Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.

Give Me Fertility, Or I'll Get it Myself! // Contaminated Soil

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2022
  • linktr.ee/perm... Our NEW Website: permapasturesf... Swale Workshop: selfreliancefe...
    John's Channel: selfreliancefe...
    Biosludged: www.brighteonf...
    Get $50 Off EMP Shield: www.empshield.com?coupon=perma
    Promo Code: perma
    Special Operations Equipment: / johnwillis1971
    Compost Tea: studio.youtube...
    TikTok: / permapasturesfarm
    Comfrey for sale: www.permapastu...
    Chicken Processing Online Course: sowtheland.com...
    Harvest Right Freeze Dryer: affiliates.har...
    Bone Sauce: www.permapastu...
    Spoons for Sale: www.permapastu...
    Commission your own Spoon/Bowl:
    Email - permapasturesfarm@gmail.com
    IG - / permapasturesfarm
    T-Shirts for sale: www.bonfire.co...
    Support the channel here: / permapasturesfarm
    Instagram: / permapasturesfarm

Komentáře • 518

  • @foodallergyblessed3332
    @foodallergyblessed3332 Před 2 lety +65

    I am one of those who bought contaminated soil! It killed many of my plants and most of the seeds never bore fruit. After contacting the company, I was told I would get a full refund. I am very grateful and thankful. However, there’s now a lingering thought in my mind, will it happen again? I absolutely think ALL THIS is on purpose….. THANK YOU for showing people like me HOW!! Knowledge is POWER!! Sending you blessings:)

  • @mamagrotgrows
    @mamagrotgrows Před 2 lety +53

    Jess from Roots and Refuge recently got hit wit this problem. She has some interesting plans to help remediate her soil, because she is determined to find a solution to help people recover from this scourge. She has some upcoming plans with mushrooms, and using plants to help detoxify the soil. Might be worth a look, if you're interested. She is another Believer, who is on fire for helping others.

    • @cuznclive2236
      @cuznclive2236 Před 2 lety +7

      "Jess from Roots and Refuge recently got hit wit this problem." Following her/them as well. They are following a very long, one step at a time, approach to determine a best-fit and teachable method, which will be an amazing series to watch. The one thing I've yet to hear them talk about is char; maybe I missed it. Nonetheless, my theory is that a raw char will grab everything from the soil, including the unwanted contaminants, and hold it long enough, or until it becomes a non-issue.
      Having written, I still believe they should strip the beds and begin their science project in a less productive, and less expensive growing environment. That tunnel needs food growing to recover costs.

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +9

      I will have to check her out

    • @mamagrotgrows
      @mamagrotgrows Před 2 lety +7

      The company that they got the soil from has provided them with activated charcoal, and given them a full refund as well, thankfully.

    • @RaechelleJ
      @RaechelleJ Před 2 lety +2

      I heard pumkons are a good detox for soil remedies

    • @sujo0603
      @sujo0603 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, I watched that episode. I really like these channels that have a focus on teaching and sharing.

  • @victoriajohnson3034
    @victoriajohnson3034 Před 2 lety +71

    Don't know if this helps anyone. I build and build my garden beds just before winter for the next year. Letting the soil sit a few months over winter seems to help me get good crops. Learned this from my grandpa.

    • @ladyryan902
      @ladyryan902 Před 2 lety +14

      Victoria..i learned the same from my grands..i was hit with herbicide hay 2 years ago n heartbroken I started treating it myself then let it sit. Last year I had 117 tomatoes growing in the same spot...letting it sit treating it does work😃

    • @victoriajohnson3034
      @victoriajohnson3034 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ladyryan902 yep!

    • @gafairbanks2434
      @gafairbanks2434 Před 2 lety +4

      DEFINITELY! PLAN AHEAD. !
      ENZYMES NEED TIME TO DO THEIR WORK.
      Like weeding, you need to remove them before seeding out!! SO it takes a few years but the end result is so worth it 🥰

    • @debrasfrugallife3703
      @debrasfrugallife3703 Před 2 lety

      Yep I do the same. Helps alot from having to deal with it in the summer heat as well

    • @GLORYWIELDERS
      @GLORYWIELDERS Před 10 měsíci +3

      It's what they used to call "letting the ground lie fallow". There was a time you weren't able to go out and buy amendments, so you would rotate crops. If you had three fields, one year you let one lie fallow, then you rotate the next year let another one lie fallow, then the 3rd year, the 3rd field rest, soluch that every third year they're lying fallow/resting/regenerating. If ground has been destroyed for any reason, a 7 year fallow period will completely regenerate the soil to its natural health. I believe it's also a requirement for organic farms to be certified. Of course this is if you have larger area and lots of fields, but in those days that's not a problem. If you were going to live you had to have as much field as you can get! 😘🙏

  • @sandyphillips6636
    @sandyphillips6636 Před 2 lety +61

    I agree with every point you've made! I am not a conspiracy theorist. I deal only in the cold, hard truth! Something is going on. Facts, not theory.

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +2

      I’m right there with you Sandy

    • @VickiSchwarz
      @VickiSchwarz Před 2 lety +3

      Don't worry about the fertilizer building exploding, or food storage burning. Or subsidies farmers having to plow under

  • @mio.giardino
    @mio.giardino Před 2 lety +32

    I can’t tell you how much of a sigh of relief I breathed when I had several beans that I planted, by seeds pop up in the soil I bought. They are at several leaves now so I know it’s good. Should I ever be blessed with land, chickens will be my first critter then it’ll be 2 feeder pigs.
    There’s a saying that says “there’s no such thing as coincidences” and to the ones that think we are wearing tinfoil hats, I say, “it’s better to wear a hat then be willfully blind”.

    • @cathleendell8111
      @cathleendell8111 Před 2 lety +3

      Absolutely! I prefer a hat over blinders any day!!!!!

  • @jtharp9265
    @jtharp9265 Před 2 lety +3

    Amen , Mr. Billy - They were widening our main road to 4 lanes from 2 - also a piece of land that cut down a bunch of trees , I stopped by there & asked the workers , could I please Get some wood chips & Dirt , along with several pallets - to put my grow bags & pots to sit on.
    They said Mam please come take what you want ....
    Its so TRUE , GO ASK YOU SHALL RECIEVE !!! AMEN .
    Mrs JosetteTharp
    Montgomery County , Texas 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @sheilafade2016
    @sheilafade2016 Před 2 lety +11

    Yep they are putting junk in the atmosphere, yep gotta try, that looks like my tomatoes

  • @grdelawter4266
    @grdelawter4266 Před 2 lety +11

    I love your ideas Billy! I bought an old lawn & leaf vacuum trailer to pull behind my riding mower in 2019 at auction for $200. After some repairs and a new hose, it worked. It holds 1-1/2 cubic yards full of fresh ground up leaves. I dump into a pile after refilling it a dozen more times. I then put it into round pile inside 48”X2X4 welded wire fence cut 12’ long to make about 4’ by 4’. I watered it as I filled it, and refilled it again and again as it broke down. I’ve learned everything I can compost, and add it to the pile with chicken manure. These began in the fall last year and I can tell I’ll have great leaf mold/compost in the spring of ‘23. Probably about 3 yards total from several piles. I don’t have any cow manure and no one locally will part with any. I don’t own a truck, but I’m making it happen!

    • @lynnwright8975
      @lynnwright8975 Před 2 lety +3

      I didn't own a truck when I first started gardening. There was a person giving away horse manure, so I bought a big tarp and made a liner in my trunk. I shoveled out a bunch, then pulled the tarp out with just a little bit of manure still in it. I dumped it on the pile. I didn't lose a drop of manure and kept my trunk clean. If you can borrow a truck. Go after a couple of loads and split it with the owner of the truck.

  • @realjoanna
    @realjoanna Před 2 lety +7

    "If you're not much of a reader, get ready for disappointment. " 🤣👍🤛

    • @vickisavage8929
      @vickisavage8929 Před 2 lety +1

      If’n y’all cain’t read it for yourself, find someone who will read it to you. Excuses are like a-holes. Everybody has them and they all stink.

  • @kellybesse4625
    @kellybesse4625 Před 2 lety +61

    I hate that this is happening. But I love that so many creators are addressing the issue. In Jess’s recent devotional, she mentioned a coming storm. Well, put enough raindrops together and that’s exactly what you’ll end up with. Proud to #bearaindrop!!!

  • @cathleendell8111
    @cathleendell8111 Před 2 lety +16

    Perfect timing for our garden. This growing season is our Sabbath rest for our garden. Everything I’ve been doing around here has been centered around healthy land.
    It is absolutely disheartening that at every turn we are challenged by outside influences. You know when our Father tells us to be “set apart”? I’m finding that means in all areas of our lives. Finding holistic God given ways to “set apart” our land means to not bring in any “outside” contamination into the land.
    And for those who won’t (not can’t) read in order to learn ….. it is written….. He who doesn’t work doesn’t eat. Reading is part of the work my friend.
    Carry on brother ya’ll are on point!!!

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you very much Cathleen!

    • @Sunnytrailrunner
      @Sunnytrailrunner Před 2 lety +2

      Hey There, Cathleen❗️I read your wise comments & have a quick question for you. If you have enough time to answer it, I’d be most grateful. QUESTION: With your term “Sabbath rest,” did you mean that you’re not growing a garden this season, as in once every seven years?

    • @cathleendell8111
      @cathleendell8111 Před 2 lety

      @@Sunnytrailrunner yes Ma’am, that is what I mean.

  • @shineyrocks390
    @shineyrocks390 Před 2 lety +56

    You always bring up some really good power point discussion. People had best start believing conspiracy cause it's coming true. Thank you 👍

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +7

      It definitely is my friend

    • @shineyrocks390
      @shineyrocks390 Před 2 lety

      @@PermaPasturesFarm21 when you tell the truth now, you get labeled. If you believe the lies you get labeled. If you go against the grain you get labeled. If you believe the Earth is flat and hollow you get labeled. It seems all these labels are leading up to something else. Don't follow the yellow brick road man stay on the straight and narrow path that will lead us home. This Earth is toast just waiting to burn.

    • @sunshinedayz2172
      @sunshinedayz2172 Před 2 lety

      The bible is filled with real conspiracies! From beginning to end..why should we believe otherwise?

    • @GLORYWIELDERS
      @GLORYWIELDERS Před 10 měsíci

      My favorite meme is that" I need new conspiracy theories because all my old ones have come true!" You're not theories, they're plots, like somebody noted that they are strategic plans. I like what the other person on here said, they're just exposed! 😘👍🙏❤️

  • @0177Mia
    @0177Mia Před 11 měsíci +1

    Sadly, we had really JACKED UP soil from LOWE'S. Full of bugs, not right on nitro, and GRUBS! our chickens helped after it was so jacked. We started a compost pile, and we're expanding a little at a time. Ty for giving us the right direction to research what we need to do! Stay diligent and BOTR!

  • @1rachp
    @1rachp Před 2 lety +12

    I am so sorry this has happened to you, but thankful you have a mind to fix it. Jess at Roots and Refuge is having the same problem. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.

  • @kirkwilson10
    @kirkwilson10 Před 2 lety +8

    Billy,
    I don't follow but a very few CZcamsrs for several reasons, but I'm glad I found you thanks to the Farm Where You Live event. In my presentation there, I shared that we'd moved onto tainted soil in 2019 unknowingly. It has been a process of using activated charcoal, Garrett Juice, orange oil, root crops and solarization but the improvement is obvious. We use the meat birds to establish garden beds. If I had known we had pesticide runoff areas from next door I would not have utilized the tarps over the areas being established because I truly believe I unknowingly protected the tainted areas from rain and sun that would have helped detox the soil. You are spot on....MAKE YOUR OWN COMPOST!

  • @rrittenhouse
    @rrittenhouse Před 2 lety +17

    I bought "10 yards" of compost this year and I received like 5 yards. It was full of plastics, roots, some fence chunks (probably treated), and even a couple rubber belts from vehicles. Needless to say I got my money back from that junk. I had issues early on with things growing but now things are starting to take off a little more, but things are late for sure. I have started building my compost on my own for next year. I doubt i'll have 10 yards worth but I'm doing what I can. I have no proof that there's anything nasty in the soil but I probably should look into that as well.

    • @crabbiecakes5663
      @crabbiecakes5663 Před 2 lety

      I'm making my own compost now. Grass clippings, cypress mulch/wood chips, dirt and fish emulsion. I use my rototiller to turn it, it looks really nice.

  • @ladyryan902
    @ladyryan902 Před 2 lety +2

    Boy is it ever a lot of work Billy!! I can't make hay for my animals so I buy it in advance n pile it in direct sun n cover it with black plastic bags💐

    • @ladyryan902
      @ladyryan902 Před 2 lety

      Sorry hit wrong button..i was trying to say that I let it sit for months before I use it for animals..ive gotten hot mulch from the dump built a garden n let it sit covered 6 months...i also throw lawn lime n Epsom salt eggshells over it once a month..so far it worked..thank God

  • @elledan
    @elledan Před 2 lety +8

    on point. again. props for dealing in solutions and not just complaints.

  • @agapefield
    @agapefield Před rokem +1

    We had a 1/2 acre pond dug and the man who dug it piled all of the topsoil in our garden area and put the 60/40 & the clay for our driveways & future metal home pad.

  • @S.Kay.Steffy
    @S.Kay.Steffy Před 2 lety +19

    FINALLY…thank you for addressing the issue that this is NO accident!

  • @Linda-tp5ik
    @Linda-tp5ik Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you for your help. I bought 2 pallets of Kellogg soil and it is contaminated, tomatoes , all the leaves are curled some so tight you can’t see the top of the leaves. I have planted abound 75 bean plants and they just die. If people in the comments want to say I am nuts go ahead, but I believe this was planned. HOW MANY COINCIDENCES BEFORE IT BECOMES MATHEMATICALLY IMPOSSIBLE?
    Thank you for your help, and I will be working hard to fix this.

  • @lleestimer2547
    @lleestimer2547 Před 2 lety +6

    we do deep litter in the barn. clean out usually in spring (late this year) what comes out of the barn is matted, soiled bedding from cows sheep and goats. I put this on weedy places thick enough to cover everything. A couple of inches of soil and in just a few months it is the most beautiful soil. It's a bit too hot to plant in straight out of the barn, but well worth getting done for fall crops or even next years garden.

  • @thedouglaspodcast
    @thedouglaspodcast Před 9 měsíci +1

    Could not possibly agree more with your intro! Not only do I agree with you and hear you, but I know what you’re saying to be fact. *THANK you* for speaking on this. I know it doesn’t go without judgment or ridicule. So it’s much appreciated when people saying that dreaded CT word 🙄 frustrating nonetheless. But you info shared is much appreciated ♥️♥️♥️

  • @puppylover8991
    @puppylover8991 Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you Billy for addressing this. Yes it's being talked about on a few channels but only a couple are providing clear solutions. Many of us can't afford to purchase soil again during this time...and what would we do with the contaminated soil. My goal is to fix the soil that is bad. Yes, its a long process but the land needs healing. Keep doing what you're doing! We need the help

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety

      Thank you so much my friend and I hope your soil turns back around quickly

  • @echothecat6748
    @echothecat6748 Před 2 lety +3

    It's because the last administration loosened regulations across the board. That's why we had contaminated baby formula, unusual high incidences of listeria and salmonella in food, and of course our fertilizer and soil purchase commercially. No checks, no balances. It's dangerous.

  • @sunshinedayz2172
    @sunshinedayz2172 Před 2 lety +1

    Oh my goodness now I know why some of the areas of my garden isn't doing so good..
    Bless you!

  • @zechariahsteiger4325
    @zechariahsteiger4325 Před 2 lety +3

    Glad so see it! I’ve been playing since mid ‘18 and have been loving the success of Squad!

  • @elijahsfarmsteadjourney
    @elijahsfarmsteadjourney Před 2 lety +10

    Ive been watching videos of geoff lawton and the weedy garden making swales and i really like how they function. When i used to live in Arizona we used to have these mini canal like "swales" called Chinampas to help trap and disperse water but they where typically made with concrete so i definitely love the idea of swales. If you guys ever do an online in depth step by step swale class id be very inclined to take it..if i lived in the usa still id attend the self relience festival and swale class but i live in canada..absolutely love what yall are doing and keep being passionate about permaculture cuz its my passion too

  • @lorieduncan3440
    @lorieduncan3440 Před 2 lety +4

    we spent 180.oo on soil to fill our green stalks and it was a waste of money, nothing that had schultz soil grew. What a disapointment. We live in town and the only garden I have is the green stalk. It's a horrible thing to spend what you can to grow food and have this happen. I'm sorry for everyone that this has happened to. Thank you for the information that you give.

  • @crabbiecakes5663
    @crabbiecakes5663 Před 2 lety +3

    It's probably Grazon. Grazon has hit farmers in US, Canada, Australia, Uk. Grazon is spread on grass crops, hay, corn as a broadleaf weed killer. The hay and corn pick it up and the cows and horses eat it and it passes through them in their manure. I've read it takes 3-5 years for it to leave the soil.

  • @montanaskye3227
    @montanaskye3227 Před 2 lety +7

    Nothing going on is a coincidence; its ALL by design!!! We have to be blind not to see it!!
    Keep up the great work Brother!!!

  • @oleboy4332
    @oleboy4332 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Just now came across your video. I spent several hundred dollars on raised garden beds and had four cubic yards of garden mix from a local, reputable company. Large company. Had it delivered and spread. Bought a couple hundred dollars of plants and planted them. All of my tomato plants got curly top disease, most likely from chemical weed killers. Unbelievable. I’m pissed

  • @lawsonlawnandfarm8073
    @lawsonlawnandfarm8073 Před 2 lety +7

    I feel the same way my friend… NONE of this stuff is an accident. It’s by design for sure. It’s apparently not going to stop any time soon seems that every day we find out something else that’s interrupting the food chain

  • @prchocolate80
    @prchocolate80 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for offering simple ways to find fertility. I live on an 1/8 acre in suburbia out side of Chicago. Uncontaminated resources are difficult to find. Last fall I brought home around 20 bags of leaves. Working on composting them, ground up a few bags to use as mulch. Could have used more. In order to up pot seedlings I bought a bag of potting soil. Noticing the peppers top set of leaves are wrinkled not growing like the leaves below them 🙁 at least I saved the larger containers from last year with spent potting soil thinking I just need to add slow release fertilizer to the soil and some organic material to pot my peppers after I remove the bad potting soil from the root ball. Would love to raise chickens can’t figure out some of the logistics.

  • @christinereeves3796
    @christinereeves3796 Před 2 lety +3

    We have healed our bag soil that we put into our greenhouse. Many prayers and and added Organic matter. We are also seeing chemical type things happening every time it rains. 🤨 (🤔)
    Keep growing soil!🙏❤️

  • @farmer-red488
    @farmer-red488 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello Billy and family.. I have a personal experience with human sludge here at our farm.. back 12 years ago we were dairy farmers and where we live is directly across the road from our local municipal office/garage and fire department. We'll our wonderful lib gvnmt was dishing out funds for "piloted projects" and our municipal officials raised their hands and took the cash to work on this project. Well to our dismay they decided to build these sludge tanks adjacent to the garage across the road from our dairy farm. Well our marketing board got wind of this taking place and informed us that IF our water table becomes contaminated due to their "pilot project" and the milk becomes contaminated due to that activity, we as the producer would be held liable for the loss of milk in the tanker that collects the milk every 2nd day. So we approached our township officials and brought these serious issues to their attention, and they didn't want to hear anything we had to bring to the table as it would have affected someone's pocket book(the mayor is also the business owner who received the contract to do the job!!)) So due to the severe nature of this situation we consulted our legal team and grassroots organizations and brought it to a halt quickly. During one of the meetings where our legal team along with scientists and others who have been directly involved in such projects and knew the firsthand destruction that that does to the land in all ots forms AND also the fact that our farm had been there and was the first dairy farm in our community, that they should heed our concerns. Unfortunately it fell on deaf ears so I became a rebel and deliver them a load of ripe fresh cow manure and dumped it during their debate.. to say that it for their attention is an understatement lol... I was charged with public mischief and ordered to pay a cleanup fine but that got thrown out and my lawyer incurred the restitution so I would have a squeaky clean record.. the project was halted, scientists on their side said the location all of a sudden wasn't adequate and the whole project was over but not before costing the taxpayers 350,00$ OVER the original cost analysis.. the importance of healthy soil is crucial and nothing to be foolinh with. Someone had to stand up and I'm glad I did and would do it again if needed.

  • @PDingenen65
    @PDingenen65 Před rokem +1

    Yup yup. My husband and I just said it. You have to make your own soil now.

  • @croberts2358
    @croberts2358 Před 2 lety +2

    We're saving all of our chicken manure and we bought a small chipper shredder.

  • @Carolynfoodforest355
    @Carolynfoodforest355 Před 2 lety +3

    David the Good has talked about herbicide contamination for several years. He even talks about methods to pull out the aminopurilyds. Check out what he does with homemade uncharged charcoal.

  • @tpaw6908
    @tpaw6908 Před 2 lety +7

    Amen Billy , soil, seed compost all one year. Trees getting diseases that have never been before. Thank you Bly . You and Michelle thank you I'll be celebrating my Freedom on the 4th because of heros like you. God bless all the Vets Happy 4th of Freedom day.

  • @poppyjones1892
    @poppyjones1892 Před 5 měsíci +1

    People are ether awake or awoke . Lets have a Green Healthy Earth 😊

  • @highroad3580
    @highroad3580 Před 2 lety +1

    Once a year we clean up the neighbors composted horse manure and spent hay for our annual spring gardening, mixed with the shed rakings from the goats. We all keep our animals chem free so it is the best stuff for the tilled and now no till gardens. A year ago we placed several cart loads of the goat shed manure and hay in a pile at the edge of the hardwoods then started using it at about 6 months composted. Beautiful dark soil perfect to mix with our garden dirt for starting seeds. Spring before last I bought the usual box store organic potting soil and the seeds that grew were stunted at best. Spring 2022 we used our mixture with stunning results. Thank you for helping gardeners find the solutions!

  • @LoriSeaborg
    @LoriSeaborg Před 2 lety +18

    I'm sorry the soil was poisoned; I'm sure it was disheartening for y'all since you'd just built that hoophouse. I did research on aminopyralids after seeing it suggested from European commenters after Roots & Refuge was wondering what's wrong with their Soil3 compost (the company acknowledged it, so their name is out there). I found a 2009 letter written by Dow AgroSciences, the owner of the herbicide, to a "gardener enthusiast," and not only is it alarming they have known of this impact on home gardeners for over a decade, but they're also very much not sorry: "In those rare cases where garden plants have been damaged by aminopyralid, the herbicide was introduced through animal manure that should not have been used as a garden fertilizer soil amendment. Aminopyralid is approved for use on some food crops but can harm the growth of many garden. Any introduction into a garden is due to a failure to follow label directions. " Typical Big Ag response, right?

    • @LoriSeaborg
      @LoriSeaborg Před 2 lety

      source: www.ncagr.gov/spcap/pesticides/documents/AminopyralidGardenerResponse29Apr09.pdf This "letter" includes a list of plants that would be affected, what will fix it (microorganisms), and photos.

    • @tracycrider7778
      @tracycrider7778 Před 2 lety +2

      Sick

    • @busygirl2681
      @busygirl2681 Před 2 lety

      WOW!! That's absolutely disturbing what these crazy people will do. Thanks for sharing great info.

  • @LeaC816
    @LeaC816 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks, Billy!! You always share truly helpful stuff. Y’all are so greatly appreciated!! I’m sorry you are getting trolls but I have always assumed when someone on here starts getting haters it’s because they are doing something right! Much love from Texas!!

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety

      Thank you so much for the vote of encouragement Lea! I hope things are all good for you back there in Texas

  • @zachdouglas1752
    @zachdouglas1752 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for all of the info you put out, been implementing a lot of your methods on my property! Assuming that what is being applied are petrochemical type pesticides/herbicides/etc, from what I understand these are derived from the ingredients used to make napalm. The remediation for heavy napalm-affected sites are large concrete buildings where they essentially incinerate the chemicals in the affected soils. Composting may act in a similar manner but at a lower heat over a longer time while also leveraging soil microbes.

  • @mrs.h3
    @mrs.h3 Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you for your honesty and all the work and info you are handing out. God bless!

  • @thethingonthedoorstep3464

    I live in the city and my yard was clay when I bought my home. My neighbor had the perfect lawn and sprayed chemicals constantly. I left my property alone, never raking. My neighbor finally moved and my soil is much better. I planted potatoes and they were doing good. I have a few trees damaged by storms and planned on cutting them for mulch. The electric company decided to spray them,even one and two foot high trees I keep trimmed. They damaged trees on half of my property and killed my potatoes. They refuse to tell me what they used but it's been several weeks and I can still smell it. I also make compost that I now won't use. I bought bags of hummus, compost and manure and then saw the soil issue on another channel. I don't have the money to fix this and feel pretty defeated. Everytime I go out in my yard I just feel sick

  • @blujen1642
    @blujen1642 Před 2 lety +2

    I have friends in Texas and that snowstorm snow wasn't snow. Ot discoloured cement pads and killed trees. That 'snow' was rod shaped. We have to Command this stuff does not come onto our lands and enthrone the Lord over the weather. Really appreciate these solutions \0/

  • @ricardodecubas522
    @ricardodecubas522 Před 2 lety +4

    The sun is the best anti-bacterial source that exists.

  • @sisterabagail457
    @sisterabagail457 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes...you can use some of that Top Soil AND The Ashes of the Trees they burn, to correct and detox your soil! Then turn and churn your soil with the the new soil & ashes.

  • @faintlyartistic7803
    @faintlyartistic7803 Před 2 lety +2

    I have made 1,000's of soil blocks in the past using my own compost and had nearly 100% germination. Fast forward to this year, new property, purchased compost for my soil blocks. Major problems with germination, even some new seeds not germinating at all. It has been frustrating.

  • @oddlycreatetiff8920
    @oddlycreatetiff8920 Před 2 lety +1

    It's wonderful and rare to find gardening knowledge AND knowledge of 'their' plans in the same channel. Roots and Refuge was the closest thing I've found until now. Subbed, and looking forward to watching more.

  • @pavlovssheep5548
    @pavlovssheep5548 Před 2 lety +2

    fungi/mushrooms that eat wood and other decaying matter are good at breaking down contaminated soil , due to there adaptive enzymes , they can change the enzymes they produce in order to digest new food sources , so could add extra wood chips and inoculate it with for example wine cap mushroom or oyster mushroom

  • @williamzegley2272
    @williamzegley2272 Před 2 lety +1

    Back in WYO after a tour of the Eastern USA. Thank you and all our new friends and acquittances that we met during our travel time. It was well worth the wait and trip. Just like Arnold, we'll be back in TN and we will be visiting others that we met while at the festival. It might have taken a while to meet face to face but I'ld do it again and pay double or more. You and William have the gift for teaching, it was a pleasure just to be around and hear the way you interreact others.
    Have some friends that have the same issues with poor soil additives mulch and compost; it happens just just as Danny stated last year. A good point to establish local barter options, like we were talking about at the festival. God Bless from WYO

  • @peoriafan1
    @peoriafan1 Před 2 lety +5

    Keep it going brotha!Don’t hold back on anything.I’m praying for you brother.

  • @psalms125selah
    @psalms125selah Před 2 lety +26

    We are not "conspiracy theorists", we are "conspiracy exposers"! Ephesians 5:11-17

  • @QuiChiYang2
    @QuiChiYang2 Před 2 lety +2

    Currently I live in a development, home association (garden Nazis) got all kinda no, no. I got my own no, no The littl space I got, I make work well, even tho they spay around our homes. More mulch, more JADAM, more fungal mass. I made friends w/da Chinapa-near-rows & ask them not to spray around my area. Just hand out bottles of water. I compost leaves, palm fronds, dead fruit. Fertility is not bought its made, microorganisms, bacteria, fungi & keen observation. For every finger you point at, 10 more are pointing right-back @chew. You wanna eat, you gotta work for it...

  • @MichaelEReed-fb2po
    @MichaelEReed-fb2po Před 2 lety +11

    Love the shirt Billy!
    Hang in there my friend. My grandmother always said, "You can't fix stupid". Carry on my friend

  • @michaelhoggard591
    @michaelhoggard591 Před 2 lety +3

    Great info Billy!

  • @bob.hudson
    @bob.hudson Před 2 lety +5

    Most commercial compost simply do not have the biology. Plus you do not know where they get there ressources from. It is really really hard to find a good compost. Here we make it ourselves and has transformed our property to the point that people ask us how we do it. There is no secret, learn soil micro biology and do it yourself.

  • @Thirddaybackyardgarden
    @Thirddaybackyardgarden Před 2 lety +4

    I enjoy your energy and the information you have presented. I have started to save piles of leaves from the fall, wood chips and I have a small compost bin in my yard. Also my husband is a truck driver (low boy driver) and he takes me to a few sites that have amazing items for my garden that you mentioned 😉

  • @BearBottomHomestead
    @BearBottomHomestead Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for being truthful. Today’s society is so use to seeing everything perfect, life isn’t that way. “Fail fast” is a saying I heard a while ago and it has been a game changer for me. Find out what doesn’t work quickly, adapt, change, and move on. My bagged soil has been a issue as well, I just thought I may have gotten a bad batch or something. Glad(not glad) to see it wasn’t just happening to me.

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety

      We are definitely going to have to start thinking outside the box my friend!

  • @janhatchett7834
    @janhatchett7834 Před 2 lety +5

    I think we got some tainted soil this year. Working to up my composting game!

  • @Hatfield_Country
    @Hatfield_Country Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for sharing your experience with us. Something is definitely going on with these soils and composts. I've been putting off starting a compost of my own, but this is all the motivation I need.

  • @FullyAliveLLC
    @FullyAliveLLC Před 2 lety +1

    Amen. Willful ignorance is stupidity and in an age of information ignorance is a choice.

  • @beetee3272
    @beetee3272 Před 2 lety +7

    You know it is deliberate! Not only going after the manufactured food but the home grower as well!

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +1

      I totally agree my friend

    • @andreaberryman5354
      @andreaberryman5354 Před rokem

      No, it's not a consiracy. It's that herbicides do not break down in hot compost the way it was hoped. Oh-and people are lazy sh*ts and throw trash in their recycling and yard waste carts. It's PEOPLE ruining compost and manure. All of the chemicals used in farms and yards.

  • @homesteadingpastor
    @homesteadingpastor Před 2 lety +5

    Great informative video my brother! We know of a lot folks as well that are having this same issue you are talking about. Keep telling it my friend. Love that shirt!! 👍🏻💪🏻👍🏻💪🏻😇🙏🏻

  • @potpourrioflife
    @potpourrioflife Před 2 lety +3

    This awesome. I am so grateful in how God has shown us different soil options right within our 1/4 acre lot. Yes we have purchased some soil, yet we have used two large bins of our compost, rototilling some new areas and planting veggies within our flower/herb beds.
    I did go to the farm stand yesterday to try new prep options while making sure that if we have problems we have food.
    There is JOY in the Lord when He shows us the way. Not just to Him but also in how we can grow our food.
    I was thinking of using an old white sheet to lightly cover the hot areas, in hopes of preventing plant burn out yet allow the sun to still filter thru. My theory is that when I worked on a farm as a young girl, I still got a tan thru those t-shirts. It won't hurt to try.
    Be blessed and know you are appreciated and prayed for.

  • @IandiBoats
    @IandiBoats Před 2 lety +1

    My chickens give me about 1 1/2 ft³ worth of beautiful soul every month. My kitchen compost/worm hill gives me another another cubic foot every 2 months. Chicken coop beading, leaves and grass gives me another half a cubic foot a month. And I live in the city on less than a quarter acre (9,000sf). I'm so grateful I'm able to create my own fertility.

  • @charlottepuglisi2893
    @charlottepuglisi2893 Před 2 lety +3

    Powerful video.

  • @ricardodecubas522
    @ricardodecubas522 Před 2 lety +8

    Definition of Conspiracy is a strategic plan!!!!

  • @rhondabarlow860
    @rhondabarlow860 Před 2 lety +1

    Last month I had the idea of asking the construction site near my house for a bucket of dirt. Your mentioning the idea gave me courage to ask for the dirt.

  • @patroot2536
    @patroot2536 Před rokem +1

    Appreciate all of your videos thank you ❤

  • @idahohoosier8989
    @idahohoosier8989 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank y'all. Always great info.
    Blessings, julie

  • @JH-oo5wt
    @JH-oo5wt Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for taking the time to address these issues. Very helpful! 👍

  • @surgerystudio7654
    @surgerystudio7654 Před 2 lety +3

    Self labeled conspiracy believer here, lol.
    I just had a theory while watching your video On my way to my local municipality to buy compost and soil feeling defeated before I even got there since that’s where I’ve been getting all my soil and compost. 🥴 I can’t compost quick enough and don’t have much space to do anything significant enough for this season so I figured I have no other choice.
    Anyway, as I was loading up my car with compost and soil a thought crossed my mind based on some previous gardening fails:
    I’m brand new to gardening, trying to prep for what’s coming and I’m in Texas. It’s been insanely hot and we haven’t had rain in a while and the sun has been brutalizing my little garden. So in the beginning I called myself planting all these seeds and putting them in a large Tupperware like container thinking it would be like a mini greenhouse. Needless to say I learned my first major lesson because nothing grew. I realized that instead of creating a greenhouse I made a sauna and sterilized my soil! Lol 😂
    As I was just loading my bags in my car I noticed how hot the bags were…..Is it possible that our soil isn’t any good because of the way it’s being kept? I can’t imagine how any beneficial fungi, rhizomes, nematodes, bacteria, or microbial life could survive in these super hot plastic bags baking in the heat outside stacked high and just waiting to be bought and brought home for use. We are just getting sterilized bags of pretty soil!
    I’m going to try and add a ton of bacteria etc back into it using the Biotone and compost teas and banana teas etc. any suggestions would be greatly welcomed🙏🏽 getting out my microscope 🔬 as well to see what if anything I can find.

    • @faintlyartistic7803
      @faintlyartistic7803 Před 2 lety +1

      Look into the Jadam method or Korean Natural Farming. I used the Jadam Microbial Solution this year which is very easy to make. I also used the pesticide formula and it is working wonders. I believe it is the future for small farmers and home gardeners.

    • @surgerystudio7654
      @surgerystudio7654 Před 2 lety +1

      @@faintlyartistic7803 thank you 😊!!!

  • @HippocratesGarden
    @HippocratesGarden Před 2 lety +3

    Don't just read, build and collect an honest to god library. If there's no power, I can read by sunlight and candlelight. Videos aren't gonna play if you got no power or Internet. The best place for knowlege, is in your head, the next best is in a book, at hand.

  • @dianetucker2711
    @dianetucker2711 Před 2 lety +1

    SUPERB video❣️Much appreciated.

  • @kennyjohnson6875
    @kennyjohnson6875 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Billy and good luck

  • @Fibers-Art-Food-Fundamentals

    Another content creator I watch for his great gardening in a city used some mushroom compost-same as he has used in the previous years-however, this time it did to his plants what your potatoes did. I believe he figured out it was too much salt, as apparently mushroom compost often has high levels of salt in it. He repeatedly flushed the beds with water and the plants recovered, but it took a while. Appreciate the natural basis of your videos and Perma-Culture in general.

  • @monikas5125
    @monikas5125 Před 2 lety +6

    We been working hard on our new property getting our compost done and learning as we go and thanks to your videos. 1 compost pile done and 2 more going . Thanks for everything

  • @helenehenkel
    @helenehenkel Před 2 lety +1

    Fortunately the bad soil issue has not affected me. Im glad you are addressing it. In my itty bitty garden I am applying many of the principles you teach & am having good results. Thank you for the information

  • @SouthernMiss87
    @SouthernMiss87 Před 2 lety +1

    I spent a bunch of time and money this late winter getting a new area of my yard ready for planting. I paid for a local dirt man to bring in a load of topsoil. I spread it around, bought a lot of trees, plants and seed. The only viable plants are at the fringe of the area, in my actual original dirt. This topsoil was obviously from a toxic dump. I’ll never do that again. Thank you Billy, I’ll try to make my own compost.

  • @billsalmon9562
    @billsalmon9562 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank billy keep up the good work

  • @emilydurkin4217
    @emilydurkin4217 Před 2 lety +3

    Wow! Thanks

  • @amyk6028
    @amyk6028 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for this video! My tomatoes, beans and peas have suffered greatly this summer. A neighbor dropped off a dump truck full of soil for me to fill my raised beds. BIG mistake. Don’t know how long it will affect my gardens but I am super frustrated that I paid for poisoned soil 😡

  • @ardenpeters4386
    @ardenpeters4386 Před 2 lety +1

    it's true up here in Idaho, also. Home Depot bagged soil is horrid. we got VERY lucky and a landscape place here has GOOD "raised beds". As well as the local hardware store has awesome bagged raised bed soil and compost. things are turning around... or died! 😢 working as fast as possible to build compost pile. til first snow stops process

  • @Dandelionhaven
    @Dandelionhaven Před 2 lety +3

    We’ve also discovered that our egg layers, meat birds & Quail have become more valuable for the manure to make compost. Meat & eggs are just a bonus! Closing the loop 🔁 on the homestead out of necessity

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety

      That’s what I’m talking about

    • @essencefarmstead
      @essencefarmstead Před 2 lety

      I keep my quail in a wood chipped ground and within 3 months it is broken down. You need to help turn it as quail don't scratch as deeply as chickens but it is my main source of compost moving forward.

  • @tinag183
    @tinag183 Před 2 lety +1

    Set up a new raised bed this Spring. Filled it with soil I purchased at Lowe's. Planted strong plants and within 3 days 90% died. The "survivors" tried to hang on but are struggling. Even the mint I transplanted is not growing. I blame the soil!

  • @andrewspeir5047
    @andrewspeir5047 Před 2 lety +3

    Love this video Billy! Appreciate all you guys do!

  • @keithtimelessacres
    @keithtimelessacres Před 2 lety +1

    This gets me mad to this problem has a solution but they won't do it. I had bought some bark mulch two years ago from a good place that I know. It did have a little dirt in it and when I put it around my plants most had died that was not in the grass family. I'm only an hour below you. This problem is every where. The one thing I tell everyone is do it God's way.Doing it Gods way is working hard using what you have and research places you want to buy from. Most local farmers will tell you if they are using any of these chemicals that are causing problems. Billy you can only teach what you can people will need to do some of the work on their own. Its a way we can work together and share what we learn to help each other out. Keep up the hard work and thank you for sharing what you know.

  • @leedalrymple737
    @leedalrymple737 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you! We are using our own compost that you have shown us to do. We have had no issues because we do it this way. We ordered the knife and comfrey salve! I am so stoked!

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you so much for your support Lee!

    • @leedalrymple737
      @leedalrymple737 Před 2 lety

      @@PermaPasturesFarm21 my pleasure you all out a part of our family life everyday. You truly are a blessing!

  • @sherrywilson472
    @sherrywilson472 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks Billy and William, wake up people. Believe what he is saying it is happening to too many of our crops this year. We are learning from perma pasture farms, in order to correct our problems. Got some harvest but taters and onions were small. Looking forward to learning more. Blessings from the Wilson's farms. 😃

  • @the2012fad
    @the2012fad Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you - everything you say makes perfect sense.

  • @mr.mikesart7111
    @mr.mikesart7111 Před 2 lety +1

    18 day compost works. Billy ain't lying.

  • @justinjames5216
    @justinjames5216 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks!

  • @ginawyatt8129
    @ginawyatt8129 Před 2 lety

    Trying to buy some land and prices are so out of reach. I am renting and gardening on a very small scale. Won't feed us in the long run because I don't have the acreage, but I feel better about the garden and food I am growing. I do my best to garden organically via permiculture and composting. This year I bought organic "compost" in bags from Home Depot. This stuff was months away from being finished. Yes, it added bulk to my soil, but my seeds had a very hard time germinating. I like your tip about sifting that crap to get soil for my seeds and should have done that. One thing I will do for my family is get more aggressive with making my own compost. Secondly, I'm going to try vermiculture on a small scale for my small garden. Looking for municipal compost sites is a great idea as well. Thank you for your passion and the truthfulness with which you told your story today.

  • @victoriajohnson3034
    @victoriajohnson3034 Před 2 lety +2

    The soil i have bought is packed full of bugs! Every kind of bugs! I get bugs are good, but this many is bad for garden soil!

  • @eu3682
    @eu3682 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for bring this to my attention. Now I have to figure out how to dispose of my malorganite properly.

  • @myfuturepuglife
    @myfuturepuglife Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for this.

    • @PermaPasturesFarm21
      @PermaPasturesFarm21  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for taking time out of your day to watch and respond my friend