Learn advanced biological methods of composting animal bodies and high nitrogen utilizing home made Korean natural farming made inputs. How to turn dead animals into living soil easily using special compost techniques.
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#composting #compost #homesteading
0:00 Intro
1:30 Explaining This Type of Composting Method
3:03 How to Start the Pile. How much carbon?
4:27 Charcoal
5:31 Setting Up Pile Foundation
6:41 Explaining Inoculants: LABS, Bokashi, IMO4
12:04 Setting up Body inoculants and bokashi
16:04 Adding Moisture
18:24 Is This Compost Safe?
19:04 Final Layers of bokashi and carbon
19:55 Results 1 week later
#composting #homesteadingskills #compost
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source
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🌱Free Digital Garden Planner & Calendar + $5 in Seeds – https://bit.ly/402CNRj
How to Build a Hot Compost Pile – https://youtu.be/pxdI0hfpgAM
Advanced Composting – https://youtu.be/r5MU0wURcZo
I cannot do this living in the city but I do hot composting which have done a wonderful job on critters that needed to be removed from this area. Not a sign of the remains could be found after six weeks. I dare say thats the results you ended up with.
Very cool, and very bold. Nobody that I've seen is even attempting to openly teach people these techniques for sustainable farming. Keep up the great work, Steven!
Just bury the dead critter along the dripline of a fruit or nut tree. Cover with large rocks or logs for a while to prevent digging by dogs or other scavengers. Easy peasy.
Update please 😊
Yes like to see the results. Thanks
This guy is definitely going to compost the dog.😂
I can see the stray dogs and coons digging into that….
Trespassers will ALSO be composted!
I never saw dead animals that way. I wish I had seen this video earlier. I've put over 75 armadillos in the trash for pickup. That was stupid. My banana trees would have loved them.
Eat more possum 😜
Thank you for sharing this information.
2 of my chickens died recently, and I composted them in my GeoBin Composting bin. I have 3 in my backyard. I've had a few chickens die last year as well. My yard man brings me bags of dried fallen leaves (By request). I use them to create leaf mould and I use them to top dead carcasses in the pile inside of my bins. It works GREAT! No foul odors. Once, I had a raccoon compromise my chicken coop, and I dispatched it before he got to my hens. I added him into one of the compost bins as well. Now, he's fertilizing my garden beds. 🙂 Thanks for sharing.
Just compost. There are no rules to this. If half the population would try it out, the world would be a much better place. Just try. Eventually you will be successful.
👊 'Promo sm'
I loss so many chickens & turkeys 😮💨 currently trying to catch the raccoon responsible
We do the same. It's inevitable that at some stage, anyone raising livestock or poultry will experience death.
One if the most best composts availavlble, it's all natural
I would have preferred to have seen composting: rats, raccoons, mice, squirrels and other vermin.
I compost my moms and my friends chickens and any meat like left overs after butchering animals in a very similar way i bokashi ferment the meat in buckets I first compost it in a pile with wood chips and leaves let it compost for 3 months then add it to a Johnson su pile let it sit for two years it feels so good not throwing anything away and getting amazing compost out of it
OMG yes. I would love to see an update.
Update please good Sir
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If you fill a 5 gallon bucket with fresh woodchips, pee in that bucket instead of normal methods, and dump said bucket on top of your pile, it will stay hot for much much longer (you can keep dumping buckets). I do quite a bit of extreme composting and found if I want to keep a gross pile hot for longer, this works great for 'sit and forget' piles. I find keeping it hot longer helps the bones turn to mush / disappear.
Nice work m8.. great tips. I have a lot of roadkill that i want to make useful..
We also compost our sheep. Hubby turns it every 3 days and we are amazed HOW FAST even the bones break down. No smell but super hot. You’ve taught me how to use more carbon though!! Thanks from Nova Scotia.
my my.
It’s not extreme…it’s what happens on this planet when humans don’t interfere.
Great stuff
Very cool
Thank you sir
Looked for an update video. I don't see one.
Just watched your update video. Why didn't you break down the lamb and salvage some meat for yourself or your chickens if it died from getting strangled in the fence?
Eating while watching this was a bad idea
Penn State county extension educator took temps of our bovine composting pile. 160°F was normal. We used 2 feet of dry below, around, and on top of the dead cow. In 6 months we would turn the pile. Only the head and hips remained at 6 months.
Do you happen to have a recommended source of straw that's broadleaf pesticide-free?
👍🏼
personally, i'm continually amazed that people think this is a new technique. I'm a practitioner of the old methods…and I've known about these types of composting methods for a long time (i'm old 😉 I think you are really respecting the animal…i mean we have to do something with the dead animal…even if we eat them there are still left over parts. It is life full circle Thanks for your video and you showed great respect. ☮☮
This video is one reason I don't want smell-o-vision!!!!!!!🤢🤮
What if you just buried the dead animals in a place that you plan on using as a future garden? This is not sarcasm. It's a legit question. Will this work for enriching that soil for future use?