I love your blessing..without the Lord there would be no water or dirt or seeds🌹🐮🍇🍉🍈🍊🍋🥔we love Him❤❤
@StardewStartup24 минут бұрын
You have those beautiful borders around your beds in many of your videos, including your more recent ones. How do you make those? What type of materials are you using for that? Also I live in Northern Virginia and the clay up here is brutal. I am planning to plant regular daikon, parsnips, and some cowpeas to help break up the clay and then let them rot down to add biomass into the soil after. Is that something you have tried to improve the soil? Or was Coastal Virginia soil much different than up here?
@MiwaKaursKitchen42 минут бұрын
You nailed the pronunciation of "satsumaimo"! Satsuma is an area currently called Kagoshima, located in the southern part of Japan, and "imo" means potato. Thanks for yet another amazing video! Blessings 🙏🏽❤️
@tarabooartarmy365443 минут бұрын
I grow Murasaki sweet potatoes and they’re the best sweet potato ever! I love that they have the drier, fluffier texture of a regular baked potato, but a hint of sweetness like a sweet potato. They’re amazing! And the one year I was able to grow them without deer pressure, they were extremely productive!
@titasmom67844 минут бұрын
We are still working on growing sweet potatoes. Our last crop was in for 120 days, and still had healthy leaves. We should have left them in the ground as we only got a few, small potatoes. Next slips will be planted soon.
@billyangelapressleyСағат бұрын
Once they are planted and growing should i fertilize the sweet potatoe plants?
@pikakerose3 сағат бұрын
ha its satsuma imo good try imo is potato in japanese
@pikakerose3 сағат бұрын
so do u put the huge potato in water n the eyes makes shoots then do u take the shoots n put it in a jar to root?
@pikakerose2 сағат бұрын
i love satsuma potatoes they sell them roasted in the japanese market here in hawaii u love it with flake salt maybe i will try buy some raw potatoes n grow some shoots thank u for your video
@kpr0ck8 сағат бұрын
In Jamaica we use the vines as New slips
@jody28739 сағат бұрын
Got to say... You two know how to make beautiful videos! Love the chicks growing with the potatoes, i find i smile through the whole thing... Glad i get to meet you and be in heaven with you one day!... ✝️
@brendaogle-em7if9 сағат бұрын
Using a lot of your garden advise for the first time My garden is doing really good. Thank you so much !!!
@kidgloves29 сағат бұрын
Sat-su-my-e-mo But that just means sweet potato in Japanese. Lol
@Gardeningchristine10 сағат бұрын
You will probably have them every year in that spot unless you got every root, or had a killing frost.
@finalmatrix10 сағат бұрын
That's massive cabbage!
@Gardeningchristine10 сағат бұрын
I’ve been growing some purple sweet potatoes I picked up from the Asian market a couple years ago. They grow great and they produce delicious leaves all throughout the heat of summer and the sweet potatoes aren’t as sweet as regular sweet potatoes and they have a smoky flavor. They are good sweet or savory.
@mjr077310 сағат бұрын
Great to see a new video post. I recently moved to central Florida and you two have taught me so much about growing vegetables in this very different climate from what I am used to in the Midwest. Thank you for all your hard work and inspiration!
@marley990410 сағат бұрын
Hello folks and Bing Bing, always here supporting your channel. Love the gardening channel.
@lynnallen131511 сағат бұрын
Everything Nancy cooks looks yummy!
@duaneandshirleyagrimson295411 сағат бұрын
New to your channel..i love your sweet prayer❤
@pa.fishpreacher616611 сағат бұрын
Where do you get your blue pots that are in the background ?
@lindag448411 сағат бұрын
Looks like a good harvest. I am partial to the solid purple sweet potatoes and the white sweet potatoes.
@stephaniez211 сағат бұрын
I've missed you guys ❤
@jerryskidlsd11 сағат бұрын
Great video! This is my first year growing in containers. Makes more sense to me..
@matttheratt11 сағат бұрын
I would love to know, other than blood and bone meal at the beginning... what fertilizer, if any, did you use during the growing process?
@michale53911 сағат бұрын
The two of you are so inspiring. Thank you for bringing pleasant content. We need that in today's world🙏
@HollisNancysHomestead11 сағат бұрын
Our pleasure!
@jody28739 сағат бұрын
Very much agree
@Liwayputi11 сағат бұрын
Yum!
@cbass275512 сағат бұрын
My sweet potato vines grew big beautiful vines like that no potatoes.
@DebRoo1112 сағат бұрын
I've heard that letting the vines grow SO long and letting them reroot as they sprawl severely hinders the sweet potato production because so much energy is going to the vines and new roots. I will be trellising mine high and any that spill over to root into the ground i will be pruning back and lifting the vines to prevent them from rooting
@marthareyes402412 сағат бұрын
That was fun to watch. Thank you for teaching all of us. Looks beautiful with the very red skin. Looked delicious. We love making sweet potato fries that we just bake in the oven.
@mattymcintyre143112 сағат бұрын
Ok Hollis, need to try a little harder. Nancy looks lovely sitting at the dinner table. You look like you just came in from the fields 😂 Love the channel though, i’ll be growing purple Japanese Sweet potatoes this year with purple flesh. These are the same purple potatoes the people of Okinawa eat that people believe is the reason for their longevity.
@vickisavage892912 сағат бұрын
For what it’s worth, sweet potato vines, leaf petioles (between the stem and the leaf) and leaves are all humanly edible, and you can find MANY recipes online. Chickens, pigs, and cattle all consider them treats.
@Tess31613 сағат бұрын
I planted japanese sweet potatoes around April this year. I followed your other videos using bone meal and blood meal. Hope to harvest soon
@DebRoo1113 сағат бұрын
They have quite a few months to go for sure if you planted in April 😉
@MichaelSmith-ck2ro13 сағат бұрын
I've had some sweet potato slips growing in a large container for a little over a month and I don't feel like they're growing much. It's full of roots but the vines don't seem to be growing much... Anyone have any suggestions?
@DebRoo1112 сағат бұрын
I do it in a clear tub with a lid with air holes. I keep the temperature consistently humid and warm. They don't like the temps to go up and down day/night. A heating pad under works great. Once the roots form it isnt long before you get the slips and once they start it will go quite quickly. Don't do it in water like Hollis has it 😬 they need to be started end if winter really
@patience122628 минут бұрын
I normally start the growing of slips on February 1st each year. By early April they are ready to be planted...and then harvested late October to November.
@vickisavage892913 сағат бұрын
Old Scottish table grace. Some ha’ meat (food) that canna’ eat, and some that could eat lack it. But I ha’ meat, and I can eat, and sae the Laird be thanket.
@michale53911 сағат бұрын
I LOVE that!
@WhoisMichelleCollie13 сағат бұрын
So we can have them 2x a month or more? I know it was done last winter, but how is your mom since she moved in with you. what is the dish on hollis side in the square container, Is there a video on that?
@1Gibson13 сағат бұрын
God almighty bless your husband. He is a reminder as to why we woman need our men.
@claudialautenslager869513 сағат бұрын
They are pronounced "sat sue me Emo"
@millinglumberforwoodworkin696613 сағат бұрын
those are yummy.,.. ['['-]-[-]=]="Ӏ սѕеḋ tо tḣіոk ḣοⅿеѕtеаḋіոģ ԝаѕ ḣаrḋ...ḃսt tḣіѕ сḣаոģеḋ еⅴеrуtḣіոģ." Ԝ*І*Ŕ*Ê*Š*Ǒ*Ս*Ť*Η*.*Č*Ο*Μ ][';/..,,,,,,,,,,,
@thecoopers534213 сағат бұрын
I let mine grow for 97 days and the biggest one I had was the size of a golf ball. Any tips. Love your content. God bless.
@francestaylor915613 сағат бұрын
Yum! Kimchi goes with everything!
@francestaylor915613 сағат бұрын
I like the purple Japanese sweet potatoes (purple all the way through). They have a cake-like texture. They make really great sweet potato casserole.
@vickisavage892913 сағат бұрын
For what it’s worth, if’n you’d buried the sweet potato instead of using toothpicks and water, you’d likely have gotten lots more slips, or at least that’s what Danny at Deep South Homestead recommends. If your experiment works out, maybe you can grow enough to sell slips in the future. At least you know you can get big taters. The biggest collection of sweet potatoes that I have found is Sand Hill Preservation Center, and they have hundreds.
@shinkaz200112 сағат бұрын
I’m Japanese so here I go. Satsuma-eemo. Imo means potatoes. Satsuma as satsuma orange.
@cohomesource10 сағат бұрын
Does look yummy! I love your gardening videos
@patience122638 минут бұрын
After watching this channel for many years, I used the water, jar, toothpick method to create slips and it works tremendously well for me. I put my jars on heat mats and they create slips by the hundreds. In 2022 I had approximately 420 slips out of just a few sweet potatoes. I had to scale back a little since I didn't have room in my garden for that many slips. Since then, I normally stop around 200 slips.
@deejones768713 сағат бұрын
I like them!
@airinbone13 сағат бұрын
Back to basics.
@esmysyield202314 сағат бұрын
Satsuma imo kinda like the orange with a weird ending lol.
@MC-uj4co14 сағат бұрын
I grew some gold's and truly easy.
@deb5thmitch14 сағат бұрын
One of my favorite ❤️, I couldn’t slip them period.