hope you'll come out of this stronger!

  • @FlorisanteFlip
    @FlorisanteFlip 4 роки тому +3

    Hi Moreno, very nice video. Im wondering what type of soil you have. On a heavy clay soil like mine the broadfork is sometimes lifting up the soil in a package in stead of loosening it.
    Also wondering how you deal with liseron appearing through the compost beds?
    Thanks!

    • @stevehatcher7700
      @stevehatcher7700 4 роки тому +5

      In heavy clay maybe move the fork at half the distance. Typically one would insert the fork about the length of the tines away from the last point of insertion. In the heavier clay if you go half that distance (6 inches instead of 1 foot) you may be more likely to have that clump of soil split up a bit instead of coming up in one solid mass. Or at least more break points and air pockets and overall decompaction across the length of the bed.
      My soil is a clay loam. Just a bit on the clay side of perfect. I apply my amendments right after forking so some of it can fall down into the holes and cracks left after forking. My thinking is it will help incorporate the organic matter deeper through soil profile faster than letting nature do the job from the top. This higher organic matter content, in time, should allow the clay to perform more like a loam.

  • @stefanklein7500
    @stefanklein7500 3 роки тому +2

    In a small garden, or when one has enough time anyway, is there any reason not to use an ordinary garden fork the same way as you use the broadfork? Or in other words, besides the width, does the broadfork have any other advantage over an ordinary garden fork?

  • @ishwaryan123
    @ishwaryan123 2 роки тому

    அருமை

  • @meganmackenzie5993
    @meganmackenzie5993 3 роки тому +2

    I watched Charles Dowding state the same thing: that he tested and found broadforked beds inferior to undisturbed beds; however, you further stated that broadforking is only for initial break up of the soil. I wish someplace rented broadforks, as they cost $$$ to purchase.

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  3 роки тому +3

      Just use a garden fork! Gets the same results :)

  • @8starsAND
    @8starsAND 3 роки тому +1

    Hello, what type of wood chips you're using? It can be pine or spruce chips? Thanks in advance for response

  • @kristilisakleiner9384
    @kristilisakleiner9384 3 роки тому

    I’m wondering if this might be helpful for planting things like potatoes?

  • @katharinabitterlich2883
    @katharinabitterlich2883 2 роки тому +4

    I love the idea to not disturb the soil, but what I observe is that in these no-dig systems there is often a huge import of compost. Depending where its from and how it was produced, I wonder if that is more sustainable and if there are alternatives where you can rest the soil without these imports?

    • @p5ycon
      @p5ycon 7 місяців тому

      You can cover crop 2-4 years, but those years the beds will be unproductive. You also skip this broadforking step if you have a few cycles with mainroot plants like White Mustard. On the other hand in productive fields you just can't avoid compost, the produce you take off the field must be replaced somehow. You can start making your own compost and upcycle food scraps, grass clippings, etc

  • @jonclovercottagemarketgard1143
    @jonclovercottagemarketgard1143 4 роки тому +1

    Great video. Very useful. It looks like the distance between each time you go in the soil is about 1 foot (12 inches). Is this correct?

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +2

      Thanks! That's right. It's roughly a foot between each time 👍

  • @madresefonoon
    @madresefonoon 2 роки тому

    Hi tanks for detail.Doesn't fork damage to cardboard base of your no dig plan ?

  • @patriciaalber367
    @patriciaalber367 4 роки тому +2

    Hi Moreno! We are in our 4th year of CSA. We gave up on Farmer's Markets because everything just wilts in the heat. So it is all CSA and trying to make enough not to have to have another job. But what we are finding in our beds in which we put wood based compost and worm castings (by the ton) is that the dirt is turning to dust. We get the compost from a local company (they all use the same dealer of it) and the worm castings from another state. We tilth these together once they are on the beds, rake and roll it but we aren't seeing that much of a change in our soil over the four years. Even with putting 5 inches of new compost the top gets quite hard. We have been no dig for the last 2 years. If I dig my hands into the "soil" it is just dust. Any ideas? And we love the videos. Thank you!

    • @MrCjallaby
      @MrCjallaby 4 роки тому +1

      What kind of soil is the native soil? Are your beds raised? Sounds like your compost mulch is not holding any water.

    • @isabellec6922
      @isabellec6922 Рік тому +1

      How about cover cropping? Bare soil is far from ideal.

  • @Adam-un5bq
    @Adam-un5bq 11 місяців тому

    Hey all! I switched from Rototilling to just using the broadfork last fall. Wow, what a difference in overall productivity!

  • @AirbornOnTime
    @AirbornOnTime 4 роки тому +1

    Hi Moreno, thanks for the video ! I was wondering, are you able to sow directly in the compost? For example carrots? I have a vegetable garden with 8 beds. On one of them I tried to do like you, only compost on top. I transplanted some lettuces a few weeks ago on the "compost bed" and on another one made of a mix of horse/chicken and cow manure mostly. On the "compost bed" the lettuces are not growing at all, they stay green though but they just won't grow. Do you have an idea of what could it be? Thanks !

    • @donisenberg3032
      @donisenberg3032 4 роки тому +2

      Thomas I had a package of carrot seeds accidentally empty into my pocket. I emptied my pocket on a new bed (covered grass with two layers of wet cardboard and topped it with 5” of compost) . I kind of forgot I had done this until the carrots started sprouting. I thinned them out to about an inch apart and I had a great crop of long straight carrots 100 days later. I didn’t put the seeds in rows or rake them into the compost, I just broadcast them in a haphazard manner when cleaning my pocket.

    • @AirbornOnTime
      @AirbornOnTime 4 роки тому

      @@donisenberg3032 Hi Don, ok thanks for the info !

  • @mistryer
    @mistryer 4 роки тому +1

    Brilliant as always, thank you! Would it be possible to do a vid on preparing a no-till area from grass to plantable beds sometime? I know you initially prepared yours with a one time tillage, but I'd like to prepare a currently meadow area into market garden beds for next year, so will be preparing, covering and wintering, so that I can start to use them next spring. I'm sure other viewers would find it useful too

  • @solveigsilsetberg6327
    @solveigsilsetberg6327 4 роки тому +2

    Hei :) veldig bra video! Great stuff Moreno 💚🌼🐝. Did you also use it initially for removing root weeds? Before adding compost? BTW I have bought one too 😃

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +2

      Thank you! We removed the weeds through initial tillage and after that immediately into the no dig setup with the compost. Looking back at it, could have done it without the tillage! Anyways, the broadfork does help with opening up the subsoil :)

  • @BigAlSparks
    @BigAlSparks 4 роки тому +7

    I have to wonder if that looseness of the soil that has caused you to dis continue using the broadfork will remain indefinitely, given nothing else in your methods changes? Or if over time, sun/heat, rain, and wind, that soil will begin to harden and compact down lower and start affecting crop results negatively, and make broadforking 2 to 3 yrs from now necessary? Maybe a great follow up video to show either way? Thumbs up !

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 2 роки тому

      If you have extra land you can fallow, plant daikon radishes. They go deep and make channels plus add organic matter to the channels.

    • @goldengryphon
      @goldengryphon 2 роки тому +1

      @@robertdouglas8895 And they're great fodder if you have animals. Rutabagas, the old mangels, will do that, too.
      To answer the previously asked question from @Big Al SParks; no. The soil won't compact from the effects of wind, rain, or any other weather-related source, barring hail (the impact of the ice balls can cause some compaction).
      For compaction of the soil to occur, you need to have pressure/weight applied to the soil. Wind, rain, snow don't have any real weight to them (even the heavy snows seen in some Northern areas aren't really that heavy on a psi scale and any damage done is alleviated by their melting). A critter walking on the soil, a tree falling, driving a vehicle, or dragging any item are all things that can cause compaction, but not weather.
      What you might see, if you watch a loose bed slowly sink in height, is settling in the soil as particles slowly shift against each other. The soil will then, technically, be compact in that it will take up less space, but it won't be dangerous to the microscopic food web you are trying to encourage.

  • @skrylos
    @skrylos 4 роки тому

    can y make a video about making compost?

  • @BadarTVTrends
    @BadarTVTrends 3 роки тому

    agricultural greetings everyone, from us Indonesian conventional farmers🇲🇨

  • @sujanaimade456
    @sujanaimade456 3 роки тому

    Please make video about making compost

  • @simon610
    @simon610 2 роки тому

    Do you ever have problem with an excess of certain nutrients (especially phosphorus) building up when you add compost every year?

  • @charliemcgriff7643
    @charliemcgriff7643 Рік тому

    Hey is it better than tilling?

  • @tkzhastings6641
    @tkzhastings6641 4 роки тому +2

    Another informative video. Thank you soo much. Are the 105 veg beds you have measuring the same witdth and length. What is their length?? Is the 76cm width an advantage?? If so what the advantage

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +3

      Hey thanks! They're all the same length (there's only a couple of odd shaped ones due to the layout of our land). They're 10 meter (33feet) by 0.75 cm (30inch). It's indeed an advantage for a couple of reasons. Most noticeably that most market garden tools are created and/or adapted for this universal width, it makes the whole garden planning much easier with all beds of same length (and width). And you can easily reach the crops on both sides of the beds, making it much more ergonomic and practical.

  • @victorjakarasi1865
    @victorjakarasi1865 4 роки тому

    How big is your farm , i recently purchased a 2 hacter farm and would like to get some advise on how to make use for it profitably

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому

      Hey Victor our farm is 1/3 acre. There's many ways you can make your land profitable. If you want to start a market garden you can start by checking out this video: ua-cam.com/video/fRlUhUWS0Hk/v-deo.html and this video: ua-cam.com/video/IJ04HY1wD1k/v-deo.html

  • @deborasilvaraimundo
    @deborasilvaraimundo Рік тому

    I've seen other videos where you use cardboard to start the beds. So I am guessing that when you use the boardfork the cardboard has already decomposed and you are going through the whole thing?

  • @hannessnyman9332
    @hannessnyman9332 4 роки тому +1

    Hi. My name is Hannes Snyman from South Africa. I have been looking at your video's and something baffle's me. Although I work the same way and have as many trees in mt garden as you, I keep on losing my crops. After adding about an inch or two on my bed's I can come back in 2-3 weeks and my trees would have invade all my new compost.... how do you do it?

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому

      Hey Hannes, sorry to hear that. It has probably to do with the type of trees you're growing under. Some trees can be quite aggressive. I'm currently working on several videos that will go into depth on this topic. They will all be released this month.

    • @hannessnyman9332
      @hannessnyman9332 4 роки тому

      @@TheDutchFarmer , thank you very much... Can't wait to see them. It is a house I am renting and all the trees has been been here from before my time

  • @user-bd6rj9wn8m
    @user-bd6rj9wn8m 3 роки тому

    👍👍👍

  • @sminthian
    @sminthian 4 роки тому +2

    Would you do this after every round of crops, or just one time in the spring every year?

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +9

      Hey Alastor, we did it initially after every crop succession. After harvesting out a crop we applied compost, broadforked the beds, raked the beds level and replanted them. Completely forgot to mention this in the video!

  • @blue_boy8621
    @blue_boy8621 4 роки тому +1

    at what angle are the tines? I've seen straight and angled.. I've no idea which is better.

    • @TheDutchFarmer
      @TheDutchFarmer  4 роки тому +3

      The tines on my broadfork are at a slight angle. Honestly, it doesn't make much difference. If used in the way I describe in the video, the results will be the same!

    • @blue_boy8621
      @blue_boy8621 4 роки тому

      Thanks!!

  • @chocalatekid8024
    @chocalatekid8024 Рік тому

    What about Yeti? I saw him buying one,!

  • @ladydianedjojodiningrat1797
    @ladydianedjojodiningrat1797 3 роки тому

    Ya Tuhan bapaknya anak anakku berkebun ....hatiku sangat bahagia

  • @Cherryparfait41
    @Cherryparfait41 3 роки тому

    Coming up with the quantity of composted organic matter to add in sufficient amounts is my problem. There is NOT a trusting quality source of i in my area. I definitely use wood chips and leaves and protect my beds from foot traffic. I have 20acres and tractor with a scoop...I can move quantities of material, but how does one ‘make’ enough??

  • @morningmidnight9398
    @morningmidnight9398 4 роки тому +1

    You must have amazing back muscles

  • @ronaldrongits7047
    @ronaldrongits7047 3 роки тому

    Hello! How can buy this Broadfork and the Gridder in Europe
    Regards
    Ronald

    • @andreaslandfunk5495
      @andreaslandfunk5495 3 роки тому

      My broadfork: www.graines-baumaux.fr/171417-outils-de-jardin Bio Beche 78430. Don't buya cheaper one, this is really good!

  • @Ema-vr6pf
    @Ema-vr6pf 3 роки тому

    Hola, sería bueno subtítulo en español plis. Gracias

  • @reiner5311
    @reiner5311 4 роки тому

    Hello thanks for the video are you in Germany? Greetings from Germany

  • @alfrednewman292
    @alfrednewman292 3 роки тому +8

    When you walk through the forest, look for squirrels, skunks, raccoons, voles, moles, rabbits, and other such critters. They are the broadforks of the forest.

  • @simd510
    @simd510 9 місяців тому

    I got a broadfork and i cant even get it into the soil, its to hard

  • @tkzhastings6641
    @tkzhastings6641 4 роки тому

    Why are some beds covered??

  • @broccoli5408
    @broccoli5408 3 роки тому +3

    That implement would last 3 seconds in our clay. I am sure it is fine in your sand dunes. Great videos by the way, great stuff

    • @JOSEPH-ck6st
      @JOSEPH-ck6st Рік тому

      Yes! Good point. This model wouldn’t cut it where you need it most. I’ve just moved to a new property, my other property( funnily enough) is in the sand dunes, and I’m now going to restore a 1200sqm horse arena. I’ll do it with a broad fork made for the job. The area has been scraped flat, zero topsoil and the top layer is lime sand and silt hard pan which is absolutely impenetrable in summer. I’ll document the process and show how soil can be built even under the most extreme adverse conditions. Cheers, Paul

  • @sunalwaysshinesonTVs
    @sunalwaysshinesonTVs 3 роки тому

    "9 to 5 to the farm life" -bad ass mutha fuk'a rapper Moreno FTW!

  • @almareynoso6579
    @almareynoso6579 9 місяців тому +1

    Wow you have vision! Are you Mexican? Because Mexican are a very hard working! And you are focus on excellence! Keep going and you will succeed 😊❤

  • @Cherryparfait41
    @Cherryparfait41 3 роки тому

    Also, weeds are exasperating. There’s definite pressure for at least 3-4 years per area. 😉
    Is there concern when gathering leaves to compost them for a year before using them? Always trying not to incorporate more weed seeds.

  • @vasilisa_romashkina
    @vasilisa_romashkina 3 роки тому +1

    Ты просто бомба💣❤️

  • @svetlanikolova7673
    @svetlanikolova7673 3 роки тому

    ON MY LAND, EARTH WORMS DO THE WORK

  • @julien9215
    @julien9215 4 роки тому +3

    "la grelinette" in french...

  • @fawziaholideen9816
    @fawziaholideen9816 3 роки тому

    Naaths junaid u6

  • @djangoapple8230
    @djangoapple8230 3 роки тому

    Broad forks are pricy. I've been wanting to invest in a welder because of other various projects and repairs. For a little more money a welder would be the better investment to buy. I could fabricate a broad fork and a number of other tools needed that could cost thousands.

  • @vasilew2823
    @vasilew2823 3 роки тому

    .

  • @bongantuli4949
    @bongantuli4949 3 роки тому

    How are you, I'm following you and learning a lot from your video. My name is David I'm in South Africa can I have your email.

  • @fatmaaydn2525
    @fatmaaydn2525 3 роки тому

    We like your videos too much but you must add to turkish subtitles on yourvideos.