Sorry for the delayed update. The TH-82 experiment failed completely because there was something wrong with the seeds, maybe faked. Some month ago we planted again hybrid from Bayer. Althought this experiment was heavily affected by the La Nina drought and we had to harvest 2 weeks before schedule the field with commercial fertilizer yielded 3 t/ha while those with our biochar-mixture doubled the harvest! We are now continuing this combination from bio and commercial fertilizer with other crops.
How about potting soil that is acidic ,will the charcoal be usefull?? I ve read that charcoal works on heavy ground and it's prohibited to mix it with soil with high potassium conc...
2007?I would have really would have liked to have seen an update on this and if you had higher yields than normal planting,I have seen your comment with the (th-82)but the real issue for this video will be did the biochar work better than normal planting
Apparantly, the charcoal works best when left and moistened for a few months to allow bacteria to colonize it. Im going to try it at home some time with a controlled indoor grow.
"This is a very ancient way of planting and harvesting rice..the Philippine government should invest and help farmers get technical assistance, the use of scientific method such as control flooding of the levees, machineries- using automatic planters which the Japanese have and combined harvester machines.
Being the world's number one rice importing country and one of the fastest growing population, the agricultural sector is essential particularly in rice cultivation and should be addressed.
Yes, when the soil is already very fertile the biochar does not help so much. Actually we have new experiments ongoing, with hybrid seeds (TH-82), biochar, compost, underplowed stalks, no commercial fertilizer. In about 2 weeks its harvest and it looks very promissing so far.
At our vegetable experiments the soil mixture of biochar, ashes, dung and compost generated some sensational results and at present we are already in the commercial stage.
I suspect that you haven't really gained much benefit from the char as the quantities in your soil are so small. As I understand it the char isn't really a fertilizer, more a substrate, an the true amazonian terra preta soils have MUCH higher densities of char than you have used.
The real benefit will come over years as local farmers create their own biochar from the farming wastes. You don't show what happens to the rice stalks after threshing but they would be prime for making biochar
We had made another experiment at the same experimental field, added again the same amount of biochar and compost, but the harvest was heavily damaged by rain and overflooding. So we do not have proper results. Next planting is in December, harvest in April. My next Philippine trip is from January 16 to June 5, then more experiments will be made, especially with sugarcane, corn and vegetables.
might biochar be more feasable for the long term, there should be minimal nutrient leaching and an possibly an overall reduction in fertilizer application? great work and thanks for the video, biochar has a great potential to sequester carbon if it were adapted by farmers who are practice 'slash and burn' agriculture.
Sorry for the delayed update. The TH-82 experiment failed completely because there was something wrong with the seeds, maybe faked. Some month ago we planted again hybrid from Bayer. Althought this experiment was heavily affected by the La Nina drought and we had to harvest 2 weeks before schedule the field with commercial fertilizer yielded 3 t/ha while those with our biochar-mixture doubled the harvest! We are now continuing this combination from bio and commercial fertilizer with other crops.
jochen53 1 year ago
How about potting soil that is acidic ,will the charcoal be usefull?? I ve read that charcoal works on heavy ground and it's prohibited to mix it with soil with high potassium conc...
andreilucaci81 1 year ago
2007?I would have really would have liked to have seen an update on this and if you had higher yields than normal planting,I have seen your comment with the (th-82)but the real issue for this video will be did the biochar work better than normal planting
tappakeggaday1 1 year ago
Apparantly, the charcoal works best when left and moistened for a few months to allow bacteria to colonize it. Im going to try it at home some time with a controlled indoor grow.
manchester26m 2 years ago
Please check the SRI method.
Google
journey to forever how to help rice plants
Also, significantly higher amounts of charcoal may improve performance.
Google
Uses of Rice Husk Charcoal for Container Culture Mie University
pawnjp 2 years ago
Biochar will save the world!
takadi 2 years ago 2
carbon
tyniehawk 2 years ago
"This is a very ancient way of planting and harvesting rice..the Philippine government should invest and help farmers get technical assistance, the use of scientific method such as control flooding of the levees, machineries- using automatic planters which the Japanese have and combined harvester machines.
Being the world's number one rice importing country and one of the fastest growing population, the agricultural sector is essential particularly in rice cultivation and should be addressed.
Flipsify 2 years ago
Comment removed
Flipsify 2 years ago
It took repeated charring over hundreds of years to create the black gold soil of the Amazon
bipper1 2 years ago
Yes, when the soil is already very fertile the biochar does not help so much. Actually we have new experiments ongoing, with hybrid seeds (TH-82), biochar, compost, underplowed stalks, no commercial fertilizer. In about 2 weeks its harvest and it looks very promissing so far.
At our vegetable experiments the soil mixture of biochar, ashes, dung and compost generated some sensational results and at present we are already in the commercial stage.
jochen53 2 years ago
I suspect that you haven't really gained much benefit from the char as the quantities in your soil are so small. As I understand it the char isn't really a fertilizer, more a substrate, an the true amazonian terra preta soils have MUCH higher densities of char than you have used.
The real benefit will come over years as local farmers create their own biochar from the farming wastes. You don't show what happens to the rice stalks after threshing but they would be prime for making biochar
mesuno1 2 years ago
We had made another experiment at the same experimental field, added again the same amount of biochar and compost, but the harvest was heavily damaged by rain and overflooding. So we do not have proper results. Next planting is in December, harvest in April. My next Philippine trip is from January 16 to June 5, then more experiments will be made, especially with sugarcane, corn and vegetables.
jochen53 4 years ago
might biochar be more feasable for the long term, there should be minimal nutrient leaching and an possibly an overall reduction in fertilizer application? great work and thanks for the video, biochar has a great potential to sequester carbon if it were adapted by farmers who are practice 'slash and burn' agriculture.
otacon451 4 years ago
how many weeks should it be if we were to observe the growth of plants?? pls. reply... tnx..
kim4rev 4 years ago
well done.
queensrightelbow 4 years ago