Go local independently owned coffee shops. Starbucks supports genocide.
@sacredcowbbq13262 күн бұрын
I've watched a bunch of vermiculture videos. This one was great so I'm going to do it your way. Thanks for your clear instructions. Love that you're working with businesses like the juice place and restaurant.
@juliettebender60723 күн бұрын
Do I have to use food grade buckets?
@augustcanyon34383 күн бұрын
Omg I don’t need the whole life story of cardboard gathering. 😮 Why can’t these younger generations get to the point?
@SarahdelHuerto8 күн бұрын
The fancy worm with teacup picture!! 😂😂 thank you for that😅
@kevintaylor143416 күн бұрын
I use coffee grounds for when im going on a fishing trip , just replace the night crawers from the dirt they come in and replace with coffee grounds , two weeks before fishing trip , you will have the biggest crawers you have ever used.😊
@timmooney246022 күн бұрын
I am in Deltona Florida. I just planted three pigeon pea start plants.
@annemarita425923 күн бұрын
I have Muscadine Grape growing wild on my acreage in SE Florida.
@surajkaravita180125 күн бұрын
please type name ingredients
@givemeliberti25 күн бұрын
I’m in Tallahassee and they are growing in my woods that really gets very little sun. Glad to know they’re Muscadine grapes and edible.😀
@bethheron814726 күн бұрын
You’re the worm whisperer!
@anthonylux183827 күн бұрын
Andrew - Thank you for this video. I noticed someone mentioned the strength of your pump. I watched a channel from the Urban Worm Company (Steve Churchill - owner & Troy - the tea expert) and they stated that your air pump should produce at least 5 litres per minute of air output for a 5 gallon container. Also, a brew creates bacteria and fungi. The bacteria feed the protozoa. Also, 3 cups of worm castings, 1 TBSP of fish hydrolysate and 1 TBSP of humic acid per 5 gallon container to promote fungal activity. Also, never use an air stone because it is VERY difficult to clean properly which can create anerobic bacteria in your next brew. Have a blessed day Andrew! Anthony
@anthonylux183827 күн бұрын
Andrew - First time viewer to your channel. You are one well-spoken individual. Thank you for the wisdom. Have a blessed day!
@johnnypc199027 күн бұрын
Ahhhh sunchokes.... the love I may divorce... delicious, very healthy, a beautiful plant and easy to grow... BUT EXTREMELY INVASIVE. I have planted them in the ground and they spread like wildfire, even went out of the garden bed and under my driveway and destroyed some of it. So I am now trying to kill that area, first with herbicide and now smothering with 4 layers of thick plastic construction tarp covered with mulch... basically smothering them, we shall see how that goes. No you cannot just dig them up, impossible.... you will not get all the tubers. I am trying pots now, big pots, but they grow so fast I think the pots will crack open soon. I like this persons method, I think I just planted too many at once.... will try his plant one and harvest later.... good luck, let me know your method.
@Matt-man6928 күн бұрын
every morning 1 cup is not "quite a bit of coffee" I drink about 2 liters a day or 4 large mugs and that is "quite a bit"
@lan-phuongnguyen4304Ай бұрын
Do you get maggots?
@user-fr3fb8ut3pАй бұрын
My experience with spent coffee grounds in composting is as a major source of green, Carbon-nitrogen ratio around 1:20, pH is 6-6.5 so ideal. Looked at cardboard as a major consistent source of carbon. But issue is time cost of sorting. So just use diversity of carbon; wood chip, spent hay, seasoned manures. Trick is break it down as much as you can, turn often at thermophilic stage (microbes heating) and introduce your physical composters after this to balance out the compost. Takes 6-12 months to make great compost. Half science, half commonsense. Bit like winemaking ?
@allfruitАй бұрын
Hello. I’m in south west Florida and have winter container garden plants and then have to change everything completely over to different set of summer heat tolerant plants. So my soil gets moved around a lot! Lately we've already been hitting temps that feel like its over 100 degrees in the shade. The garage is even hotter. Is it even feasible for me to do a worm bin down here? If so, how do you know how many worm bins to have for a backyard container garden? I would love to do this but not sure if I can.
@mikey2time484Ай бұрын
Red guava Is naturally resistant to the worm
@kingsburybmАй бұрын
Replying from reddit. Thanks for the link to your video.
@Raspukek-fu8unАй бұрын
>ansulfured molasses whot blyat? like if molasses ever had sulfur init. u cringeboi talk nonsence
@aaronkozak7144Ай бұрын
Can you use honey instead of molasses?
@why6715224 күн бұрын
Its the sugar! I use organic maple syrup... Black Strap molasses is the best, but until I get some at Walley World for this batch I used maple syrup... It is the sugar that the microbes eat and multiply...
@garylafreniere19 күн бұрын
@@why67152 I've been using Agave Nectar the past few years and have had great results with it.
@lisacardwell2508Ай бұрын
OMG I just want simplicity!!
@gus3967Ай бұрын
The video starts at 7:50
@Magalys1958Ай бұрын
After a couple years of frustrating tries to grow gandules I find the Lazarus dwarf variety of PR botanical garden of the UPR. (Compostapr you tube video on gandules) it give fruit twice a year. Until the cold kills the plant here in NC. I’m super happy with my gandules. This is my third year growing them!
@T4JQ3LАй бұрын
I'm in south Texas, a bit north of Houston and we have muscadines growing here. Right now they're still very green and nowhere near being ripe.
@user-qs4rd5ei6rАй бұрын
Do the worms still multiply and breed during this process?
@dosdeyamaguchi9675Ай бұрын
look just bury your food scraps in the ground instead of this bs
@GoGreenCompostАй бұрын
not the same thing at all
@leewilson5539Ай бұрын
I used to make tea that grew fungi hair over the top of my soil. It looked like crystals growing and it stayed wet all the time like the layer of dirt had its own atmosphere 😂. I want to grow a big tub of dirt like shroom growers do with all that mycelium in it mixed with mycrohzea and all that in there too
@edwardlucas5498Ай бұрын
My coffee dealer has been supplying me with about sixty litres of grounds a week for years it makes really good compost 👍
@reglarcatG---2178Ай бұрын
Excellent tutorial my good man, very concise and clear, I'm planning an earthworm endeavor and benefited from this presentation, so thanks!
@JoseOrtiz-zb7gqАй бұрын
Awesome . Ty
@Holistic-NickАй бұрын
Dont warm your water in the microwave smh
@GoGreenCompostАй бұрын
Why not
@Holistic-NickАй бұрын
@@GoGreenCompost radiation
@miriamshippmann7638Ай бұрын
What about using grounded up oyster shells for the grit? That is what I gave my chickens for grit.
@senatorjosephmccarthy272017 күн бұрын
Leviticus 11 applies.
@IcuddabinАй бұрын
How often do you feed the worms and what amount of worms in count should you have used for these bins shown? Also, when using cardboard, can you use the entire cardboard even if it has printed item on the cardboard, or do you have to cut that out?
@senatorjosephmccarthy272017 күн бұрын
Good questions. Should have been covered in the video.
@williamwoody7607Ай бұрын
In your thumbnail I thought you were Lemmy. LOL.
@MrShankfuАй бұрын
So are you pushing the top bucket down compressing the second bucket during bucket rotation or are you gently placing the top bucket on the second?
@timmooney24602 ай бұрын
I just bought some pigeon pea seeds on Etsy . I am going to grow the trees for food and as a shade wall for my home here in Deltona Florida.Anxious to get some results.
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
Good luck!
@michelle-um2zb2 ай бұрын
My coffee grounds got moldy. Can I still use them? In my worms
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
yeah they won't mind
@michelle-um2zb2 ай бұрын
My coffee grounds have grown a mold on them. Are they safe to feed to my worms?
@michelle-um2zb2 ай бұрын
Could somebody tell me whether or not that would be harmful to my worms to give them coffee grounds that that have developed a mold I would really appreciate it. Thank you so very much.
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
I don't think they will mind
@Romuluz3692 ай бұрын
Hit like immediately after dune reference
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
😂
@pa.fishpreacher61662 ай бұрын
Would the worms survive the winter in the buckets? Would it be too hot during the summer?
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
I move them into my shed in the winter, and keep them in the shade during the summer
@kbbb42272 ай бұрын
Will worms eat poo, like pig poo or horse poo or human poo?
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
I don't think that would be good for worms. You could compost fecal waste with black soldier flies
@kbbb42272 ай бұрын
Thank you for the reply.
@joelkibbie78182 ай бұрын
You can feed them composted manure. But I wouldn’t give them fresh manure.
@tomtrask_YT2 ай бұрын
@@GoGreenCompost specifically, I, personally, wouldn't put any feces in the worm bin. Compost bin? no problemo. But the bin that's just there to feed worms? no way. And it's not because it'dd hurt the worms, it's because it attracts too many things that are not welcome in a worm bin (house flies springs to mind).
@kbbb42272 ай бұрын
Is it true that worms don’t like coffee grounds?
@tomtrask_YT2 ай бұрын
this has not been my experience. They're fine with coffee grounds (it's not their favorite food - that'd be fruit, generally - but they'll get to it, eventually)
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
I don't believe so
@timmooney24602 ай бұрын
how close to your home can you plant a pigeon pea tree.
@joelatif98242 ай бұрын
Boycott starbucks
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
I don't ever go there for coffee, but I'll still take their free grounds!
@literarynick2 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. I really appreciate the time and effort that you put into this.
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
Thanks! Happy composting 👍
@oldmanjoe68082 ай бұрын
I would have thought at the outset of your video that you'd counteract the acid in coffee grins by adding some lime. Reckon not.
@GoGreenCompost2 ай бұрын
just add some paper or cardboard
@LuxVblogs2 ай бұрын
I think that’s what it is. PlantIn app identifies it as such also. I thought it was nettle and has taken over a vast plot in the backyard. I guess I’ll cautiously tough it and examine it closer now that I know it’s not stinging nettle. Thais app is really opening my eyes to world of plants.
@stopdeforestation2 ай бұрын
I like pigeon peas better than the common garden pea.