THE SECRET TO BUILDING HEALTHY SOIL!

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • I have been building healthy soil for years, and this is how I do it!
    Thanks for the kind words and support 😁🐕❤️
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Komentáře • 482

  • @offgridjunky
    @offgridjunky Před 6 lety +105

    I remember when someone told me it took 2 years for a pineapple to fruit.. and I remember thinking that was too long....then a year went by and then another year went by and I thought to myself....if I would have planted that pineapple 2 years ago I would have had a pineapple.....!! that was 6 years ago....since then I have had quit a few pineapples...I guess what I'm saying is...you can't eat what you don't plant..even if it takes 2 years to get it. same concept with my fruit trees I put in last year... if it takes 3 years to fruit and I don't plant it, guess what...in 3 years I won't have anything...!! stay blessed...

    • @FeyScribe
      @FeyScribe Před 4 lety +7

      i just got pineapple plants, inspired

    • @bencyber8595
      @bencyber8595 Před 3 lety +1

      I have just started planted 2 plant just now, how long will I taste the pineapple ?

    • @offgridjunky
      @offgridjunky Před 3 lety

      @@bencyber8595 they say 2 years. Sometimes sooner. It varies on what kind of pineapple you plant.

    • @ziggybender9125
      @ziggybender9125 Před 2 lety

      I finally planted 2 sugarloaf pineapple plants from tops. 1 of them is fruiting this year but the fruit is tiny, I asked my friend and he told me that's to be expected when planting from tops. No one told me I'd wait 2 years for a fist size pineapple...

    • @life-eu
      @life-eu Před rokem

      The best words i read in the last year!

  • @gigidi6816
    @gigidi6816 Před 6 lety +100

    You are killing it, James!
    I've added 6-8" of woodchips to my garden and my plants are LOVING it. I've even made a believer of my dad, who thought I was out of my mind with all those woodchips! I showed him your videos so he could have an idea what a multi-year food forest looks like.
    May God continue to bless you😊

    • @pattihayden8100
      @pattihayden8100 Před 6 lety +7

      ang medina 😂 my kids thought I had gone off the deep end when I had 25 cubic yards of wood chips delivered to my house 7 months ago. They’re a believer now!!

    • @ashcash111296
      @ashcash111296 Před 5 lety +1

      Pam, where did you find your wood mulch?

    • @svetlanikolova7673
      @svetlanikolova7673 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ashcash111296 You cant tell your local tree trimming service to drop it off , your local restaurants and Coffee shops to use your property as a dumping ground. once you have loaded it all up mix it all and distribute in your garden spot . wait six months and plant in the spring

    • @titanart6225
      @titanart6225 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you add compost over top of your wood chips like Paul Paul Gautschi says in Back To Eden to create compost soup to soak into the soil?

    • @kathynix6552
      @kathynix6552 Před rokem

      @@svetlanikolova7673 @Barbara T
      Just check on the organic status of the restaurant

  • @JWDicus
    @JWDicus Před rokem +3

    This last year was the first time I have ever used diakon radish in my garden as a way to build soil, and I am amazed by their ability to penetrate deep down, just as you were saying about carrots. If you haven't already tried diakon, I highly recommend it for your situation. Get yourself some seeds and just sow them randomly throughout that food forest. Love your channel, James. Thanks for bringing the rest of us these videos.

  • @Matt_j593
    @Matt_j593 Před 6 lety +10

    You have really developed as a presenter over the years. I’m in year 3 of the Back To Eden method. When I started, I had zero worms and compacted soil. I am only applying wood chips and compost and some organic fertilizer to get things going. The worms are everywhere and there are parts of the garden I could dig with my hand.

  • @lifeonhuckleberryhill6052
    @lifeonhuckleberryhill6052 Před 6 lety +32

    We are in the early stages of planting a food forest, and we have learned a lot by watching your videos. We are enjoying seeing how your garden progresses, and pray God's richest blessings on you!

  • @sacredtools.netclairvoyant1573

    Your positive attitude makes learning a pleasure. I live on sandy soil too, and after five years of soil building last year was my best harvest ever and it was because of you! Thanks so much.

    • @nickthegardener.1120
      @nickthegardener.1120 Před rokem +1

      I wish I had 5% of James energy! He has a very positive energy vibration!💚👍

  • @colleensainsbury9022
    @colleensainsbury9022 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a lifesaver for me. I am one dune away from the beach and gardening on pure sand. Was stressing about having to dig the soil over and over. Now I know I never have to dig, I can let nature do the work!

  • @sir2022
    @sir2022 Před 6 lety +46

    Another great root crop to breakup hard compacted clay soil is Daikon Radish....they grow a really long and strong tap root.

    • @davidcarr7228
      @davidcarr7228 Před 4 lety +2

      How do I get started and where do I get this at the nursery

    • @jamesbassett8470
      @jamesbassett8470 Před 3 lety +2

      @@davidcarr7228 Daikon also goes by the name 'Soil Buster." Seeds are available in garden stores and online.

    • @pascalxus
      @pascalxus Před 3 lety

      @@davidcarr7228 you can get great deals on it on ebay. 500 of them for a 2 or 3 dollars. Or you can go all out and get 15000 seeds for 13$ ! wow. i'm planting these bad boys everywhere.

    • @heathparkhurst3011
      @heathparkhurst3011 Před 3 lety

      @@jamesbassett8470 Will they grow in heavy red clay loam?

    • @summcunt5421
      @summcunt5421 Před 2 lety

      I bought some seeds called tillage radish. They seem very similar to daikon. They grow really well in my clay. I just chop the top off when it begins to flower and let the root turn into worm food. The tops go in the compost.

  • @naplescajun
    @naplescajun Před 6 lety +27

    LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your channel! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, passion and love of life with us!

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 6 lety +2

      Your so kind naplescajun, thank you for the words of encouragement!

    • @lorrainebarnett8389
      @lorrainebarnett8389 Před 6 lety +4

      Love the thing you said about using root crops to break up the soil. I have clay and that is such a great bit of advice. Also, I am so grateful for your encouragement and faith. Gardeners need faith for sure.

  • @simpleman6591
    @simpleman6591 Před 6 lety +22

    You present the best videos on youtube. You acted like a mosquito bit you. I'm a diabetic, and they used to come to get me from miles around. I started eating three cloves of garlic a day. They now buzz around me, but never get bit. I used to have lumps all over me when I would head to the house of the evenings. Just trying to help you as you do all the rest of us. The garlic is good for all kinds of other things too. Always waiting for your next video.

    • @oliviatracy5285
      @oliviatracy5285 Před 5 lety +1

      Simpleman Also I hear planting garlic and leaving it to rot builds soil?? What is your guys opinion on this? Do you think its true?

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 Před 4 lety +3

      ​@@oliviatracy5285- ANY roots you leave in the soil will help build soil. Reason why cover crops is a simple and cheap way of building soil. Whenever possible take the "fruits" of your labor (crop) but leave the roots and any other organic matter you don't intend to use for something else. Certainly different for root crops, like carrots or turnips. ;-)
      Personally I've got a problem of convincing my wife to follow basic Permaculture principles. Having "formal", or should I say conventional, farming experience, makes it more difficult for her to absorb these details, or let go the "old ways". If I'm distracted in no time everything is dug out/tilled!
      About a month ago we picked the fava beans. So we picked the pods and I cut the plant stalks flat to the ground. We walked away.
      Shortly after we were mulching the flat beds and for whatever reason she pulled one of the left over stalks. Well the fine soil and the amount of earth worms in that single stalk was amazing. I quickly took the chance to point that detail. She's slightly more convinced. LOL :-)
      Cheers

    • @mohammadakhter8614
      @mohammadakhter8614 Před 3 lety

      I eat so much garlic but may be mosquitoes in our are love garlic, they love to bite me. I am so sick of mosquito bites.

  • @PalmettoParatrooper
    @PalmettoParatrooper Před 6 lety +1

    I have hard clay soil but I've trenched it on contour and I allow the wild plants to grow to their final stage of life before mowing 80% of them down. They do a fairly good job breaking up the surface layers of clay on their own. Things like wild leaks and plantain and wood sorrel and dewberry are what make up most of the natural ground cover on my land.

  • @johnnyspropshop
    @johnnyspropshop Před 6 lety +40

    Preach it James. I just got my wood chips into the garden today, took months of waiting but it finally happened. Neighbors are interested and will compare their tilled garden to mine. Wife is not convinced but helped fork chips anyways. Every video you put out keeps my motivation going. Thank you.

    • @pattihayden8100
      @pattihayden8100 Před 6 lety +3

      John Fisher I’ve had wood chips down for 7 months on top of my clay soil. I was putting in some more water lines and as I was moving the wood chips away the worms were about 2” down. Probably because the chips were moist. Love love wood chips!!!!!

    • @fishmut
      @fishmut Před 6 lety +3

      John Fisher hi there John, water breaks things down just remember that. If it’s dry water it and it will break the chips down below the surface. If your getting plenty rain fall it will happen naturally. Also remember it takes time so be patient . Good luck with your gardening good results are not to far away mate. Happy gardening.

    • @svetlanikolova7673
      @svetlanikolova7673 Před 4 lety +1

      John Fisher, forking wood chis? why? layer on top.of your soil. Forking them in is a no no in nature nobody forks in anything, it just layers

    • @brandywineblue
      @brandywineblue Před 2 lety +1

      @@svetlanikolova7673 he probably meant using forks to move them from the big pile dumped in his driveway and spreading them on his garden

  • @matthewmoore7366
    @matthewmoore7366 Před 5 lety +1

    I never considered planting anything with a strong taproot to break up my clay soil. I've been building from top up for about 3 years, lots of fungi out there now. However still the compacted clay under the top layer of gold. Part of the organic matter in my beds is a gazillion acorns. I've always pulled they baby oaks out and let them rot elsewhere. . . Oaks = taproots... but that carrot idea, for worm food, I love it... great video

    • @shadytreez
      @shadytreez Před 5 lety

      I let a red oak grow in my garden and it has added so much to my garden. I swear the roots balance the clay soil. Under it is my pepper garden. One is 3 years old and held all the peppers through the frost. Granted I live in 9B in California, but without this tree all would have frozen to the ground. I let my seedless Thompson wind into it. Best dang trellis! I have so much food, even the wildlife get tired of the grapes that are sweeter than sunshine.

  • @WillowZeyphr
    @WillowZeyphr Před 2 lety +3

    I'm just starting to branch out of buckets and pots and this helps immensely! My vision is to have a garden with veggies and fruit trees mixed in amongst one another. I started small and have been learning a lot. I have a dream of creating a garden that everyone can feel free to help themselves to! They can plant and grow in their own section if they wish even!. I believe that we should all try to bring a family touch to our place of comfort. Wouldn't that be wonderful! I have been working on it, one day at a time :) Thank you for sharing your wisdom with me, this will absolutely help me step closer to achieving my dream! The glass greenhouse for winter growing ( and to keep me at peace😉) would Thank you again! Have a most magnificent day/night or morning, my friend!

  • @marabiquel6414
    @marabiquel6414 Před 3 lety

    I’m closed to the beach too . Sandy soils are tricky.... but I love to work with it.... it has so many advantages .... the sandy soils becomes better throughout the years. ❤️🇵🇷

  • @rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291
    @rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I own an 8 acre property. It has multiple kinds of soils. I’m close enough to Myrtle Beach to have alot of sand but I’m also far enough away that I have alot of clay. I’ve found different colors of sand and different colors of clay on my property as well. Before I plant a tree I dig down a couple of feet to see what the soil looks like under it before planting now. I made alot of mistakes and lost alot of trees bc I planted them in the wrong location.

  • @summcunt5421
    @summcunt5421 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm using woodchips on my clay. I've noticed after 2 years my soil has improved a lot. I'm about to start growing king stropharia mushrooms in the woodchips because it helps to break down the woodchips faster. Apparently they are a good tasting mushroom too, so that will be a bonus. Better soil and an extra food source. I've also heard that bees use the mycelium of this fungus as medicine. Apparently bees will move woodchips to get to it. I hope to see this for myself.

  • @jimwilleford6140
    @jimwilleford6140 Před 5 lety +1

    I have watched a number of your videos. In my opinion, this is your best presentation yet. You have become a pro in front of the camera, your teachings are clear and much more concise. Most importantly, your garden is beautiful. Congratulations.

  • @michaelmoody7372
    @michaelmoody7372 Před 4 lety

    I brought in 10 semi loads of mulch from a land clearing company. Not dump trucks but 53ft semi loads! 🤣 my family thought I had lost my mind but now they are seeing the benefits. Keep up the good work your videos are very informative! 👍🏼

  • @thehappygardener1308
    @thehappygardener1308 Před 3 lety

    Another great instructional vid James, I live in Perth Western Australia and have horrible sand like you, put a layer of cardboard down to kill the weeds and topped with a couple of inches of free woodchips from a local lopper, bam..... 6 months later after a rainy winter I have worms in my soil with a great composition. Just starting my food forest after seeing your channel. Thankyou for changing my life and ideas

  • @jkdruid
    @jkdruid Před 5 měsíci

    I love watching your old and new videos. I learn so much.thank you.

  • @pattihayden8100
    @pattihayden8100 Před 6 lety +30

    You are spot on! Wood chips changes everything. I have clay soil and since the wood chips everything is growing abundantly!

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 6 lety +2

      Amen Patti! I love hearing that word abundance ❤️😁

    • @pattihayden8100
      @pattihayden8100 Před 6 lety +4

      James I also have some 5 gallon containers that plants come in and I set them by my trees and throw my kitchen scraps into and water it as it feeds the trees. The growth is 10x better. Give it a try and give us a video!

    • @TileBitan
      @TileBitan Před 2 lety

      @A E just throw vegetable matter and no big animals will come for it. Throwing meat around is risky, it could get you an infestation of nasty critters

    • @TileBitan
      @TileBitan Před 2 lety

      @A E Np! If you want to use animal manure u can tho, James uses some chicken waste, but notice he merges a bit of waste with a lot of wood shavings or something brown and dry to keep it from being all clumped up and rotting

    • @omararreola5449
      @omararreola5449 Před rokem

      Do you just put wood chips anything else ?

  • @melanin4267
    @melanin4267 Před rokem

    Thank you 💜💜💜 I have all raised beds because I Am surrounded by Clay. Planting the deep rooted plants is such helpful information. I really appreciate it. 🏡🧑🏾‍🌾🍉🍅💜

  • @monkeywarrior939
    @monkeywarrior939 Před 5 lety

    Used to work on a grape farm on the side of an interstate highway. Terrible clay soil. We would go through yards and yards of wood chips every year. It was miraculous how much the soil changed. The best part is that you can usually ask tree removal companies to dump their wood chips for next to nothing.

  • @reshgala
    @reshgala Před 6 lety +2

    Your knowledge and excitement about this topic and gardening in general is infectious! So inspiring! Keep up the great work!

  • @professorwooters2386
    @professorwooters2386 Před rokem

    Thanks for the tip about planting carrots and letting the tap roots rot. Great idea

  • @rlportillo
    @rlportillo Před 6 lety +13

    I think I see a great teacher in the making!

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 6 lety +3

      Your kind, thanks for the encouragement my friend 😁

  • @JastaAdventures
    @JastaAdventures Před 6 lety +1

    One thing I love about gardening is the constant learning. Thanks for this video, it definitely added to my knowledge!!!! We’ve been doing woodchips for about 18 months and the evolution of our garden/foodforest is incredible!!

  • @bobbybillingsley7057
    @bobbybillingsley7057 Před 5 lety +1

    I took a bunch of eggs and a lot of vegetables scraps, and rice and put it in a 50 gallon garden pot with regular Alabama front yard dirt and it makes the plants that's in it grow 10 times better. The plants get so heavy that there hanging out of the pot and can't stand up straight after the get long. Your are 100% right about building soil. Its all about the longjevity.... Thanks.

  • @1947dhammond
    @1947dhammond Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for information about creating great rich soil with wood chips, planting plants to provide that soil with fruit trees, adding compost, adding egg shells or nutrients to the soil. I love what you are teaching me. God bless you as you grow and experience new relationships with soil building to create a forest of fruits and veggies..

  • @lindameese2334
    @lindameese2334 Před 6 lety +1

    I love watching your videos so much. I just soak in everything you say and then implement it in my own garden. I gardened the wrong way (tilled) for years but those days are over, thank goodness. But I also love to listen to you when I get off work, it literally "zens" me lol. You're putting good into the soil and into the world, God bless you!

  • @jessfindsherlife2749
    @jessfindsherlife2749 Před 6 lety +10

    Thank you! Its all about the soil. You're like my own personal soil encyclopedia. How do you store all that information☺

  • @gardenoforigins30
    @gardenoforigins30 Před 6 lety +3

    Another inspiring lesson! I love the long taproot idea for clay! Love seeing your excitement while talking about your soil.

  • @PreciousPearls57
    @PreciousPearls57 Před 2 lety

    Thank you James. I really needed to know about sandy soil to plant. Need wood chips!
    God Bless you James.😍

  • @carolparrish194
    @carolparrish194 Před 6 lety +3

    I wish I had your video 8 years ago when I started my garden. I just found your video in the last 6 months. I am convinced you are right on the chips. The only problem is I am having a real problem getting wood chips. Since gardening is getting harder because of my age I am trying very hard to cover my garden with wood chips to keep out the weeds and hold in moisture as well to enrich the soil. I can already tell the difference in the area I have chipped.

    • @heatherhineline9481
      @heatherhineline9481 Před 6 lety +4

      carol parrish Before I got wood chips I used leaves that I held down with whatever sticks and twigs I found in my yard. I even grabbed bags of leaves/sticks off the side of the road. Hehe. Grass clippings too. Really Helped my clay and rocks to start growing somethings.

    • @kg2time983
      @kg2time983 Před 6 lety

      Heather Hineline ii

    • @brigittelm6054
      @brigittelm6054 Před 6 lety +1

      carol parrish getting fall leaves, horse manure, grass clippings, newspaper, cardboard will help too. Call tree companies to dee if they chip or use stripper on braches they cut and see if they would like to dump a load at you home. And not pay local dump fees. Keep gardening 😍

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 Před 6 lety +2

      carol parrish - Make your own compost.
      Leaves, coffee, manure, wood chips, cardboard, egg shells...pretty much whatever you can get your hands on, preferably for free.
      If you use a fire place in the Winter, are the ashes going to the garbage? ;-)
      When doing that DIY carpentry project, is the saw dust dumped in the garbage? ;-)
      A few ideas, just put it together and nature will do the rest. ;-)
      Cheers

    • @THEREALInfamousP
      @THEREALInfamousP Před 5 lety +1

      For accessing freely available wood mulch/wood chips, here are a few ideas that are working out great for me.
      1. Use the international arborist search tool. Just google that and put in your location. The arborist I found is also the manager of urban forestry for my town. I had a load delivered within a week.
      2. Call landscaping companies. Though they may not be arborists, they do a lot of chipping and would be happy to deliver to you when working on a chip job locally. In most cases, their alternative is dropping at a landfill or recycling center which is often farther away, and in many instances, charges them to do so. These guys usually won’t take your monetary offer either as you’re saving them a huge headache.
      3. Implement number two into calling tree service companies. Same thing with them; they usually won’t take a donation. I find they will take a six pack usually, so I keep one on hand for them.

  • @vaughan7835
    @vaughan7835 Před rokem

    Hey James. I'm currently building a, what I hope to be, small food forest in a previously weedy, wasted space, on borrowed property, in mid NSW coast, Australia. Found the soil to be mostly sand w 2" of nice dark soil above. Disappointed! Watched a heap of your videos for the last 3yrs. This 1 gives me more confidence! I have access to free woodchips, & seagrass, close by. Started with cardboard & sticks, (hugelcultur) then the top 2" from dug woodchip paths & whatever else I could find on top. Im growing (& or plan to) herbs, spices, vegies & fruit trees. Keeps me (& my dog "Rabbit") busy while not being able to work. Also, we are living the "Vanlife" locally. Love your work 👌

  • @brusselsprout5851
    @brusselsprout5851 Před 2 lety

    That is what I’m seeing...my garden is not improving but going down. My butternut squash is the size of a baseball! My sunflowers that used to be huge are small. I got one old German tomato. 8 San Marzano. And most the cherry tomatoes are the size of a fine. The leek are puny, too. Sigh....I’ve been tilling. That’s it! I’m done. Tomorrow I’m going to get mulch and other organic to start layering. Again, thank you for this no bull no hype video. You get right down to it. I’ll pick up some sweet clover too.

  • @svetlanikolova7673
    @svetlanikolova7673 Před 4 lety

    I started with rocky sand soil . I added manure and mulch and my soil improved in 6 months. I do my fertilizing in the fall just like nature to assure optimum results.I hope that in 5 years I will only put 3 inches of chicken manure down in fall. cant wait for my chickens( my soil manufacturing plant)
    Greetings from Bulgaria

  • @annlights3544
    @annlights3544 Před 6 lety +4

    You actually gave me hope to improve my very very sandy soil I was wondering how am I gonna build my soil from the bottom up I wanted a healthy soil all the way around not just adding mulch on top and call it a day . God bless you 💜

    • @sidneyeaston6927
      @sidneyeaston6927 Před 5 lety

      It takes a while to get it right but if you can build a pile of wood chips put green stuff on the top grass cuttings old kitchen waste the thicker the better the green stuff will compact and go anaerobic as you water the top the rotten mess will soak the wood chips and start the process of decomposition once the pile has turned black turn it over let it rest for a few days then spread over the wood chips that you have previously spread around your garden and rake in, this is how to treat faster than just throwing fresh wood chips down

  • @1947dhammond
    @1947dhammond Před 4 lety

    farmers work awfully hard to produce a great crop! How I appreciate them more everyday for their courage, hard work, and patients. We don't pay them enough money, nor give them the credit for the hard good work they put forth in order to produce an enormous, nutritious plants to market. Just in my little garden, I've learned to appreciate them with the challenge I have to grow things. God bless every farmer!

  • @jsaunbooker1791
    @jsaunbooker1791 Před 6 lety +2

    I had to add a comment for this video. U truly made me aware of how to produce healthy soil. I like the way u broke it all down. Yes I heard of mulching but now I c the importance it does

  • @phoenixchildress8572
    @phoenixchildress8572 Před 5 lety +3

    I loooove the ennergy!!! The energy that you have is very motivating!! This video is also very informing!! 👍🏾👍🏾

  • @1phloxy
    @1phloxy Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks again James. Great advice. I started 2 years ago my soil is so nice I can use my hand instead of a shovel.

  • @thomassmith8700
    @thomassmith8700 Před 6 lety

    There are a lot of videos that claim back to Eden doesn't work. But everything you say makes sense. I'm going to give it a shot. I got a bag Mykos from Amazon last week. Got half the garden covered in contractor paper and wood chips I got off a tree guy last fall. I know I'm getting a late start for this season but I'll take what I can get for this year. 😀 Thanks for all the great info!

  • @mfjf3916
    @mfjf3916 Před 5 lety

    I have salty black clay..so years ago I hauled in trucks of what I thought was sandy loam ..I got gypped.. it was brown depleted clay for nothing grew on it for years...cactus and mesquite grow well here..south Texas..cabbage grows well too on a raised bed with amended clay soils.

  • @grethabekker1777
    @grethabekker1777 Před 3 lety

    It is exiting to allow soil to become a living entity, like you explain here. And it smells so nice!

  • @embracingnature4125
    @embracingnature4125 Před 6 lety

    I am from a beach city too,live really far from the beach but still there's sandy soil everywhere..this is definitely encouraging.

  • @PharmSilver
    @PharmSilver Před 6 lety +4

    Hey James. How bout some comfrey to help the soil from bottom up (deep tap root) and top down (chop and drop leaves). Working for me !

  • @craigronaldinho8279
    @craigronaldinho8279 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
    Followed through with ur advice and now i was fortunate to get two loads of chips dropped off!...20 yards!
    I hardly water my plants, despite the unbearable heat here in Texas.

  • @jbfam7208
    @jbfam7208 Před 6 lety +1

    I tried the wood chips/back to eden method and got a ton of grubs that killed and ate the roots of my plants...i mean “a whole lot.” It was the most bizarre occurrence, so i removed the chips and life was back to normal. I hv raised beds, not sure if thats a factor. New to this channel James. Love ur enthusiasm and knowledge.

  • @rawutah
    @rawutah Před 6 lety +1

    my new favorite video on building soil!!!!!!!!!!!!! thank you james!!!!!!!!! so much to glean in this one!!!!! all of them!!!!!

  • @koicaine1230
    @koicaine1230 Před 2 lety

    OMG!! I've been following your channel for a couple of years and I had no idea you were growing in sandy soil, I have basically beach sand where I live and have tried everything in the world to turn my sand into soil and then I stumbled onto this video!! I'm putting in Hugelkultur this winter since even the Terra Preta didn't work. Nothing I have done has worked, all I have to show for my efforts is darker colored sand...

    • @flofi4397
      @flofi4397 Před 2 lety +1

      A lot of compost and mulch mulch mulch

  • @lourdesreveles3067
    @lourdesreveles3067 Před 3 lety +1

    Me encantan tus videos y realmente disfruto leyendo, pues no hablo al cien por ciento el inglés y estoy muy agradecida que hayas activado la configuración para poder activar nuestro propio idioma de acuerdo a la necesidad de cada uno de los que te vemos. Estoy aprendiendo cada día cosas buenas y maravillosas de la agricultura orgánica, así que me decidí a mejorar el suelo de mi terreno, vivo, en el área 7b, Tulsa Oklahoma, entonces esto es arcilloso, he aprendido un montón con cada video tuyo que estoy cada vez más convencida de lo que quiero. Tal vez no me alcance la vida para ver completamente todo lo que me gustaría hacer, pero he comenzado con el paso 1, que es ponerme en acción. Así que, aquí tienes tal vez un tema, o yo no he llegado al video si es que ya lo tienes. Ok. Yo tengo diez grandes árboles en mi terreno, cinco de ellos son de nogal, entonces, muchos me dicen que esas hojas no me van a servir, pero solo en algunos sitios puedo leer que estas hojas sí sirven, entonces, haciendo oídos sordos, he juntado todas las hojas y las estoy compostando, para hacer la famosa tierra de hojas, cuál es tu opinión al respecto? sirven o no? he mezclado las hojas de los diez árboles. Gracias por leer mi carta... perdón, mi mensaje.

  • @alionofengland4059
    @alionofengland4059 Před 5 lety

    i am looking to get my back yard sorted out so i can grow stuff anywhere on the ground... My soil is horrible and like clay! when it rains, the surface acts as a waterproof layer so the water builds up on the surface and floods! i have been looking into it and doing homework and find that adding organic matter over time will gradually give me great soil! im hoping so anwyays... lol im going to send the kids down to the big field in autumn to collect bags of fallen leaves and i will head out to the woods to collect anything of good use for incorporating into it too :D i cannot wait to get started! you have inspired me to do this man!

  • @thedayfliesby9427
    @thedayfliesby9427 Před 2 lety

    My soil is hot and sandy. Very little rain. I’m slowly using these techniques and they are working. Love your videos! This comment is four years later but if you made a video on retaining rain water, that would help me!

  • @raymondaten2179
    @raymondaten2179 Před 6 lety +15

    Been waiting for this video. Many don't realize the biology in the soil. When you don't have that biology you have dirt. Even in the sand those aggragites will get in there not to mention the space in the sand will take in the organic matter from above and eventually you will literally change the soil structure in the sand. Man nature is awesome. Way to go man.

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 6 lety +3

      Awesome! Glad you enjoyed it sit.
      Sounds like you know your stuff Raymond 😁

    • @raymondaten2179
      @raymondaten2179 Před 6 lety +3

      I've been watching a lot of videos because I want to build my soil natures way but I have a septic system somewhere in my backyard so until I find it I can't plant any trees so I'm starting to use cover crops which is the next best thing. I watch mark from I am organic garending and although he dies have some trees he uses mainly cover crops. But neither you use covers crops or trees the concept is the same you keep a living root in the ground which will help build that mycorrizeil fungi which like you said in the video is the key.

    • @samuelmjlfjell
      @samuelmjlfjell Před 6 lety

      Raymond Aten
      I watch NJ Mark "I Am Organic "
      Too. I see where he says that you have to have the living root. I believe that grass and weeds are not the enemy. They are what nature put there.

    • @raymondaten2179
      @raymondaten2179 Před 6 lety

      Sam K bad thing about most weeds is they don't use mycorizziel fungi some do. Your right they aren't the enemy although you wouldn't want them to over run your garden.

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 Před 4 lety

      @@raymondaten2179 - My 2 cents. Maintaining the "weeds" under control is nice and good. BUT they are allies, not enemies. I use them whenever possible. Great natural fertilizer, compost raw material, mulch. You name it and we don't even need to work to make them happen. :-)

  • @devincahoon830
    @devincahoon830 Před rokem

    Thanks for the soil tutorial. I’m working with a clay base and this has been very helpful

  • @coreyjames1
    @coreyjames1 Před 5 lety +1

    I feel like you made this video for me.....you're right!.....let nature do what it's been doing for thousands of years.!.... Great video!

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 5 lety +1

      You’re exactly who I made it for my friend 😁

  • @gamelard1963
    @gamelard1963 Před 6 lety

    my soil is full of a couple of things, worms both red worms and the longer ones. those spring tail thingies (those white flea looking things that jump around a lot) earwigs, the rollie pollies, and millipedes. only once did i find a land planarian flatworm (thats a predatory worm that eats earthworms.) oh and i have lots of slugs too.
    i noticed the number of these creatures has increased ever since i started adding new soil and other organic stuff.

  • @aaronbrooks6635
    @aaronbrooks6635 Před 6 lety

    SO MUCH YES.

  • @manjushreetsl2531
    @manjushreetsl2531 Před 4 lety

    Thanks James, you are an inspiration.

  • @brusselsprout5851
    @brusselsprout5851 Před 2 lety

    ❤️ Tuck, too!

  • @ronserrokpam904
    @ronserrokpam904 Před 5 lety

    This is so True.You are awsome.👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @wudangmtn
    @wudangmtn Před 4 lety

    Good, clear instruction. Thanks.

  • @elizabethyates5933
    @elizabethyates5933 Před 6 lety +1

    What do you think about doing cover crop in areas you don't have forest? where the sandy soil is.. clover daikon radish etc.. leave it there to break down into sand and create better soil? also compost tea- spray everything with it for extra boost. even the poor soil.. if your compost tea has proper biology it'll get down into the sandy soil..

  • @dereka3341
    @dereka3341 Před 6 lety

    I'm using an organic cover crop for the first time this year, in my vegetable garden. I definitely have earth worms and the soil's residual breakdown, after you dig maybe 2 inches down, is a dark, dark brown/black color.

  • @mydreamhorse12
    @mydreamhorse12 Před 6 lety

    You are my favorite channel. You have opened up my world and brought it together! Thank you for all you do for us!

  • @jaquiobear
    @jaquiobear Před 6 lety

    THANK YOU JAMES! I know you always read all the comments cause you always answer mine, and this is the second time you’ve answered my comment in a video. I knew when you didn’t answer in the comment section that I should pay attention to the coming videos. And this one is the best answer so far cause it is not only that you gave the answer within a video, but you actually made a whole video only on the subject of my question! Thank you so much, it was very complete and clear to understand, and I feel honored to get such a beautiful and fantastic answer. I was maybe not the only one asking that sort of question, so there are surely a lot of people being helped.
    👍🏼🤗🙏🏼☘️🍂🌷🌳😃❣️

  • @DavidfromMichigan
    @DavidfromMichigan Před 2 lety

    To Miracle Grow and Scott's, you're public enemy #1! Keep it up baby!

  • @jimmywayneoconner9225
    @jimmywayneoconner9225 Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks for the info James, I live 8 miles from the beach south of tallahassee, this is just what I needed to know!

  • @DonnaldaSmolens
    @DonnaldaSmolens Před 6 lety

    I also have sandy, rocky soil which is a bit salty. I have been adding local organic matter to the soil for almost 5 years now and finally have clumps when I fork the soil. I also have "nurse trees" mesquites, screw beans and Guamuchil that fix nitrogen in the soil. No worms though, might be too hot here.

  • @Rick-uu4iu
    @Rick-uu4iu Před 4 lety +1

    Wow that was very informative. I just finished making a raised bed and layered the bottom with wood chips. I was planning to put a layer of horse manure in next while my compost bens finish doing their thing. I would really appreciate your opinion on the horse manure idea. Thanks Rick

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Před 4 lety +1

      Aged horse manure is awesome, I have had good results with a variety of foods including swiss chard, kale, and potatoes.

  • @duckyluver12
    @duckyluver12 Před 3 lety +1

    This was such a good video James, thanks! I have completely sand soil in my garden also.

  • @mexicas6637
    @mexicas6637 Před 4 lety

    Great content on vegetable gardening from a fellow east coast gardener 👍👏

  • @notflanders4967
    @notflanders4967 Před 4 lety

    Had to come back to this one man, it touches on several good points. This is the video I need to start sharing this with people to expose them to ideas on why and how to stray away from chemicals. Thanks for sharing!

  • @pmore75
    @pmore75 Před 4 lety

    This is a great video. I like that you highlighted that you build soil from the top and below. I hadn't connected this idea before. You have a great garden.

  • @skullcollector29
    @skullcollector29 Před 4 lety

    Awesome .....I like the way You talk straight to the point ...Greetings from Long Branch , NJ

  • @BRWfilms
    @BRWfilms Před 2 lety

    Saw you years ago I'm about to start my food forest next week. Glad I found you again!! I got Georgia clay

  • @VianneyCreates
    @VianneyCreates Před 5 lety

    Great discussion, and so very right! Thank you!

  • @sourclam904
    @sourclam904 Před 4 lety

    Great explanation and info. Thanks for posting

  • @danielfisch655
    @danielfisch655 Před 6 lety

    Amen brother, I also layer organic material in my garden to grow soil first and afterwards I plant fruit trees and food. Please keep these informative videos coming.

  • @richardkrug6855
    @richardkrug6855 Před 6 lety

    Excellent video and topic! It confirmed an inspiration I had many weeks ago to cover my entire backyard (which was pure hardpan) with a layer of compost. It took 10 pickup loads, or about 10 cubic yards to cover the backyard with about one inch of compost. Will repeat the process after the leaves have fallen from my trees this Fall, which will give me two inches of compost on top of the hardpan. Then plan on covering all that compost with two inches of mulch. From just the one inch of compost, the hardpan after just 6 weeks or so, has started to become moist and loose - like real soil! Keep up the good work! It really is all about the soil.

  • @nickthegardener.1120
    @nickthegardener.1120 Před rokem

    Love it! Am now doing it! Soil food web 💚👍😁🙏

  • @saltlifess6226
    @saltlifess6226 Před 2 lety

    I'm also spraying compost tea.

  • @bamb33na
    @bamb33na Před 2 lety

    Thank you!

  • @sunnysacto
    @sunnysacto Před 5 lety +5

    years of wood chip restored heavy clay soil to organic balance, the only issue is many don't want to wait years for soil to recover naturally.

    • @jamesprigioni
      @jamesprigioni  Před 5 lety +1

      Sooo true my friend. Everyone wants a quick fix

    • @sharronlee4641
      @sharronlee4641 Před 4 lety

      I am in Kansas. Eastern Kansas in a 40 year old subdivision on a lot that slopes in 2 directions. Hard pan and clay. I have a tiny kitchen garden. I compost everything for the soil for the kitchen garden. Thanks to your videos I see the way out of this bad soil problem. Thank you so much. Also I put the kitchen waste in the freezer each night. Then to the compost bin in the morning. It cuts the breakdown time a lot. A million thanks. Woodchips her I come.

  • @cgh353
    @cgh353 Před 6 lety

    In my community garden 3 years ago it was clay. but with wood chips and nitrogen rich matter mixed in. Now its like 8 inches deep of black rich soil before you hit the mineral and moisture-rich clay layer.
    Now I use my pathways as worms beds and screen the material for more soil.since i screen the path ways i keep it weed free. if you do it all right.you will make more soil then you know what to do with.

  • @lxmzhg
    @lxmzhg Před 5 lety +1

    I lhave 1 acre. After I started improving my soil, I had an infestation of moles. If they are beneficial to the soil & garden, then no problem, but if not then I need to find a way to get rid of them.

    • @brettmagnuson8318
      @brettmagnuson8318 Před 5 lety

      look into the wire tek 1001 easyset mole eliminator trap. I put it in the ground and within 20 minutes it worked.

  • @georgiawilliams3460
    @georgiawilliams3460 Před 3 lety

    Love your vibes, great vid. Thankyou

  • @haffeezasmith9969
    @haffeezasmith9969 Před 2 lety

    Thank you.

  • @jameshscameron2246
    @jameshscameron2246 Před 3 lety

    thnx james, love learning from u and ur dog

  • @jeannechin5052
    @jeannechin5052 Před 3 lety

    Thank you! Such good information!

  • @tinanuse-tolar4916
    @tinanuse-tolar4916 Před 6 lety +2

    On my next trip back up to NJ, I'd love to tour your Forest.

  • @sammorris2389
    @sammorris2389 Před 6 lety

    So awesome me and my gf watch your videos all the time, love the energy!!!! We are turning our desert back yard in west texas into a food forest. But with our lack of tress, and bountyfull used animal bedding we laid down a layer of that. And after almost a month of 100+ days no rain full sun i havent watered my plants yet they are so healthy and alive. we are on our way to createing our own homestead, with alot of help from all of your videos!!

  • @angielima111
    @angielima111 Před 5 lety +1

    thanks so much for this great info, you're very effective at communicating the facts! Keep it going, we need you here.

  • @wanda409
    @wanda409 Před 6 lety

    WOW! so much GREAT information....down to the nitty-gritty of soil life.

  • @Sabijans
    @Sabijans Před 6 lety

    Simple and clear explanation. Thank you! I have no garden of my own but am working in the garden of a family member. It's interesting and challenging to try to implement permaculture principles while sharing a space with other people that know "conventional" gardening. Besides that, the time I can invest in the garden is limited. This is creating a system where I have to bargain for some permaculture elements without being too invasive for the other gardener. Currently, I believe that in such a scenario, short term there should be some allowances for disrupting the soil to keep the interest of the other gardener(s) who are used to this, and slowly move towards healthier soil... A layer of mulch for the paths and some areas with clover or prettier deep-rooted plants might still have a long-term impact?

  • @akammerman
    @akammerman Před 6 lety

    I've read that Daikon or Tillage Radish is a great way to organically drill your soil.

  • @soniasamivillin743
    @soniasamivillin743 Před 2 lety

    Lovely video and lovely garden. It's very reasurring as I've been throwing small pieces of leftover vegetables in the garden :)

  • @davidlillecrapp2960
    @davidlillecrapp2960 Před 3 lety

    If the soil is hard and compacted and horrible to begin with; I will always till it first before beginning the layering process. I’ve had good success with hugulkulture