@iwillbite > that’s literally a recipe for plant food https://tube.raccoon.quest/watch?v=P9ELg7PmJEU Did 2Kg of nettle extract recently. The place I normally got my nettle go mowed and I don't have any left to eat for myself :cry: You can also make LAB if you have too much milk. https://tube.raccoon.quest/watch?v=vgB_5_xKpdo It's not the best that I can make since it's UHT milk but it's better than wasting it. I also add this to my hens feed, fermenting the wheat it a day or before will make them digest much better.
@iwillbite >how dare you Joke aside, I do eat them at some point (when they don't give anymore eggs at all). It's the circle of life.
These hens were rescued and are culled hens, they lay a lot less since they were fed chems that forced them to lay eggs. And each year they lay a little less than previous years, on six hens I get an egg every two days now.
@iwillbite >I would find it hard to eat them tho since they’re pets They're pets but it's not like a dog or close to that. Hens are pretty vicious and cold hearted raptor, they kill each other and eat their own eggs/chicks if something isn't right to them.
>How many years do you stay with them until you finally decide to eat them? Really depends on how I feel it.
@iwillbite >are you like a farmer? I wish I had such land :cry: True organic self sustainability for lets say a family of ten demands so much space when done correctly. I'm not I'm just a computer repair guy with a plant hobby.
>You know too much about this agricultural thing smh This is just very very basic stuff, if you want me to go into details I could start speaking of how ion exchange (nutrients) works in the soil, which is again to simplify done by aerobic type of bacteria (bacteria that multiplies in the presence of oxygen), or name a few endophytic bacteria, lets say carrots, like Agrobacterium, Klebsiella, Rhizobium etc... These one actually live inside the cell of the carrot and help it's growing.
This is just a hobby tbh, I just looked for solutions to organic farming which have the same if not better output than synthetic/industrial agriculture and it actually works. It's just that the soils are very damaged due to the current practices and it requires a few years before it can grow again properly. Just like the human body, it demands time to heal.
@coolboymew It's a joke. Alum rock is a mineral that you can use as a deodorant, most industrial deodorant actually add some in their mixtures.
It's a polished rock that you add a bit of water before applying under your armpits. It's ordorless and doesn't block sweating but it's acidic and thus kills the bacteria that is responsible for the body smell. It's only negative side is that you can't use it if you have cuts/wounds, it's toxic if in contact with blood. But some will argue that spays and the crap they put in industrial deodorant are much worse.