29 March 2012

How Homegrown Charcoal May Get Your Garden Through A Drought

Posted in News, Biochar, Science, Soil

Biochar will really improve the soil's capacity to hold water

How Homegrown Charcoal May Get Your Garden Through A Drought
Eliza Barclay from NPR writes:
You've probably heard of compost – that thick chocolate-colored stuff that's an organic gardener's best friend and supplies plants with all kinds of succulent nutrients.

But what about biochar? It's another ancient farming material made from slow-burned wood (also known as charcoal) that holds nutrients and water into soil without them draining away. And lately it has enjoyed a certain revival because it can also pull and store the carbon in greenhouse gases from the air. Everyone from California grape growers to home gardeners on YouTube is trying it out.
Biogeochemist Caroline Masiello is pretty excited about biochar, especially what it means in an era when water resources are swiftly diminishing. "There's no question that there's been an explosion of interest in this," says Masiello. "And it's becoming clear that the water cycle benefits of biochar are at least as important, especially in drought-prone regions."

But there's a catch. As Masiello and her colleagues at Rice University write in the latest issue of the Journal of Biomass and Bioenergy, the temperature that you bake the wood chips or other plant matter that go into the biochar matters. They found that biochar baked at above 842 degrees Fahreheit (450 degrees Celsius) helped soil hold water and carbon better than biochar cooked at lower temperatures.

Scientists believe that biochar was first used by farmers in the Amazon Basin of South America to make terra preta, or fertile black earth, some 2,500 years ago. They buried wood in closed pits and let it smolder there for days. Nowadays, a lot of industrial-scale biochar is made in kilns.

Like compost, biochar takes some time and energy to make, but it can be a DIY project at home. The trick is to make sure no oxygen gets in while the wood is baking. Many people, like this small farmer John Rogers, build small kilns out of steel drums they seal off.

But Masiello says if you want to be sure get it right, you'll definitely need a thermometer. In her humid hometown of Houston, she's tried to make biochar with magnolia leaves, which are abundant. But she recommends against it.

"A lot of plants around here have a waxy cuticle designed to repel water that will persist and create problems in the soil," she says. "If you're using wood, you're less likely to have problems. And the biochar will really improve the soil's capacity to hold water."

Comments (4)

  • Giishela

    Giishela

    14 June 2012 at 23:09 |
    Hi,We are about to start the production of atievactd biomass. I noticed that your BioChar is remarkable. I'm really interested and would like to combine your BioChar which I believe could enhanced our atievactd biomass. Should you have more information, please send them over.Thanks and best regardsJames
  • Salman

    Salman

    24 May 2012 at 17:16 |
    Brian, Just spotted an nice arcitle about yourself keylining a field a few towns over from me in the Tennessean online. Not knowing a thing about keylining, I searched me up some photos of your rig and a few of the Australian Yeoman plows. I was instantly aware that the tines of the keyline plow look exactly like a sub -soiler. You just have multiple tines and better depth control with the wheels. Am I correct? Sort of?Thanks for your hard work in promoting soil conservation and dynamics
  • Shanty

    Shanty

    24 May 2012 at 07:23 |
    Hi, I am from Slovakia. Nobody here ever heard about biochar so I like to do some adv to this great thing. Ib4d like to build Adam retrot kiln for making biochar from the woodlands and green waste around my city, along with composting site. As I know it should be the first farm producing biochar in Central Europe. Would it be possible to send me the costings and any info on where to get hold of the plans ? Could you please advice on how I can get the design and instructions? Or could I contact someone in regards to setting up my own kiln? Many thanks. Milan
  • Maximo

    Maximo

    08 April 2012 at 00:55 |
    I am delighted to have found this boichar community. I am a masonry heater builder and farmer in South Carolina (USA) dealing with worn out soil and limited means as well as physical disability from a stroke. We have an abundance of surplus firewood created by recent storms in our heavily wooded part of the state. I already have an outdoor rocket heater built of salvaged brick which I can modify for pyrolysis and boichar production. The advantage of brick and soapstone (steatite) over metal vessels may be longevity. Our main crop of blueberries requires a low soil PH which could be adversely affected by adding charcoal. So we will begin with the compost bin for our raised bed vegetable gardens to try our hand at terra forming.

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