Hello Hawaii! I just received a fresh batch of Kona coffee from Hawaii. I learned about it from a co-crop insurance friend in 2012. It is the best and about the only coffee I drink. I’m hoping to try Philippine coffee one day.
Here on the Northern Plains of the US, it has become very common to plant cover crops following a short season crop such as wheat (or corn and forage crops cut for silage). Old school thinking was that would further deplete soil profile moisture as rain can be a limiting factor here. But, actually, in return, keeping the soil microbes happy and healthy with an actively growing plant will build organic matter and improve soil fertility in the long run thus reducing the need for commercial fertilizer and pesticides. Some of those cover crops can be used for late season grazing further reducing labor of feeding livestock into the winter months and keeping manure out in the field where it is needed. Our cold winter months here will slow microbial activity, but at the same time, inhibit other pests from completely overwhelming our farms. You at LeMes Farm have have an impressive operation. Keep up the excellent work!👍👍
Amo ito't iyo new property? Looks perfect for syntropic farming although bangin biased la ak kay amo yana tak goal. I disagree with you about climate change (urgency and cause), but I agree regenerative agriculture/natural farming is the only way forward. The real problem with synthetic fertilizers is that the plant is disincentivized from farming its own microbes because their food is already there. It's like if people were readily provided with free food, we wouldn't work for it anymore. In the case of plants, it means less microbial diversity and less exudates into soil, leading to less carbon/organic matter storage. Also, most of the synthetic fertilize just evaporates into the air or, worse, runs off into water sources.
Yes sir... Actually diri sya new, maiha na sya pero waray la matrabaho kay waray sa focus hehe... Pero yana amon na po tikangan pagwork. Maupay gud lagi unta with animals pero kay waray pa magbabantay mejo harayo hiya haam farm pero mabaktas la lwat. Mayda po geap haak nagyakan with the same point of view as yours sir... Medyo blurry pa haak gud ito na issue pero bagat connected gud it improper practices hit mga disasters na we experience. We will study more about it sir...
Amazing natural farm! Thank you for saving the earth!
We do what we can 🥰🥰 Thank you for watching... Hopefully we can visit hawaiii... Want to see farms there and surf also 😁😁
Hello Hawaii!
I just received a fresh batch of Kona coffee from Hawaii. I learned about it from a co-crop insurance friend in 2012. It is the best and about the only coffee I drink. I’m hoping to try Philippine coffee one day.
@@LGR605 awesome! We have a lot of coffee growers by us in Ka’u!
wow!!! amazing vlog. a lot of coconut trees
Thank you po sirdafarmer... Happy farming... Organic grower din po ba kayo?
awesome friend!
Thanks friend... Start your garden now
will you start a new field soon?
We are scheduled to start working on the new field on sep 3... Excited to post a new video of it soon.
Here on the Northern Plains of the US, it has become very common to plant cover crops following a short season crop such as wheat (or corn and forage crops cut for silage). Old school thinking was that would further deplete soil profile moisture as rain can be a limiting factor here. But, actually, in return, keeping the soil microbes happy and healthy with an actively growing plant will build organic matter and improve soil fertility in the long run thus reducing the need for commercial fertilizer and pesticides. Some of those cover crops can be used for late season grazing further reducing labor of feeding livestock into the winter months and keeping manure out in the field where it is needed. Our cold winter months here will slow microbial activity, but at the same time, inhibit other pests from completely overwhelming our farms.
You at LeMes Farm have have an impressive operation. Keep up the excellent work!👍👍
True microbes are so important in our ecosystem... 🌱 Thank you... Happy Farming to you... Hoping we excel in what we do.
Ang lapad ng lugar nyo ilang hectarya, ang ganda tingnan
Wala pa pong half hectare maam... Maliit lang po ang farm namin. Mukha lang malaki hehe.
Amo ito't iyo new property? Looks perfect for syntropic farming although bangin biased la ak kay amo yana tak goal.
I disagree with you about climate change (urgency and cause), but I agree regenerative agriculture/natural farming is the only way forward. The real problem with synthetic fertilizers is that the plant is disincentivized from farming its own microbes because their food is already there. It's like if people were readily provided with free food, we wouldn't work for it anymore. In the case of plants, it means less microbial diversity and less exudates into soil, leading to less carbon/organic matter storage. Also, most of the synthetic fertilize just evaporates into the air or, worse, runs off into water sources.
Yes sir... Actually diri sya new, maiha na sya pero waray la matrabaho kay waray sa focus hehe... Pero yana amon na po tikangan pagwork. Maupay gud lagi unta with animals pero kay waray pa magbabantay mejo harayo hiya haam farm pero mabaktas la lwat.
Mayda po geap haak nagyakan with the same point of view as yours sir... Medyo blurry pa haak gud ito na issue pero bagat connected gud it improper practices hit mga disasters na we experience. We will study more about it sir...
Nakakasad la yana diri na mainom ang water ha deep well