Alright!
This is John Kohler of Growingyourgreens.com.
Today we have another exciting episode for
you, and still on vacation in Maui.
We’re going to share another cool organic
farm with you guys.
So where we’re at today is, we’re next
to my friend Ryan’s place.
There’s a few cool things about Ryan.
Number one, I’ve known him for 15 plus years
now, totally cool.
And another cool thing is actually about five
years, I came to this very farm and filmed
an episode, and I have it documented for you
guys.
I’ll put a link down below for you guys
if you want to see his humble beginnings.
Basically, what happened was about five years
ago, he was working for a local, natural foods
company and was doing that pretty much fulltime,
and tried to maintain a little farm on the
side.
Slowly but surely, day after day, he’d put
a little bit more time in his farm and yes
he’d still have to go to work, but at one
point finally he got his farm built up enough
that he was able to leave his job and do what
he really loved.
I love gardening and I love farming; this
is just fun to me, it’s not work.
And although he is probably technically working
more hours and harder, what you believe work
is is what you think of it.
Some people might think, “John man, it’s
so much work to make a video.”
No, for me, making videos like this for you
guys is fun.
For me gardening, spending time with my girlfriend,
traveling, that’s all fun stuff.
That’s not work, because you gotta do something
with your time.
That’s what he gets to do.
He gets to wake up passionately every day.
He gets to work on his farm, he gets to make
a living, feed his family and all this kind
of stuff.
And actually he’s doing better now than
actually working full time with his farm on
the part time.
I want to encourage all you guys out there,
if you want a career, if you don’t like
your job right now, it is always an option
no matter where you live in the country to
start a farm.
Even if you don’t have enough space.
Check my past episodes or my upcoming episode
on a guy in Portland who has a farm out of
his garage, growing wheat grass and buckwheat
sprouts and sunflower greens.
There’s always a way to do it.
There’s microgreen places that I’ve visited
and made videos about it, and that’s their
indoor farm.
Microgreens, they sell for a lot of money.
The other thing, about my friend here on Maui,
things sell for a little bit more expensive
than the mainland.
Plus, the cool thing he does that differentiates
himself, and I always encourage you guys to
differentiate yourself.
If everybody’s growing apples in your area,
don’t grow apples.
That’s too much competition.
Grow pears, or Asian pears, because nobody’s
got them, so guess what, because you’re
the only guy with them, you could charge more
money for them and the care in general is
probably fairly similar to the apples.
And so he really tries to grow a diversity
of crops and actually at this last farmer’s
market, it was the Maui Upcountry Farmer’s
Market near Kula on Saturday, which, if you
go to, number one farmer’s market in Maui
and I recommend you guys get there early,
very important, like 6:30,7, because they
will sell out of stuff.
There’s that much of a demand for fresh,
locally grown organic produce here in Maui.
That’s one of the reasons why he can make
this happen.
Somebody might think, “Yeah, the farm behind
him looks really great!”
Well, actually, this is not actually his farm.
This is actually the neighbor’s farm, which
also grows with organic principles, but does
it a lot different.
If you think of a farm, you think of a place
like this, with rows and maybe some plastic
on the ground to help prevent weeds, and all
this kind of stuff.
This kind of farm, while it’s cool and I
always encourage you guys to grow your own
food and have your own farm, there are more
sustainable ways and less sustainable ways
to farm in my opinion.
In this method, they’re bringing in a lot
of external inputs because they’re not making
a lot of their own inputs for their farm on
site.
Whereas if we look next door, you’re going
to see, number one, a lot more diversity and
number two, he’s actually making some of
the inputs he needs to fertilize his garden
to make it fruitful, bountiful, and productive.
I guess without any further ado, let’s go
into his farm and what I’m going to do today
with you guys is share some of the techniques
and special crops that he’s growing and
how to do it, whether you live in Maui, or
the mainland, an apartment in New York City,
you’ll be sure to see some tips that’ll
help you grow more food effectively, whether
you just want to grow for you and your family
like I encourage everybody watching this video
to do, or whether you want to start a small
farm like he has to help feed the community
and of course, also your family.
Let’s head into his cool farm.
So this is the road that goes into his farm
and you can see the clearly defined border;
you can see the standard row crop agriculture
up to his property and at this property line,
he’s done something very special.
He’s using the edges to his advantage and
I want to encourage you guys to use the edges
of your property to your advantage.
It’s actually quite windy up here sometimes
so he’s grown windbreaks around the perimeter
of his property and they’re not standard
trees or plants that are just good for nothing,
right?
Everything always has a purpose on his farm,
and I want everything you guys grow to have
a purpose, whether you’re going to eat it,
whether you’re going sell it, or whether
it’s going to feed your soil and you’re
growing nutrition for your soil.
That’s simply what he’s doing.
Over on this side he’s growing some cash
crops, known as sugar cane, I love my sugar
cane, but he’s growing tons of sugar cane
and he has some of the healthiest organic
sugar cane I’ve ever seen.
It’s like this thick in girth, and we’ll
check it out in a little bit.
And then over on this side he has some nitrogen-fixing
trees that grow pretty quickly and you can
just chop them and drop them to add fertility
to his soil.
I guess without further ado let’s head into
the farm and check it out.
One of the things my friend strives to do
is bring fertility to his soil, and one of
the ways he does that is by utilizing animals.
So he has multiple different kinds of animals:
ducks, geese, goats, chickens and yes, even
wabbits.
Silly wabbits, oh you guys are cute wabbits.
So what we’re looking at here is chicken
tractor, I mean rabbit tractor.
This is a rabbit tractor that he can pick
up and move to where he needs it to feed the
rabbits scrub weeds and produce clippings
that he wouldn’t normally eat.
He feeds them that food and then the rabbits
make their rabbit manure.
In the last episode that you guys saw, my
other friend does not use any rabbit manure
and you could do it either way.
You don’t need manure to be an organic gardener.
There are definitely ways to do gardening
without manure, if that is your choice.
For example, the next-door grower, you guys
saw the row crops.
They bring in animal manures from a local
feed lot that’s being fed GMO corn and soy,
yet they still consider themselves organic.
Now the feed lots are feeding them GMO corn
and soy but also antibiotics.
That’s the kind of manure that I do not
and will not endorse or recommend that you
guys bring in to your farm.
If you do want to bring in manure, know the
source.
Better yet, if you want to do manure, make
it yourself.
That’s even the best, because you know what’s
going into the rabbit’s mouth.
Personally, I’ll probably not have a whole
lot of animals.
Once again, there’s pros and cons to everything
in life.
If you get married to a stripper, that’s
a pro and a con, because she’s probably
really hot but the con is she was, you know,
a stripper.
And not to say anything about strippers or
anything, but once again with having animals,
it’s a pro and a con.
The animals are living creatures.
They take a lot more work than the sugar canes
sitting next to them because they’re living,
they’re moving, they’re breathing, they
could get hurt, they require more constant
attention.
If you guys have any sort of pet, a dog or
cat, you guys baby your pets.
And if you have animals, in my opinion you
should be babying them and taking care of
them because they’re actually providing
for you, whether you’re going to use them
for food or whether you’re going to use
them for manure.
A lot of my friend Ryan’s time is dedicated
to taking care of his animal, whether that
means filling up the water bottle, whether
that means feeding them every day, making
sure they always have water, and making sure
they don’t get hurt, or eaten by animals.
I want you guys to think about this.
The other thing I want you guys to think about
and realize is that he is feeding them weeds
that are not really of a financial value here,
but basically rabbits speed up the compost
process to make the nutrients more broken
down and available for the soil.
You could do the same thing just by taking
the weeds and putting them into a compost
pile to let it cook down.
Furthermore, the animals over there, they’re
going to eat the weeds like we eat food, and
our bodies take out what we need, some of
it is burned in energy for us to be able to
talk and move, and then the rest comes out
of us.
So they’re taking the weeds that have, say
100 percent nutrition, and they eat it, and
then they poop out 80 percent of what was
in the weeds when a much better preference
for me and not have to take care of animals
is to put the weeds into my compost and get
a higher percentage of net nutrition out of
it to put back into my garden.
That being said, it will take a lot more leaf
matter to break down because the rabbits and
other animals are concentrators of nutrients.
I always like to give you guys the full story
instead of saying “Don’t use manure!”
or “You should always use manure!”
I want you guys to be mindful, and I try to
lay out both angles for you, so you guys can
make a decision on what you choose to do on
your own garden or farm.
Next let’s go ahead and move on to, it looks
like he just harvested some sugar cane so
I’ll show you a bundle of sugar cane.
What we’re looking at now is some of the
sugar cane that my friend Ryan has harvested,
and you can see all the sugar cane plants
over on that side.
These guys are tall.
I wish I had as much sugar cane as my Ryan
does.
He’s had to train this stuff up because
sugar cane doesn’t grow up erect like guys
at night with a hot girl.
They kind of flop over and get sideways, so
he’s actually had to painstakingly tie these
guys to go upright to provide windbreaks.
In addition, they also provide some shading
to the plants planted below.
Now that could be a good thing when it’s
super hot but that can also be a bad thing
because that can limit growth.
But no matter what he’s doing, it looks
like he’s doing a great job because the
sugar cane is growing quite well.
Sugar cane is in the grass family and sugar
cane, in my opinion, is the best form of sugar
that we should be consuming, if you want to
consume sugar.
We get all this refined sugar.
Everything’s been processed out of it.
Everybody’s always saying “Don’t eat
white foods!
Don’t eat white flours and white sugars!”
We want to eat natural whole food, and the
whole sugar cane here, this bunch, it’s
pretty heavy.
Look at this bunch right here.
This green sugar cane is definitely a lot
of heft, a lot of weight to it.
It’s quite unfortunate that here on Maui,
most of the sugar cane being produced is not
being grown in an organic manner in my opinion,
is not super sustainable just so that people
could have their white sugar.
Most of this sugar cane is sold so that it
actually can be juiced with sugar cane juicers
and drank right up.
If you visit Ryan at the farmers’ market,
he will bring juiced up organic sugar cane
straight from his fields and let me tell you,
I had some at the farmers’ market and it’s
some of the best stuff.
If you’ve never had it you’ve got to have
it.
It’s super sweet and uber delicious.
This is just one of the crops that he grows
to differentiate himself from other growers
because not many people grow the sugar cane.
And he has multiple varieties of the sugar
cane and much like apples, whether you’ve
got Granny Smith or Fuji apples, each variety
of sugar cane grows a little bit differently
and of course, tastes differently as well.
What we’re looking at now is another specialty
crop that I don’t often see around, but
Ryan has been very successful growing this
crop.
And this is raspberries.
I know you’re thinking, “John you could
grow raspberries in the tropics man, I thought
they were a temperate climate fruit.”
Actually, these are not just any old raspberries.
They’re called the mysore raspberries and
check them out, these guys are like black
raspberries.
I always want to encourage you guys to eat
your foods in color, and if you live in the
tropics, you should definitely be growing
some mysore raspberries.
Quite delicious.
Super good and these guys grow in the way
Ryan grows them.
Check it out.
They’re also super productive.
These are actually very labor-intensive to
harvest, so unless you got a lot of labor,
might not want to grow these.
They’ve got some nasty thorns on them, more
akin to blackberries than raspberries, but
he’ll harvest whole containers of these
and guess what, when you’re the only guy
at the farmers’ market who’s got the mysores,
you can charge almost any price you want.
What we’re looking at now is one of Ryan’s
fields for lack of a better word.
This is not like the farmer next door that
has the standard row crops.
Ryan has row crops, but it’s a diversity
of different crops.
He doesn’t just plant all kale in this section
and all okra over there and all the eggplants
over there.
He has it all mixed up.
This is my style of gardening; I like to intermix
things and interplant things and that’s
very valuable so that if you have an outbreak
of pests on this kale, it’s not affecting
the kale on the south fourty over there.
This is technique I personally like to use.
Also it breaks up the monotony and makes things
look cool.
In addition, because of the way my friend
Ryan is farming, he’s more productive than
the farmer next door due to his practices.
As you guys can see, one of the practices,
unlike most commercial farmers that grow a
bunch of lettuce, they’ll come in with their
knife and chop off the whole head of lettuce
and sell the whole head of lettuce, or they’ll
chop off their whole kale plant and sell a
whole thing of kale, Ryan comes and carefully
and painstakingly harvests the leaves off
these kale plants.
He’ll harvest one leaf of this plant, one
off this plant, one leaf off this plant, and
because he’s got a hundred plants all the
way down the row, he’ll have bunches of
kale to sell at the farmers’ market.
Now if you’re just going for a family, you
won’t need a hundred plants but I’d definitely
like to have 20-odd plants during the winter
when things slow down.
Unfortunately, or fortunately for Ryan, things
don’t slow down here in Hawaii because it
never gets super cold like the mainland.
One of the things I want to let you guys know
about is the method of harvesting he’s using.
I call it, for lack of a better word, “sustainably
harvesting” because think of it, if you
took this kale plant, you chopped it down
and then you just sold the kale right here,
then the plant would not be productive for
you.
You’d have to start again, plant the seed,
keep it growing and it’s going to take a
lot more time to replenish.
I always want to encourage you guys to keep
your plants for as long as you can, provided
they are still productive and if you grow
them in good nutritious soil like Ryan has
here and he’s included things here like
the rock dust that I like to use and adding
compost back into his farm, you can maintain
production and still get good yields.
In addition, because Ryan is harvesting in
this fashion, he’s harvesting baby leaves
so the customers are also getting a higher
quality product, in my opinion.
If you’re going to buy kale, collard greens,
or any kind of greens in the store, you always
want to get the smallest leaves because they’re
going to taste better, they’re going to
be more tender whereas many growers are going
to pick that old, nasty, long leaves that
just aren’t going to taste as good when
you’re trying to cut them up and use them
in a salad for example.
I’ve had some of the greens here and I’ve
got to tell you, they are amazing.
Now check this out.
You guys might be thinking, “John, is that
an earth ship?
It looks like the framing of an earth ship.”
Well no, Ryan’s not building an earth ship
here, although he might one day.
What you’re looking at is actually his cool
tomato trellis.
Ryan’s kind of like me.
He likes to reuse things and make things as
most efficient as possible so that he can
save on labor, and it makes less work in the
long run.
If you just let your tomatoes sprawl out on
the ground, they’re going to take more area,
more space and you’re going to have to hunt
and pick for the ripe tomatoes whereas with
this, he’s reusing wood and irrigation line
that was previously existing on the property
to make an amazing trellis structure, one
like I’ve never seen before.
This thing is towering out at like 10 feet
tall with just some simple wood and some wood
screws and this irrigation tubing.
He’s made a really nice structure.
To me, this looks like one of those gazebo
things you walk through when you’re getting
married.
And the other thing he’s doing is he takes
the time to single stem his tomato plants.
These guys grow really tall and when they
grow tall and up and over the top, he actually
weaves them back the other way and he’s
keeping the foliage of the leaves down so
that he can easily pick and see the tomatoes
when they’re ripe.
Not many farmers take the time to do it right,
to be most efficient, but also enables him
to control bugs and disease much better because
there’s very few leaves on the plant.
I definitely like this technique a lot, especially
in a home environment where I'm at and many
of you guys are.
You’re going to want to grow your tomatoes
vertically, get them off the ground and I
may even next year because if Ryan’s doing
it, I’ll single stem my tomatoes too.
Alright, so I wanted to give you guys a walkthrough
of this cool trellis structure.
This thing was fully enclosed, it’d be quite
cool because you’d have a ton of tomatoes
growing but check it out, he not only has
tons of tomatoes growing, but if you look
at the other side, that’s yumbalicious right
there.
My favorite sugar snap peas there, right here,
coming out the vine.
I’m going to go ahead and try this one.
Hear that crunch.
Wow, best Maui-grown sugar snap pea I’ve
ever tasted.
What we’re looking at now is another area
of Ryan’s farm.
He just doesn’t have all row crops like
I showed you guys, and diverse row crops at
that.
He has many different areas, and I want to
encourage you guys when you have a home garden
or farm such as this, don’t put all your
eggs in one basket.
You want to have different areas, with different
gardening techniques because what you’re
going to find is if you only have row crops
with plastic on top, you’re going to be
limited in what you can grow.
What he’s done here is build raised beds
with recycled lumber, much of which that he’s
gotten, if not all of it, for free actually
and it’s just random pieces of lumber, whether
that’s 2x4s or 2x6s, stakes, and he’s
built these amazing raised beds that he’s
brought in some soil and used some native
soil to have a little bit different soil consistency.
And because these are raised beds, he has
more control of the soil and also the weather
and whatnot in here, because the soil does
stay a little bit warmer.
In my personal home garden, I grow in all
raised beds.
I don’t mess around with growing in the
soil because the soil, I don’t know the
quality of it and I want to make sure I have
the best soil because basically I’m feeding
myself.
Now Ryan’s a different situation; while
he is feeding his family with his food, his
primary purpose for growing is to remain viable
as a business.
He’s doing a fine job at that.
One of the ways he does that is by growing
crops people think you can’t grow in Hawaii.
For example, here has some celery and there’s
far and few in between organic growers that
grow celery in Hawaii because it can be challenging
and difficult.
If you go to the cooperative extension office,
they don’t even say you can even grow that,
and there’s a lot of crops they don’t
even recognize or say you could grow because
it’s too hard.
So he’s figured out special techniques that
allow him to grow celery and guess what?
When he’s the only one with celery at the
market, he could charge whatever he wants
if the people want it.
He’s been selling out of his celery, so
that tells you something.
This celery looks super amazing to me and
besides just the celery, this next bed over
here that you guys can’t see, he’s growing
yam bean, or jicama.
The biggest jicama I ever saw was at the farmers’
market on Saturday at Ryan’s booth.
It was huge, and jicama is one of my favorite
root crops, and you need a long season to
grow a good jicama, like he has here.
And of course, when you’ve got good nutrition,
rock dust and good soil, your plants are going
to perform for you.
That’s one of the tips that I’ll share
with you guys.
One of Ryan’s secrets is that working and
developing the soil, figuring out what the
soil needs, what the plants need, and simply
providing it.
Because really, Ryan is not growing simply
vegetables.
He’s growing soil, and I want you guys out
there to focus not growing jicama or celery,
but focus on growing your soil.
When you grow your soil and you have good
soil, it’ll be a lot easier for you to grow
those vegetables.
What we’re looking at now is Ryan’s shade
house, where he starts all the babies that
he grows on his farm.
Now, each one of the different trays has,
I don’t even know, like a hundred cells.
This is a scale far beyond what I’ve ever
done before, but that’s because he has a
full-on farm to produce literally pounds and
pounds of food every week to sell at the farmers’
market.
So he starts all his seeds right here, and
I want to stop right there for a second.
It’s always the best, in my opinion, to
start your seeds if you know what you’re
doing, because a seed packet is cheap and
buying plant starts is quite expensive.
You probably couldn’t be financially viable
if you relied on somebody else to make the
starter plants that he plants on his farm
right here.
For that reason, especially if you’re a
farmer, you need to learn how to properly
start seeds and grow them out.
For many of you guys, who might not have even
started to garden or grow food yet, I would
definitely recommend doing a mixture of buying
some plant starts because you’re assured
a plant start that’s bigger is going to
be more resilient to things happening to it
and higher level and probability of success
whereas if you start seeding, if you don’t
do enough water, not enough sun, too much
sun, the plants could be stunted when they’re
growing up.
The most important time of a plant’s life
is not when it’s producing for you.
It’s when it’s in its baby stage, and
when it gets transplanted out.
You want to make sure, it’s root-bound when
it’s planted out, and you always want to
make sure it has a happy, healthy life.
If he forgets to water his little babies here,
and they run out of water, they could lose
their life or worse, in my opinion, they’d
actually get stunted growth.
And because they were stunted at birth or
when they’re young, they’re never going
to fully mature and develop into their full
genetic potential.
And so he has all sorts of varieties, and
he’s selected varieties that will do well
in the climate here.
That’s another very important tip.
No matter where you live, whether you live
in Hawaii or California or Nevada, you want
to select varieties that are going to do well
in your particular climate and one of the
ways you can learn this is by talking to other
farmers, if they want to share that information
with you, but more importantly, like Ryan
has done since he’s been farming for so
long, he’s done trial and error.
He buys different kinds of seeds; he plants
this variety of carrot, that variety of carrot.
He’s like oh, that variety of carrot didn’t
yield so well so I’m not going to buy that
kind of carrot again, but this variety did
really good so I’m going to keep growing
that kind and he’ll constantly strive to
try different varieties and see what happens.
Plus new varieties, maybe colorful carrots,
red carrots, purple carrots, and that’s
more appealing to customers than the standard
orange carrot which everybody seems to grow
these days.
I’m happy to learn that because he’s growing
using organic methods here, he uses organic
seeds whenever possible, but one of the sad
things and facts about organics is that in
this day and age, not all the seeds in the
entire world are always available organically
so there are rules that say if you can’t
find a seed organic, you can find a conventional
seed and grow it under organic growing practices,
and then you can still call it organic.
That’s simply what he’s doing here, so
that he can have a nice wide range of variety
that’s going to yield well in this particular
climate.
I want to encourage you guys, too, to be so
walking with blinders on and like, “I gotta
get organic seeds and organic plants!”
As long as it’s not GMO, you want to get
some seeds and start them out so you can grow
them.
Ryan here, he saves his seeds so that once
he grows out certain varieties, sometimes
he’ll let some plants go to seed, he’ll
collect the seeds, and then regrow the seeds,
which is now getting more accustomed to the
climate here.
Plus now, there are first generation organic
seeds that he’s produced himself, and the
best seeds, are of course, the ones you save
yourself in my opinion.
One of the cool things about my friend Ryan
is that he makes use of any resource that
would normally be thrown away.
This is a resource that’s constantly being
thrown away, but yet you can use them to grow
food.
This is especially important if you live in
an apartment in New York City and you have
a little patio, well hey, get an oldass bathtub,
fill it with some dirt, put a screen mesh
in the drain because that’s where it’s
going to drain because it is sloped, and plant
some food in it!
It might look funny to your neighbors, but
Ryan doesn’t have any neighbors close by
to see how he’s growing, but he’s simply
using an old cast iron bathtub and these guys
can be heavy, as a large pot.
I always want to encourage you guys to think
out of the box, or think out of the bathtub.
What he’s growing here is actually watercress,
one of my favorite leafy greens to eat.
They like it a little bit more moist than
other plants.
Nice and peppery.
On the other side, on the back side here,
he’s got another peppery plant, known as
the horse radish.
Let me tell you, it’s definitely a good
thing to grow horseradish and the watercress
in the bathtub because these guys are spreaders;
they will spread out and root out and take
over space if you allow it to.
But in a container, it can’t grow past the
boundaries of the container.
So here’s some more cool containers Ryan
is using to grow crops in.
Of course, first I think we have some standard
large wide-mouth pots back there, and all
of these have similar crops.
I believe they are radishes right now, and
whether he’s got large plastic pots and
the cheapest place to buy those large plastic
pots is at your local hydroponics store.
I’ve found some of the large ones could
run maybe 10 bucks for a nice-sized pot.
Another thing he’s using is one that looks
like, that looks like a kid’s wagon.
Another thing that looks very close to this
is one of those pull-along igloo coolers.
You can poke some holes in the bottom; I’ve
seen some people use those before.
All these were reclaimed out of the landfill
and put some good soil in and planting things
in.
Here’s the trick: if there’s pros and
cons to everything in gardening, especially
when growing some of these delicate root crops,
if you have nematodes in your soil, the nematodes
will jack up radish roots.
That’s happened to me before.
But when you put the soil in the container,
and you control it, the nematodes can’t
get in there and they can’t squirm and squiggle,
however they move, and get in there to mess
up your crops.
I’m sure that’s one of the many reasons
he’s using containers to grow these specific
crops.
Next I want to show you a few more cool containers
he’s growing out of.
I think my friend Ryan takes the cake for
being the most innovative farmer that I know.
What he’s using here is really cool.
I don’t know if you can see that on the
camera.
He’s got one of those plastic doghouses
that come in the two halves: the top half
and the bottom half.
This is the top half of one of those plastic
doghouses and he put some wood over on this
side to block out the part where the dog walks
in.
He’s filled this with soil and is just using
it as another container.
Another thing he’s using and he uses a lot
of these guys because they are available,
are like the 35-gallon plastic drums.
He takes a saws-all and saws it in half, puts
some holes in the bottom and guess what?
Voila, instant plant growing container.
So next what we’re looking at is one of
the many fruits Ryan cultivates here on his
farm, and it’s simply the bananas.
He’s done quite well with the bananas; he
has probably over a 150 different clumps on
their own and each clump has all these baby
plants that come up one at a time and each
plant, or banana plant, people would call
them a tree but they’re not technically
a tree, comes up and they do what they’re
doing here.
You can see a bunch of these clumps.
You’ve got the big banana flower on the
bottom and they make a big rack of bananas.
He has many different varieties of bananas
and I actually had an apple banana earlier.
If you come to Hawaii, you’ve got to get
one of Ryan’s apple bananas.
They’re some of the sweetest that I’ve
tasted.
This is basically another cash crop for him
because with the 150 clumps, he makes, I don’t
know 300 pounds give or take, this will be
different every time.
This is a constant supply and harvest.
Amazing.
They produce fairly quickly compared to other
fruit crops that can be grown.
If you live in the tropics, I definitely encourage
you guys to grow some heirloom varieties of
bananas, not the standard Williams or Cavendish
bananas that’s so commonly found in the
supermarket.
What we’re looking at now is a pond that
Ryan put on site here.
Now the pond has the fish in there, which
he’s currently developing and letting them
grow.
He’s using some kind of aquaponics system,
for lack of a better word, he’s not using
a formal aquaponics system where he’s got
the water running out, but basically he’ll
pump out water and feed his vegetables with
the fish water, which is the pee and the poop
of the fish that adds fertility to his soil.
This is yet another way that Ryan is adding
fertility besides the other animals.
He’s also using the fish, and of course
uses and makes plenty of his own compost here.
What we’re looking at now is a trellis system
that Ryan has created using some standard
T-posts every probably 10, 12, feet, some
wire and some cane grass that was growing
on his property.
This is actually done very methodically, about
every foot.
He has some wire running down to the next
one, it’s weaved inside the cane grass,
which is a locally produced resource here
on site, and he’s planted all his new little
tomato plants down below to let them climb
up and grow this amazing, low-cost trellis.
Ryan is full of cool and innovative ideas
on how to reuse things on site instead of
bringing in new things whenever possible.
This is one of the things I admire about him,
and I want to encourage you guys to always
think, once again, outside the box.
And think about how can I use this resource
on my property, whether it’s old plants
that would’ve gone into the compost.
Well can I use that to make a trellis out
of old tree limbs, right?
If they’re straight, shave them down so
you could make a trellis out of it.
Use some twine or some wire, instead of having
to buy expensive trellis material, make your
own out of materials you’ve got.
It’s definitely smart and going to save
you money in the long run.
What we’re looking at now are some liliquoi
vines, and these guys are quite productive.
There’s a lot of liliquoi, and for you guys
that don’t know, liliquoi is a Hawaiian
word for passion fruit.
I love my passion fruits.
He’s got some standard passion fruits here,
and one of the things I want to point out
in this area is that all along the property,
he’s growing his own fertilizer.
I want to encourage you guys to also grow
your own fertilizer.
In many places around the world, you can grow
your own fertilizer.
“John, how do you grow fertilizer man?
I thought that was the stuff that comes out
the bag.”
Well, think about it.
Where did fertilizer originally come from
before we had stuff in a bag?
It came from nature.
Plants would grow next to other plants, they
create symbiotic relationships with their
roots, and the plants such as the one right
here, which is actually called the pigeon
pea, is a nitrogen-fixing plant.
So it absorbs the nitrogen out of the air,
stores it in the root zone and all the leaves
are rich in nutrition as well.
He literally chops and drops this stuff, basically
break it up, tear pieces off, drop it on the
ground and guess what, when that stuff breaks
down, it feeds the plants that are next to
it.
Sometimes he’ll use the pigeon pea to shade
things out if they are young and tender and
until they get strong.
Then he’ll chop down the pigeon pea and
he will feed that to his plants.
Let me tell you this, the best food for plants
is animal manure!
No, kidding, it’s other plants man.
It’s how the nature system is designed and
set up.
If you put too much chicken manure on your
plants, you may burn your plants, but you
can put as much leaves and plant matter as
you want on your plants, and it’s not going
to burn.
So think about that.
I try for the most part to model nature’s
systems.
Of course, now when you’re on a farming
situation and Ryan is pulling out tonnage
of food on a monthly basis and pulling this
food off, he’s taking nutrition out of his
farm and sharing that and getting it out to
people in the community.
He also needs to be bringing back that much,
or more in my opinion, nutrition, back to
his soil to keep his land fertile and enable
him to keep his production up.
Because he exports more nutrients than he’s
bringing in, he’s going to be running at
a deficiency and you can’t run in a deficiency,
whether that’s with a checkbook or at a
farm for very long.
Another innovative way Ryan’s using the
pigeon pea is to provide support and trellis
up his chayote squash vine.
Now Ryan is the one responsible for me growing
my own chayote squash at my place, so that
I could start eating the tips like he does,
and actually like he sells at the market.
This is a chayote squash vine, and this is
a delicacy.
The vine grows and you clip off the little
tip right there, and this is edible raw.
It’s such a delicate and delicious flavor.
Mm, it’s quite good, but besides just the
baby tips that you can eat raw in salads,
there’s a chayote squash fruit.
You can see two excellent examples here.
These guys are honking.
The squash can be cooked up like any other
squash, and these guys are doing quite well
also.
These provide two sources of income, but at
the same time, you can see that pigeon pea
here that’s being succumbed by the chayote
squash, but guess what, the pigeon pea is
growing and also providing nutrients for the
chayote squash.
Also he can squash and drop this stuff to
provide nitrogen to his chayote squash vine.
If you’re never heard of chayote squash
before, I want to encourage you guys to go
visit a local ethnic market, like a Mexican
market, sometimes Asian markets will also
sell the chayote squash.
Check it out.
If you want to start one of these for next
year — and only grow them in the summertime
because winter it gets freezing, these guys
are not going to make it, although there are
more cold-tolerant varieties, but the standard
green kind is not one of those.
You take the fruit and plant it half in dirt,
half out of dirt and it sprouts up and grows
a whole new vine.
So you’ll want to do this about the same
time you plant your tomatoes for next spring.
You’re going to want to do this inside,
keep it warm, so that it germinates and then
makes a vine for you.
These vines grow very quickly and besides
which, they’re also very delicious.
So this next shot’s very important.
I’m not going to talk too loud, otherwise
it might be quite dangerous for me.
You see there’s a crack in this tree right
here, and if you look very carefully, I know
some of you guys got really good X-ray vision,
you can see in the crack, and I’m not going
to dare stick my hand in there.
But he has a naturally occurring wild beehive.
One of the things Ryan strives to do is create
homes for creatures, and I want you guys to
create homes for creatures, too.
He creates good soil to have good soil microbiology.
He creates a good home with a lot of organic
matter to feed the worms in the soil.
He’s providing a good home for his plants,
but he’s also providing a good home for
the bees in this tree that’s rotting, that’s
no longer, well almost not alive.
The bees have had their own hive in there.
Now he does not harvest honey.
This is a wild hive he does not mess with,
but the bees in my opinion are an integral
part of farming and your gardening.
Without the bees, we would lose 30 percent
of the crops because the crops need to get
pollinated by the bees.
So having simply wild bees here that are doing
their own thing, it simply increases Ryan’s
yield.
I want to encourage you guys out there, if
it’s legal where you live, to start keeping
bees to help bees out.
They’re getting colony collapse disorder
due to the use of pesticides and all these
chemicals in nature, and I want you guys to
help the bees out because commercial farming
and commercial keeping of bees, in many instances
they’re shipping bees across the country,
they’re using different chemicals in the
bee hives is not a good thing.
Ryan lets these guys do what they’re going
to do on their own.
He does also have hives that he tends to in
other areas of the farm to definitely increase
his production as well.
He’s also starting to produce honey.
But he’s only going to take the extra honey,
and unlike the other farmers who just take
all the honey from the bees, then the farmers
have to feed the bees sugar water, he’s
trying to live more in accordance with nature.
And if bees have the extra honey, then he’ll
tap off the top.
It’s kind of like when I was a kid; I’d
go in my mom’s purse and take just a dollar
or two so that she wouldn’t miss it.
That’s literally what Ryan’s doing with
the honey.
In any case, the sun’s going down.
I want to get some time to interview Ryan
on the show for you so next we’re going
to head in and sit down with Ryan, ask him
a few poignant questions about his farm and
some tips that he can give you guys to increase
your garden at home or your farm if you’ve
got one.
So now I’m with my friend Ryan, who’s
the farmer here on this amazing property that
I’ve gotten and had the pleasure to show
you guys.
We’re simply going to ask him a few questions.
So the first question is Ryan, why do you
choose to grow using organic practices and
actually, even more than organic, you’re
making many of the inputs on your farm.
RYAN: The main reason that I grow my own food
is that I want to feed myself and feed my
family.
My family’s super important to me, and when
I look around at what’s available, I was
like, well I have a problem with that, I have
a problem with this, and I’d get too picky
and then I’m like alright, I guess if I
want to do it right I’m just going to have
to do it myself.
And so now seven years later, I’ve been
doing it myself and now we’ve gotten to
the point that I can share it with the rest
of the community as well.
JOHN: Wow, I mean that’s why I started growing
my own food as well, just like Ryan.
I was not happy with the current food system
and how foods, even organic food, is raised.
They’re not doing specific things that I
feel, and Ryan will also probably feel, are
really important to have high quality and
the best tasting food.
So Ryan, next I want to ask you about the
animal agriculture.
So you’ve incorporated things like the rabbits,
the chickens, the ducks, and even the goats
into your whole mix here.
What role do they play in your farm overall?
RYAN: It adds to the diversity and diversity’s
everything, really.
I like to provide housing for all the animals.
So all the animals provide a different mineral,
different spectrum, they all have a function
on the farm, and they have pastureland that
has a future that’s going to be an orchard.
In the meantime, I’m busy maintaining a
productive farm.
The goats can keep that maintained, and all
the while building up the fertility.
They eat the grass, they spread their manure,
and it’s building up the fertility.
I rotate those goats around, I move them to
another location, and when I go in to work
in that area, it’s going to be easy to work
because it’s not going to be overgrown with
thick woody stuff.
I can get in there and they’ve made the
soil so much better, they’ve done a lot
of the hard work for me.
The same with the chickens.
With the rabbits I always like to say it takes
the work out of weeding.
Instead of weeding, I’m pulling out, I'm
actually harvesting food for the animals,
food for the rabbits, either for the chickens
or the rabbits or the fish.
And then I’m in relation with them, and
their manure is in relation to the soil microbes,
and so it helps us make all these circles
and all these connections in the soil food
web.
JOHN: I think it’s really important to have
connections.
He’s using a lot of the inputs on site,
and keeping them on site.
Let’s talk about that for a second.
How important is it to you to be as sustainable
as possible?
RYAN: Well, I look at all the options.
It’s very important.
That’s my main goal, is to figure out how
to tighten that loop, close that loop and
really be, discover what is actually sustainability.
So I look and I see other organic farms and
I watch what they do.
A lot of it is it’s organic, you need so
much nitrogen, you go to the feed store, the
fertilizer store, and you buy big pallets
of fertilizer that’s organic.
And you’re like, alright, what’s in that?
What makes it organic?
Can I do that myself?
And I look at it and go well geez, that’s
chicken manure, slaughterhouse byproducts,
blood meal, bone meal, and where does that
come from?
And you look and go, oh, you think, there’s
a naïve perception that all comes from organic
farms.
The reality is, it doesn’t.
Most of the organic farms keep that for themselves
and what’s available as certified organic
or OP certified organic fertilizer is slaughterhouse
byproducts and animal byproducts from factory-farmed,
antibiotic-, GMO-fed animals, and that is
certified organic.
That’s what it is.
To me it’s substandard.
Organic isn’t really my goal, so I say,
alright, I want what they want out of that.
Get the nitrogen, and all the minerals and
everything that comes out of that animal and
go a little deeper.
I need to do it myself, do that dirty work,
and really have a relationship with all those
animals so that I can really understand and
know what’s going into my food.
I can just go buy GMO-fed animal manures and
byproducts, but it’s possibly laced with
all this GMO contamination and antibiotics
and hormones and all kinds of whatever, and
I just don’t know about it.
It’s a big question mark.
I’m like alright, I’m going to do it myself,
so that really helps me to close that loop.
I can produce the animals, I feed the animals
on the farm, whatever isn’t good enough
to sell or I don’t eat, I refeed it to the
animals and recycle.
So I can lose a whole entire crop but it’s
not really a loss.
It goes back into the animals and they turn
it back into fertilizer and that feeds the
next crop.
So that helps close the loop and gets me closer
to that word — sustainable.
JOHN: Awesome.
I want to encourage you guys whenever you
can to think about these kinds of things.
Most people that are organic gardeners just
buy the organic stuff from the store and put
it on their crops without even thinking about
it.
I try to teach you guys a different way and
in my videos provide you options.
In this video you’re looking at how Ryan
does it and in the last episode you saw how
my other friend does it without the use of
animals, and the choice is yours.
I just want to give you guys a whole bunch
of different things you can try to see which
one makes the most sense for you.
I just want to provide you guys with options,
and at the same time I’m learning, every
farm I visit I’m learning so much new information
to make my farm that I have one day, amazing.
So Ryan, how many acres do you have here and
is it easily workable by you and your family?
RYAN: We’re about four acres.
We have a couple of neighbors that we have
some pasture on, but it’s about four acres,
but it’s not even all used yet.
We’re able to be quite productive, it’s
pretty intensive production and I’d say,
it probably takes 40, 80, 100, 200 hours a
week about altogether.
So whoever that is, if that’s my family
or if I have some help, to be able to maintain
that, so maybe 50 hours a week an acre.
But you also have to think it took me many
years for me to get to that point, of not
being productive for many years and learning
and learning and building the infrastructure
and building that soil up so that you’re
building the equity in the soil so you can
start getting that residual effect from that.
So it takes time to get to that point.
JOHN: Good point.
I want to always talk about building up your
soil.
I talked about it earlier in this episode
but it really is that important.
Good farmers know that they are, once again,
building up the soil, not actually growing
plants.
Ryan, another cool thing about you specifically
is that I know you used to work a fulltime
job and have a part-time farm, and you were
able to leave your job and come full time
on the farm.
You want to share this and provide some inspiration
for people out there who might be working
at a job that they hate for money that they
don’t need, when they’d just rather be
out in the garden?
You were actually able to make it happen,
and what are some of the tips that you would
give the people out there who maybe want to
have their own farm one day and be sustainable
and use their own farm as their source of
income like you’ve created for yourself?
RYAN: If you’re grateful, your cup is always
full, so be grateful for what you have.
Start with what you have and be grateful for
what you have.
And use what you have, and that’s how I
feel like we’ve been able to build this
farm.
Looking a bathtubs and whatnot, as not necessarily
trash, but maybe someone’s discarded 15
foot piece of fence.
On a shoestring I can start and build and
take little pieces and while I have a full
time job, be grateful for that job.
I was able to fund the infrastructure of the
farm, so I was grateful for my job that it
was able to afford the farm because to do
it the way I really want to do it, it’s
not something that happens over night.
So it takes a lot of time and it takes a lot
of energy and if you see it as labor and work,
then maybe you’ll get discouraged.
If you count how many hours you work and how
much money you make, you’re like “Oh,
I’m making $2 an hour it’s not worth it
I want to keep my job.”
But, if you use it was what you want to do
and there’s a passion and you know you’re
building that equity in, you’re building
the equity, you’re putting in the soil,
you’re putting in the infrastructure, that
is the bank account.
The farm is the bank account so you can put
all your energy and resources into that, and
you know, you have faith that it’s going
to come back later, so you build a pond and
invest in livestock and plant varieties and
soil amendments.
It can be thousands and thousands and thousands
of dollars in building up the soil and getting
the pH and getting the mineral content right,
but once it’s there it’s less input.
So the beginning of farming, it’s a lot
of input and very little output, and so it
can be very discouraging so you have to hold
the vision and keep your eyes on the prize
so you can move forward into the future where
there’s less and less and less input and
more and more and more output.
That is the goal we’re looking for.
JOHN: Awesome.
I always want to encourage you guys out there,
whether you want to farm or you’re not ever
going to open a farm like Ryan did, always
live with an attitude of gratitude.
Every day I wake up I'm grateful for waking
up because some people simply did not wake
up today and able to do the work that I do.
Visiting farms, having so much fun in life,
and once again, I want you guys, besides just
thinking about the money, because yes we all
need money in our society to live, but also
think about what you would enjoy.
I love gardening, I love farming, I love visiting
farms.
I love what I do and even if I’m not making
the most money, as long as I have enough money
to live, survive and do what I want, I’m
totally happy with that.
I want to encourage you guys to go a little
bit in this direction because it seems to
me in America today that everybody’s focused
on the almighty dollar.
To be successful you gotta be rich!
Well to me success is doing what you love,
having a smile on your face and more importantly,
helping others like I do in all the videos
here.
So Ryan, is there any last tips and tidbits
of knowledge that you’d like to share with
all the other gardeners and farmers out there?
Because you know so much about this stuff,
it’s amazing.
RYAN: My tip is, the more you know, the more
you realize you don’t know, so remain open
and don’t think that you know everything
because there’s always so much to learn.
And having a relationship with your farm.
I spend a lot of time, I work a lot at night,
and I really examine the plants and find out
what bugs are working and find out what are
the beneficial insects.
I see stuff crawling around and I see what
is it doing, and you can get that relationship.
It seems a relationship with the animals.
And another good tip I have is, it’s not
even my tip, everyone’s already said it,
but if at first you don’t succeed, try again,
so how many times have we failed at growing
celery or failed at growing collard greens
or failed at growing every crop?
You have to fail in order to learn, and as
much as I’d like to think I can just watch
some video or read some book, I don’t know.
It ends up being I actually have to make the
mistake myself to really bring it in and own
it and really learn from it.
Somebody can tell me, oh when you grow sweet
potatoes, watch out for this.
And I’m watching out for it, but then it
happens anyway.
It’s like alright, at least I saw it coming
but it still happened to me.
So at least now that I see it happen, I can
understand it and move forward with how to
do it again.
And so try it again and if that doesn’t
work, try it again.
Have that faith and don’t think of it as
work.
It’s just a process.
We’re learning and we’re in relation so
be in relation, and don’t see it as a failure.
It’s an opportunity, and if it turns out
to be compost, that’s good for your soil,
that’s putting money back into the equity
of your farm and bank account.
That’s going to continue serving you in
the future so there is no waste, there is
no trash at all, it gets cycled back and that
again is the sustainability loop.
JOHN: Wow, some of the most wisest words ever
said by a farmer on my show.
I encourage you guys to heed those words.
In one of the models that I go by in my life
is there’s no such thing as failure.
There’s only successes because I kill a
plant, I’ve succeeded at knowing how to
kill a plant so that I can do it better and
improve next time.
I know many of you guys out there are thinking,
“But John!
Seriously though!
I’ve got brown thumbs man, I can’t do
it!”
Well, another thing is attitude.
With that kind of attitude, you’re not going
to succeed, so I want you guys to open up
yourselves and start the process of growing.
I don’t even want to say “try” because
if you try to stand up on top a stool, you
will not actually stand up on the stool.
I want you just to do, like Yoda says, “There
is no try just do.”
And I can’t say that in a Yoda voice.
So Ryan, we are here on Maui and you have
some awesome produce.
How can somebody buy some of this amazing
produce you guys saw, whether you live on
Maui or whether you’re visiting Maui, definitely
recommend your first stop should be Ryan’s
stuff.
It’s some of the best here on the island.
RYAN: We sell it to Upcountry Farmers’ Market
in Kula, every Saturday, starts at 7 in the
morning, goes until about 11.
We do a wednesday market in Makawao town in
Po’okela Church.
It starts at 9 to 1.
We do wholesale deliveries to different restaurants;
you can find out stuff a lot at Mana Foods
and Down to Earth.
Those are the two larger health food stores
on the island.
We do some other smaller stuff, too.
We definitely have our produce around and
we’d appreciate everybody’s support.
I’m very grateful for the support of the
community because if it wasn’t for the support
of the customers who want the quality and
want the local and organic and want the best
stuff, then I couldn’t do it, so mahalo
for all the support from the community.
JOHN: Awesome.
Well thank you for that Ryan.
Sun’s going down, I gotta get going, but
I really love spending time on your farm.
This is actually the second time I’ve visited
this farm in my week here on Maui.
I’m going to be flying out tomorrow so this
is pretty much one of the last episodes I’ll
be making for you guys.
But I really, sincerely hope you guys learned
a few things along the way at Ryan’s farm,
once again whether you want to start a farm,
whether you’re farming already or you’re
just a gardener.
There’s tons of tidbits of knowledge in
this video, and you might even want to watch
it a second time to get all the knowledge
that was shared inside it.
In addition, you want to be sure to subscribe
to my videos if not already.
I have over 1,000 videos now, and I visited
this place like five years ago.
The link is definitely up if you want to see
the transition from then to now because it
is amazing.
It’s like when I go on vacation for a week
and leave my garden and I come back after
a week and it’s so much more grown.
I got to come back here after five years and
it’s like this place is like a jungle.
I hope you guys enjoyed this episode.
Once again my name is John Kohler with Growingyourgreens.com.
We’ll see you next time and until then,
remember, keep on growing!
