Blast Your Soil with Biology: How to Make 5 Gallons of Compost Tea

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • Video Summary: Making compost tea gives you the ability to treat a large amount of plants or soil with tons of beneficial microbes using as little as 3 cups of compost. By pulling microbes off the surface of compost or vermicompost, then adding air and food to explode the numbers of those microbes, you can deliver the same biology as several cubic yards of high-biology compost.
    In this video, Steve brings in his Soil Nerd Troy to walk you through how to make a simple 5-gallon brew which can be used as-is or diluted to allow distribution over a larger surface area.
    Read All of Our Articles on Compost Tea
    urbanwormcompany.com/category...
    Read the Ultimate Guide to Vermicomposting at the Urban Worm Company!
    urbanwormcompany.com/vermicom...
    Timestamps:
    00:00 Video Start
    00:21 How you can explode the microbe population in your tea
    01:38 The setup for a good compost tea brew
    01:49 How to neutralize chlorine and chloramine in your brew
    03:30 A really inexpensive compost tea bag
    05:30 Our compost tea recipe: Compost, humic acid and fishydrolysate
    10:10 Why you want to massage and break up clumps of compost in your brew
    11:50 If fungi don't reproduce in the compost tea brew, why add a fungal food at all?
    14:59 How long should a brew last?
    17:50 Should you expect foam in a compost tea brew?
    18:46 Why you should NOT use air stones or bubble stones in a compost tea brew
    19:54 How to choose the right air pump for your compost tea brew
    About the Urban Worm Company
    Website: urbanwormcompany.com
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Komentáře • 86

  • @AlvinMcManus
    @AlvinMcManus Před rokem +9

    I've been using powdered ascorbic acid to neutralize the chloramines in my water along with a 2-3 hour aeration prior to adding the goodies. I am using a Bubble Snake (not stones) for the bucket. My brew bag is a 400micron bag that was 19 bucks and it's cleaned after every use. You don't use molasses, heh? What about liquid kelp? **Note the bucket should be below the pump to avoid any possibility of siphon action if you lose power during your brew. Just being prudent here. ** Thank you Troy for the easy to understand explanation of the process. This will help me brew better going forward.

  • @moonbastic
    @moonbastic Před rokem +5

    This is fascinating. I will probably never make tea, but I love learning about the process!

  • @antoniooswaldostoreljunior5039

    Thanks, Steve! Very many precious details.

  • @cindyskinner64
    @cindyskinner64 Před 4 měsíci

    Finally! A good use for the Bass-O-Matic from SNL 1970's!!! Really very useful video. Thank you!

  • @joanncrespo683
    @joanncrespo683 Před rokem

    thank you great job

  • @DaKineGardenStuff
    @DaKineGardenStuff Před rokem +12

    When is a good indication that your garden would benefit from the high biology from compost brew? How often should the brew be applied?

    • @DaKineGardenStuff
      @DaKineGardenStuff Před rokem

      @@UrbanWormCompany What does a visible clitellum have to do with compost tea? I am confused.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +2

      Sorry! That was meant for another video comment. As for an indication, I am not sure, but your soil and plants will likely always benefit from a good tea application. And you can't overdo it with tea as it will not burn your plants like regular N fertilizer.
      You might look for wilting or yellowing as an indication though.

    • @insAneTunA
      @insAneTunA Před 9 měsíci +3

      Another indicator could be when you have a lot of aphids and caterpillars. Let me explain it, because it is a bit complicated. In the most ideal situation a healthy plant that grows in the most ideal soil for that plant with the most ideal external conditions and the most ideal amount of water, is able to produce enough sugars to protect itself against aphids and other insects. Aphids and other insects are simply unable to digest the amount of sugar that healthy plants produce. If you have insects it is an indicator that the plant and the soil is not healthy and as a result the plant is not able to get enough nutrients. In other words, then your soil is "bad". The plant that is under attack from insects might look healthy, and your soil might look good, but when you measure the sugar content from the plant that is under attack it will show that it is less compared to the sugar content from a real healthy plant. So when you apply the tea, there is a good chance that the insects will disappear, because there will be enough micro organisms to convert enough nutrients for the plants.
      The micro organisms turn nutrients into plant available nutrients in exchange for sugars that they get from the roots from the plants. It is a symbiotic relation. Plants cannot just extract all the nutrients that they need from the soil. They need the micro organisms to do that for them, and only after the micro organisms have converted those nutrients the plants will be able to use that.
      Especially pots and hanging baskets and planters benefit from it. At least that is my experience. I use it for my entire garden, including the grass lawn. I have tried commercial liquid fertilizer for my hanging baskets, it worked for some flower varieties, but not for all. And I have a mixed basket so that wasn't working. After applying the worm tea a couple of times the flowers that were dying are recovering. So I call that a win.

    • @insAneTunA
      @insAneTunA Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@DaKineGardenStuff Another indicator. If you have planted fruits your fruits will taste much sweeter.

  • @stephaniechale6128
    @stephaniechale6128 Před rokem +2

    Great video. Maybe you could set aside some water (1 or so cups) and mix the humic powder in to make a slurry? Then add it to the bucket.

  • @anthonylux1838
    @anthonylux1838 Před 26 dny

    Steve - Thank you for your September 18, 2022 video titled "Blast Your Soil with Biology: How to Make 5 Gallons of Compost Tea". I have viewed many compost brew videos, but I learned things from Troy that I have never heard before. So valuable . . . Thank you for making the video, Steve!!! Just three questions for Troy. If he had amended the brew with kelp (contains hormones that promote root growth) and molasses (to feed bacteria moreso than fungi) how much would you dose for that 5 gallon pail. Lastly, does the brew require dilution upon application? I have burned plants before, but I did not utilize your recipe. Thank you for your kind consideration, Steve.

  • @theresarothenberger2264

    Will fish emulsion work as well! Thanks for all your time and info.

  • @garywillow6578
    @garywillow6578 Před rokem +3

    Great video. I also make L.A.B serum and my earthworms ( I compost for a long time in my bins) love the milk curds and then the curds bloom into fluffy white clouds to colonise my bins.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +2

      Thanks Gary! I’m going to have to look into this LAB serum stuff. Does that have to do with lactobaccilus?

    • @garywillow6578
      @garywillow6578 Před rokem

      @@UrbanWormCompany yes it is fermented rice wash added to milk to separate into lacto serum. So easy to make and the serum I drench my worm bin soil and the curds I lay on top. 24 hours and all the earthworms come up to feed. I use earthworms as I make living soil for my indoor garden and after composting everything I want I add earthworms and leave for a year+. Tried to introduce magic mushroom mycelium as I harvest this from my Welsh hills; but ended up with many Deaths cap mushrooms. Not quite what I was looking for.

  • @coupleofcruisers1710
    @coupleofcruisers1710 Před rokem

    Great Vid! Just ordered my Bin, Thanks Steve! Troy, do ever use Biochar in your Brew? Trying to add more Carbon in my tea base.. Thoughts?

  • @lylecasteel365
    @lylecasteel365 Před rokem +2

    Great video! I have seen some people dilute tea down but I have put it on my garden full strength. Seems like diluting it defeats the purpose. I had no isues with grasshoppers all summer.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +2

      Dilution allows you to spread the biology over a much larger surface area. More water equals more vehicles. Yes, you might get less biology per square inch but it's still a massive amount of biology.

  • @kellyhammel7722
    @kellyhammel7722 Před rokem +1

    We are in a drought should I wait until we get some moisture in the ground before I apply the tea to the lawn. Thanks

  • @Vermicompost
    @Vermicompost Před rokem +1

    Awesome video Steve & Troy!!! Lots of good info!! You guys would make for very entertaining lab partners in High School Biology class😂🤣😂🪱🪱🪱

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      Ha! The only think I remember from high school lab is hooking up the bunsen burner to a water source and shooting little streams of water all over the class.

  • @insAneTunA
    @insAneTunA Před 9 měsíci

    I have the same pump. I have cut 2 pieces from a rubber playground tile and I screwed that on both sides to a piece of wood. And then I screwed the pump to that, and now the vibration and the noise is much less. I still prefer the piston style pumps over the membrane pumps despite the noise and the vibration because they are more durable and reliable and they use less power. At least to my experience. Although this type of capacity is more suitable for a rain barrel. It is a bit overkill for a 5 gallon bucket. I have better results with an air stone. They do get clogged up over time, but it is easy to clean with a wire brush and then they are as good as new again. I get much much more microbial activity with the finer bubbles compared to not using the air stone. Watch my video.
    I also have a bucket filled with wood chips mixed with green bio mass and some water but not completely full with water, a bit inspired by the Johnson and Su bio reactor, which I can recommend to learn about. I've let that ferment for a while and after a couple of weeks I added the water from that bucket to my compost tea brew barrel, and I put some new water in my bucket with wood chips. As I understand it the wood chip compost tea is producing even more micro organisms as the vermi compost tea. So that way I have the best of both worlds. At least that is the idea. At first the fermenting wood chips and bio mass stinks pretty bad, but the bad smell goes away, and after that you can keep reusing it. And when you add the water from the fermenting wood chips to your compost tea brew the bad smell will also go away after it has bubbled long enough. When the bad smell goes away it is also an indicator that you can use it.
    I am not a scientific expert at all. I am just trying some stuff, and I also learn a lot from other people. And when I get a good result I continue to do it.

  • @malcolmyoung7866
    @malcolmyoung7866 Před rokem +1

    Hello Steve, Great video.
    If you have any Vermicomposting left in your mesh bag at the end of this process is it okay to return it to a worm bin for true worms to ‘recycle’ once dried off? Waste not want not!
    Another ‘bone’ question what time of year is it best to apply this liquid and how to apply it. I imagine that one ‘made’ it’s best to use immediately so that the microbes etc within are at their most beneficial?
    Early days for me regards Vermicomposting but learning so very quickly..
    Thanks to you and Troy for giving us such great info…

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      Thanks Malcolm! Absolutely, you can return the spent castings to your bin or even put them in your garden.
      And as for the best time of year to apply, I would imagine there's no bad time but I'd want to apply when there aren't extreme temps. And yes, use immediately to make sure the tea doesn't go anaerobic.

  • @kellyhammel7722
    @kellyhammel7722 Před rokem +2

    Do you dilute the worm tea if you put it in a sprayer for application?

  • @707thizzn
    @707thizzn Před rokem

    Love the video. So quick question, is it a bad thing if you put to much food in the bucket where it causes over flowing bubbles? I was alwaya taught that you want the bubbles AND over flowing.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      I don't think it's a bad thing but too much food in the form of molasses will cause a huge boom and bust in your microbe populations.

  • @AndrewSemple
    @AndrewSemple Před rokem

    Informative always. Not a good idea to use a pond pump (motor in the bucket) for the same reasons as the air stones?

    • @fbryce1ify
      @fbryce1ify Před rokem

      isnt the pump beside the bucket?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +1

      Thanks Andrew, yeah I'd probably use a pump that remains outside of the bucket itself.

  • @dronefish9629
    @dronefish9629 Před rokem

    I can't see Troy without laughing about the title of his worm chow with 'Chef Troyardee' video.

  • @KrazyKajun602
    @KrazyKajun602 Před dnem

    Do you use the 5gal as is or do you dilute it so much with water to cover the required area?

  • @user-gc6qi7ev1o
    @user-gc6qi7ev1o Před rokem

    I hope everyone tries compost tea. At least for a full grow, a watering or two isn't enough to give some final judgement.

  • @clivesconundrumgarden
    @clivesconundrumgarden Před rokem +4

    Excellent Steve!! We always enjoy your and Troy's thoughts! Looking forward to doing this ourselves.
    You referenced temperatures, how long into the fall/winter would apply the tea? And when would you start applying it in the spring?
    Thanks for the tip on air stones aswell.
    Cheers from Victoria Canada

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +2

      Thanks CCG! There's not a "bad" time to apply tea, but I would do it outside of extreme temperatures. You may also want to do it when you've got some plants growing that would immediately benefit.

    • @clivesconundrumgarden
      @clivesconundrumgarden Před rokem

      @@UrbanWormCompany excellent, thanks Steve 🤜🤛

  • @paulacorey2148
    @paulacorey2148 Před měsícem

    How long is the worm tea active after brewed?

  • @tommillar8382
    @tommillar8382 Před 2 měsíci

    Worms tea. Good garden ❤😢

  • @kamranarshad1203
    @kamranarshad1203 Před rokem

    Hi, could one use a normal organic garden compost as a starter bedding material for worms? or they wont like it? the idea is to start with this normal compost and then put it the worms and then start feeding the bin kitchen scraps .....

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      I like compost as a habitat, but I'm less positive on it as a bedding as there is not enough available carbon. I think it could be included in a bin, but it won't offset the nitrogen-rich food waste you'd be putting in the bin.

  • @techwithchris007
    @techwithchris007 Před rokem

    can i use this right after it was mixed or is the air pump and brewing neccessary?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +1

      You would get *some* benefit to using it after a short mixing but you get a much larger population of microbes with the brewing.

  • @chileanita1
    @chileanita1 Před 11 měsíci

    I was taught to use molasses for a food source while brewing. Can you explain the difference and/or benefits of these sources? Molasses is more accessible to me.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před 10 měsíci +3

      Molasses or other sugars tends to produce a boom and bust in bacteria. Where foods like kelp meal provide a much slower, steadier food source. Kind of like the difference between simple sugars and complex carbohydrates.

  • @theunskoch4256
    @theunskoch4256 Před rokem

    May i ask what type of air pump do i use sorry for the ignorance, do i get it at a hard ware store or pet store

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      I think a pet store is your best bet here! For a 5-gallon brew, you only need roughly a 5-10 liters per minute pump.

  • @danielgomes4754
    @danielgomes4754 Před měsícem

    The pump is over kill, a fish tank pump will be better option. Also drill a few more holes at the base of the PVC.

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před měsícem

      Yeah it is. We'd planned on doing the video with a 55-gallon barrel that day but switched to the 5-gallon bucket at filming time

  • @timcoates3821
    @timcoates3821 Před 7 měsíci

    Once you are ready to put out onto the garden do you dilute the tea? And what ratio please. I have done a simple brew no pump, jut let some worm castings sit in a bucket overnight, then added some molasses and stired it a bit

  • @brentfellers9632
    @brentfellers9632 Před rokem +2

    Do you have to remove the castings from the water? Could you just let it boil without the bag?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +1

      You could let it continue to brew I suppose but there would be some much sediment in the tea that it would likely clog whatever sprayer you might have planned to use.

  • @gcranch9913
    @gcranch9913 Před 8 měsíci

    Is the process any different with worm casings?

  • @gilreitsma7348
    @gilreitsma7348 Před rokem +1

    Not sure if it was mentioned, but what is the application rate for the concentrated 5-gallon brew?

  • @shrimpworms
    @shrimpworms Před 11 měsíci

    What's the name of the fish hydrolysate that yall were using?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před 11 měsíci

      I'm not sure if we had a specific brand, but Neptune Harvest is a well-known brand

  • @dento4865
    @dento4865 Před rokem +1

    What's the best way to store the tea if I don't use all 5 gallons at once? How long does it last in the bucket?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem +2

      Hi Denton, I'd have to ask Troy but you probably want to use it within 12 hours or so. The aerated tea has such a high biology count that the microbes consume the available oxygen very quickly.

  • @michelbisson6645
    @michelbisson6645 Před 9 měsíci

    so how long last those fungi are they just dormant?
    do they live longer than bacteria?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před 9 měsíci

      Hey Michel, I'm not actually sure how long fungi last to be honest!

  • @Josef_R
    @Josef_R Před rokem

    Seems like you should throw the leftover strsined solids into your worm bin when you're done, right?

  • @lylecasteel365
    @lylecasteel365 Před rokem

    When you make tea, you add food for the bacteria, fungi, etc. -- would it be beneficial to mix those same foods in water to wet your bins? Wouldnt that increase the micorbial life in your bin by a lot?

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      Your bin should already be a microbe-rich environment. That said, it's probably a good idea to add that stuff in when starting a new bin to jumpstart the populations.

  • @pingpong9656
    @pingpong9656 Před 7 měsíci +1

    That outer pipe is going to end up emptying out the whole bucket with the venturi effect...

  • @beastyelmoboy1
    @beastyelmoboy1 Před 4 měsíci

    what else could be used as a food source?

  • @AlvinMcManus
    @AlvinMcManus Před rokem

    All the dry humic acid products that I have been able to find have been granular and not powered. How do I get powdered? DIY or purchase? heh?😉

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      Troy may have to come back to answer that one, Alvin!

    • @AlvinMcManus
      @AlvinMcManus Před rokem

      @@UrbanWormCompany I'll just use the liquid Humic acid or the old ascorbic acid followed by a pH Up buffering liquid.
      I do suppose I could get a used Nutri Bullet blender and grind the granular serif, right? ✌🏼

  • @catwalker6931
    @catwalker6931 Před rokem

    Just wanted to note that litres are not gallons , but there are about 3.7 litres per gallon. So a 5 gallon bucket is approximately 16.9 litres . So do you want a bigger pump or just say for pump size ratio , match the litres as gallons

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před rokem

      Correct....liters are not gallons. But you want the pump (in liters per minute) to approximate the number of gallons you're brewing.

    • @bennywalsh2038
      @bennywalsh2038 Před rokem

      And US gallons (16fl oz per pint) are different to imperial gallons (20 fl oz per pint) So 5
      US gallons are 18 litres.

  • @DrHalid
    @DrHalid Před rokem

    👍🏿

  • @dylanlinebarger8244
    @dylanlinebarger8244 Před rokem

    If these two had a baby, he would be named Vincent Vega

  • @jeffreythiel5315
    @jeffreythiel5315 Před 11 měsíci

    Just watching all the work spraying out the end of the hose / pvc pipe onto the ground makes this video a little odd
    Necessity is the mother of all inventions time to come up with something better than that hose pipe make a mess lose the tea on the ground 😅system

  • @DiMiTri-ys7ei
    @DiMiTri-ys7ei Před měsícem

    That pump is so overkill.. all you need is a 15 dollar fish tank pump

    • @UrbanWormCompany
      @UrbanWormCompany  Před měsícem

      Yeah it is. We'd planned on doing the video with a 55-gallon barrel that day but switched to the 5-gallon bucket at filming time

  • @benkermen8360
    @benkermen8360 Před rokem

    Nope, not to loud.

  • @BugRod64
    @BugRod64 Před rokem

    humic acid as a dry powder is very hydrophobic. the warmer the water or using a mixer will make it dissolve faster.
    and the amount of bacteria will be in the billions