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EM1 EME FPE FFE EM5 EM7 Robust Polycultures
EM1 (original) is sleeping. Microorganisms in EM1 are in a dormant stage.
To activate sleeping microorganisms, give them:  food  and a  house . ( livestock grade blackstrap molasses ) ( water in an  anaerobic condition )
Always Be scientific Po!
EM Extended Calibration Dilution Fermentation  Measure 30 ml EM1 (2 Table spoons) Always Be scientific!
EME 30 ml 300 M 2 Tablespoon 15 ml EME Inoculation Dilution Rate 1:500 4 gallons X 3.8 L/g = 15 Liters 15 Liters = 15,000 ml /500= 30 ml Area Covered
The Value of EM1 by volume 30 ml 1,000 ml (1 Liter) 33 10,000 M 2 (1 hectare) 1,000 ml (1 Liter) 30 Liters 1,000 30  hectares Cost 80  centavos 26 peso 800  peso EM1 EM Extended Back Pack Sprayer Area 1 ml 30 ml 1 300 M 2
Inoculation Comparison Takes advanced management and time No guarantee of results Cultures can have contamination P 20-60/ backpack sprayer P600-P3,600/hectare Simple management  Little time, easy Guaranteed results Cultures will be pure P 1/ backpack sprayer P 30/hectare Good System if Sugar and rice are Free, Lots of time to manage, You are exacting and precise Good System if Sugar is Expensive, Too busy for tedious propagation, Want to save money
3 Fs to Sustainability Functionally Do-able Financially Viable Friendly on the Environment Functionality
Hands on training EM Technology is Easy
Schools Children can do it!
Learn to Propagate Microbes
EM Livestock Bokashi
 
5 pales Manure  or Copra Meal 15 Pales Uling EM Fertilizer Bokashi
Stochu   (EM5)  keeps  pests away
How to make EM 5 With neem leaves,  Neem oil or seed,   garlic, ginger, lemon grass, herbs Insect repellent
How to make FPE (100L) EM Fermented Plant Extract Herb Hormone
Recommended chopped plants Weeds having strong life and flavors and also Neem, garlic, ginger, lemon grass, herbs, chili* Grasses having medicinal values Prunings, young shoots and immature fruits  (the weeds should be cut in the morning) Microbial Herbal Hormone Infusion
How to make FPE (100L) EM Fermented Fruit Extract Ripening Agent Ripe fruits
Indigenous Micro organisms (IMO) Fermented Plant Juice ( FPJ) -  Fermented Fruit Juice  ( FFJ ) -  Lactic Acid  Bacteria  ( LA B ) - Oriental Herbal Nutrients (O H N) -  Fermented Fish Amino Acid  ( FAA) -  Water soluble calcium (  W CA) -  Water soluble calcium phosphate (WSCP) Korean Natural Farming Foliar Fertilizers Herb Hormone Microbial Inoculants Bones are high in Phosphate Burnt Egg Shells +  Natural Vinegar Egg Shells are Calcium Carbonate 21 days
Bones Cow Pig Goat Dinosaur Foliar Fertilizers Free bones
Fish Silage Foliar Fertilizers Always Be scientific!
Fish Silage Easily digested high energy food Lutefiske Pickled Herring Fish Sauce Bagoong Enzymes and peptides, amino acids, available N
Fish Silage Fish Emulsion F.A.A. Fish Amino Acid Fresh not rotten Fish Waste Entrails Trash Fish Free Fish Foliar Fertilizers
Fish Silage (F.A.A.) 1 part chopped fish waste 1 part molasses Small Water (if needed) to mix Plastic Allowed for Fertilizer Production Enzymes and peptides, amino acids, available N Foliar Fertilizers
Organic Foliar Fertilizer Aloha's Favorite Tea Keith Mikkelson giving three (3) day intensive training for the Department of Agrarian Reform
USA:   Dr. Elaine Ingram Dr. Ingram developed a curriculum for the Aerated Tea Brewers Guide The SOIL FOOD WEB is a complex inter relationship of organisms and chemical reactions that all effect each other. We can create favorable microbial habitats and inoculants for the soil food web to prosper
Aerated Vermicast Tea
Please: Always Aerate to culture Beneficial Microorganisms Aloha's Favorite Tea Keith Mikkelson giving three (3) day intensive training for the Department of Agrarian Reform Fermentation
Air Water Compost Molasses 1/2 Liter Molasses 1 L Vermicasts 20 L H2O E.M.  Aquarium Air Pump
Brew 24 hrs for annual vegetables Brew 48-72 hrs for Perennials Harvest time
This would never happen at Aloha House! Some call this "Compost Tea"
Organic? Illegal in the USA Stagnent-Uncomposted-Raw-Manure
E-coli Giardia Fecal coliforms Enterohemorrhagic  E. coli  (EHEC): found in humans, cattle, and goats. Virotype is strain O157:H7, which causes bloody diarrhea without fever. EHEC can cause hemolytic-uremic syndrome and sudden kidney failure and possesses toxin that can elicit an intense inflammatory response. The Giardia parasite lives in the intestine of infected humans or animals. Giardia is found in soil, food, water, or surfaces that have been contaminated with the feces from infected humans or animals. You can become infected after accidentally swallowing the parasite; Bad Microbes
If this is Organic you should Panic Always Aerate Compost Tea
 
Compost Teas, Compost Extracts & Liquid Organic Extracts   Compost leachate  is the dark-colored solution that leaches out of the bottom of the compost pile—most likely will be rich in soluble nutrients; but, in the early stage of composting it may also contain pathogens. It would be viewed as a pollution source if allowed to run off-site. Compost leachate needs further bioremediation and is not suitable or recommended as a foliar spray. Compost Extract  is made from compost suspended in a barrel of water for 7 to 14 days, usually soaking in a burlap sack—a centuries-old technique. The primary benefit of the extract will be a supply of soluble nutrients, which can be used as a liquid fertilizer. Anaerobic problems diminish results. Compost tea , A.C.T. in modern terminology, is a compost extract brewed with a microbial food source—molasses, kelp, rock dust, humic-fulvic acids. The compost-tea brewing technique, an aerobic process, extracts and grows populations of beneficial microorganisms. Compost teas are distinguished from compost extracts both in method of production and in the way they are used. Teas are actively brewed with microbial food and catalyst sources added to the solution, and a sump pump bubbles and aerates the solution, supplying plenty of much-needed oxygen. The aim of the brewing process is to extract beneficial microbes from the compost itself, followed by growing these populations of microbes during the 24- to 36-hour brew period. The compost provides the source of microbes, and the microbial food and catalyst amendments promote the growth and multiplication of microbes in the tea. Some examples of microbial food sources: molasses, kelp powder, and fish powder. Some examples of microbial catalysts: humic acid, yucca extract, and rock dust. Building on the concept of compost teas as a liquid organic extract, what are some other common organic extracts used as a liquid drench or foliar spray? Manure Tea  - Manure-based extracts are a soluble nutrient source made from raw animal manure soaked in water. For all practical purposes, manure tea is prepared in the same way as the compost extracts described in the preceding section. The manure is placed in a burlap sack and suspended in a barrel of water for 7 to 14 days. The primary benefit of the tea will be a supply of soluble nutrients, which can be used as a liquid fertilizer. Herbal Tea -  Plant-based extracts are from stinging nettle, horse tail, comfrey, clover. A common method is to stuff a barrel about three-quarters full of fresh green plant material, then top off the barrel with tepid water. The tea is allowed to ferment at ambient temperatures for 3 to 10 days. The finished product is strained, then diluted in portions of 1:10 or 1:5 and used as a foliar spray or soil drench. Herbal teas provide a supply of soluble nutrients as well as bioactive plant compounds. Liquid Manures  - Mixtures of plant and animal byproducts steeped as an extract—stinging nettle, comfrey, seaweed, fish wastes, fish meal. Liquid manures are a blend of marine products (local fish wastes, seaweed extract, kelp meal) and locally harvested herbs, soaked and fermented at ambient temperatures for 3 to 10 days. Liquid manures are prepared similarly to herbal tea—the material is fully immersed in the barrel during the fermenting period, then strained and diluted and used as a foliar spray or soil drench. Liquid manures supply soluble nutrients and bioactive compounds. Summary  - Compost teas and herbal teas are tools that can be made on the farm to enhance crop fertility and to inoculate the phyllosphere and rhizosphere with soluble nutrients, beneficial microbes, and the beneficial metabolites of microbes. Caution  - Whereas raw animal manures are used as a compost windrow feedstock, the composting process—thermophyllic heating to 135-160° F for 10-15 days—assures pathogen reduction. The raw organic matter initially present in the compost windrow undergoes a complete transformation, with humus as an end product. Any pathogens associated with raw manures will be gone. So caution is extended: Manure teas are NOT the same thing as compost teas or compost extracts. Because of concerns over new pathogenic strains of E. coli, the author advises growers to reconsider manure teas and/or to work with a microbial lab to ensure a safe, worthwhile product. Steve Diver ATTRA
Methods of Compost Tea Production Bucket-Fermentation Method "Passive" compost tea is prepared by immersing a burlap sack filled with compost into a bucket or tank, stirring occasionally. Usually the brew time is longer, from 7 to 10 days. This is the method that dates back hundreds of years in Europe, and is more akin to a compost watery extract than a "brewed" and aerated compost tea. Bucket-Bubbler Method The equipment setup and scale of production are similar to the bucket method, except that an aquarium-size pump and air bubbler are used in association with microbial food and catalyst sources added to the solution as an amendment. Since aeration is critical, as many as three sump pumps may be used in a bucket simultaneously. With homemade compost tea brewing, a compost "sock" is commonly used as a filter-strainer. Ideally, the mesh size will strain compost particulate matter but still allow beneficial microbes—including fungal hyphae and nematodes—to migrate into solution. Single-strand mesh materials such as nylon stockings, laundry bags, and paint bags are some of the materials being used; fungal hyphae tend to get caught in polywoven fabrics. If burlap is used, it should be "aged" burlap. Trough Method Large-scale production of compost teas employs homemade tanks and pumps. An 8- or 12-inch-diameter PVC pipe is cut in half, drilled full of holes, and lined with burlap. Compost is placed in this makeshift trough. The PVC trough is supported above the tank, several feet in the air. The tank is filled with water, and microbial food sources are added as an amendment. A sump pump sucks the solution from the bottom of the tank and distributes the solution to a trickle line running horizontally along the top of the PVC trough filled with compost. As the solution runs through the burlap bags containing the compost, a leachate is created which then drops several feet through the air back into the open tank below. A sump pump in the bottom of the tank collects this "tea" and distributes it back through the water line at the top of the trough, and so on. Through this process, which lasts about seven days, the compost tea is recirculated, bubbled, and aerated. The purpose of the microbial food source is to grow a large population of beneficial microorganisms. Commercial Tea Brewers Commercial equipment is available for the production of brewed compost teas (see a list of suppliers below). Usually there is a compost sack or a compost leachate basket with drainage holes, either of which are used to hold a certain volume of compost. The compost-filled container is placed in a specially designed tank filled with chlorine-free water. Microbial food sources are added to the solution. A pump supplies oxygen to a specially-designed aeration device which bubbles and aerates the tea.  Steve Diver ATTRA Vortex Method The use of air to raise water and then draw down into a vortex the fluid tea. Highly aerobic and energized by the organized water flow, the fluid then passes through a chaos chamber before it once again is organized by the vortex. This method is popular among EM users as well a biodynamic systems.
Compost + h 2 o  + molasses + air Basic Compost Tea Aquarium Air Pump Avoid anaerobic pockets! Tilt  pail  to prevent  Putrifaction   Spacer Air Stone Suspend Compost In  “tea bag”
 
Vortex Brewer
Single Vortex Brewer
 
 
Clockwise
Counter Clockwise
Duel Vortex Brewer 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ”
Double Vortex Compost Tea Brewer 1 1/2 ” 1 1/2 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” Larger Center Chamber Water chaos zone Side Drain Makes unit lower
 
Mixing Chamber (Chaos Chamber)
Whizz-bang Double Vortex Compost Tea Brewer Clockwise Counter Clockwise Chaos Exchanger Air Pump Collection Point
 
 
 
Rock Powders
Epsom Salt Rock Powder Rock Powder Sea Salt Calcium Carbonate Bat Guano Granite Dust EM5
 
 
 
 
 
This book was the first work to attack Von Liebig ’ s salt fertilizer thesis.  Translated from the German, the book introduced people to the idea that plants require healthy food in order to flourish, just as a human being does.  It describes a then new and rational system for fertilization which has become science today  —  fertilizing with stone dust.  Hensel went searching for food for plants and found it in the rocks. Fed on such foods, plants will yield healthy, wholesome and life sustaining food that escapes disease and parasites. Dr. Julius Hensel (1894)
 
Gravel Gravel dust
Quartz
Plant Sap Disease free at 12º+
Got Minerals?
FAA Egg Calcium Extract Bone Calcium  Phosphate Extract Vermi Casts Bio D 500
 
 
Got Tea?
1924  Biodynamics In Germany,  Rudolf Steiner  developed  biodynamic agriculture , the first comprehensive organic farming system.  This began with a lecture series Steiner presented at a farm in Koberwitz (now in Poland) in 1924.  Steiner emphasized the farmer's role in guiding and balancing the interaction of the animals, plants and soil. Healthy animals depended upon healthy plants (for their food), healthy plants upon healthy soil, healthy soil upon healthy animals (for the manure).
Biodynamic Preparations BD 500 BD 501
Biodynamic Composts
Pfeiffer's research into the microbiology of compost production led to the development of a compost inoculant, BD Compost Starter®, that contains all the BD compost preparations (502-507) plus stirred BD No. 500, as well as  55 different types of microorganisms (mixed cultures of bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, yeasts).  BD Compost Starter® is widely used by biodynamic farmers because it is easy to apply while building the compost pile. Today, the starter is prepared and sold through the Josephine Porter Institute (JPI) for Applied Biodynamics ( 5 ), in Woolwine, Virginia. Because compost is often at a premium on farms, European biodynamic researcher Maria Thun developed Barrel Compost. Consisting of fresh cow manure that has been treated with the original preparations as well as egg shells and basalt rock dust — then allowed to ferment in a pit for about 3 months, finished Barrel Compost is diluted in water and applied directly to the fields as a spray. Use of Barrel Compost compensates to some degree for lack of sufficient compost. A variation on Barrel Compost is mixing stinging nettle with fresh cow manure in a 50:50 volume to volume ratio.
Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas My order of experience
Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Lower Tech Higher Tech Complexity
Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Cost Low High Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi
Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Adaption/longevity KNF Palawan Trained - 1,200 After 1 year -   <10  Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Long time Short time
Adaption/longevity Cost Lower Tech Your order of experience Just Do It!
3 Day Intensive Training Arrive Monday T-W-Th Training: lectures and hands Friday - Underground River or farm tours Check out Saturday
Sustainable Agriculture Natural Farming Nature Farming Permaculture Organic Farming Bio-Dynamic Farming Biological Farming Korean Natural Farming Kyusei Nature Farming Demeter Biodynamics F.A.I.T.H. Gardening  French Raised Beds Farming God ’s Way Keyline Design SALT Farming Permaculture Sustainable Square foot
Quality Assurance USDA Certification - N.O.P. OMRI Philippine Certification Only guarantees a minimum Pesticide free. Chemical free. Three years prior to production. Minimum standard - poison free No nutritional standard Organic by Default - Most organic food
 
 
 
Nutrient Dense Food BEYOND Organic There is a movement for high quality food High vitamins, high minerals, high sugar This food has healing powers Brix o  as an indicator The refractometer
Plant Sap Disease free at 12º+
The Brix Scale A relative index of food quality Cabbage 6  8  10  12 Within a given species of plant, the crop with the higher refractive index will have a: higher sugar content higher mineral content higher protein content greater specific gravity or density This adds up to sweeter taste, higher mineral density and more nutrition as well as food with lower nitrate and water content, a lower freezing point, and better storage attributes. Next step: ORAC rating
Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity ORAC rating is a laboratory analysis that provides an overall measure of a food's   antioxidant   activity. The higher the ORAC score, the greater is the food's antioxidant capacity. ORAC tests are often used to compare the antioxidant activities of different foods (fruits,  vegetables , juices, wines, etc.).
 
Mango Tomato
Brixº as a quality indicator High quality milk is: Raw (unpasturized) Fresh (not stale) Good Brix (>10º) From Grass Fed cows (no soy or grain)
Got High Brix?

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Advanced Microbial Applications and Methods

  • 1. EM1 EME FPE FFE EM5 EM7 Robust Polycultures
  • 2. EM1 (original) is sleeping. Microorganisms in EM1 are in a dormant stage.
  • 3. To activate sleeping microorganisms, give them: food and a house . ( livestock grade blackstrap molasses ) ( water in an anaerobic condition )
  • 5. EM Extended Calibration Dilution Fermentation Measure 30 ml EM1 (2 Table spoons) Always Be scientific!
  • 6. EME 30 ml 300 M 2 Tablespoon 15 ml EME Inoculation Dilution Rate 1:500 4 gallons X 3.8 L/g = 15 Liters 15 Liters = 15,000 ml /500= 30 ml Area Covered
  • 7. The Value of EM1 by volume 30 ml 1,000 ml (1 Liter) 33 10,000 M 2 (1 hectare) 1,000 ml (1 Liter) 30 Liters 1,000 30 hectares Cost 80 centavos 26 peso 800 peso EM1 EM Extended Back Pack Sprayer Area 1 ml 30 ml 1 300 M 2
  • 8. Inoculation Comparison Takes advanced management and time No guarantee of results Cultures can have contamination P 20-60/ backpack sprayer P600-P3,600/hectare Simple management Little time, easy Guaranteed results Cultures will be pure P 1/ backpack sprayer P 30/hectare Good System if Sugar and rice are Free, Lots of time to manage, You are exacting and precise Good System if Sugar is Expensive, Too busy for tedious propagation, Want to save money
  • 9. 3 Fs to Sustainability Functionally Do-able Financially Viable Friendly on the Environment Functionality
  • 10. Hands on training EM Technology is Easy
  • 12. Learn to Propagate Microbes
  • 14.  
  • 15. 5 pales Manure or Copra Meal 15 Pales Uling EM Fertilizer Bokashi
  • 16. Stochu (EM5) keeps pests away
  • 17. How to make EM 5 With neem leaves, Neem oil or seed, garlic, ginger, lemon grass, herbs Insect repellent
  • 18. How to make FPE (100L) EM Fermented Plant Extract Herb Hormone
  • 19. Recommended chopped plants Weeds having strong life and flavors and also Neem, garlic, ginger, lemon grass, herbs, chili* Grasses having medicinal values Prunings, young shoots and immature fruits (the weeds should be cut in the morning) Microbial Herbal Hormone Infusion
  • 20. How to make FPE (100L) EM Fermented Fruit Extract Ripening Agent Ripe fruits
  • 21. Indigenous Micro organisms (IMO) Fermented Plant Juice ( FPJ) - Fermented Fruit Juice ( FFJ ) - Lactic Acid Bacteria ( LA B ) - Oriental Herbal Nutrients (O H N) - Fermented Fish Amino Acid ( FAA) - Water soluble calcium ( W CA) - Water soluble calcium phosphate (WSCP) Korean Natural Farming Foliar Fertilizers Herb Hormone Microbial Inoculants Bones are high in Phosphate Burnt Egg Shells + Natural Vinegar Egg Shells are Calcium Carbonate 21 days
  • 22. Bones Cow Pig Goat Dinosaur Foliar Fertilizers Free bones
  • 23. Fish Silage Foliar Fertilizers Always Be scientific!
  • 24. Fish Silage Easily digested high energy food Lutefiske Pickled Herring Fish Sauce Bagoong Enzymes and peptides, amino acids, available N
  • 25. Fish Silage Fish Emulsion F.A.A. Fish Amino Acid Fresh not rotten Fish Waste Entrails Trash Fish Free Fish Foliar Fertilizers
  • 26. Fish Silage (F.A.A.) 1 part chopped fish waste 1 part molasses Small Water (if needed) to mix Plastic Allowed for Fertilizer Production Enzymes and peptides, amino acids, available N Foliar Fertilizers
  • 27. Organic Foliar Fertilizer Aloha's Favorite Tea Keith Mikkelson giving three (3) day intensive training for the Department of Agrarian Reform
  • 28. USA: Dr. Elaine Ingram Dr. Ingram developed a curriculum for the Aerated Tea Brewers Guide The SOIL FOOD WEB is a complex inter relationship of organisms and chemical reactions that all effect each other. We can create favorable microbial habitats and inoculants for the soil food web to prosper
  • 30. Please: Always Aerate to culture Beneficial Microorganisms Aloha's Favorite Tea Keith Mikkelson giving three (3) day intensive training for the Department of Agrarian Reform Fermentation
  • 31. Air Water Compost Molasses 1/2 Liter Molasses 1 L Vermicasts 20 L H2O E.M. Aquarium Air Pump
  • 32. Brew 24 hrs for annual vegetables Brew 48-72 hrs for Perennials Harvest time
  • 33. This would never happen at Aloha House! Some call this &quot;Compost Tea&quot;
  • 34. Organic? Illegal in the USA Stagnent-Uncomposted-Raw-Manure
  • 35. E-coli Giardia Fecal coliforms Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC): found in humans, cattle, and goats. Virotype is strain O157:H7, which causes bloody diarrhea without fever. EHEC can cause hemolytic-uremic syndrome and sudden kidney failure and possesses toxin that can elicit an intense inflammatory response. The Giardia parasite lives in the intestine of infected humans or animals. Giardia is found in soil, food, water, or surfaces that have been contaminated with the feces from infected humans or animals. You can become infected after accidentally swallowing the parasite; Bad Microbes
  • 36. If this is Organic you should Panic Always Aerate Compost Tea
  • 37.  
  • 38. Compost Teas, Compost Extracts & Liquid Organic Extracts Compost leachate is the dark-colored solution that leaches out of the bottom of the compost pile—most likely will be rich in soluble nutrients; but, in the early stage of composting it may also contain pathogens. It would be viewed as a pollution source if allowed to run off-site. Compost leachate needs further bioremediation and is not suitable or recommended as a foliar spray. Compost Extract is made from compost suspended in a barrel of water for 7 to 14 days, usually soaking in a burlap sack—a centuries-old technique. The primary benefit of the extract will be a supply of soluble nutrients, which can be used as a liquid fertilizer. Anaerobic problems diminish results. Compost tea , A.C.T. in modern terminology, is a compost extract brewed with a microbial food source—molasses, kelp, rock dust, humic-fulvic acids. The compost-tea brewing technique, an aerobic process, extracts and grows populations of beneficial microorganisms. Compost teas are distinguished from compost extracts both in method of production and in the way they are used. Teas are actively brewed with microbial food and catalyst sources added to the solution, and a sump pump bubbles and aerates the solution, supplying plenty of much-needed oxygen. The aim of the brewing process is to extract beneficial microbes from the compost itself, followed by growing these populations of microbes during the 24- to 36-hour brew period. The compost provides the source of microbes, and the microbial food and catalyst amendments promote the growth and multiplication of microbes in the tea. Some examples of microbial food sources: molasses, kelp powder, and fish powder. Some examples of microbial catalysts: humic acid, yucca extract, and rock dust. Building on the concept of compost teas as a liquid organic extract, what are some other common organic extracts used as a liquid drench or foliar spray? Manure Tea - Manure-based extracts are a soluble nutrient source made from raw animal manure soaked in water. For all practical purposes, manure tea is prepared in the same way as the compost extracts described in the preceding section. The manure is placed in a burlap sack and suspended in a barrel of water for 7 to 14 days. The primary benefit of the tea will be a supply of soluble nutrients, which can be used as a liquid fertilizer. Herbal Tea - Plant-based extracts are from stinging nettle, horse tail, comfrey, clover. A common method is to stuff a barrel about three-quarters full of fresh green plant material, then top off the barrel with tepid water. The tea is allowed to ferment at ambient temperatures for 3 to 10 days. The finished product is strained, then diluted in portions of 1:10 or 1:5 and used as a foliar spray or soil drench. Herbal teas provide a supply of soluble nutrients as well as bioactive plant compounds. Liquid Manures - Mixtures of plant and animal byproducts steeped as an extract—stinging nettle, comfrey, seaweed, fish wastes, fish meal. Liquid manures are a blend of marine products (local fish wastes, seaweed extract, kelp meal) and locally harvested herbs, soaked and fermented at ambient temperatures for 3 to 10 days. Liquid manures are prepared similarly to herbal tea—the material is fully immersed in the barrel during the fermenting period, then strained and diluted and used as a foliar spray or soil drench. Liquid manures supply soluble nutrients and bioactive compounds. Summary - Compost teas and herbal teas are tools that can be made on the farm to enhance crop fertility and to inoculate the phyllosphere and rhizosphere with soluble nutrients, beneficial microbes, and the beneficial metabolites of microbes. Caution - Whereas raw animal manures are used as a compost windrow feedstock, the composting process—thermophyllic heating to 135-160° F for 10-15 days—assures pathogen reduction. The raw organic matter initially present in the compost windrow undergoes a complete transformation, with humus as an end product. Any pathogens associated with raw manures will be gone. So caution is extended: Manure teas are NOT the same thing as compost teas or compost extracts. Because of concerns over new pathogenic strains of E. coli, the author advises growers to reconsider manure teas and/or to work with a microbial lab to ensure a safe, worthwhile product. Steve Diver ATTRA
  • 39. Methods of Compost Tea Production Bucket-Fermentation Method &quot;Passive&quot; compost tea is prepared by immersing a burlap sack filled with compost into a bucket or tank, stirring occasionally. Usually the brew time is longer, from 7 to 10 days. This is the method that dates back hundreds of years in Europe, and is more akin to a compost watery extract than a &quot;brewed&quot; and aerated compost tea. Bucket-Bubbler Method The equipment setup and scale of production are similar to the bucket method, except that an aquarium-size pump and air bubbler are used in association with microbial food and catalyst sources added to the solution as an amendment. Since aeration is critical, as many as three sump pumps may be used in a bucket simultaneously. With homemade compost tea brewing, a compost &quot;sock&quot; is commonly used as a filter-strainer. Ideally, the mesh size will strain compost particulate matter but still allow beneficial microbes—including fungal hyphae and nematodes—to migrate into solution. Single-strand mesh materials such as nylon stockings, laundry bags, and paint bags are some of the materials being used; fungal hyphae tend to get caught in polywoven fabrics. If burlap is used, it should be &quot;aged&quot; burlap. Trough Method Large-scale production of compost teas employs homemade tanks and pumps. An 8- or 12-inch-diameter PVC pipe is cut in half, drilled full of holes, and lined with burlap. Compost is placed in this makeshift trough. The PVC trough is supported above the tank, several feet in the air. The tank is filled with water, and microbial food sources are added as an amendment. A sump pump sucks the solution from the bottom of the tank and distributes the solution to a trickle line running horizontally along the top of the PVC trough filled with compost. As the solution runs through the burlap bags containing the compost, a leachate is created which then drops several feet through the air back into the open tank below. A sump pump in the bottom of the tank collects this &quot;tea&quot; and distributes it back through the water line at the top of the trough, and so on. Through this process, which lasts about seven days, the compost tea is recirculated, bubbled, and aerated. The purpose of the microbial food source is to grow a large population of beneficial microorganisms. Commercial Tea Brewers Commercial equipment is available for the production of brewed compost teas (see a list of suppliers below). Usually there is a compost sack or a compost leachate basket with drainage holes, either of which are used to hold a certain volume of compost. The compost-filled container is placed in a specially designed tank filled with chlorine-free water. Microbial food sources are added to the solution. A pump supplies oxygen to a specially-designed aeration device which bubbles and aerates the tea. Steve Diver ATTRA Vortex Method The use of air to raise water and then draw down into a vortex the fluid tea. Highly aerobic and energized by the organized water flow, the fluid then passes through a chaos chamber before it once again is organized by the vortex. This method is popular among EM users as well a biodynamic systems.
  • 40. Compost + h 2 o + molasses + air Basic Compost Tea Aquarium Air Pump Avoid anaerobic pockets! Tilt pail to prevent Putrifaction Spacer Air Stone Suspend Compost In “tea bag”
  • 41.  
  • 44.  
  • 45.  
  • 48. Duel Vortex Brewer 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ”
  • 49. Double Vortex Compost Tea Brewer 1 1/2 ” 1 1/2 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” 1 1/4 ” Larger Center Chamber Water chaos zone Side Drain Makes unit lower
  • 50.  
  • 52. Whizz-bang Double Vortex Compost Tea Brewer Clockwise Counter Clockwise Chaos Exchanger Air Pump Collection Point
  • 53.  
  • 54.  
  • 55.  
  • 57. Epsom Salt Rock Powder Rock Powder Sea Salt Calcium Carbonate Bat Guano Granite Dust EM5
  • 58.  
  • 59.  
  • 60.  
  • 61.  
  • 62.  
  • 63. This book was the first work to attack Von Liebig ’ s salt fertilizer thesis. Translated from the German, the book introduced people to the idea that plants require healthy food in order to flourish, just as a human being does. It describes a then new and rational system for fertilization which has become science today — fertilizing with stone dust. Hensel went searching for food for plants and found it in the rocks. Fed on such foods, plants will yield healthy, wholesome and life sustaining food that escapes disease and parasites. Dr. Julius Hensel (1894)
  • 64.  
  • 67. Plant Sap Disease free at 12º+
  • 69. FAA Egg Calcium Extract Bone Calcium Phosphate Extract Vermi Casts Bio D 500
  • 70.  
  • 71.  
  • 73. 1924 Biodynamics In Germany, Rudolf Steiner developed biodynamic agriculture , the first comprehensive organic farming system. This began with a lecture series Steiner presented at a farm in Koberwitz (now in Poland) in 1924. Steiner emphasized the farmer's role in guiding and balancing the interaction of the animals, plants and soil. Healthy animals depended upon healthy plants (for their food), healthy plants upon healthy soil, healthy soil upon healthy animals (for the manure).
  • 76. Pfeiffer's research into the microbiology of compost production led to the development of a compost inoculant, BD Compost Starter®, that contains all the BD compost preparations (502-507) plus stirred BD No. 500, as well as 55 different types of microorganisms (mixed cultures of bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, yeasts). BD Compost Starter® is widely used by biodynamic farmers because it is easy to apply while building the compost pile. Today, the starter is prepared and sold through the Josephine Porter Institute (JPI) for Applied Biodynamics ( 5 ), in Woolwine, Virginia. Because compost is often at a premium on farms, European biodynamic researcher Maria Thun developed Barrel Compost. Consisting of fresh cow manure that has been treated with the original preparations as well as egg shells and basalt rock dust — then allowed to ferment in a pit for about 3 months, finished Barrel Compost is diluted in water and applied directly to the fields as a spray. Use of Barrel Compost compensates to some degree for lack of sufficient compost. A variation on Barrel Compost is mixing stinging nettle with fresh cow manure in a 50:50 volume to volume ratio.
  • 77. Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas My order of experience
  • 78. Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Lower Tech Higher Tech Complexity
  • 79. Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Cost Low High Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi
  • 80. Ancient Forest Bokashi KNF Simulate Nature EM1 Biodynamic Preps ACT Aerated Compost Teas Adaption/longevity KNF Palawan Trained - 1,200 After 1 year - <10 Aerobic Compost Thermophilic / Mesophiles / Actinomycetes / Fungi Long time Short time
  • 81. Adaption/longevity Cost Lower Tech Your order of experience Just Do It!
  • 82. 3 Day Intensive Training Arrive Monday T-W-Th Training: lectures and hands Friday - Underground River or farm tours Check out Saturday
  • 83. Sustainable Agriculture Natural Farming Nature Farming Permaculture Organic Farming Bio-Dynamic Farming Biological Farming Korean Natural Farming Kyusei Nature Farming Demeter Biodynamics F.A.I.T.H. Gardening French Raised Beds Farming God ’s Way Keyline Design SALT Farming Permaculture Sustainable Square foot
  • 84. Quality Assurance USDA Certification - N.O.P. OMRI Philippine Certification Only guarantees a minimum Pesticide free. Chemical free. Three years prior to production. Minimum standard - poison free No nutritional standard Organic by Default - Most organic food
  • 85.  
  • 86.  
  • 87.  
  • 88. Nutrient Dense Food BEYOND Organic There is a movement for high quality food High vitamins, high minerals, high sugar This food has healing powers Brix o as an indicator The refractometer
  • 89. Plant Sap Disease free at 12º+
  • 90. The Brix Scale A relative index of food quality Cabbage 6 8 10 12 Within a given species of plant, the crop with the higher refractive index will have a: higher sugar content higher mineral content higher protein content greater specific gravity or density This adds up to sweeter taste, higher mineral density and more nutrition as well as food with lower nitrate and water content, a lower freezing point, and better storage attributes. Next step: ORAC rating
  • 91. Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity ORAC rating is a laboratory analysis that provides an overall measure of a food's antioxidant activity. The higher the ORAC score, the greater is the food's antioxidant capacity. ORAC tests are often used to compare the antioxidant activities of different foods (fruits, vegetables , juices, wines, etc.).
  • 92.  
  • 94. Brixº as a quality indicator High quality milk is: Raw (unpasturized) Fresh (not stale) Good Brix (>10º) From Grass Fed cows (no soy or grain)

Editor's Notes

  • #3: EM1は休眠状態にある このスライドからEMを実際に使うための説明となる
  • #4: 眠っている菌を起こすため、EMにエサと水を与える
  • #8: 培養したEM活性液はコストパフォーマンスに優れている 購入したEM1は、現場では20000倍程度で使える
  • #17: ストチュウには害虫忌避効果があり、EMFPEとの併用で効果が上がる
  • #18: ストチュウ仕込みの分量 酒の種類は、蒸留酒であればウイスキーなどでもよい (度数の高いもの)
  • #19: EMFPEの作り方 100Lの容器で作る
  • #20: 使用できる植物の種類 このスライドは、必要ない場合は抜いて発表できる
  • #21: EMFPEの作り方 100Lの容器で作る