Yeah - charcoal is incredible stuff. Nothing organic leaves my property. I burn green & brown waste in a simple kiln made from corrugated iron & then quench it at the end with water.

It's free charcoal & turns the soil a lovely black colour. I can't make enough of the stuff.

My soil doesn't crack that badly but it's rarely bare & full of rocks.

I used to try & rot the branches & cleared trees but they dry out & take forever to break down (a lot of Australian gum trees). The charcoal chunks get smaller & finer over time but don't really break down. I use the bigger chunks to grill with.

If you're going to purposefully grow material to make bio char, I think bamboo is best. It grows fast & the charcoal it produces is very porous & easily crushed.

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Sounds good! I've been participating in "Bamboo Rescue" for three years now!

I don't know what bamboo rescue is.

I have a friend who makes bio char as a side gig. The dude is burning constantly & his bamboo clumps are also just constantly producing.

Some of his bamboo is epic & he sells it to festivals to make temporary structures from.

It's also fun to burn bamboo because the segments explode loudly from the water expanding.