I Finally Did It! How Back To Eden Transformed My Garden!

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Off-Grid with Curtis Stone

Off-Grid with Curtis Stone

Жыл бұрын

FREE WEBINAR: “Find Your Dream Homestead Property” → freedomfarmers.com/op/land-as...
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The only thing constant is change, even in farming. Weather systems, soil conditions, pest issues… These are only some of the things you face on a regular basis on a farm. Watch this video as I reveal the REASONS I changed my mind about Back to EDEN!
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About Curtis Stone:
Curtis is one of the world’s most highly sought-after small farming educators. His book, The Urban Farmer, offers a new way to think about farming𑁋 one where quality of life and profitability coexist. Today, Curtis spends most of his time building his 40-acre off-grid homestead in British Columbia. He leverages his relationships with other experts to bring diverse content into the homes of gardeners and aspiring small farmers from around the world. Learn more at FromTheField.TV.
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Biocratic - birocratic.com
The Muse Maker - / themusemaker
David Cutter Music - davidcuttermusic.co.uk
artlist.io/Curtis-38762
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Пікірлер: 299
@annefricker8474
@annefricker8474 8 ай бұрын
One thing Paul mentioned is he uses wood chips not wood bark. There is a difference.
@JK-jf7xq
@JK-jf7xq 24 күн бұрын
Yes, chipped leafy branches.
@MGoerdt2009
@MGoerdt2009 Жыл бұрын
I just gotta say, "Dude's shirt is on point." Okay, now I'll get back to watching the video. Lol
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
2022=Orwell timeframe of prophesy. Orwell is not fiction but reality today.
@GrowingOrganicTvShow
@GrowingOrganicTvShow Жыл бұрын
I do the exact same thing adding shredded wood chips about 3 times a year. The insect will break down all the material very fast and you have to continue to keep adding it. It is amazing how fast it breaks down. The longer you do it the better your soil becomes.
@ValentinasNaturals
@ValentinasNaturals 8 ай бұрын
100% the key is keep adding as you said! Let's build this land we all live on :)!!!
@farogmardk3001
@farogmardk3001 Жыл бұрын
People who say you should never be hypocritical are being hypocritical.
@nicolasbertin8552
@nicolasbertin8552 Жыл бұрын
The point of mulching heavily with wood chips though is that after 3 years of it you don't need anything else. No fertilizers, no compost, nothing. Commercial farmers in France who do this still use compost as a topsoil to sow small seeds like carrots and turnips of course. And on a few crops such as squash and onions, they can use plastic tarps with holes laid down on top of the mulch, so they don't have to weed their beds. Coz even though annual weeds won't go through the mulch, some perennials like quackgrass, thistle and nettle will.
@edgeofentropy3492
@edgeofentropy3492 3 ай бұрын
Your shirt: AAAAAAAAMEN!
@ozzmann3217
@ozzmann3217 3 ай бұрын
Freakin love that shirt and hope you have now seen why woodchips are amazing
@jcrockett870
@jcrockett870 Жыл бұрын
The Eden guy... if you watch other videos of his, you will see that he is not using deep woodchip mulch on his bed where he direct seeds greens and stuff. in those beds, he covers it with a layer of screened chicken compost. So when he says he is not using fertilizer, he means he is not using chemical fertilizer. BTW, I added 5 hens to my system and in addition to eggs for my family, I get the manure for compost ... I use the woodchips in the perennials. Such as, Hazelnut, blueberries, and Raspberries...
@charlescoker7752
@charlescoker7752 Жыл бұрын
Gautschi can get away with not putting chips, and keeping chips covering his gardeen all the time. Because his climate rarely gets over 75 degrees all summer. Not enough heat to burn up the organic matter.That is why his tours in July, and August of his garden looks wonderful. Where places where it is hotter, like in the high 90's to the low 100's. Their garden are toast in July, and August.
@comebackking7446
@comebackking7446 Жыл бұрын
That depends. I'm in Central Florida, zone 9b and it's quite hot in the summer. I'm a woodchip gardner and I make it work in July and August. I think you just need to adapt to your environment and plant what grows. The wood chips really hold the soil together and hold the moisture in, and they break down into more excellent soil pretty quickly. I do plenty of chop and drop and add amendments like coffee grounds and urine and that seems to speed up the decomposition and adds nitrogen. I'm lucky that while our summers are hot and humid they are also wet so I really never water unless I'm watering in some seeds - and then I quite often only water one time. What I do would not work in the high desert but I'm sure there is way to adapt.
@deinse82
@deinse82 Жыл бұрын
Compost isn't fertilizer. So he's right: he's not using fertilizer.
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns 5 ай бұрын
Posted this comment on another reply, but I'll drop it here too in case anyone else wants to know: Paul didn't start using chicken compost in his garden until about a decade or so ago. He used wood chips for his annuals for the majority of his time doing "back to eden," _but the chips were screened._ I've had the privilege of visiting his garden many times over the years, and can confirm that to be the case by asking very clearly in-person. I also believe that he has since returned to using only screened wood chips for his annuals as of a year or two ago and no longer uses chicken compost, due to his decline in physical ability (the chicken compost comes with its fair share of weed seeds, and he has to collect it himself, and now he's conveniently able to buy pre-screened wood chips from a local supplier). Hope that helps!
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns 5 ай бұрын
@@charlescoker7752 High heat is not really an issue (east texas here, +110F is not uncommon). Wood chips are a mulch - mulch is an insulator from extreme heat and extreme cold. If your ground is drying up, your mulch is not deep enough, that's really all there is to that. *Or* the actual 'chips' of your wood chips are too big - larger chips means more space for hot air to permeate through to the top soil. I had my front yard chipped with an industrial chipper that spat out chips in which some were ~8in long, and my back yard i chipped myself with a friends chipper on his tractor which made chips no larger than playground size... after the summer my front yard was bone dry and the back was perfectly fine and moist.
@annburge291
@annburge291 Жыл бұрын
Rewatch Back to Eden.... The woidchips were around trees and shrubs. His vegetable garden was different. The woodchips had had months in the chicken pen. They were totally broken down, shifted and then applied to the top of the soil. Not once did Paul Gauchi say cover the place with woodchips. Look at all his lawn areas. What you are doing is fine. Water with compost tea and the woodchips will break down much faster.
@glennjgroves
@glennjgroves 6 ай бұрын
The problem with the Back to Eden documentary is what it leaves out (or at least does not clearly say.) Chickens, using them to break down waste plant material, and then spreading the mixture of manure and broken down plant material, is a huge part of what Paul does - but barely mentioned in the documentary. Well done for catching that. I have only watched Back to Eden once. Other videos from Paul do cover it. Not many that I have found though.
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns
@ZechariahAhl-su9ns 5 ай бұрын
@@glennjgroves @annburge291 Paul didn't start using chicken compost in his garden until about a decade or so ago. He used wood chips for his annuals for the majority of his time doing "back to eden," but they were sieved - *that* is the part that I don't believe I've ever actually heard him say anywhere online. I've had the privilege of visiting his garden many times over the years, and can confirm that to be the case. I also believe that he has since returned to using only screened wood chips for his annuals as of a year or two ago and no longer uses chicken compost, due to his decline in physical ability (the chicken compost comes with its fair share of weed seeds, and he's able to buy pre-screened wood chips from a local supplier). Hope that helps!
@glennjgroves
@glennjgroves 5 ай бұрын
@@ZechariahAhl-su9ns that makes more sense - thank you.
@garthwunsch
@garthwunsch Жыл бұрын
Curtis, I do a lot similar to you… and I’m on bedrock! I let my woodchips age a year or two and then put them through my old Kemp hammermill style shredder. The product is partially composted and almost nothing bigger than 1/2” - 3/4” long. I often put this through a 1/2” hardware cloth screen. The resulting finer material is the best slug control I’ve ever used. The top dries out quickly and when the slugs crawl onto it, it sticks to their body so they can’t lay down a slime trail and escape… in the morning… out comes the sun… et voilà… escargots!
@daviddean4618
@daviddean4618 Жыл бұрын
I was going to suggest the same process. I run bark mulch through a chipper/shredder. I also run the bedding from the chicken coop in alternating shovels and then I add weed stems as well for some green.
@spacemanspiffy6596
@spacemanspiffy6596 Жыл бұрын
Helped my garden with slugs and mice
@Wrellothere53904
@Wrellothere53904 Жыл бұрын
wow
@dragonlady6387
@dragonlady6387 Жыл бұрын
You can make compost you don't need to buy it. If you have chickens feed them some of the garden waste and whats left over put it in the compoast bin. Add green and brown Oganic matter plus the chicken poop when you clean out their pen. In a few weeks you will have plenty of compost. Plus you also get eggs, and chicken meat if you have a few meat birds.
@soronos8586
@soronos8586 Жыл бұрын
Dang man, Curtis is looking like he’s in better shape than we’ve ever seen him before
@ValentinasNaturals
@ValentinasNaturals 8 ай бұрын
That's fairly new mulch as well which makes it a bit more difficult. If you can constantly keep mulch that is decaying on the back burner to feed the soil, you will continue to succeed! A 1-2 year old mulch is best.
@ValentinasNaturals
@ValentinasNaturals 8 ай бұрын
I said "new" mulch what I meant was it is more fresh, if that wasn't clear.
@mattst.4699
@mattst.4699 Жыл бұрын
Now you are speaking my language with clay soil that needs to be conditioned and loosened. I use mulch on most of my gardens too.
@KatyNik
@KatyNik Жыл бұрын
Curtis I so appreciate you and your videos. I look forward to every time you post! Thank you.
@toxicrune
@toxicrune Жыл бұрын
Thank for posting and thank you for being real.
@microhomesteadecology
@microhomesteadecology Жыл бұрын
Love the update on your thoughts on this. I’ve adopted a similar approach relevant to my context. I’ve got good access to both tree shreds and waste alfalfa hay. So I’m running a combination approach in all my paths with alternate layers of hay and wood chips. Beds are getting topped up with compost and then mulched with hay and other organic materials. It’s ending up being a mixture of the back to Eden approach and the Ruth Stout deep hay method. It never ceases to amaze me the difference a good layer of mulch can have on the health of the soil, which just keeps getting better it seems season after season.
@garthwunsch
@garthwunsch Жыл бұрын
Very similar approach here… and of course I don’t till!
@microhomesteadecology
@microhomesteadecology Жыл бұрын
@@garthwunsch solid choice! I’ve also abandoned tilling for the most part. Just keep piling on the compost and organic matter!
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
Ruth Stout methodologies could barely only feed a family comprised of herself: there are NO results of any substance if u r a lazy plus stunted gardener using Eden BS tactics.
@suewarman9287
@suewarman9287 Жыл бұрын
Bravo Curtis, your hard work has paid off!
@metsgiantsfan333
@metsgiantsfan333 Жыл бұрын
I always appreciate your nuanced takes, Curtis.
@andersonsprairieviewfarm2552
@andersonsprairieviewfarm2552 Жыл бұрын
The woodchips will also help you prevent erosion on your slopes, just some food for thought, and they'll also keep your soil temperature much more consistent cool in the heat of the summer and warmer throughout the winter months, but if there frozen your not digging in them.
@willc4922
@willc4922 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a new book title "The Context".... Awesome to see you back here
@mchaywood83
@mchaywood83 10 күн бұрын
That is so true about the compost. I have in the past done 1/3 vermiculite, peat moss, and compost and gotten big peppers, but this year I have small peppers and redid my beds with just straight compost. I think the crusting and drying out is the problem.
@jessicalynam7356
@jessicalynam7356 Жыл бұрын
Great video Curtis! Thank you
@amyjeanius
@amyjeanius Жыл бұрын
Love to see your farming techniques evolve to a more nature-based approach in such a short time. Using what you have around you, being adaptable and building resiliency are how we are going to survive moving forward. Keep sharing and inspiring!! Love your shirts!!
@andersonsprairieviewfarm2552
@andersonsprairieviewfarm2552 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely not I actually have to thank you, you led me to BTE, I got and understood your previous message, so I had to check out BTE because I had know idea what you where talking about, but wow when I found out I had so many light bulbs go off, I am limited on water and being able save 70 to 90 percent water savings, and that's huge, so happy to see you on board.
@lyonhawaii
@lyonhawaii 4 ай бұрын
Love the shirt's message!
@eddieslittlestack7919
@eddieslittlestack7919 Жыл бұрын
Looks great Curtis! Looks really really great. As far as the mulch, as you’ve always emphasized is always comes down to context.
@nancyjohnson5901
@nancyjohnson5901 Жыл бұрын
Love what your doing! The mulch is the only thing that will break down the clay!
@robertlossing3390
@robertlossing3390 Жыл бұрын
Perfect youtuber and channel right here!💯
@jonathanwilson4949
@jonathanwilson4949 3 ай бұрын
Happy to see you looking extremely healthy and it seems like you have more peace of mind.
@spoolsandbobbins
@spoolsandbobbins Жыл бұрын
Super helpful video for us. We’re east coast Canadians and it’s been HOT and DRY for 2 years. We’ve put large wood chips between our garden rows and I think we’ll add smaller ones on top. If direct sowing doesn’t work we’ll do more seedlings. We also collect seaweed and make compost tea with it adding comfrey and weeds etc. it’s tough when it’s so hot and dry in summer, not to mention winds!
@tencyross3156
@tencyross3156 Жыл бұрын
I love this video! Thank you for making a video that what I do isn’t insane. So many times people say your wood chips are killing your garden. Proof is in the pudding.
@Dukemeistro
@Dukemeistro Жыл бұрын
I really admire you man --you have major drive! 👍
@michaela.754
@michaela.754 Жыл бұрын
Love how based this guy has gotten over the past few years
@ThePandaBeat
@ThePandaBeat Жыл бұрын
It's true, I've noticed the same.
@certified_boogeyman
@certified_boogeyman Жыл бұрын
What does based mean?
@prestheticmullet
@prestheticmullet Жыл бұрын
@@certified_boogeyman It's kind of like internet slang for a person who will speak facts weather they offend modern perverted thinking or not. It stems from a musician people nicknamed the "based god" aka "lil b"
@cmonletsbreal9474
@cmonletsbreal9474 4 ай бұрын
wow dude doin great! I watched you back when you just finished biking your gear around the neighbourhood and Its great to see how its going. Been doing the wood chips for several years now and i love the results. anyways thanks Curtis, youve inspired more than you know.....cheers oh and love the shirt.
@jeffdible8171
@jeffdible8171 Жыл бұрын
Yet another great value added video. I'm avoiding a lot of you tube these days, but you popped up and you are always worth my time. It's all about context. Slower, long term, and deep soil nutrition is going to be really hard when you are cranking out product and need volume. I've done this method and composting in place for more of a time saver and back saver due to limited machinery. Almost all methods work, eventually. Many neglected areas with perennials just get grass clippings dumped to keep weeds down. About year 3 of this process and the growth was through the roof.
@FreeRadicalslifestyle
@FreeRadicalslifestyle Жыл бұрын
So good to see you are able to elucidate the problem of learning to deal with the present circumstances as opposed to pandering to a fixed ideology. Hope you are finding time to make your music still.
@joellaurin9007
@joellaurin9007 Жыл бұрын
Looks great!
@gogogardener
@gogogardener Жыл бұрын
Good when you can use what you have. A few weeks ago, the county was taking out a pine tree in the name of progress. All I had to do was ask, and they dropped the shredded tree in my yard. It's being transformed into compost long term AND being applied now as mulch to conserve water in desert / drought. Even experimenting as topper for a raised bed's carrot sowing to keep soil moistforgermination. Typically, I mulch in the Fall, before our rains, with Tractor Supply pine shavings. It degrades well during our Winter rains and can be a good mulch for a few years. I'm excited to have the shredded tree to use.
@derekk2708
@derekk2708 Жыл бұрын
Another Great Video. Thanks Curtis. ; )
@Wrellothere53904
@Wrellothere53904 Жыл бұрын
super interested to see how this developes
@evantspurrell
@evantspurrell Жыл бұрын
chikens+mulch= compost. Chikens do a good job of grinding it down through scratching. but if you are on a slope they will push it down hill though their scratching. i like to use wood chips in my self cleaning coop.
@pondholloworchards
@pondholloworchards Жыл бұрын
Nice shirt 👍
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
Curtis: I live and homestead in the remote area of the Ottawa Valley, and have almost identical challenges you faced with slopes, rocks galore and organic topsoil very sparse - what a curse - but why anyone wud want to live in the burbs these apocalyptic days is beyond my wildest imagination. U presented me with great ideas like terracing and utilizing slopes to enlarge my growing area. I use timbers one cuts for firewood, etc. and Hugel methods to enlarge this space and the tractor bucket is busy bringing in rocks and logs for stabilization and access. I am not a fan of Eden methodologies as here in frigid Canada this bark and chip materiel breaks down very slowly: so I compensate by using decaying wood and leaves as amendments for the poor soil I inherited. I cud go on n on but U and I have a lot in common and thanx for the advice you transmitted in this video. As Gerald Celente (Trend's Journal") says: "Hell is just around the corner" and we are preparing to be spared from its verdict by being remote homesteaders and incidentally working 10 hours a day to defeat this scenario. Merci.
@andrewboyddotcom
@andrewboyddotcom Жыл бұрын
Interesting video. We're heading into a precarious time with food shortages guaranteed. I liked the bit about leaving the crops dormant in the soil throughout winter and harvesting as needed direct out of the ground. Glory to God.
@josephlarsen
@josephlarsen Жыл бұрын
have you been to pauls house? He doesn't just mulch. He mulches his trees pretty heavily, but where he seeds he uses the chicken leftovers and screens the mulch through a 1/4" screen. He can plant right into it. For me one of the most important things is that you get enough water. Here in utah you have to water it or it doesn't work, and the mulch doesn't break down over time
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
Agree as here in frigid Eastern Ontario not unlike Utah - I have the same issues with this Eden BS.
@jessielane521
@jessielane521 Жыл бұрын
I soil block right on top of my mulch market rows after harvesting, I just move the mulch aside and don't even dig down, I also mulch with multi different materials and the soil thanks me for it. If you don't have compost near you available by bulk, that's a hole in your market others could use too, might be an easy opportunity to make more money and if you have chickens, they will turn it for you. All you need is green and brown matter, and a small bit of land. Great video, cheers.
@offgridcurtisstone
@offgridcurtisstone Жыл бұрын
Right on.
@jonmoseley8434
@jonmoseley8434 Жыл бұрын
I noticed after watching the film about Paul Gouchi's property, I finally noticed that he talks about a heavy mulch on his orchard with great success. I believe the wood chips form a great fungal environment that trees and bushes thrive on. However, Paul grows vegetables in a separate section with a screened soil from his chicken coop. I only mention this because I have had mixed results until I finally saw this detail. I like what you are doing and pray you have great success.
@a4000t
@a4000t Жыл бұрын
wood chips are pure carbon,and one thing he stresses is you want wood chips with green leaves mulched in,the leaves and stuff(green) provide nitrogen for the chips(brown) to break down. the key to doing this is deep,so 1ft deep of chips and such. he adds in chicken poop,rabbit poop etc(more nitrogen) to help break it all down. a year later you have a bed that is turned into compost and ideal to plant in. if you try and plant in wood chips first year(depending on climate) you may not get good results.
@wheelersway
@wheelersway Жыл бұрын
You can broadcast seed right on top of the mulch, tickle it in with a soft rake
@Paul_CarolGautschi
@Paul_CarolGautschi 4 ай бұрын
Every Monday, at 5 PM, Pacific time, Paul Gautschi is LIVE. You can ask him questions. Him and Carol are there for up to three hours. I'm not sure you knew about this, so I thought I would post here. We addressed the cardboard issue a couple of weeks ago. - Please tell others. Thank you for doing this video. kzfaq.info/love/og231QtSPc4fa41OnRz7OQ
@sdfft820
@sdfft820 Жыл бұрын
YES.
@kensearle4892
@kensearle4892 Жыл бұрын
Doing the screened mulch is pretty smart. I am not using back to Eden in my beds because fresh wood chips are usually very abrasive and extra work to dig through when planting by hand. I think back to Eden works better on fruit trees where the digging and planting is only done once for 15-20 years of production, but for annual vegetables it is extra work and I need to be efficient with my time and energy. If you screen it and take out much of the abrasiveness so you can hand plant easily, then I can see that working. Then it is a bit like no dig gardening where you can keep adding that on top to help keep in moisture, block weeds, and still plant fairly easily. Good idea!
@seaday123
@seaday123 2 ай бұрын
Curtis, I am glad you did this video. I've been watching and wondering ... gee he's on a mountain top of rock and I sure wonder how he can get compost deployed there. I'd love to see you do updates from time to time on your experiences with this.
@ronaldcummings6337
@ronaldcummings6337 Жыл бұрын
I put about six inches of wood chips on my beds mainly for weed control because I was working away from home for about three years. They I ran my BCS through it and had wonderful black soil, very rich and fertile.
@kenyonbissett3512
@kenyonbissett3512 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know if it would apply to you but Sepp Holzer used the rocks from his mountain side to absorb and release heat for his crops and orchard trees to create and maintain micro climates. He was even able to grow citrus 🍊 and 🍋 on his mountain Austrian farm.
@fyrerayne8882
@fyrerayne8882 8 ай бұрын
Cool, thanks man
@my_permaculture
@my_permaculture Жыл бұрын
Time Place and Circumstance. Always the base of the patterns that we observe and develop.
@spacemanspiffy6596
@spacemanspiffy6596 Жыл бұрын
1:40, did it this year with great success. I totally butted heads with your previous Eden video =P (100% context though/life). But Johnny's single row seeder has worked wonders for this gardening. This fall I will be planting carrots and onions and then pushing wood mulch back over for already seeded spring crop hope it works. This year I used 2x4's for 7 days to cover carrots to keep in moisture. I use peat moss to store veg in during winter, then re use peat to cover tiny seeds like carrots and onions with a layer then 2x4's on top. The 2x4 helped keep the wood chips from burying the small seeds while germinating. I removed boards and just let the mulch fall as it may afterward. Last year I struggled with crazy mice damage to all my root veg so I went to Eden style this year and so far so good. My potatoes actually a problem, I mulched with wood chip and I think it gave them early blight and also the potatoes didn't 'pop up' so now they are WAY deep LOL. I want to see the world go Eden!
@spacemanspiffy6596
@spacemanspiffy6596 Жыл бұрын
hehe I am just over joyed to see this! You will reach so many more than I will!
@keishabruce2238
@keishabruce2238 3 ай бұрын
Nice shirt! And video! 🌱 ❤
@DrFrankenstine1
@DrFrankenstine1 Жыл бұрын
Live and adapt.
@adrianblizzard6436
@adrianblizzard6436 Жыл бұрын
Brother you’ve always been fit but your looking very healthy these days , keep it up 👍
@rorymoran6415
@rorymoran6415 Жыл бұрын
You could create a mulch spreader wheel at the front of your seeder
@dinaarmeni2674
@dinaarmeni2674 Жыл бұрын
Love your shirt
@Agrillot6
@Agrillot6 4 ай бұрын
The shirt got you a follow immediately
@DimRagga
@DimRagga Жыл бұрын
One of us! One of us! One of us!
@AshtynJadeProduction
@AshtynJadeProduction Жыл бұрын
Love the shirt!!
@bob.hudson
@bob.hudson Жыл бұрын
There is a big miss understanding on the back to eden and wood chips. You have to inoculate them with compost in order for them to decay faster. He actually says it in the movie but people just heard wood chips. He we have foind a great option that is to inoculate wood chips with worm casting tea. It works incredibly well and regenerate the soil very fast. Also the secret is to get very fresh wood chips so that the decomposition happen in your soil and not in a pile. Glad you realzed this, there is no shame to learn
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
No one disputes the added value of mulch: BUT creating mulch from wood chips (like hemlock, cedar, hardwood) in a short time frame unless one lives in zone 10 where only soft wood fibers (weak cellulose and lignin) grow in these hotter climes. Here in the frigid eastern Ontario (hardwood country): they are virtually a waste of time (5-10 years), and most importantly at my age: Energy.
@bob.hudson
@bob.hudson Жыл бұрын
@@dol3980 wood chips is one of the highest carbon content you can feed the soil with, they need a lot of nitrogen to decompose and turn into soil. That is why it takes so long.
@comebackking7446
@comebackking7446 Жыл бұрын
Chop and drop, coffee grounds, urine, various forms of JADAM liquid fertilizers - all can be applied to crops or the entire area of wood chips. A little hard to do at a large scale but for someone who is growing for their family it's really easy. You'd be surprised how many gallons of urine you can collect in a week!
@john3_14-17
@john3_14-17 Жыл бұрын
@@dol3980 Not sure what you mean by only soft wood fibers in zone 10...most of the hardest woods in the world are tropical hardwoods.
@nolatenbroeke7992
@nolatenbroeke7992 Жыл бұрын
Love the t-shirt
@michellel5444
@michellel5444 Жыл бұрын
I'm listening, really I am but damn, you have some beautiful land and views. 😍
@Kristy_not_kristine
@Kristy_not_kristine Жыл бұрын
Great shirt
@megandow4816
@megandow4816 Жыл бұрын
Your. Shirt. Is. Amazing.
@jessicaSmash
@jessicaSmash Жыл бұрын
Love the shirt
@maxiskogen
@maxiskogen Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Back to eden is primarily going back to God and let him advice about how, what and when you garden. Great Video, nice to see how shreded bark is usfull. There is a lot of that available in my context aswell :-)
@CharlesGann1
@CharlesGann1 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see you address Back to Eden from your new context. My clay does exactly as you described andthe the mulch really helps withmoderate that crusting issue. Will also encourage worm activity for structure enhancement. Glad you are screening the bed mulch. The last interview I saw with Paul Guache he had gaineda access to finer mulch which he waslittle usinf in his rows. Even he is innovating still soI no reason you can't! Great content..
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
Contextually, (and ask Curtis) name me one locale where "Guache" techniques can be deployed successfully to produce 2 year topsoil:
@zritamoe7528
@zritamoe7528 Жыл бұрын
I want that t-shirt Curtis!!!!
@hosoiarchives4858
@hosoiarchives4858 10 ай бұрын
To properly do Paul Gautschi you put woodchips on your perennials and you need compost/biochar/cover crops for your annuals Real simple
@lisalapoint7022
@lisalapoint7022 Жыл бұрын
Back to Eden is a food forest. It is the opposite of market gardening, which is usually labor intensive mono crops in rows.
@ximono
@ximono Жыл бұрын
Usually, perhaps, but not always. It's not uncommon to combine the two in permaculture.
@dandan8333
@dandan8333 Жыл бұрын
Congratulations as time changes, as do we to the surroundings of nature that allows us to manage. Indeed it's a process and around the world many are changing what use to be... at this point both you and the Dutch Farmer are tackling simular ideas for your family. Until I return home to Guangxi, my journey in NC is on the same track building up for my granddaughter to enjoy in 7 - 10 years; while at Wake Forest University. A dream life. This video confirms my site has been fairly correct with little adjustments needed. ty.
@wgarvey84
@wgarvey84 Жыл бұрын
Luv the vid and i luv the shirt
@eyreland
@eyreland Жыл бұрын
Dump ALL incumbents. I also have rock, sand, clay devoid of nutrients. It is a slow progress, but transformation is possible.
@John-Adams-Can
@John-Adams-Can Жыл бұрын
Our property is exactly the same. 2 feet of clay on bedrock. We used logs to raise some beds then filled with as rich of soil as we could find. Covered with hay and use fish emulsion. Potatoes are growing great. Everything else is being eaten as it sprouts by the forest animals. We have huge sources of mulch but little leary about ticks.
@deinse82
@deinse82 Жыл бұрын
Wouldn't it be easier to make your own compost, than to keep moving mulch on and off direct seeded beds? Not sure how familiar you are with Charles Dowding. I assume you know about him, but if you don't, you should check him out. He has the least work-intensive compost making system, where he turns all waste into compost, with minimal effort. Surely, your garden and kitchen waste, plus an appropriate amount of wood chips, would produce enough compost for your direct seeded beds.
@spoolsandbobbins
@spoolsandbobbins Жыл бұрын
I think with Charles being in Whales though he gets a lot of rain, doesn’t get extreme cold or heat and that plays a role too.
@henrimcgowan5589
@henrimcgowan5589 Жыл бұрын
I subbed just because of your awesome shirt
@sebastienloyer9471
@sebastienloyer9471 Жыл бұрын
Make bioreactor with the wood chips.
@absoluteveracity8165
@absoluteveracity8165 Жыл бұрын
when you make the seed row put earth worm casting then the seed and more earth worm casting on top of the seed then cover with a little mulch. vermiculture
@mwmingram
@mwmingram Жыл бұрын
Good vibes in this video. Respect.
@ricforest3879
@ricforest3879 Жыл бұрын
Curtis , my friend has a zipper type hand tool that enables him to expose a row and direct seed using a Jiang 1 row seeder, one the crop is up he can zip some mulch near the plants
@thenewyorkredneck4735
@thenewyorkredneck4735 Жыл бұрын
Dude, looking shreded Rock on
@pantaipasirputih8770
@pantaipasirputih8770 Жыл бұрын
I was going to say that too. So Lythe
@MrWildplum
@MrWildplum Жыл бұрын
What do you think about mulching with compost in the beds? If had access would it be better than chips?
@bethburger9889
@bethburger9889 Жыл бұрын
the shirt, yes!
@gerhardbraatz6305
@gerhardbraatz6305 Жыл бұрын
Different situations call for different methods of growing. There is no one size fits all.
@colinwientjens1871
@colinwientjens1871 Жыл бұрын
Looks good mate. Are you using any livestock to create compost on this place?
@GaryDerry11
@GaryDerry11 Жыл бұрын
I had a p-patch where several decades of mulching the pathways created a perfect medium for crab grass to contaminate everything... making it very hard (maybe impossible) to get rid of the crab grass. In my opinion, the pathway would have been better off being left bare.
@dol3980
@dol3980 Жыл бұрын
I spend as much time pulling this witch or scotch grass from bark chip pathways as watering. RITE-ON.
@3535gt
@3535gt Жыл бұрын
check out Ed the pond professor in regards to your water feature. he's the man when it comes to water and biodiversity.
@KRscience
@KRscience Жыл бұрын
Despite a few drawbacks, you will not regret your decision to use wood chips. I've been using wood chips for 5 years now. I only have to water once or twice a summer and the weed pressure is low. My soil looks better and better each year too. The only big issue I had was increased slug pressure. Slugs love woodchips too!
@mickymidnight1
@mickymidnight1 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting great content on youtube...much appreciated.
@donfredricks8965
@donfredricks8965 Жыл бұрын
Looks great! Good work!
@bullishtingles1384
@bullishtingles1384 Жыл бұрын
You get a like for the t-shirt alone.
@halsteward1003
@halsteward1003 Жыл бұрын
Thank You. Curious what size holes are in Your Screen 🤔
@patrickhamilton5829
@patrickhamilton5829 Жыл бұрын
Curtis you look like you are in your best shape ever :)
@offgridcurtisstone
@offgridcurtisstone Жыл бұрын
As good as when I was 28. I'm 42!
@patrickhamilton5829
@patrickhamilton5829 Жыл бұрын
@@offgridcurtisstone God Bless from Norway 💪🏻😀
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