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Rye from Seed to Bread 

Charles Dowding
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I sowed then transplanted 31 clumps of rye in October 2021, harvested the ears in August, then did all the rest in this video, finishing with the rye bread you see at the end.
For 2023 harvest I am sowing some of this grain at the end of September. Two to three seeds per module in CD 60 trays, to transplant around the middle of October.
I grew up on a farm where we had tractors and combine harvesters, and it felt effortless to grow tons of food.
This process is a perspective on the work needed to grow a loaf of bread, by hand. It makes me grateful for machines! And my mill is electric, whereas if you grind by hand, which I have done, it takes around 20 minutes to have enough flour for one loaf of bread.
On the other hand this is a wonderful way to connect strongly with how our food grows and is processed. If you try it, you will savour every mouthful of the bread you produce!
Sorry we edited out part of the bread making, I felt the video was getting too long. I add one tablespoon approx of starter and 1 level tbsp oil per 900g loaf.
00:00 Introduction
00:24 The harvested grain, and I explain the growing process from seed, harvest help from Heidi Theaker
01:31 Some info on the rye plant
02:28 Removing grains from ears, with demonstration
03:52 Info on the yield
05:18 Winnowing, and I demonstrate an unusual method!
10:24 Milling, with demonstration
16:05 Mixing and baking The adding oil step was unintentionally edited out (Charles' fault!)
18:20 A word on (not) adding salt
19:41 The taste test!
21:32 The conclusion
Link to Samap grain mill www.samap-eco.fr/en/moulins/D...
Filmed and edited by Edward Dowding freelance filmmaker, August 2022 at Homeacres, Somerset, UK edowdingfilms.onfabrik.com/po...
There is a recipe for my bread in the new cookbook we are publishing in early November this year.
You can join this channel by paying a monthly fee, to support our work with helping gardeners grow better, and to receive monthly videos made only for members:
/ @charlesdowding1nodig

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14 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 650   
@lucyb15
@lucyb15 Год назад
My mother grew her own rye but she did it mainly for the straw which she carefully harvested, dried and used to make rye straw baskets, coiled baskets bound with oak splints. She taught me how to make them too. Thanks for the pleasant memories you triggered with this video. I make a similar bread to which I add various seeds.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Wonderful. Adam soaked the straw and is growing mushrooms in it!
@MissMaryLu
@MissMaryLu Год назад
@@CharlesDowding1nodig I’d love to see a video on that! What a great use of the whole plant
@edwardreedy
@edwardreedy Год назад
Well now l have another reason to try growing rye!
@johngariepy3230
@johngariepy3230 Год назад
I second Miss Mary Lu's suggestion of a video on growing mushrooms in the straw. Your content is amazing Charles, thanks.
@VanderlyndenJengold
@VanderlyndenJengold Год назад
I'd like to have made a straw hat out of my straw. Instead the chickens then the compost had it. I haven't the patience, nor the skill, to braid straw.
@valeriavine
@valeriavine Год назад
Love to see more videos on growing different grains. It's an area that most home gardeners don't have much experience of.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thanks and yes
@iwona4685
@iwona4685 Год назад
I was going to suggest the same thing... I just bought some barley seeds but had no confidence to grow them. I spent my early childhood on my grandparents homestead. Wish I remembered how to grow grains.
@Yotaciv
@Yotaciv Год назад
Plant 50-100 grams of seed in late April-early may, 8-10” between rows. Add 1/2 to 3/4 pound of 30-0-0 lawn fertilizer in furrows between rows and 20-40 maybe 60 pounds of cattle manure to 100 sq ft area. Should yield a respectable crop. That assuming poor soil nutrients.
@mrvento_za
@mrvento_za Год назад
My mom and I, loved this video. You should do more videos where you cook/bake with some of the food that comes from your garden.
@rose-qo3iy
@rose-qo3iy Год назад
Yes please brilliant idea
@OrtoInScatola
@OrtoInScatola Год назад
I subscribe to this… or you could tell stories of your experience as a vegetable farmer… by the fireplace… perfect for winter time
@barkershill
@barkershill Год назад
Wheat and rye are , as far as I am aware , normally Autumn sown . And by early spring are a mass of green leaves several inches high . Apparently , in the old days , sheep were turned out to graze on this in the early spring when there wasn’t much else around . By a combination of grazing it and treading on it they would induce the plants to perform something called “tillering” , which meant that they produced multiple seed heads instead of just one , and thereby increased the grain yield
@lilpipskweek6448
@lilpipskweek6448 Год назад
Hence the sheep breed the Ryeland (bred by monks around Leominster) from Herefordshire grazed on the ryelands as you point out -thanks
@lindasands1433
@lindasands1433 Год назад
Oh! 👍
@barkershill
@barkershill Год назад
I haven’t been involved in cereal growing for a longtime , but when I was we used to hitch the ring roller on behind the tractor every spring and roll the wheat to get the the plants to tiller . There were no sheep on the farm at that time so no benefits from fertiliser . . Incidentally , the sheep are back on that farm now and although they don’t graze the wheat , feed on a ley of stubble turnips and clover which is now part of the rotation
@Yotaciv
@Yotaciv Год назад
Fall grazing to minimize tillering maybe. Plant too early and you get too many tillers. Plants will tiller if given the room or time to grow. 3-5 tiller per plant is ideal, but if planted more densely less tillers is more yield.
@lydiajoymcdowell-davis3390
@lydiajoymcdowell-davis3390 Год назад
Brilliant!
@TaylorinShirewood
@TaylorinShirewood Год назад
One of your best videos yet Charles! Very silly but heart-warming seeing your son and you try different ways of processing the rye
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thanks Kyle, glad you enjoyed it!
@mariebridges2219
@mariebridges2219 Год назад
Agreed! Wonderful, Charles. What a blessing to have your son following in your footsteps...so to speak. Enjoying the soul-satisfying pleasures of growing, tending, harvesting, AND eating the fruit of your labor! Being German myself, that rye bread was mouthwatering--even on film :) Thanks for sharing the entire process.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
@@mariebridges2219 happy to hear that Marie!
@jacharakis
@jacharakis Год назад
No dig produce, no knead bread - love the simplicity of it all!
@henrymann1443
@henrymann1443 Год назад
This was great! Please make more of these garden to kitchen videos!! ❤❤
@theresawaveyme4482
@theresawaveyme4482 Год назад
Very Interesting indeed. Amazing how hard one had to work pre-industrial age to make a loaf of bread. Wow.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
It really is!
@robertevans8024
@robertevans8024 Год назад
Next time try a pillow case and a length of heavy rubber hose to release the grain. And pouring the grain from bucket to bucket with a box fan blowing on high can also help remove the chaff. 👍
@dinosaur0073
@dinosaur0073 Год назад
Interesting..!!!. Thank you Charles great result. Rye from seed to bread 🍞 with butter 🧈 and honey 🍯 ....yami!!!😋
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Our pleasure!
@pythonhighadder7982
@pythonhighadder7982 Год назад
Wow Charles that bread looks great. I have hope for your future grain harvests and videos.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Me too and thanks
@jamesraphael8473
@jamesraphael8473 Год назад
I don't know what is in his voice i like. I just love hearing it. Kudos Sir!
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thank you James. I do have an audiobook on Amazon, about No-Dig Gardening, Course Book 1
@jamesraphael8473
@jamesraphael8473 Год назад
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Alright Charles, I'll check it out, thanks.
@mandysplottoplate9410
@mandysplottoplate9410 Год назад
Loved watchng this Thankyou charles
@chickadeeofmaine8094
@chickadeeofmaine8094 Год назад
I winnow my blueberries with a fan. Works great!
@gudi361
@gudi361 Год назад
That is a well earned bread!
@gudi361
@gudi361 Год назад
Thank you for picking me! I send an answer via SMS , as I couldn't get it to work via Whatsapp. Hope that works!
@tanju9041
@tanju9041 Год назад
All this time and I only just saw this video. Its amazing! I am definitely growing rye this year. I am giving up a third of my tiny, quarter allotment and going for this. Thanks again Charles.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Good luck!!
@tanju9041
@tanju9041 Год назад
@@CharlesDowding1nodig thanks, I am sure I'll need it!
@thenodiggardener
@thenodiggardener Год назад
Even if the taste of the bread was no different in comparison to the one from the grain you usually have, which is obviously already superior to anything a supermarket loaf is going to give you, I should still think that the level of satisfaction from having grown, harvested, cleaned, and milled it yourself is just immense anyway. I bag tomatoes up for the freezer, and they are not anywhere near as difficult to process, but I still feel better than knowing I can just opening a tin from the supermarket. Also, those seeds are now naturalised to your land, so super interesting to see a comparison from next year with this year's figures!
@karinmeyerowitz98
@karinmeyerowitz98 Год назад
While watching you trying to winnow without a breeze, we had a lovely light breeze outside. I couldn't understand why you struggled... Here was this nice breeze.... Was really into the video... Loved it!! Regards from sunny and breezy South Africa. (North West Potchefstroom)
@thenodiggardener
@thenodiggardener Год назад
@@karinmeyerowitz98 Just to let you know that you've accidently posted under my comment. You may want to C+P it into the main feed, so that Charles catches your post,
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
found it!
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Yes you are so right, this gave me huge pleasure but I did expect more flavour. I think it was influenced by the video causing me to treat the starter differently and it made it more acidic. I'm looking forward to quietly 'brewing' and baking with my normal routine and we shall see! Also I'm sowing the seeds this weekend! Exciting.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thanks Karin and it was so strange because normally, it's an absolute given that we have some breeze here. The one evening I needed it, I wasn't there!!
@settingFreedomFires
@settingFreedomFires Год назад
My wife bakes rye bread occasionally, and this video is the reason I decided to grow some for her this winter
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
That is cool, best of luck with it!
@hilarypollock1
@hilarypollock1 10 месяцев назад
I have only recently caught up with this video. I was pleasantly surprised to see you using the same mill I inherited from my Father some years ago. He would have purchased it about the same time as you. Your use of a simple plastic bag to catch the flour was inspirational for me. I had been struggling with flower dust. I have yet to make bread, only flat bread at the moment. Which works well. And of course I admire you growing your own Rye. A million thanks. Hilary ( Australia)
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig 10 месяцев назад
How amazing Hilary, thanks for sharing and happy milling!
@squange20
@squange20 Год назад
You are a marvel Charles. I’m so glad I found this video. We’ve been buying organic spelt and rye flour from the South Island for years, and have paid far too much in shipping costs. I might try growing rye which will halve those costs. I like the way rye plants grow upright and don’t take up too much space. Thank you for the very informative and useful videos. I’m following some of them for sowing seed, and love the way you plant from little plugs straight into the ground rather than transplanting into bigger pots and finally into the ground. As I write this, my little greenhouse is being set up, so can’t wait to potter around in there.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
That sounds brilliant, and I'm delighted to help, good luck with your grain growing. It does involve a lot of time…
@tedbastwock3810
@tedbastwock3810 Год назад
Oh, Charles, there you go again, motivating me to try something new ... now I just must grow grain and make bread, I've got a lot to learn about it, but I think now I'll give it a shot :-) Thanks, Charles
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Nice to hear Ted, sow today!!
@danielarichter2453
@danielarichter2453 Год назад
Nice experiment , thank you for showing!
@junematthews8612
@junematthews8612 Год назад
Perfect”little Red Hen” story.
@Constantinului
@Constantinului Год назад
Really nice, brother !
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thank you! Cheers!
@paulboyter4153
@paulboyter4153 Год назад
A fan would be handy with no wind, it’s worked for me many times. Great video as usual 🙏🏼
@petercole8096
@petercole8096 Год назад
No surprise that the "No Dig" master makes "No Knead" bread! Great video Charles. I wish I could taste that bread.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Cheers Peter, wish I could share flavour!
@jenbear8652
@jenbear8652 Год назад
Great point! 😆
@Qopzeep
@Qopzeep Год назад
Charles likes everything with a 'no' in it. No-dig, no-knead, no-nonsense...
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
😂 well spotted
@chrismaclean1021
@chrismaclean1021 8 месяцев назад
Just wanted to say that, in addition to your composting, poly tunnel and no-dig lessons, this RU-vid video inspired us to purchase a grain mill and sack of rye, and we've started making our own wholegrain rye sourdough. After some trial and error, I got the variables "dialed in" yesterday and produced my first edible loaf. It was so good!! I missed the time for planting winter rye this season, but will give that a go next year (don't tell my partner, as I may have to steal some space from her flower borders). You're a great inspiration for sustainable growing, healthy living, and great eating. Thank you, and I look forward to learning more. Best Regards, Chris, Scotland
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig 8 месяцев назад
Hi Chris, thanks so much for sharing this and I'm delighted to have been able to help in many ways. I had a chuckle at the thought of your inedible loaves! I can't believe though that they were too awful, but I'm happy that you are in the groove now. It may be just as well you missed the sowing time for rye!
@samanthaperry6236
@samanthaperry6236 Год назад
You always manage to make me smile
@LC-ut7sh
@LC-ut7sh Год назад
Your bread looks fab, thanks for sharing
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thank you 😊
@pamwilliams6630
@pamwilliams6630 Год назад
We've got plenty of wind here in Eastern VA from Ian:)
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
😂 so do we normally!!
@lamngo3427
@lamngo3427 Год назад
I love your videos.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
💚
@mwmingram
@mwmingram Год назад
Great! Thank you.
@Bobsmith-ot6si
@Bobsmith-ot6si Год назад
How lovely 😊
@Peterharte73
@Peterharte73 Год назад
I make my bread every morning There's nothing like homemade bread... Great video Charles 👍
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Nice to hear!
@dianeladico1769
@dianeladico1769 Год назад
That was a lovely loaf of bread with a beautiful crumb. Thank you for taking us along.
@Yotaciv
@Yotaciv Год назад
To thresh my einkorn this year i ended up using my drill press with a sort of whisk made with stranded copper grounding wire, 4 gauge i think. Then used a 4” 190 cfm exhaust fan to blow out the chaff. Worked like a charm. 2000-2250 rpm on drill press seemed to be sweet spot. A corded drill could also be used with a modified paint mixer of sorts. I yielded 1.25 gallons of clean grain from similar 98 sq ft area. 29.24 bushels an acre roughly. Planted 40 grams of seed, 30grams of it in modern rows for half the plot and 10grams like yours, in 3 seeds clumps for other half of plot. May 7-10 seeding late august-early September harvest. We had a very wet year in Saskatchewan, had ergot in the hulless einkorn. Elongated black grains.
@gonzozopox308
@gonzozopox308 Год назад
No dig, no knead. More time to enjoy. Just Wonderful!
@Wolfgang3418
@Wolfgang3418 Год назад
Haha, I'm searching at present for comments saying no dig, no knead. I found two yet.😀
@lynnrushton7458
@lynnrushton7458 Год назад
Very nice!! 👌👏👏
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Thanks Lynn
@thebrum2044
@thebrum2044 Год назад
Great to see the end to end process and final product. A video that has helped my children understand the creation of beautiful bread. Thanks for sharing.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Nice to hear and thanks 😀
@hercule1610
@hercule1610 Год назад
Beautiful video. It helps me realize how much work it must have been a couple hundred years ago to keep a family in bread especially if you were just a peasant.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Yes, quite a reality check!
@paulc7460
@paulc7460 Год назад
Hi I watch your channel and have used many of your tips on my allotment it's changed the way I grow my veg much appreciated the main reason I commented is I also make sour dough bread and was intrigued that you use doves grain and you mentioned the marriage family ,I work in a flour mill in Chelmsford owned by the marriage family I use there spelt and rye I've mentioned your channel many times thanks Paul
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
So nice of you to comment Paul and that's a really interesting coincidence! Because, that is a different family also called Marriage and I believe no relation!! The ones I'm referring to are based near Newbury in Berkshire, do ask your people if they know them, I'm sure they do. And that's great news about your allotment, and sharing, thanks.
@carlagarrett8584
@carlagarrett8584 11 месяцев назад
to see the efforts needed to grow one loaf of bread, makes you really appreciate how much its worth.
@gawain8000
@gawain8000 Год назад
Great ❤ Thanks for sharing 🎉
@mariakraska5738
@mariakraska5738 Год назад
Suuuper 👍💚♥️
@feminislive
@feminislive Год назад
Charming!
@jeffcokenour3459
@jeffcokenour3459 Год назад
Thank you!
@VanderlyndenJengold
@VanderlyndenJengold Год назад
I grew wheat last year - the rats and pigeons loved it!
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Ah nooo!
@VanderlyndenJengold
@VanderlyndenJengold Год назад
@@CharlesDowding1nodig My patch is prone to rats, I'm near a stream, a country park, I have chickens. I tried netting yet the rats were there in daylight, and I later found some of their nearby stashes of grain. I did get a harvest and had fun growing and winnowing etc. The chickens loved the fresh grain rather than the stuff I usually buy in, yet I never made my own bread. Shame, as I also have an old working mill a mile from where I live.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
@@VanderlyndenJengold nice to hear, except your location is difficult!
@andreeal6822
@andreeal6822 Год назад
In order to take the seeds out, as well as for beans, we would put them in a cloth bag and beat them with a rolling pin or broom handle. It's easier like this, also works for sunflower seeds if you lightly beat the other side of the flower once it's dried. Fun memories and good for letting out stress, quiet a workout as well😂 My grandmother used to love doing this part! She was a big gardener.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Loverly comment thanks Andreea
@cherylanderson3340
@cherylanderson3340 Год назад
More thoughts: When you were trying to remove the rye from the chaf, I recalled seeing a woman with a large bowl or basin which she'd shake to the far side of the basin & then would give it a sharp shake & jerk it back towards herself, getting the lighter weight chaff to go up into the air while the heavier grain fell back into the bowl. I guess she got the basin pulled aside while letting the lighter stuff fall to the ground. Now that I can see the bread, I remembered making Swedish Limpa - a beautiful & delicious rye bread with micro planed orange zest added. That rye would also make a flavotful hard tak!
@user-ey9bt7fs6n
@user-ey9bt7fs6n Год назад
Seeing you cook or bake with what you grow is fun video option.
@thelmamc522
@thelmamc522 Год назад
My 14 year old son is doing the same experiment. He is drying some wheat he grew in the corner of my garden. We have a hand grinder. What a great outcome with your rye
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Please wish him well, nice to hear
@jeannet9592
@jeannet9592 10 месяцев назад
This video was very entertaining! Thanks for the chuckles and the information.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig 10 месяцев назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@rosstemple7617
@rosstemple7617 Год назад
Thanks for sharing. That’s awesome. This is just another thing children should be learning and experiencing. To think about where food comes from and the time and effort that goes into it. Great point about the mold. There’s a bit of funny history about that. But also health benefits compared to store bought food. Great video. Would love to see more from the garden to table shows. ❤
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
I hope some kids see this, thanks Ross
@S3ANW7MA
@S3ANW7MA Год назад
That was fun watching the whole process and getting to join you in the kitchen. Thank you! I hope to give this a go next year!😅
@seanjamescameron
@seanjamescameron Год назад
Thoroughly enjoyed this video. I make my own bread using emmer flour, much better bread than the Chorleywood processed shop bread.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
So right Sean! Thanks
@reneeklein3090
@reneeklein3090 Год назад
Definitely should do more cooking videos!
@mariecrowe8843
@mariecrowe8843 Год назад
Brilliant
@yanellopezboffadossi4576
@yanellopezboffadossi4576 Год назад
So beautiful be witnesses of all process 🙏🏼 thank you for sharing, it was amazing. It makes me remember my father 🌱 Regards from Argentina 🇦🇷
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it Yanel, thanks for commenting
@Ali.McL9
@Ali.McL9 11 месяцев назад
This has got to be the BEST thing I've seen for a while. The joy you're having is infectious! ❤ Thanks for and educational and fun VIDEO Charles 🙏🏻
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig 11 месяцев назад
Ah so nice thanks!
@tanarehbein7768
@tanarehbein7768 Год назад
thanks for this. I want to try grain myself.
@pythonhighadder7982
@pythonhighadder7982 Год назад
@7:50 hey Charles great job. Btw, now you know why they had things called winnowing fans, mostly seen in Churches today.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
😂 indeed!
@zeddybear257
@zeddybear257 Год назад
Maybe a hair dryer of fan at a low setting would be helpful. Glad you stayed upright!
@anapaulacrawford5837
@anapaulacrawford5837 Год назад
Oh it had to be delicious! Next time try to stand in front of a fan if is no win . 😂
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Next time! There will be wind...
@adathomas8604
@adathomas8604 Год назад
Ergot used to be called 'cockspur', because it makes the infected seed look like a cockerel's foot. you can find pictures of it in the old farming books.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
That is very helpful, thanks. Occasionally I see some seeds which are black but not deformed in any way and I think that is probably not ergot. Especially after the year we had which was so dry.
@evilestmark
@evilestmark Год назад
I've used an electric fan to help winnowing when there was no wind.
@lone318
@lone318 Год назад
Should have used an electric fan makes life so much easier 🎉
@joshlovegood9392
@joshlovegood9392 Год назад
I've been looking forward to this for so long. Didn't let me down. Brilliant once again Charles. I think you've invented a signature winnowing technique too!! The 'Dowding Spin' perhaps?? :)
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Four course rotation! Thanks Josh
@rhohoho
@rhohoho Год назад
This was fantastic to see, thank you!
@the_green_anna
@the_green_anna Год назад
Loved this! 😍🤤🌾
@pamelaadams3649
@pamelaadams3649 Год назад
Your determination and effort put into separating the grain is legendary!
@elenabeza4432
@elenabeza4432 Год назад
Wow
@jcking6785
@jcking6785 Год назад
Quite fascinating!
@mikehurdiss226
@mikehurdiss226 Год назад
Well done Charles and thanks!👍
@aldas3831
@aldas3831 Год назад
I enjoyed the video very much!
@MrsBadger
@MrsBadger Год назад
How rewarding. Well done 👏🏻
@amylanagan7874
@amylanagan7874 Год назад
Absolutely love this. Thank you for sharing.
@tedvandermale2597
@tedvandermale2597 Год назад
Love to see more videos like this. Fascinating
@carolewarner101
@carolewarner101 Год назад
Absolutely LOVED this! Thanks so much for sharing.
@sonnyamoran7383
@sonnyamoran7383 Год назад
Thank you for the demonstration.
@darrendoss3753
@darrendoss3753 Год назад
Very good video!
@cadileigh9948
@cadileigh9948 Год назад
yum
@chompers11
@chompers11 Год назад
Your videos are SO good
@HS-qf5of
@HS-qf5of Год назад
That was a visually lovely video AND I learned a lot. Thank you!😊
@singncarpenter6270
@singncarpenter6270 Год назад
Now that's dedication.
@stuckinthemudgarden7726
@stuckinthemudgarden7726 Год назад
Thank you for sharing all of your great knowledge
@breaker-one-nine
@breaker-one-nine Год назад
Brilliant! Love rye bread. Glad you showed us how the crop turned out!
@wbranches1
@wbranches1 Год назад
Looks like you are having fun.
@StayPrimal
@StayPrimal Год назад
This is INCREDIBLE! So inspiring, i'm for sure doing this in 2-3 years.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Go you!
@StayPrimal
@StayPrimal Год назад
@@CharlesDowding1nodig Haha, the famous ''go you'' which changed my life.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
💚
@JulianJP21
@JulianJP21 Год назад
Thanks Master 👍💪as always appreciated!!!
@garypeluso3300
@garypeluso3300 Год назад
That bread looks delicious!
@rebeccawatson9284
@rebeccawatson9284 Год назад
Lol! You guys could've gotten a fan and cooled off, as well. However, if you were intending to show the medieval method, then I see the sense in not doing so. I love watching your videos, especially about compost, and other nerdy things such as this! Thanks for everyone's hard work and your sharing of precious knowledge!
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Cheers Rebecca, nice you got that
@brendagamba7826
@brendagamba7826 Год назад
The walkabout was genius. . Thanks from Cape Town.
@GoingGreenMom
@GoingGreenMom Год назад
It's definitely an interesting exercise! look forward to seeing how next year goes!
@kennyjohnson6875
@kennyjohnson6875 Год назад
Never seen anyone do that before.Intresting!
@jsbadger
@jsbadger Год назад
I had asked about you doing videos of you cooking from your harvests, and after a fashion, you've more than delivered. I was hoping to see something much like this, as its generally not shown of, from ground prep-planting-care-harvest- AND to table. I have a bucket of hard red wheat I just may try with what you've shown. Bless you, Charles.
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
Funny, thanks!
@rakelfm6245
@rakelfm6245 Год назад
Precioso vídeo 🥰💓
@kebunidebermain_ku8313
@kebunidebermain_ku8313 Год назад
Wow 🥰🥰🥰
@marykappesser5145
@marykappesser5145 Год назад
Great video. I enjoyed each part, especially the spinning winnow!
@Awellsfarm
@Awellsfarm Год назад
This was awesome! Thank you !
@CharlesDowding1nodig
@CharlesDowding1nodig Год назад
💚
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