Differences in Tilled and No Till Soils

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  • Опубліковано 28 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 263

  • @tymz-r-achangin
    @tymz-r-achangin Рік тому +20

    We would usually pass on watching things like this, but this was actually interesting since he explained things in a detailed way and yet nearly everyone can still understand. He also demonstrated the subject matter in a real-life way versus just using those computer animated videos and drawings

  • @TheRealJohnJ10
    @TheRealJohnJ10 3 роки тому +24

    I learn more on UA-cam than I did in school.

    • @CriticalThinker27
      @CriticalThinker27 3 роки тому +3

      You mean slave indoctrination camps. Yeah, me too.

    • @dougclarkson69
      @dougclarkson69 9 місяців тому

      UA-cam makes teachers in a government school system obsolete, I totally agree with you.

  • @soniadsouza6590
    @soniadsouza6590 6 років тому +30

    Awesome and this the best example I have ever seen. Hats off for experimenting in such a wonderful way.

  • @jaxnaturals
    @jaxnaturals 2 роки тому +3

    This is one of the better rabbit holes I have jumped into. Thanks for all the great information

  • @MrFennmeista
    @MrFennmeista 11 років тому +72

    I believe the most important aspect here is with regards to 'weathering'. Non tilled soil will prevent the washing away of vital nutrients and organic matter, so your field does not look like a deserted tundra after so many years

    • @RJ1999x
      @RJ1999x 4 роки тому

      And where did the soil go?
      Into the next field 🤦‍♂️

    • @BlueSpirit422
      @BlueSpirit422 4 роки тому +12

      @@RJ1999x Actually, it goes into the nearest water body, often the ocean, where it can possibly cause algae blooms, killing life in there

    • @RJ1999x
      @RJ1999x 4 роки тому +3

      @@BlueSpirit422 completely wrong

    • @RJ1999x
      @RJ1999x 3 роки тому +2

      @@jomsies Yes but you're telling only part of the story the tree huggers have fed you.
      The fertilizer runoff causing this isn't coming from farm land it's coming from the cities and golf courses that over apply product for their vanity, in heavy rains it flows down the storm sewers and right into the rivers and streams that feed the Mississippi river then flows out into the gulf

    • @thenormalyears
      @thenormalyears 3 роки тому +3

      @@RJ1999x of course taking any accountability for your own actions is physically impossible for boomers but they sure can pass the buck and blame everyone else

  • @starks1414
    @starks1414 8 років тому +24

    I have been part of no till operations on a family farm for 40 years and have seen improvements on the land. No body farms the old school way of over tillage of land anymore. Our growing season in Canada is so short that we can't afford or have the time to not do anything but no till. Technology and new grains on the market have helped with greater returns from farming practices. Great video and appreciate you sharing.

    • @nrdbookcook8836
      @nrdbookcook8836 7 років тому +5

      Aaron Starko if you cover your soil in wood chips, or leaf mold it would extend your growing season by insulating the soil

    • @raurkegoose5233
      @raurkegoose5233 7 років тому +12

      wood chips or leaf mold + 1000 acres = impractical

    • @sebastienlaflamme6147
      @sebastienlaflamme6147 5 років тому +1

      @@raurkegoose5233 You are missing something in your calculations. Wood chips + Leaf Mold + 1000 acres = impractical. If you add a variable to your equation, it adds up to multiple beneficial factors, you see, you simply have to get out of the capitalist mindset where you have to make a profit over your neighbour. Read carefully. Wood chips + 1000 acres + 1000 workers = practical. Feeds more than 1000, and creates a massive surplus. HAven't thought of that, did you? At the moment, there is 37 billion acres that are land on Earth. That is about 4 acres per person. Way more than what we need to survive. Wake up!

    • @jeil5676
      @jeil5676 4 роки тому +2

      @@sebastienlaflamme6147 your model is add wood chips and mulch or lose the farm. Farm is a business. Only capitalists can afford to hobby farm.

    • @sebastienlaflamme6147
      @sebastienlaflamme6147 4 роки тому

      @@jeil5676 Those are empty facts. Not interested, come at me with arguments. Why should capitalists the only one able to hobby farm? You are in a cage and you don't see that the door is open. Stay inside and continue to sleep JEIL.
      When you have factual information I will be interested in hearing you out. Until then, I'm not interested in undeveloped opinions.

  • @leinchunongho8425
    @leinchunongho8425 2 роки тому +16

    Good day sir. I love the demonstration. I am a young African farmer aspiring to fight hunger, I am in need of coaching. This kind of drills aren't being taught in our schools here

    • @veziqiniso4425
      @veziqiniso4425 9 місяців тому +2

      Contact Foundations for Farming in Zimbabwe

    • @calculatedrush
      @calculatedrush Місяць тому

      @leinchunongho8425 are you still working on farming? If so I'd like to help out

  • @gardenlikeaviking
    @gardenlikeaviking 2 роки тому +1

    this is a fantastic visual illustration... thank you for your efforts..

  • @scottscontracting
    @scottscontracting 7 років тому +17

    These techniques used in the video can be replicated in your Garden or Farm. I worry that the soils ability to hold moisture will become a must have in the future due to altered weather patterns.

    • @agustasister5624
      @agustasister5624 6 років тому +9

      Weather patterns will always changes...always.

    • @kuiperbeltdropout8791
      @kuiperbeltdropout8791 2 роки тому

      @@agustasister5624 yes weather always changes, but living soil can survive freezing temps as well as it can survive roasting sun. As long as you use plenty of organic matter, I like to go off Charles Dowding and apply a layer of compost over the beds in winter

    • @richardtrowell8812
      @richardtrowell8812 2 роки тому

      @@kuiperbeltdropout8791 did you miss the part where he said 50 years? How about seeing that application on 1000 acres and compare the yield for the first five years to a traditional farm. That would give you an idea how long it would take to convert and have reasonable yield. You have to plant a nitrogen yielding plant in order to plant a crop that needs it to produce our food. That's planting twice for one crop. That's the reality of this demonstration.

    • @kuiperbeltdropout8791
      @kuiperbeltdropout8791 2 роки тому +1

      @@richardtrowell8812 all things worth doing take time, for now I'll keep using compost and grass clippings/straw to build organic matter. I'm lucky to have loamy sandy humus packed soil where I lived so it was pretty easy to get started! Also I'm not on a farm though so I could see the hassle of having to do that to a whole farm but it's still better for the earth anyway you slice it

    • @kuiperbeltdropout8791
      @kuiperbeltdropout8791 2 роки тому +2

      @@richardtrowell8812 the Cherokee did no till and no dig farming and they were master gardeners

  • @manjunathp7291
    @manjunathp7291 2 роки тому +3

    It was a nice clear demonstration and good proof.Great work! Thank you!

  •  8 років тому +19

    Very interesting presentation. Quiet amazing to see the difference in such a way. Thank you!

  • @thenodiggardener
    @thenodiggardener 2 роки тому

    UA-cam actually suggested this video to me, and I'm glad it did. It's a great demonstration!

  • @ogreunderbridge5204
    @ogreunderbridge5204 Рік тому +3

    Just to be clear on your definition; Do you differentiate between tilling with a mechanically rotating tiller and turning the fields top layer with a plow ? Or do you figure both as here demonstrated, equally destructive ?

    • @CharlesMeyer-le7bk
      @CharlesMeyer-le7bk Рік тому +1

      All tillage destroys soil structure and aggregation/

    • @phatman808
      @phatman808 6 місяців тому

      Moldboard, ripper, chisel, rototiller, all the stuff that really mixes up the soil is tillage. Disc harrow and other cultivators are usually considered low-till.

  • @maggief6653
    @maggief6653 7 років тому +5

    Excellent demonstration, thank you very much!

  • @pawewdowiak364
    @pawewdowiak364 8 років тому +11

    My proposal for quicker gets better soil( like on this non till) is USING effective microorganism. Really helpfully, you will see.

  • @zen4men
    @zen4men 2 роки тому

    Brilliant demo. ...... Saved the link, as will return to it again.

  • @scottpulver4920
    @scottpulver4920 Рік тому

    Hmmm… outstanding explanation!!! I was a spray kill then till 1”-2” then roll and seed and roll again and pray for a sprinkle. I don’t have a no-till planter. So spray kill then seed and roll.? I’ll try?

  • @svetlanikolova7673
    @svetlanikolova7673 4 роки тому +5

    no till saves money time and my soil along with water
    i am extremely happy I went no till

  • @walkingmonument
    @walkingmonument 7 років тому +63

    Damn! If this doesn't convince you, nothing will

    • @christoandries7117
      @christoandries7117 6 років тому +3

      lol so true mate

    • @Tabooza
      @Tabooza 5 років тому +11

      @John Sluder the forest never gets filled and that's the true testament to no till. You feed the soil/earth not the plant

    • @roflstomps324
      @roflstomps324 5 років тому +3

      @@Tabooza Good luck farming in the forest. Enjoy feeding everything but yourself.

    • @GameShaft
      @GameShaft 4 роки тому +2

      @John Sluder monsanto would be one of the people affected by no till. Because ypu use nature as a fertilizer. Plus youll feed the soil microbiology

    • @GeorgeHadjicostas
      @GeorgeHadjicostas 4 роки тому

      John Sluder what you say have no meaning - stop blaming and give some knowledge

  • @przybyla420
    @przybyla420 3 роки тому +4

    He just touched the tip of the iceberg listing the benefits of organic matter.

  • @RobPainless
    @RobPainless 6 років тому +1

    That was a terrific demonstration.

  • @judygreen7615
    @judygreen7615 8 років тому +2

    What is the phosphorus you sprinkled on the soil?

    • @RobPainless
      @RobPainless 6 років тому +1

      Cake/cookie sprinkles...basically green colored sugar.

  • @benreber2277
    @benreber2277 2 роки тому +3

    I’m just getting into farming so I’ve always thought that soil needs to be aerated. If the ground is too dense then the ground won’t allow root growth.

    • @priceless2353
      @priceless2353 2 роки тому

      Same here, from what I found from Allan Savory is cattle grazing does wonders if done properly “holistic management” is what he calls it

    • @lonewolftech
      @lonewolftech 2 роки тому +1

      Nature does that on its own.

  • @dzilajl
    @dzilajl 7 років тому +1

    Would you mind if I copied this video for my channel and add a translation of it?

  • @zacriley1
    @zacriley1 5 років тому +1

    can anyone tell me how you would start turning the tilled soil into the no till? Is it as simple as planting the next years annuals via no till or does the tilled soil need some treatment like sub soiling or slotting with gypsum? thanks

    • @connornolan3626
      @connornolan3626 4 роки тому

      Cease tillage completely. You can either put your field into a pasture or alfalfa for a few years or try your luck and go right into it. Soil health doesn’t regenerate over night

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @simtaylor4900
    @simtaylor4900 6 років тому +1

    so i was wondering do you plough then till? Or till then plough?

    • @mattsma111
      @mattsma111 5 років тому

      you would plough then till.

  • @robgood1706
    @robgood1706 12 років тому +6

    I dont know your area you are in,but here in Missouri(Northern)No Till works as long as you have plenty of moisture,but after 2 years of drought the only crops that yielded much were on land that could hold moisture.I build my soil through plowing under a green manure crop every 3 years.

  • @joesare8797
    @joesare8797 10 років тому +2

    Is it okay if I till up my front yard? Or should I use a shovel? I need to plant grass but I do g know if tilling my yard will ruin the soil. Someone please help me.!

    • @karnaag
      @karnaag 7 років тому +1

      Potatoes are not legumes. They do nothing for the nitrogen level in the soil.

    • @agustasister5624
      @agustasister5624 6 років тому +1

      For a lawn replacement like you are undertaking just do it the old fashioned way. are u sure you must replace it? REALLY.CHANCES ARE U DONT...AND WITH WHAT TYPE OF GRASS...if your going to that.expense research it and DO NOT PUT IN A LAWN....OR VERY VERY LITTLE.
      If you have just say 5 percent good lawn you can easly turn it around in 5 years to a perfect lawn. I take by never allowing weeds to go to seed...keep it mowed...put a thin layer of compost on.GOO AREAS..spring summer.AT LEAST..once a month make a molasis mixture...spray..PUT ON ...oh now having a brain fart....thr glueten stuff...it.stops.seeds from germinating..a local owned nursery will know....NEVER USE A PETROLEUM BASED PRODUCT....EVER.
      WEEDS...I MADE IT A HABIT TO PULL 10 WEEDS EACH DAY ON MY WAY TO THE MAIL BOX...
      NO WEEDS....FABULOUS LAWN...JUST AT THREE YEARS....AND WELL NOT MANY WEEDS..LOL...OH AN ODD WEEKEND OF PULLING WEEDS FOR A LITTLE WHILE..HERE AND THERE...
      Most gardeners will tell you that u need about 20 percent good lawn to turn it around...think sbout it before u dig that yard up

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Tilling will damage the soil. A wrecking ball will tear up your house...the object is to use damage sparingly, only when absolutely necessary, and use other options when possible. Not every fastener is a nail, and not every tool is a hammer.

    • @lonewolftech
      @lonewolftech 2 роки тому

      @@agustasister5624 what's the point of having a weed free lawn? A green sea of stupid lifeless nothing... most weeks as you morons call them are just wild flowers, which feed the bees and birds.. why not just grow food there instead??

  • @bill.Latham
    @bill.Latham 3 роки тому +1

    Are you saying it's best not to roto tilled your garden??

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Exactly. What he doesn't get to is info about keeping the soil covered with plants and organic matter to protect the soil from sun, wind, water and feed the soil life.

    • @joshuavazquez5534
      @joshuavazquez5534 2 роки тому

      @@leelindsay5618 on a large scale there is never enough organic matter to mulch

  • @VasilyKiryanov
    @VasilyKiryanov 9 років тому +4

    Actually just 'not tilling' does not tell the whole story. It also affects the way crops are planted, how fields are kept in general etc.

    • @Ramontf3
      @Ramontf3 5 років тому +1

      The two samples he gave were right next to each other. Its jus about the effect of oxygen on organic material in your dirt. Worms for the win ha

  • @Azam_Pakistan
    @Azam_Pakistan 3 роки тому

    Wouldn't the run off be checked when the land is not steeply sloped and the water will have to enter the soil?

    • @veziqiniso4425
      @veziqiniso4425 9 місяців тому

      No, not if soils have low organic matter and are poorly aggregated with very low porosity and tendency to disintegrate and slake with finer soil particles blocking soil pores and channels. Then the only path for the water is accumulate on surface and you get ponding and runoff.

  • @irishjockey4212
    @irishjockey4212 5 років тому

    So are you saying no till is better?

  • @koonielustgod6667
    @koonielustgod6667 6 років тому +3

    Great video and good work I know now no till is 💯% better 🌳👍🏾

  • @jamessullivan9992
    @jamessullivan9992 Рік тому

    what was grown on this land for 50 years ,corn?

  • @albieoval1657
    @albieoval1657 4 роки тому

    what if you amend the soil first, till it, and then top it off with a mulch?

    • @garygunderson1047
      @garygunderson1047 2 роки тому +1

      Then the water/rain still would not infiltrate into the subsoil very well. I know you spent good money on that tiller and don't want to be made the fool because of it but you are best off just selling it cheaply to someone you dont like. Tilling destorys not only microorganisms but it destorys the incredibly useful networks/tunnels/binding agents they create.

  • @sweetvuvuzela4634
    @sweetvuvuzela4634 5 років тому +1

    A question to anyone with clay soil how is no till going to work no matter how much organic material you place on it will compact down and become concrete so it maybe dependent on the type of soil in question

    • @lovecatspiracy
      @lovecatspiracy 4 роки тому +2

      No till means you let the soil organisms do the work for you. I top dress with animal straw and now my garden is replete with worms. The clay has become soft humus and even my paths have worm castings piling up. Worms come to the surface and eat the organic material, then bring it down into your clay. They perforate the soil with their tunnels, bringing oxygen down below. My "compost corner" that I use to colonize raw clay now fizzes when you water it, it's so aerated. No till takes time and mindful application of topdress, but wow, it really works!

    • @sweetvuvuzela4634
      @sweetvuvuzela4634 4 роки тому

      CommentBoxParticipant2980 thanks bud for the detailed answer

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

    • @joshuavazquez5534
      @joshuavazquez5534 2 роки тому

      @@lovecatspiracy you cant no till on a big scale farm. its impossible to acquire enough mulch and cover crop just makes a mess in northern climates due to the short growing season. If your farming large scale you need to let your overworked land go to pasture for 4 years and then come back to work it again for 4 years on and off

  • @DiegoPunchw
    @DiegoPunchw 7 років тому +8

    very good!! NoTill for life!

  • @Azam_Pakistan
    @Azam_Pakistan 4 роки тому

    Great job. Could you please educate on how could no till work when we grow vegetables (on ridges) on lands where maize or sunflower grew before. Also the ridges need to be remade every year as harvesting destroy these. Second we grow rice which includes encouraging a hard pan of soil beneath the surface and needs to be broken for the following wheat. How should we follow No Till under that situation?

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

    • @mattilaurila8639
      @mattilaurila8639 3 роки тому +1

      You just keep the ridges on same place and build them up after harvest.By ovet the time You can see that the soil slowly gets more resilience.

    • @streamer1598
      @streamer1598 2 роки тому

      Just try it out

    • @garygunderson1047
      @garygunderson1047 2 роки тому

      wheat and rice aren't human food. they make us fat and sick. grow fruit. if you want to keep your rigdes cut down trees that are being outcompeted by other trees and use their trunks as you would swales. Lay them in a line 'on contour' or level with each other.

  • @joshuavazquez5534
    @joshuavazquez5534 2 роки тому

    how do you no till and grow crops on a large scale? it seems impossible. i always rotate to new land and let the over farmed one go fallow and then come back to the fallowed land to work again

    • @phatman808
      @phatman808 6 місяців тому

      What are you growing and how big of an area? I live on the Palouse and there are hundreds of thousands of acres of no and low till here that do just fine, although the coming glyphosate ban is going to screw us really hard.

  • @eromod
    @eromod 2 роки тому

    No till soil had no grass?

  • @briangreen256
    @briangreen256 Рік тому +1

    I till every year. I am overwhelmed by my garden in peak season.

    • @hawks9142
      @hawks9142 6 місяців тому

      It's because tillage breaks down the organic matter faster in the soil. It's great for the plants in the short term but eventually you'll run out of that organic matter. It's often compared to withdrawaling from a savings account, take too much and eventually you'll run out.

  • @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281
    @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281 3 роки тому +1

    Hmmm, never had the Ecoli outbreaks until no till came on the scene...is it related?

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      No, no-till reduces run off. Keeping a living plant in the ground year round would be even better at reducing run off. E-coli is more about feeding corn and soy to cattle standing up to their knees in their own feces.

    • @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281
      @bellyacres3jillyandkerry281 3 роки тому

      @@leelindsay5618 grains, vegetables etc. don't stay in the ground year round, they are seasonal, unlike grass, and impacted earth does not breath. A simple garden is a good example, no root growth for plants if you don't work the soil and fertilizer stays above ground and not composting like it should perhaps is the culprit for some E-coli caused by animal feces used as fertilizer not broken down. The E-coli breakouts come mainly from veggies like lettuce and melons- and dirty chickens. Isn't it odd how pigs are so dirty-but so few Ecoli breakouts in the pork industry and many now are in confinements? It' s nothing to do with soy or corn, it's not the type of feed that is culprit or people would be dropping like flies as most processed foods have both these ingredients.

  • @kanebang7342
    @kanebang7342 6 років тому +1

    So we jus don't eat for fifty years. How do we farm no till soil?

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 4 роки тому +1

      Kane Bang
      - Why do you assume you can't grow crops?!!! It's precisely the opposite. Not only you can grow crops but also grow them in better conditions. Not killing the soil and in most cases with less "inputs" for better output! Something that surprise many people.

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @justingermanovich
    @justingermanovich 7 років тому +1

    For the run off demonstration. The left cup was emptying out much faster then the other one. That’s not a fair comparison.

    • @bishop198666
      @bishop198666 7 років тому +1

      Justin Germanovich assuming both holes are the same size the rate at which the water is dripping out of the cups will always be the same... basic physics... but having said that the demonstration still showed the difference

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 4 роки тому +3

      Let's cut the crap. Walk trough ANY heavily tilled soil, particularly after a rain event and notice the erosion, run off, etc.... Do the same exercise in a no till area.
      The obvious bite the eyes on the spot! ;-)
      On the path (driveway) along my tiny farm and the neighbors farms. The entrance of my farm has absolutely no signs of erosion. The soil is in my farm and stay there.
      On neighboring farms (all tilled), the piles of dirt left after any rain event is nothing short of ridiculous. The sheer amount should be a tell tale. But blindly they look but refuse too see the OBVIOUS. The dirt (by then is not soil anymore) should be on their land. Not in the middle of the driveway and going downstream!

    • @oe542
      @oe542 4 роки тому +1

      Bbbbbbbut but but....... we’ve always done it that way. I mean heck the Amish do it??? What could be wrong????

  • @mrantone916
    @mrantone916 3 роки тому

    You sir are awake! 🙏

  • @narendrapeesapati2819
    @narendrapeesapati2819 7 років тому

    is untilled soil is better than tilled soils in rain fall areas??

    • @nrdbookcook8836
      @nrdbookcook8836 7 років тому +3

      peesapati narendra yes. It will always be better not to destroy all the life in the soil. Look at rain forests. No till and growing just fine

    • @agustasister5624
      @agustasister5624 6 років тому +1

      yes. The microbial system is essential for good.crop production. Especially sustained production.

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      And also low rainfall areas too

  • @bradsaunders4856
    @bradsaunders4856 5 років тому +3

    What was the first thing Adam did when they got kicked out of the garden? He ignorantly tilled the ground.

    • @markm8188
      @markm8188 Рік тому

      He should have known better. The garden was no till.

  • @AdvancedMath
    @AdvancedMath 4 роки тому

    Cool. What a beautiful video.

  • @nkyabosi4827
    @nkyabosi4827 4 роки тому

    Learnt a lot, wish the lesson was longer

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @lesliemowers4443
    @lesliemowers4443 5 років тому +1

    Why in the first test did the tilled soil break apart. But in the second test, the tilled soil did not break apart.

    • @HomemadeC4
      @HomemadeC4 4 роки тому +1

      Leslie Mowers my guess is that this happens because in the first test the tilled soils was completely submerged in water, while in the second it was only wet on the surface allowing it to create the hydrophobic layer as was elaborated would happen.

  • @charleydan
    @charleydan 6 років тому +2

    When looking at Great Plains Equipment studies. No till versus deep tillage fracturing found no till did not perform well.
    No till with cover crops, appears far better. Because one has cover crop agitating soil deep and no till keeps the first four to eight inches absorbing. Of course all depends on other factors and adaption to ones operation goals.

    • @3.6roentgen61
      @3.6roentgen61 5 років тому +4

      Yeah a company that sells tillage equipment is saying that tillage is better then notill. Imagine that.

  • @Maggerck
    @Maggerck 7 років тому +4

    The evidence is in!

  • @oKFarmer
    @oKFarmer 10 років тому

    Re: DePrepper
    Is the difference in soil moisture misleading? No-till generally retains more soil moisture than conventional. So a fair comparison would have the two plots the soil came from being sampled at the same time, and the no-till sample would naturally be higher moisture. If the no-till sample were dried to the same moisture content as the conventional, I think it would probably do better at absorbing water than this experiment demonstrated.

    • @alphasxsignal
      @alphasxsignal 10 років тому +1

      I don't need moisture here in Florida with our rains. No till has fun keeping the weeds out.

    • @buddybernardino9314
      @buddybernardino9314 9 років тому +1

      Climate Change renders continuous tilling operation in the farm obsolete. If you want to engage in scorched-earth farming, then continue tilling your soil. Climate Change is happy about that.

    • @agustasister5624
      @agustasister5624 6 років тому

      There are whole farms now they have proven this eith...many videos on it..

  • @MustangsTrainsMowers
    @MustangsTrainsMowers 4 місяці тому

    I was sitting at a bar and began talking to a city woman about strip tilling, she gasped and said I’m not that kind of woman, got up and stomped away.

  • @salisuyunusa178
    @salisuyunusa178 7 років тому

    why is cec is increasing at 30 Cm depth

    • @blacktion89
      @blacktion89 7 років тому

      Salisu Yunusa Clay has higher cec, the further down you go the more clay there is ususally.

  • @johnsonlong1272
    @johnsonlong1272 Рік тому

    In this demonstration 2 soils that were horribly cared for if we packed our soils that hard here in the East they would not grow anyting. And unfortunately I think it is soil type dependent because I know after 10 years of no-till on our type of soil you can hardly grow a weed let alone a crop and there is no organic matter left so I really don't understand how they're getting a dark soil if they're claiming it is no till our non tilled soil turns from a rich dark-colored soil that will support earthworms to a light-colored soil that water stands on top of with nothing left but light colored silt and stones that doesn't have any earthworms or bugs left in it when we go back to plowing and after about three to four years of plowing the worms return and the soil starts to turn dark again. Here it seems like if we don't plow down our crop trash that trash simply evaporates into the air overtime and does nothing for our soil in fact on a sunny day over a no-till field you can literally see the haze from that material going into the air and you never see that on a tild field. So something doesn't add up here maybe on the soil condition are working with the soil is so poor to begin with that no-till is better I don't know but here where the soil is rich and a high-quality agricultural soil we see quite the opposite we see concrete soil structure everywhere you no till and the soil literally stripped of its nutrients. An easy test would be plant a grass hay crop five years plow it up I bet you the only thing left under that grass Sod is light soil and stones very little organic matter below the top plant mass. Now growth corn in the same soil for 5 years tilling every year you are going to have very soft very non compacted dark rich soil about 8 to 10 in deep. And you are never going to have any soil that you can make a clump out of like you're seeing in the video and when it rains on our soil at don't run off its soaks in the only place we see runoff being an issue is in no-till or disk ripper ground where the tillzone has been compacted so hard the no water can permeate.

  • @anthonymuthoni7087
    @anthonymuthoni7087 4 роки тому

    great demonsration

  • @pash9956
    @pash9956 2 роки тому

    I saw pics of an ancient apple grove in SIBERIA! Protected and nourished underneath and above. Nobody ever tampered with it. I'm trying to go
    no-till. It requires new thinking.

  • @scottschaeffer8920
    @scottschaeffer8920 2 роки тому

    I find it introspective at least, that the old farmers that used long rotations with crop diversity were building good soils, and perhaps were unaware?

  • @abuji101
    @abuji101 7 років тому

    Wow! Superb explanation! Thanks for the effort.

  • @mikerangel1545
    @mikerangel1545 9 років тому +8

    Allowing the land to fallow for 50 years will effect it. Farming is a business not a game.

    • @sdbruceb
      @sdbruceb 5 років тому +4

      No till is still farmed. Seed is still drilled in through crimped cover. The no till is not fallow.

  • @jimbreedlove1342
    @jimbreedlove1342 4 роки тому

    Ok why do organic farmers have highest concentration of organic matter but they till the most?

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      What do you call the guy who barely graduates med school? There are many levels of "better" that can be had. Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @anxiousbeachbums
    @anxiousbeachbums 5 років тому +10

    Interesting.............And I'm not even a FARMER.....!!!

  • @wallychambe1587
    @wallychambe1587 Рік тому

    Wow, never knew that!😲😲

  • @texasRoofDoctor
    @texasRoofDoctor Рік тому

    Nature does it one way for a reason.

  • @jayb2257
    @jayb2257 7 років тому

    great info I learned so much no till from here on out

  • @onitbrkn
    @onitbrkn 8 років тому +14

    lol i hate when teachers ask questions

  • @sebastianstewart6894
    @sebastianstewart6894 5 років тому

    This understanding saturn in the golden age.

  • @MountZzzzk
    @MountZzzzk 2 роки тому +1

    Damn good 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @jackfrost326
    @jackfrost326 6 років тому +2

    People don't know what's good for them until you literally have to show them. No patience is the root of all fuhk ups and evil

    • @agustasister5624
      @agustasister5624 6 років тому

      Thr wuick buck and get rich quick.schemes .
      .LIKE AL.GORES...HATE THAT IDIOT.

  • @oKFarmer
    @oKFarmer 10 років тому

    Re: John Sluder
    You keep claiming your yields are better but if you've never used no-till because you're against GMO and related herbicides, where is your direct comparison for this claim? You don't know unless you've trialed it in a side-by-side field plot over a 5-7 year period.
    No-till has the same "organic" pesticides available that non-GMO conventional farmers do, and all conventional farms I know use at least as much herbicide and insecticide as no-till farms. There are also cover cropping systems available to no-till that organically suppress weed growth by acting as a mulch that completely covers the soil surface, with no pesticides required for kill.

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @sassymassey5002
    @sassymassey5002 3 роки тому

    So organic farmers no till ??never seen it we till every year and are soil is black. When the is weeds in the spring you till them to kill them rather the spraying

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @GOAT-HRDRZ
    @GOAT-HRDRZ 5 років тому +1

    I like this dude 👍

  • @daringfawn6958
    @daringfawn6958 5 років тому

    Now can we be absolutely sure that these substrates are what they tell us they are.

  • @VeganChiefWarrior
    @VeganChiefWarrior 7 років тому

    GREAT PRESENTATION TAKE IT TO THE SCHOOLS

  • @jeraldhackett3108
    @jeraldhackett3108 10 років тому

    i think ph value and temprature also play a great role on the plant or crops---jerald from india

  • @WvhKerkhof
    @WvhKerkhof 2 роки тому +1

    I live in the Netherlands, clay soil, farmers can not change because they have not the time and money to change. Today we had 3 millimeter rain, it is the only rain for may. Wheat was already planted for the second time, the first did not come up. Farmers farm backward here. Farmers get money from the government to put humus on the land. They throw it on a pile in a corner of the land, so they get money but not the benefits of better soil. They have not the will to change, because the bank has to get paid every year. It is a dead end road.

  • @Ahmed-se2xd
    @Ahmed-se2xd 6 років тому +1

    AT FIRST AM Agricultural ENGINEER from Egypt , what i can say about all this demonstration the following points
    1-the layer off soil which he have made all the demonstration and give information about its advantages . is the surface layer which is normally not important for plant growing while the crop roots is going much more deeper in the soil
    2- this layer is important only during the germination and the first days of planting
    3- this layer is mainly for weeds and what we don't need during our plantation
    4- i recommend this method if we just want to play foot ball on this ground or just want green surface land

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @العراقد-م7ش
    @العراقد-م7ش 5 років тому +2

    Good zero tillage
    جميل

  • @MJH_1963
    @MJH_1963 7 років тому

    That is a very good demonstration.

  • @ehsantavakoli7843
    @ehsantavakoli7843 7 років тому

    great explanation, thanks!

  • @lordshakey
    @lordshakey 5 років тому +1

    Wow

  • @jimboak613
    @jimboak613 8 років тому +3

    sigh! - you can set this up to work either way... it is a powerful demo though

  • @Agrotill
    @Agrotill 10 років тому +1

    👍👍👍

  • @briangreen256
    @briangreen256 Рік тому

    I have clay soil. I have to till mine.

  • @Socalponds
    @Socalponds 8 років тому

    interesting.

  • @lawsonhare3114
    @lawsonhare3114 4 роки тому

    very god evidence

  • @raurkegoose5233
    @raurkegoose5233 7 років тому +8

    All these farming experts down-playing or ridiculing no-till...I wonder how many of them rely on agricultural welfare when droughts ruin their crops.

    • @jcwell6801
      @jcwell6801 6 років тому

      Raurke Goose deep water culture is the lead producer of veggies in the world no soil need for this just controlled setting..

    • @laconflo1613
      @laconflo1613 6 років тому

      @@jcwell6801 Yep completely unnatural.

  • @prestontingley8914
    @prestontingley8914 3 роки тому

    Cool demonstration, no knowledge really to be learned though on the soil diversity or comp

  • @user-pm8qf3dj8v
    @user-pm8qf3dj8v 7 років тому +2

    means do less interference with nature
    age old practice is changing
    change is the truth
    nothing remain CONSTANT.
    so rules also change
    good video
    money time fuel lavour saving practice.
    I will pramote in India
    thanks for your efforts

  • @shutinalley
    @shutinalley 6 місяців тому

    The ocean would certainly like no till. Maybe get healthier fish?

  • @metak71
    @metak71 9 років тому

    What is the point of this video?Im not a farmer and I dont understand what he is tryign to show here? everyone i know tills their garden before planting.... I thought to get good crops you have to till the land to get the nutrients/fertiliz in?? how do you get nutrients into the soil without tilling? i have a small garden and I always do this before planting.

    • @metak71
      @metak71 9 років тому

      Matt In Illinois
      Matt but farmers till the land for ages and the produce is good no?

    • @metak71
      @metak71 9 років тому

      Matt Igood points. Im not a farmer either but Im trhyign to learn I started doing some home gardening adn trying to learn.....I notice my vegs are not coming up big enough esp the toamtoes, so im trying fruits and berries now prob my soil is not fertile enough since I havent really tilled it much adn there is clay in it lots of it

    • @mariannearndt5057
      @mariannearndt5057 9 років тому

      Matt In Illinois One water hemp plant, which is a dangerous weed, produces over a million seeds. Leaving a field to go to weeds would be a terrible mistake. The weeds would deplete all nutrients, moisture and leave billions of seeds.

    • @RougeSamurai77
      @RougeSamurai77 9 років тому +1

      Weed seeds don't germinate because of mulch plus no till doesn't mean you let weeds germinate all over the place...

    • @barkershill
      @barkershill 9 років тому +5

      +Fryderyk Robert Chopin I have been growing vegetables for forty years and went over to no till four years ago . best choice I ever made, honestly! . you do not need to bury fertilizer or compost to make it available to the plants roots . Micro organisms in the soil will do it . If you genuinely want some answers to your questions look at the vids of Charles Dowding or better still buy one of his books

  • @markissboi3583
    @markissboi3583 4 роки тому +1

    do u no til soil & grow🌾 takes a few years but its worth it soil is better my x school mate from 70s he started it in australia & went world🌏 wide teaching about No Til crops 👍Horsham vic oz guy he be 60 now like me found 1 video if he dont convice you nothing will

  • @dont.ripfuller6587
    @dont.ripfuller6587 2 роки тому

    Mulched leaves, organic matter, compost, carbon- you do things right, right being a somewhat controversial term so I will define it for this comment as of the highest quality, then, your soil will be turned every inch of it by earthworms and develop vast colonies of mycorrhizal fungus.
    Method 2 for rebuilding soil, stop. turn around and walk away from it and leave it don't mow it don't put animals on it that don't get there on their own just walk away from it and let it sit. that's how it got built up fertile in the first place. meddling humans looking for quick results without proper input cause much damage.
    you see this sort of damage from large scale commercial operations seeking profit and believing their quote unquote scientists will solve their problems as they're created.
    small scale permaculture will provide you what you need, if you don't let greed and want for more out of less become your guidance.

  • @jeil5676
    @jeil5676 7 років тому +2

    looks like the nontilled was amended while the tilled was not....apples to oranges...i dont doubt benefits of no till but falsifying a demonstration just makes you seem like a liar. A real demonstration would involve a sample each from a plot that is half no-till and half tilled with both halves receiving the same amount of amendments and then as a control, a bit of soil from same plot that has not been amended at all.

    • @jeil5676
      @jeil5676 4 роки тому +1

      wow I stumbled on a 2 year old post....Anyways never mind. Charles Dowding has shown there is not much difference in a small garden plot. Its just less work for no till.

  • @chrisc3197
    @chrisc3197 5 років тому

    This is a company selling there products

  • @poilochien
    @poilochien Рік тому

    " it's economic, stupid ... "

  • @btudrus
    @btudrus 2 роки тому +2

    Growing plants is the original sin of the mankind.
    Every human culture ended because they either destroyed their soil or they were taken over by some other culture which destroyed their soil and were unable to feed themselves.
    If you are growing plants you are in competition with the nature and try to kill every other plant that would take the place of the one plant you want to grow.
    Just compare it to animals like cows grazing on a pasture. There is a variety of plants growing there. No one does a damage by tilling the soil. No fertilizers (which actually destroy the soil). No pesticides, no herbicides, no insekticides. No irrigation which would again rather destroy the soil. Insects living in the cows' excrements, helping the soil further. More biodiversity. Many grass species growing together creating a robust ecosystem. Insects, birds, small animals actually living there not being in danger by big machines or by chemicals which would kill these.
    We must all stop eating plants and eat meat and animal fat instead!

  • @donnyt12915
    @donnyt12915 8 років тому +3

    Is he a salesman?

    • @MJH_1963
      @MJH_1963 7 років тому

      Is it really organic farming? I'm from Australia and I would still add superphoshate and use no-till. I have granite soil and the rain just runs off. It is native country.

    • @gillenzfluff8380
      @gillenzfluff8380 6 років тому

      Chase What was he selling?

    • @RobPainless
      @RobPainless 6 років тому

      It's possible that he is, but in this case probably not. There is equipment that is specifically designed for no-till operations (high dollar, like most ag equipment) so it is a legitimate question. But the credits say that this guy is a university agronomist who is just doing an informative presentation.

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 3 роки тому

      No this is an education conference. Look up Understanding Ag channel on youtube

  • @ontheedgewithreg238
    @ontheedgewithreg238 6 років тому

    Our society is fucked I remember growing up in farming community when round up first came out. Sales man came to out small community hall and drank a cup of round up he fucking died two years later any videos on that kind of story lol Monsanto and his bullshit