:INFO Making Biochar from Yard Waste at Home Biochar is a stable form of carbon made by burning organic material in a low-oxygen environment. Added to garden soil, it improves water retention, feeds soil biology, and sequesters carbon for centuries. A simple DIY retort or TLUD stove makes it from material you would otherwise compost or burn. :COUNTER.half | :COUNTER.half 1000 Years :PATH Build a Simple Retort A retort is an inner chamber inside a fire. The simplest version is a tightly lidded metal barrel inside a larger burn barrel. The outer fire heats the inner chamber, driving off gases without allowing the material to combust directly. :PATH Run the Carbonization Fill the inner chamber with dry woody material. Light the outer fire and maintain it for 2 to 4 hours. The process is complete when smoke from the exhaust pipe runs clear rather than white or yellow. :PATH Charge and Apply Raw biochar absorbs nutrients from soil before it benefits plants. Charge it first by soaking in compost tea, urine diluted 10 to 1, or compost moisture for two weeks. Then mix into beds at 10% by volume. :CHECKLIST Biochar Production Checklist [ ] Dry feedstock to under 20% moisture before burning [ ] Retort sealed with minimal oxygen ingress [ ] Fire maintained at stable temperature for full run [ ] Cool completely before opening to prevent combustion [ ] Crush large chunks before charging or applying [ ] Charge biochar before adding to soil :NOTE Biochar from treated wood, plastics, or diseased plant material should not go into food gardens. Use only clean yard waste, hardwood, or straw feedstocks. :LINK https://www.biochar-international.org International Biochar Initiative: Research and Guides