November 21, 2024

VIDEO: Building Microbe-Rich Living Compost Part 1


Making and applying microbe-rich compost is one of the most valuable things you can do for your soil. Learn how, with Jane Weaver of Earth & Spirit Design, and get an inspired perspective on how to to make compost that is biologically diverse making it better for your soil, plants and nutrient density of the food you grow. Understand principles and practices of home-scale composting to insure a rodent-free and biologically active compost pile.

24 thoughts on “VIDEO: Building Microbe-Rich Living Compost Part 1

  1. Дорый день. Получилось ли вам получить корни.? Черенки хурмы вообще дают корни? Есть свидетельства укоренения хурмы у других авторов, можете ли вы дать на них ссылку (укоренения хурмы)?
    Good day. Did you get the roots.? Do persimmon cuttings give roots at all? There is evidence of persimmon rooting from other authors, can you give a link to them (persimmon rooting)?

  2. Can you find a source for this quote? At 19:28 “If everybody who grazes were doing rotational grazing properly, it would take five years to get back to pre-industrial levels of carbon dioxide in the sky.” <— I love it, but it seems hyperbolic. A source here would be awesome.

  3. I remember my grandmother burying fish parts from a cleaning in the alleys between the planted rows in her garden is that wrong? I have also seen many farmers burying their fish parts the same way?

  4. So I'm curious, JADAM is a very successful method of gardening, and it literally uses anaerobic extraction methods to make fertilizer, this video contradics the JADAM method, the question is then why if the JADAM method is successful is this method successful as well?

  5. I am wanting to build a bioreactor to produce methane for various uses however I'm concerned about the bi-product ie the digestate which some taught the use as fertilizer. However, after watching a few of

  6. Love this , but i dont think the worms at the lake is causing the issue with trees moving back , if you look at succession, trees produce lots of woody material , that is food for fungal growth , added worms to soil will not increase the bacteria , and will most certainly not decrease fungi… The system will balance it self out , worms are dependent on bacteria to live as food, they eat bacteria , the don't add bacteria. Like dr Elaine said , bacteria will always be present, its just the ratio of bacteria to fungi that will determine what grows best.

    Something else is most prob going on, why is there less and less fungi around the lake that's causing trees to die, is there maybe not another reason why this is happening.

    Back to worms, if worms are added to a system without natural predators , they would multiply to the point where they wipe out bacteria, or at least bring down the numbers, so my opinion is, its not because of the worms that this is happening, there must be some other problem here.

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