How to make a liquid fertiliser (that doesn't smell bad!) from nettles or comfrey.
Aranya demonstrates how to make an aerobic liquid plant fertiliser using things that most people would just throw away.
This is one of four videos I just added to my 'Design Your Site with Permaculture' course. www.learnpermaculture.com/ind...
For two-week residential permaculture design courses with Aranya visit:
www.learnpermaculture.com/ind...
Пікірлер: 616
the cow in the background is just adorable. 🐄
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Yes indeed... :)
As long as I see you collect the plastic drill waste and put it carefully into your pocket, I know this is the decent person that I should respect. You are very careful
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
Someone who collects small particles of plastic like that I can really appreciate!
@LearnPermaculture
Ай бұрын
Thank you. :)
@jamesgarner2103
18 күн бұрын
makes perfect sense. you dont want them in your soil or garden.
@LearnPermaculture
17 күн бұрын
@@jamesgarner2103 I agree!
I love the cow freely roaming in the field ! what a way to live !
For the weight I would suggest mixing a blob of concrete and sticking a piece of scrap metal into it to act as a handle so it can easily be pulled out.
@tubthump
2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking engineering bricks or old storage heater bricks with some rope tied around each one
@itsamedjmario
Жыл бұрын
Great idea !!!
@smithy4121
Жыл бұрын
@Smeargut I love that idea was going to say you could attach rope to your handle too.
@DiviniTea369
10 ай бұрын
Awesome suggestion
I tried this with comfrey quite a few years ago and completely forgot how well it works and how easy it is! I'll have to get started on doing it again now.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
That's great to hear. :)
@fortbumper
2 жыл бұрын
and no chemical !
@MikeAG333
Жыл бұрын
@@fortbumper I We all know what you mean, but everything in the universe is made of chemicals. This method of producing fertiliser is entirely a chemical process.
Great tutorial. Clear explanation. Thanks for taking the time to do this and sharing the love! 😊
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
Well spoken. You left nothing up for guessing. TY
@LearnPermaculture
7 күн бұрын
Thanks!
Amazing! Thank you for the video.
Thank you for a very clear explanation as always.
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
Glad it makes sense. :)
Awesome idea !!! Exactly what I need at the moment .Thank you :)
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Enjoy!
Thank you such a good idea. Well explained.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Judy! :)
Great tips! Thanks very much.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much for this and so clearly demonstrated too.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
REALLY clever. I will be trying this out. Thank you!
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Robert! :)
Great technique from a Master. Thank you Aranya
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
This was a complete guide and excellent idea. Thank you for sharing.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome sukkar. :)
This was a really good idea. Thank you
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Violet!
Fantastic!👍👍👍
Nice simple practicle easy and cheap. May try it myself.
Fantastic teaching. Thank you
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome Sonia. :)
Thanks for sharing
Thank you so much for spending some time on showing me how to use nettles.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Sybil for watching. :)
Excellent video Aranya :)
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Jessie. :)
Great informations!! Thank you!
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
Brrilant idea , thank thank you .
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You’re welcome 😊
Thanks for sharing,very helpfulnto a new beginners to have a garden at our backyard
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome Elizabeth. :)
It's great how many different ways there are to extract nutrients from unwanted plants. Thanks for the video. It was very thorough and informative.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Zeb!
@Mrbfgray
Жыл бұрын
And wanted plants such as comfrey(sp?). I grow some of that but need to move it out of late day hot summer sun, doesn't take that well at 105 F without constant water.
@craigdonald551
11 ай бұрын
@@MrbfgrayMaybe try growing tithonia diversifolia (Mexican Sunflower) instead of Comfrey
@Mrbfgray
11 ай бұрын
@@craigdonald551 Appreciate the suggestion, my comfrey is doing better this yr, dropping a lot of leaves but not entirely wilting like it used to. About yr 3 I think now, getting better established, only sporadically watered it even at 110F. (water is expensive here)
@Mrbfgray
11 ай бұрын
@@craigdonald551 For what it's worth--comfrey is reputed to have litany of 'medicinal' uses. I'm more or less immune to bee stings (last I checked) but got nailed by a wasp several months ago and it hurt a little for days, not used to that. Then I got wasp stung again a week ago and it dawned on me comfrey might help, half hr later picked a fresh green leaf, with no expectations, wadded it up to juice it into stung thumb. Easily could be coincidental but sting went away quickly.
Love these types of projects! A drainpipe/waste pipe works quite well,
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
Yes indeed! Smaller scale, but same functionality.
@craftypam9992
2 жыл бұрын
I use a piece of piping, with a funnel at the bottom to fill a collection bottle, and the bottom of a pop bottle at the top of the pipe to serve as a lid (added after some daft sparrows decided to nest in there). I stuff slightly chopped leaves in the top, get the juice at the bottom. I've never actually removed any leaf matter from it, it all just seems to disappear. The whole kit is just inside the greenhouse door, so it's a bit warmer. And close to where I want to use it!
This is the funniest video I've seen for ages 😄😄 thanks
Great idea!!very well explained.Cheers from Australia!😁
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Exelent many thanx and you have a very tidy garden
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mike!
Really good video thanks. So much better than so much online. Your honesty shines my friend!
@LearnPermaculture
11 ай бұрын
Thank you! :)
Great video, thank you very much
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome Sophie! :)
This is an awesome idea and I'll be doing a much smaller scale but can use it for all my gardening weeds.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
So glad to be of help. :)
Thank you!
I'm so glad I found this. I've been looking for a way to make fertiliser which doesn't smell as I can't use the smelly stuff at all. Your instructions are very clear. Thank you.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome. :)
very informative and great way, Thank You
@LearnPermaculture
24 күн бұрын
Glad to be of help.
That was very interesting, thanks
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks rudy!
brilliant - always regard nettles as a crop but this is better than just adding them to my compost heaps! Will get on it dreckly. Graham (Cornwall)
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
Proper job!
Great video!
@LearnPermaculture
10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Very grateful for this. Have tried the method with water but it was soooooo smelly. Am on a budget so it will be a big help for my allotment. A big thank you.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
So glad that it helps Katherine.
Merci from Montreal, Canada.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
This was very interesting to me, I only knew about making stinky Nettle tea and this year was going to try again but with a bucket that has a lid. I'll try and think of a way to use some of what we've got around here to make your setup, I only have new rain barrels, maybe I'll use some buckets. Thanks for a very well explained video!
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mary! Yes, you could use do this on a smaller scale too. Start with what you've got and when you have the chance to get an old water butt or similar you can scale up. :)
I don't have any nettles or comfrey but I do have weeds and grass clippings that would work. Thanks for sharing this info. I really did not like the stinky stuff.
@LearnPermaculture
7 ай бұрын
Pretty much any leafy healthy looking plant that you know not to be toxic should be good. Grass cuttings however tend to clump together and go anaerobic (even without a weight on top) so you might be able to put a little in your mix but not too much. Nettles and comfrey have quite chunky stems which create air spaces in the mix - grass does not.
@jonisolis9645
7 ай бұрын
Thanks for the added info and you did not say what this liquid smells like. Smells like dirt? @@LearnPermaculture
@LearnPermaculture
7 ай бұрын
@@jonisolis9645 The aerobic liquid feed doesn't have a particularly strong smell. 'Leafy' I supposed I'd describe it. Not like soil.
I've been doing this for years but my favorite plant to work with as a silage is clover clover will breakdown and Juice up the chlorophyll best plus if you use it on your vegetables like I do mostly tomatoes it makes the tomato plant fibrous sturdy my tomato plants got 7ft tall last year and the tomatoes were very good tasty like tomato should anyway enjoy your time out there and I see a lot of people doing this these days it does work believe it or not happy trails
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Sounds excellent! Nettles are an abundant weed which many people can find close by, but if you've room to plant clover it's a very valuable cover crop / nitrogen fixer too. :)
Excellent
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Lauretta. :)
Every day you learn something new and today is no exception... What a great explanation and teaching. Thank you very much sir. I am taking the first steps in permaculture and every day I am more passionate, I had read about the nettle method, which I don't have at home, but I was seriously thinking if nettle is sold for seeds or something like that. But I had never heard of this getting on the skin, that was great to know. Ruled out the water method lol. As soon as I have the opportunity to do this as you explain it to us, believe me I will be extremely happy, like today, to have found you. I stay on your magnificent channel. Greetings from Tulsa, Oklahoma.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome! Have fun experimenting. :)
@iheartherbs
Жыл бұрын
Look up how to identify nettles, they are ALL around you. You'll never look at weeds the same when you identify all the plants outside your door. The Earth has a symbiotic relationship with us and provides all we need on a personal basis wherever we are ❤ Seriously, you probably have nettles on your land or somewhere you have access to. Blessings
I really love this idea, thank you. It's much better than the anaerobic method! Will be trying this very soon :) I also very much like your stone retained garden area, it's beautiful!
@rufia75
2 жыл бұрын
His garden is definitely epic! and this is a great DIY fertilizer, by looks of it.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I hope it works well for you too. :)
very cool
thanks,i really need to have a nettle corner on my allotment asap,great presentation !!
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
Great video, time for me to look for these items 🙂
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Andy!
Thank you for the thorough explanation. I’m in the subtropics in Australia, lots of sunshine and moisture so I think this method is perfect for the many weeds I get. I don’t like throwing any organic matter away unless it’s diseased so I’ll keep the pernicious weeds for the anaerobic water method and other weeds for this aerobic method. Great advice, thank you 🙏
@LearnPermaculture
11 ай бұрын
Thank you Susan! :)
Thanks for the inspiration. I have used nettles soaked in water for years but I wanted to make a concentrate which is easier to keep and store, and we have vast amounts of nettles here. Although I won't be doing literally what you have devised, I have an old redundant worm bin which can be easily converted to do the same thing. I am actually going to start on it this afternoon. Good video and clearly explained. Thanks.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thanks BertieFox, I hope it works well for you. :)
I liked when you put that plastic spirals in your pocket 5:18. Unexpected but well appreciated! I am looking for a liquid fertilizer that doesn't smell bad as I have neighbors very close. Does it still work, two years later?
@LearnPermaculture
11 ай бұрын
Thanks! Yes, it works fine - no smell from the barrel. The only thing that will create a smell is if you bottle it for later use without filtering out any bits. In a bottle those bits will decompose anaerobically and make a bad smell.
Great job 👍
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks! :)
@donabellahardeneravlogs790
2 жыл бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture You're welcome Sir!
Amazing 👍👍
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Haha didn't see the cow🐄 come by to investigate the drill noise until the second time I watched this. 😂
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
It's a great moment... :D
Beautiful organic solution to a problem
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
@muthurivitchchannelenvironment
2 жыл бұрын
subscribed too. My channel promotes permaculture too. check it out
Great stuff mate, love your process to liquefy weeds to fertiliser without a stinky brew, airating with aquarium bubbles is fun too, but this is the simplest for sure, I'll definitely be doing this. Thankyou
@LearnPermaculture
26 күн бұрын
Thanks! it was originally taught to me by Pat Bowcock at the wonderful Ourganics in West Dorset. It's been the only method I've used for years...
This looks great. I did the nettles and water thing and boy does it STINK! If this truly doesn't smell I'm going to be thrilled.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
It has a smell (like many things) but it's subtle and certainly not bad.
Love this video, I'm experimenting using primarily nettles, with clean cardboard, a bit of brown sugar, and some other compostables.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
It's always good to experiment! :)
Your method is so much better due to the often off-putting smell of fermenting plants in a water solution. I've done that, and the smell won't even get off my hands. It is distinctly unpleasant, in my opinion. Your method seems to work as fast as the water method, not even needing covering to discourage mosquitos or smells escaping. Those two things alone make your method better. I am going to try it, but probably not with a barrel, maybe just a five gallon bucket to start and see how it goes. I have the buckets, the weights, the out-of-control vines and weeds, etc. and in this season in Florida, the rainfall. There is a man who converted his 1,000 acres over to natural fertilizer using the water method plus micro-organisms for breakdown. But it takes a year for the breakdown to be complete. He has big tanks that strain the solution and sprays his fields. I don't know if your method would help him or not, as he does focus a lot on fungus/inoculant. Anyway, his KZread channel is The Plant People, and I think you both have much in common. Perhaps you could share information. The method of making "home brew" is key to circumventing the fertilizer shortage/price, even for big growers, if they are willing to learn this method of soil building. Thank you for a great video. I have never see this method before, in all the videos I have seen. Please make more of them to keep them circulating on KZread and other sites so farmers looking for alternatives can utilize your method. You could do a series of "shorts" on KZread, and that would help.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Lynn, I shall look up The Plant People! I learnt how to do this from my friend Pat Bowcock at Ourganics and I think she learnt it in turn from someone in Eire. Anyway, the limiting factor I think is the amount of leaves you can obtain as raw material, but even making a little can make a significant difference.
fabulous
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Rachel!
Terimakasih Saya akan coba ya...
Excellent thankyou 🐝🐝🐝
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Debs!
What an excellent demonstration for someone like me who is just now learning about this method. So cool. Thank you for the video!
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Leah! :)
Beautiful sir
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! :)
Just made similar out of a 55 gallon plastic drum. As I’m in the tropics I’ve used Tithonia and Moringa with an added dash of Leucaena, instead of Comfrey and nettles.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a perfect locally adapted version!
Thank you I really like this idea. If your not careful feeding your plants organically can cost a fortune I really like this way of making my own, none stinky fertiliser in large ish amounts.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
It can indeed. Doing this is really a no-brainer!
Thank you for this info. I live in town and don't have access to a nettle patch but I have plenty of weeds lol, so I guess they will do.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Pretty much any weed growing happily in your garden will contain useful nutrients for your plants. Just use the leaves and stems though as they break down more quickly and avoid putting in seeds if you can.
@tubthump
2 жыл бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture would grass be ok (couch grass I think)?. (Thank you for this inspiring video!).
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@tubthump I've not tried, but it can be a useful mulch in the garden if applied thinly enough. I would imagine nettles and confrey are better because they root more deeply than grasses tend too and so could be accessing more minerals/nutrients.
I like this method best. The water method, obvious drawbacks, especially when on a shared property. The fermentation method requires the expense of the sugar. I don't see any drawbacks to this one. I also appreciated hearing which plants preferred which, well plants, ex; Comfrey or Nettles. Not having a current source of nettles, Comfrey will be my go to for now, with the addition of my weeded plants. Thank you for a great video. Appreciate the "scrounged parts" aspect too. :-)
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Helen, I especially enjoy putting to good use other people's junk. Hopefully a lot more leaky water butts will be saved from landfill now.
@abbyscott4457
11 ай бұрын
I agree. I don't mind the smell of the anaerobic stuff, but I lease my uncles land and he's not fond of it, lol. I'm excited to try this!
I followed what you did. my plant in good shape very effective liquid fertilizer thank you very much🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
So pleased to hear that Jeffrey! :)
@msredwun
Жыл бұрын
How has the smell been for you?
This is a brilliant idea!! Thanks!
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Wendy! :)
Genius! thank you
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@TheBahiaVibe
2 жыл бұрын
should I keep it in the sun or shade?
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheBahiaVibe It depends on where you are. Here in Britain we don't get so much heat from the Sun so I leave mine out to collect as much as possible. If you're in a hotter place and it doesn't rain so much then you might want to keep it in a shadier place. The bacteria that break down the plant tissues need some moisture and like a bit of heat, but not too much or too little of either.
@TheBahiaVibe
2 жыл бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture Great thank you so much I'm in California, and I thought the heat might be to much for the bacterias
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheBahiaVibe Then a shady spot should still be warm enough.
Great video. I'm definitely going to try this. I made comfrey before in liquid and I just couldn't stand the smell so I never made it again. Thanks for sharing this, it's class 👏
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
It's one of the worst whiffs...
smart ,,thank you
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
Makes sense to me! It reminds me of the KNF prep Fermented Plant Juice, but they add a lot of raw brown sugar with the plant material to draw out the liquids much faster and feed beneficial microbes. That certainly works, but at least in my area those amounts of raw sugar end up being pretty costly, and that partly defeats the purpose of making one's own fertilizer in the first place. I have more time than cash, and there are other good ways to encourage the friendly microbes. I've been using anaerobic comfrey and weed teas for a couple years now, and I'm sort of used to the, uhh, "tastiness" of them. But my wife would probably appreciate me using this version instead ;)
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
I think she might. :)
@zam1007
2 жыл бұрын
sugar? any free fruits or berries e.g. blackberry, spoiled strawberry, apples can perhaps be a sugar source.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@zam1007 Sugar is usually added to make compost teas or other ferments. That's a different brew from this one. Fermenting nettles with sugar will make a much stronger fertiliser. At the moment we eat all the fruit we get, but some day we might have surplus. :D
@matthew04101
2 жыл бұрын
i don't like the idea of using sugar or molasses. for the same amount of money i can just go buy a few bags of compost.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@matthew04101 The beauty of this method is no need for the sugar.
Excellent demo! Thanks for sharing. Will also try this with decomp as items from the garden are done and the fall leaves start coming down. Would like to know the growth production increase with using this method.
@LearnPermaculture
10 ай бұрын
Thanks! The best time of year to make this is when the plants are actively making leaves - generally in the spring - as we're collecting the sap/juice. Once plants start making flowers and seeds they pretty much stop making leaves. The liquid does store very well though - in a cool place - and if you ensure that you don't bottle any undecomposed 'bits' it won't smell bad either. I haven't specifically compared the results of feeding with nettles or comfrey vs any other fertiliser, but it's certainly an improvement on none and apart from your time it costs nothing.
Terry King, a wonderful master gardener does this on a grand scale on his plot in Britain. Can't remember his channel name, but it should show up with a KZread search of his name.
@LearnPermaculture
28 күн бұрын
Thanks! Yes, I see that he uses the pipe method, but on a bigger scale than the usual drainpipe. Good if you have a structure to attach it to. Not sure he has any more volume than a butt like this can generate though...
I suppose to make FPJ you could add shredded sugarbeet if you have the room to grow it. I do like the big bin method though. I have a theory that the best food for plants is themselves - juiced, composted or dried and ground as everything they need is there in the right proportions.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Yes indeed. That's why healthy weeds are perfect.
JADAM uses the anaerobic vegetable digestion method. JLF - JADAM Liquid Fertilizer.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Bob, yes, I'm familiar with that.
never expected to get great gardening tips from the late George Carlin
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Alive and well, but with a bit less swearing. :D
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Now where did I leave my time-travelling telephone box?
@babycheesus666
2 жыл бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture LOL ❤
I've used comfrey tea for years. I also chop and drop it as mulch. I use Russian Bocking 14 with an NPK of 1.8-0.5-7.0. I brew it in a 32 gallon black garbage can. Let it sit for 3 months to a year. I don't strain it, I just take the sprinkler off the can so I don't clog up the cans. I also use fermented plant juice made from comfrey which I foliar spray. I use only 1/4 teaspoon for 5 gallons. It's very powerful stuff. I also make lacto microorganisms which is also fermented. I combine it with the fermented plant juice and spray it every two weeks. It works pretty well. The only other addition I use for supplemental fertilization is some fast acting bone meal . I will use it when I start to see flowers forming on my tomatoes and peppers. Love it! Blessings to you. This was a wonderful video.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Tom! Yes, the Bocking varieties produce a lot of leaf and stem in a small space compared to the smaller ones, though I find the latter good for chopping and dropping around young trees where they won't overwhelm them. It sounds like you have a great system there. :)
I made some of that with water and the smell is positively the most horrid thing I have ever smelled I can smell it 20 ft from the barrel and it's almost airtight. Can't wait to try this! Nice neighbors behind you. Never play loud music or romp in the gas! Or bum. Well, they might bum a handful of grass.
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Yep! The anaerobic version really stinks. This is so so different.
I like this idea. You might want to put marks for where the line of holes in on the outside of the bucket. I’m old and would forget where they are over time
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Donna, that's a good idea. On mine I've drilled them in line with the seam on the barrel so I can use that as a marker.
Thank you for a well-explained method. I've not made liquid feeds to date and have just had a bigger compost operation as a result. With 2 allotment plots and gathering all raw material that comes my way, I've ended up with 16 dalek bins - all full at this time of year (end May). The reason I was prejudiced against liquid feeds was the smell of anaerobic decomposition (not relevant here) and the lack of control available over potency. I was hoping for more on the latter, which you partly addressed in the video and in comments. There's no point having a fixed dilution ratio if you can't control the strength of the initial liquid. Maybe it doesn't matter as long as it is 'somewhat' diluted....what do you think?
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
You're right - if you leave the lid off (as I tend to do) then it'll be more dilute when it rains more often. I tend to judge it on the basis of how dark it looks and dilute accordingly. Certainly you could exclude all rainfall and add a more controlled volume of water for wetting the leaves but I haven't found the need to do that. My approach is to start by using a more dilute solution and then increase the strength a little at a time if the needs of any plant arises.
Chicken wire and bricks....Geniuuuuuusssss!!!!
Thank you so much for this video-perfect for me in so many ways. Your teaching style is so welcome. I have a very modest and am not very strong but this looks very doable for me....I don't have orange bricks but will figure something out (none to find nearby). Re comfrey - I don't have nettles but have an abundance of comfrey a couple times in the summer (right now it needs cutting). Can I use comfrey for everything in my garden? I heard you mention tomatoes but I need to have something to use on everything-potatoes, greens etc..maybe berries? Thank you so much for your help with this. .
@LearnPermaculture
7 күн бұрын
Yes, anything that will lift the barrel above a container will do - my friend Pat uses a pair of old van roof bars. Comfrey is very good too. It's more suited to feeding plants when they are in the flowering and fruiting stage and comes a bit later in the season, but I always make a barrel of comfrey liquid too. Yes, this will work for any plants that need a feed though for potatoes you could use the leaves as a mulch instead and save the work. I actually wrap a comfrey leaf around each seed potato when I plant them in the spring.
Looking at it, it would be a really good way to pre-process any sort of perennial weeds before adding them to the compost heap. Once they've been in there for a few months they won't regrow, even from roots. You wouldn't be so sure about the content of the liquid but that's a small price to pay. Thanks!
@LearnPermaculture
11 ай бұрын
Yes indeed. As long as you added your weeds before they seed. :)
Thank you for a great video, very interesting and informative. What do you do with the nettles in the bottom, do you throw them out or do they stay in until you've finished making LPF?
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin. Good question! I just emptied them into the compost bin this week (late March), ready for refilling the butts again soon. After the best part of a year you're left with a bit of mush, but mostly just the woody parts of the stems - essentially fragile sticks. I reckon that's a useful addition of carbon to the heap.
@martincoates390
2 жыл бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture Thank you for clearing that up for me. I've been following your advice for about a week now and I have already harvested a whole liter of LPF thanks to you and your video. I had to watch it again to pick up on the fact I needed to water it lightly during this sunny period, because there was not a lot of product coming out.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
@@martincoates390 Yes indeed, the heat of the Sun speeds the process, but the bacteria also need a bit of moisture. Good to hear that your new system is being productive already. :)
Impatient people like me can skip to 8:30 or 9:00 for the useful info.
Hey, thanx a lot for both this idea and video. It is a real pleasure to watch you. I've been using other method for many years, but I will try this for sure. Just one short question-when you put green stuff inside for the first time, do you use some water at that point? Or you leave as it is and wait for some rain? Keep up the good work. All the best from Serbia!
@LearnPermaculture
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Lada. :) I just put it in as it is as there's plenty of liquid in the leaves themselves and packed in the barrel there's little surface for evaporation. I only sprinkle water on it if it's dry for a couple of weeks.
@ladasamara2158
11 ай бұрын
@@LearnPermaculture Thank you, it makes sense. All the best
Thank you. Doing that next week with my nettles and comfrey. Potatoes just broke ground
@LearnPermaculture
Ай бұрын
The new growing season is always exciting!
Great idea Aranya. Assume you cover it when it’s raining?
@LearnPermaculture
3 жыл бұрын
I leave it open as the rain washes the oozing laiquid through to the bottom. It's still good and rich, though the collector will fill up more quickly & need emptying more often.
Great video. Thank! You mentioned that you can keep adding plant material. But does the barrel eventually build up with the plant material that doesn't breakdown? If so, does it inhibit the process at a certain point?
@LearnPermaculture
Жыл бұрын
Yes, the fibrous material does accumulate in the bottom of the barrel. At the end of the year I just empty it out and put it on the compost heap, starting afresh each spring.
Weeds grow first on ground that has been disturbed...because they can! Weeds are able to extract nutrients, and live, when other plants cannot. Making a tea from these 'first troops' , extracting what they were able to isolate, is always a good idea - not just Comfrey & Nettles.
@LearnPermaculture
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, any happy plants can make good fertiliser though it's easier to harvest bigger plants like comfrey and nettles and their deeper roots mean they may have extra nutrients too.
Thank you. Its so much better without the smell. How long does the liquid keep?
@LearnPermaculture
4 ай бұрын
It is isn't it? I store the last batch of the autumn overwinter and use it in early spring, so it can keep quite a long time. The most important thing to do is to sieve it well before bottling it - if there are any bits in it they'll decompose anaerobially in the bottle and make it smelly. Then keep it somewhere cool and dark - we put ours in the garage.
nicer alternative to stinky anaerobic water
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