7 Things You Can Bury in the Garden to Add FREE Nutrients



You can easily add fertilizer and nutrients to you garden by burying these 7 things in your garden. These 7 things, kitchen scraps, eggs shells, cardboard, bread, coffee grounds, grass clippings, and fallen leaves add organic matter in the soil, attracts earthworms, and increases the microbial activity in the soil. In addition to burying these things, you should not bury woodchips,

#Garden #Gardening #daisycreekfarms
0:22 Kitchen Scraps
2:06 Egg Shells
2:55 Cardboard
3:38 Stale Bread
4:02 Coffee Grounds
4:30 Grass Clippings
4:33 Fallen Leaves

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43 thoughts on “7 Things You Can Bury in the Garden to Add FREE Nutrients”

  1. I love your channel.
    Couple things I'm concerned with. I mow up the leaves, they do have pine needles in it. Have put it on raised bed. Will not put anymore. I had no idea bread can be used. Love that idea. I have been making compost that have pine needles. Will this be alright for my fig tree

    Reply
  2. Esto es respetable como lo hace el pero hay otras maneras que se puede hacer el compost y es poniendo cerca de las plantas que d se siembren botellas enterradas con el pico para abajo y con huecos y se llenan de desperdicios y se tapan por ahí se puede echar el agua del riego que al pasar a través de los restos de cocina pues va enriqueciendo las raíces de lo que está plantado ,me figuro que con el tiempo se puede mezclar a la tierra el compost y así volver a llenar las botellas ,este sistema es bueno pues no atraera animales que escarben y dañen lo sembrado

    Reply
  3. It would seem that cardboard contains what are known as "forever chemicals" and are not a great idea. I wish I had not listened to permaculturists who advised this over the past 20 years.

    Reply
  4. I never add vegetable matter directly yo my soil as the process of rotting uses nitrogen. I always compost my waste in a small Heath Robinson composter I made for a corner of my patio. it only us large enough to produce about 100 litres of rotted compost a year but that is enough to top up the nutrients in my veg planters. I use weeds, plant cuttings, vegetable and fruit waste although in summer I need to reduce this as it attracts sciarid flies. Egg shells and paper and cardboard.
    As my composter is only small I have to wait for it to rot down every now and then before adding more.
    It also needs to be watered more often than I remember. Dish washing water or pot washing water is useful.

    Reply
  5. Great ideas. 👍🏼 I save my eggshells as well and to make them break down faster, I use an extra spice grinder that I found at a second hand shop for $2 and I only use it for grinding eggshells into powder and other garden or household related jobs. Works great.

    Reply
  6. Put the food in the juicer, collect the juice and add to finely shredded cardboard/paper. Add foundation earth and coffee grounds. Add a bit of ground bread. Mix it all up with peat, Coco coir, grass cutting, fresh and dead leaves, tea leaves, disease free cow dung. Sea weed.
    Add local soil. Worms.
    Put into compost bin.
    Make sure everything is finally mixed up and ground up as small as possible with soil probiotics.
    Add good drainage.
    Protection for compost bins. Good ventilation.

    Reply
  7. Dude, just why are you burying it directly? Why not do a proper compost that gets hot and sanitized? I would prefer a well matured compost over directly buried organic garbage any day. And toilet paper rolls? Do you know if they added chemical stuff to the cardboard? It surely wasn't intended for food so the industry isn't held to any standards. Same about supermarket produce, it's treated in many ways to keep a long shelf life. Personally I would through all your garbage in a heap and let it go through the compost hot phase, hoping that whatever is on it gets broken down and when worms appear by themselves and multiply the compost is ready to go on your beds.
    But that's just me.
    See, and now I even generate traffic for your video by commenting.

    Reply
  8. In the Columbus Georgia area people have been composting peanut shells forever!…well I moved to the area in 1981, the old timers told me they had been doing it ever since the Tom's Peanut factory opened. We would go to the factory and get them back the truck loads for free. Those mixed with our red Georgia clay and a bit of sand made some really good gardens.

    Reply

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