Never had a garden before? Here is what you NEED To know before you start gardening for that first year! kzbin.info/www/bejne/h4e1d3enoNWEobc
@offthemap95824 жыл бұрын
Hi there! Could you perhaps give some advice on how to make these raised garden beds you have? What is the size (H x L x B) and with what material did you fill them? The ones you have made are a simple but durable design that also seems very cost efficient. Any info would be greatly appreciated!
@kateowens453 жыл бұрын
I live in Cody, WY. The soil in my backyard is challenging- clay and big round river rock to make digging a hole a permanent spot for a bush. The wind is not bad in town and the garden is protected by lilacs, honeysuckles and elms along the north side. I want to plant a "food forest" for my bees, chickens, the wild birds and wild rabbits. What bushes would you suggest. Cody is considered zone 4/5 and my garden is mostly 4. Even cheat grass does not want to grow, so I am resorting to special big digs with planting soil for each new bush and straw bale gardening for vegetables. Hopefully composted straw and chicken manure will help to transform the garden in future years.
@jojolly54 Жыл бұрын
After trying to homestead for 5 years in Arkansas (zone 7), we gave up and moved home to Maine (zone4B). We could never get our garden to survive the hot, humid summers in AR, but our short growing season in Maine is amazing. I just canned my 500th quart today. I’ll take the short season anytime!
@lacielynnae71032 жыл бұрын
I grew up in your area of WY but now live in Estonia 🇪🇪 (tiny country up by Finland and Russia) - still cold but more forest than prairie. I’m learning a lot about what to plant by just looking at the traditional foods to understand what grows well here. Loads of berries and fruit trees, sooo many potatoes, root vegetables, and lots of calorie dense plants to last through long winters. Keep up the good work!
@comando19114 жыл бұрын
Im technically zone 6(Hudson Valley, Upstate NY)... but never let that stop me, i got cotton, peanuts, tobacco, and all kinds of other crazy plants that are not grown up here, but thank god for greenhouses!
@thinkingofothers3533 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all your help.
@druppling3 жыл бұрын
Zone 8 - DEER! Biggest problem is DEER. Then watering. I don't like to use the well too much, so try to plant reduced water plants.
@toniharms58073 жыл бұрын
Zone 4. I think my biggest struggle is finding help. Most videos books ect. all take place in ideal growing environments. Even though I'm zone 4, I've seen it snow and frost many times in the middle of July. I would love a resource for cold weather high altitude gardening tips.
@brywalker71993 жыл бұрын
Same issues here. So hard to find quality info.
@keeptrying59625 жыл бұрын
Texas here, zone 8a. The HEAT is the thing here. Just as you described, the most valuable advice is to ask those well-familiar with an area what works/what doesn't work. The first year here, I threw away a lot of $$$ on plants from big-box stores, rated for this area. They were o.k. until the heat came to stay. LOVE YOUR VIDEOS. Daughter is graduating from UW this weekend.💛🤠
@samanthaB77125 жыл бұрын
yes, 8a and the heat just killed our summer squash but jump started our cucumbers.....Texas is hard to figure....so unpredictable. It's interesting that East Texas is considered sub tropical but yet it can snow and freeze...
@jennienniedots5 жыл бұрын
i am spoiled. we are 9a/b. we are in California and can pretty much grow everything almost all year round. we have many kinds berries, fruit and citrus trees, herbs, etc all growing in our front and back yard right now. i can grow food pretty much all year round. we have a tiny yard in suburbia and ripped out the front yard and made it a beautiful edible garden. i have artichokes, cucumbers, rhubarb, tomatoes, peas, peppers, beans, grapes, melons, zucchini, root veggies, onion, garlic, peanuts, etc. the only problem i have is that sometimes my winter crops like cabbage and broccoli will bolt because we will have a couple nice warm days in winter. and i personally fail at potatoes every single year - but i think that is us still figuring out potatoes. we can and dehydrate everything. my major sad garden problem is that i wish i had more land - so i could do more fruit and nut trees and plant more foods. i dont have enough room to grow popcorn etc - but we can squeeze in a bunch of mammoth sunflowers for the seeds every year.
@fifigrohvoiceovers4 жыл бұрын
I guess not so spoiled then. It's a trade off between having more land and climate.
@simply_andreastewart3 жыл бұрын
You are #lifegoals 🤩 We are in Riverside County and purchased a 2 acre homestead before housing prices went crazy (just before the lock down started) and there was no crops growing besides two navel Orange trees. We are up to 23 fruit trees now, a berry patch, small garden and tons of flowers. I need to put in raises beds because we have a major gopher problem in our area and everything needs gopher netting. 🙈
@brentderksen5 жыл бұрын
Alberta zone 3... potatoes onions and peas in the ground, everything else May long weekend if no frost is the forecast. Corn not till June.
@swedishmeatball31295 жыл бұрын
Brent and Natasha Derksen 👋🏼 Hi Alberta Zone 3, Alberta Zone 2 here. 👋🏼
@melodieeab5 жыл бұрын
Ontario zone 4/5 here, north of Lake Huron. We are just past our estimated last frost date, but my garden is under water from all the rain.
@kristyPoyntz3 жыл бұрын
I'm in southeastern Alberta! And our season and growing zone is the same here..I really appreciate your videos and advice because it actually applies to me and my homestead! Thanks so much!! Im a new subscriber and im here for good!
@shaynacossette4 жыл бұрын
So glad I found your channel! New gardener up in the prairies in canada so you advice is so helpful!
@candacewiebe79293 жыл бұрын
Same! 👍🏼
@AngieRichmond3 жыл бұрын
I’m in zone 3 in Canada. Snow in May and September is pretty standard for us but we still get to harvest quite a bit of food. This year I plan on expanding by starting seeds indoors. Also I love your raised beds! 💙
@dfhepner5 жыл бұрын
Clark, Wy North West of the state Zone 4a to 4b. The rhubarb and horseradish started coming up the end of April. I planted daikon radish then and they came up no problem and have survived the freezing nights and the two snow storms we had.
@lynsmith26985 жыл бұрын
Great video. Its snow today and i am browsing the pages of my seed catalog. We are zone 2/3 here. This year we are building a greenhouse. I am so excited over it....i had one years ago but now that we recently retired we will build a new big one. Thank you again, i enjoy your videos
@crazylanea5 жыл бұрын
I'm in zone 7a, and I bought an old Victorian farmhouse that suburbia has grown around. This is the first place I've gardened that didn't have the topsoil stripped off, and it is amazing how much more I have to weed. Good farm soil can be both a blessing and a curse.
@Digger12985 жыл бұрын
Were in Western Wyoming at about 8000'. We can get frost or snow any month of the year so everything is grown inside our two greenhouses. We have a neighbor about five miles to the west who has a large greenhouse and a small outdoor garden for carrots and other cold weather vegetables but he looses the outdoor garden to the cold about every two or three years. We're on a South facing sheltered slope that's heavily treed so we don't have much of an issue with wind.
@djmerrell96444 жыл бұрын
We just moved to Wyoming and will be starting our garden this spring. We have never lived in zone 5 before... Thanks for the tips!
@homesteadingintheheartland81065 жыл бұрын
Cass county ND here, haven't been able to plant yet, zone 4, too cold n windy to harden off plants till today. Gonna be late start this yr. Hope we go to Oct this yr to get best harvest. Thanks for the info, we are doing our first big garden since moving to 10 acre farm last Aug (300tom plants etc). God Bless!
@angeange76395 жыл бұрын
4a in Canada! Still just looking at my garlic that is growing nice will prepare the garden this weekend! Plant some seeds this weekend and my onion bulbs but the rest will wait another week! The house is green everything is ready to go outside but the weather has been cold... The winter was really hard still have lots of ice under the hay in the horse fields...
@kikik52664 жыл бұрын
We still garden in Alaska. Lol. Whence why I'm watching this video. Lol
@MyQuaintCottage5 жыл бұрын
Love your raised beds. We're in a cool climate as well. Great tips. 😊
@KG-hg1eo5 жыл бұрын
We are zone 3/4 in Central Oregon. The most challenging thing is we have frost risk all year around, plus we are in the high desert. Temps are 90s in the day and at night can frost. So if you wanna grow tomatoes or squash it has to be in a greenhouse. I used to think it was horrible but I changed my prospective and have made it a challenge. And also in the process of building a half in ground green house.
@theprairiehomestead5 жыл бұрын
Frost all year around-- yikes!! I have it pretty easy in comparison!
@serenitywoods97525 жыл бұрын
Currently living in SE Alaska (Florida Panhandle of Alaska) zone 6 but rains 220 days of the year and hardly any sun. Where my property is Eastern Alaska zone 1a Extremely small growing season. The good news is less rain and over a month of 24/7 sun. Excited to experience that growing season.
@dylanashley7994 жыл бұрын
In Cheyenne probably around where you’re at, I actually usually plant around mid April and start seeds even before that, and do very well, but you are so right about choosing the right selection of seeds
@Frugal_granny Жыл бұрын
You can make an extension on your garden by merely taking a plastic sheet and place it over your raised bed. If you’ve put out seeds, use clear plastic & if you just want to heat the soil for future planting; use black sheets & remember to weigh the sheets down! (Btw) I’m in South Dakota & used to live in Powell (zone 4)
@katiek68084 жыл бұрын
I am in Canada. Garden Zone 3. My husband made me some raised beds this year and I am loving them! I'm just trying out a variety of fruit and veggies this year to see what works in our climate because this is all kinda new to me. My biggest struggle is having to wait to plant most things until late May or even June. I get so excited and start waaaay too many seeds too soon. And how short my growing season is can be hard.
@tanarehbein77683 жыл бұрын
Wow can I ever identify with the zone, the wind and the snow, frost, and cold spring soil. I also have high elevation. Try Triple Divide Seeds, Whitefish, MT. They are more acclamated for Zone 4-5. I'm excited to be planning a greenhouse with a geothermal GHAT system (Ceres out of Colorado) for next year! Good video cold growing soul sister ☺️
@yahushaismyshepherd11793 жыл бұрын
Zone 3 northern Alberta Canada. Have to protect beans and squash pumpkins as can get frost 1st week of August. We are just putting garden in now.
@missyweidenaar50165 жыл бұрын
We live in southwest Montana in zone 4. I hear you when it comes to the gardening bug! Thankfully, last summer we were given a wood-frame greenhouse and it has been awesome! We put all new polycarbonate panels on it and they seem pretty sturdy. You might be able to use them where you are. I have loved being able to start and grow SO many things! The trouble now is being patient to wait until June to put a lot of it out and in the ground.
@tanarehbein77683 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to my new green house with a geothermal GAHT system. I'm so excited! I want to grow a fig tree as well as winter salads, ect.
@tanarehbein77683 жыл бұрын
Forgot to say I'm outside Missoula. Glad to see you here ☺️
@kathyschieb66864 жыл бұрын
we are zone 4-5 and live in town. Not a lot of room for gardening but still want to do it. I just found your channel. might need to binge watch here for a while.
@nikosushi87873 жыл бұрын
GIRL, I cannot tell you how nice this video is! I just changed from WA state to Saskatchewan, Canada - a huge leap from zone 8b to zone 2b in growing. And I have never gardened before! So I'm taking the plunge this year and learning how to do it in a colder/drier area!
@VegetableAcademy3 жыл бұрын
Welcome to Saskatchewan! We're growing in Saskatoon and it's not so bad. The garden can still be incredibly productive during our long summer days and the winter gives us a welcome break.
@karengates85085 жыл бұрын
May 14th now and we had snow last night here in the Northeast Kingdom of VT...we’re all hanging in there...LOL - ZONE 4
@GoingGreenMom2 жыл бұрын
Lol. Currants, I planted 2 bushes by my shed a few years ago, and black raspberries.... 1 died, was replaced by a volunteer tree, and between some unruly grape vines and black raspberries, the light to the remaining bush had to be minimal...... everything lost leaves and I had pulled grapevine out. It had leaves! It was still alive! Lol, hoping to move it in the spring once it warms up a bit.
@Frugal_granny Жыл бұрын
I recommend planting more zone 3 & 4s! There are great productive plants from those zones you can add and they will love the Wy climate n cope with Artic weather
@jenisecoronado55555 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Jill! Here in southern NM in the Sacramento Mountains (7,000 ft elevation), we do pretty good but there are some absolute "no no's"! One of them is blue berries. We are in zone 6b and even though they fit within our rating you CANNOT grow them here without a herculean effort!! They like acid and the soil here is alkaline. Amend your soil, you say? Hah! Guess what? The water is alkaline too! So if the dirt don't kill 'em, the water will!!!! Best of luck in your gardening season, Jill, and all you other gardeners out there - especially with the crazy weather that is the new abnormally normal!
@tanarehbein77683 жыл бұрын
I can't believe I'm not the only one! How often do we think that? Yes I have alkaline soil and water, and blue berries. They struggled for 5years and I lost about half of them. Then I started mulching with wood chips and my chopped up Christmas tree! This year should tell the tail. To keep or not to keep, that is the question ❓
@jenisecoronado55553 жыл бұрын
@@tanarehbein7768 I hope your tenaciousness is greatly rewarded, Tana! I gave up and planted blackberries, grapes, and aronia berries which all do very well!
@carriewojnar2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact! You should try peeing on your blueberry bushes. Sounds crazy, but it is an old farmer trick that works on things like blueberries. It has the balance of acid and nutrients they need to thrive. Maybe try it before throwing in the towel.
@shawner46405 жыл бұрын
Here in Nova Scotia we are in a zone 5 area as well. It has been cold and wet here . I can not wait til the warmer weather finally breaks and we can enjoy the sunshine a bit. Brrrrrr......
@YasuTaniina2 жыл бұрын
Zone 5a. Very very windy and a little dry. I have 3 kids 5 and under, and I'm recovering from being sick the last couple of years, so I've been extremely limited on time. I have no grow lights and I live near neighbors and have no fence, so while there is no official hoa, I do consider how my neighbors would feel about things like greenhouses and more raised beds, especially considering that the area behind our houses is somewhat treated like a community playground.
@lostcreekcabin2021 Жыл бұрын
I garden in the far north of Ontario, Canada . Conditions here are a bit more harsh than Alaska . ( We don't have the warming ocean effect ) . At any rate , choosing the right plant varieties is one of the key ways of having a better chance .
@mommy2kdk5 жыл бұрын
Great tips!! I am in I think 5a, south west South Dakota. We just got our greenhouse up yesterday and finally finishing transplanting to bigger pots until big enough for the ground.
@SaraMaisey3 жыл бұрын
Yay Wyoming! I am in Evanston on the south west corner of the state. Zone 4a but sometimes better to buy zone 3 plants. Our biggest issue here is altitude. At just under 7000 ft our summer nights are usually in the forties and fifties. Just subscribed and excited to see your other videos.
@planningreelalaska41214 жыл бұрын
We are in 2a ( anchorage Alaska) ugh! So hard to plant here . I like that you said your herbs come back like chives and parsley. I’m hoping mine will come back in the spring.
@castebner5 жыл бұрын
I'd say we are opposite of you...we are Zone 9 -- the Arizona desert. Our gardening time is very limited, because we have to have plants in the ground by February or March and be finished by June before things actually start cooking on the vine! Some people are successful with a fall planting, but my head is into the holidays by that time. We also have a lot of clay in our soil, so that has to be addressed as well. We do have a raised bed for planting which makes it much easier, and I really like yours.
@Murphis555 жыл бұрын
You could build a geothermal greenhouse. It’s just basically a hole in the ground with duck pipe that runs about 8 ft into ground and harvests the ambient temp of ground check out Nebraska greenhouse in the snow. Once it’s up it sort of self maintains and pays for itself. 👍🏻🖖🏻💪🏻🐾🖖🏻❤️🙋🏼♀️
@theprairiehomestead5 жыл бұрын
I've seen pics of those-- they are fascinating!
@andielliott23063 жыл бұрын
I am in East Idaho...zone 4b Snake River Valley...very windy. Canby Raspberries do wonderfully well here.
@kptown13 жыл бұрын
We purchased property in Bone this winter. Hoping to get a few plants in to enjoy for the summer 🤞🏻
@shelldonaldson42765 жыл бұрын
Some of these tips will come in handy for our garden here on the coast of Scotland! Thanks for sharing :)
@renamaemcdonald20753 жыл бұрын
You nailed it on every point! We live in zone 2A. Lots of fun!😆 Gotta love gardening to do it here. I'm a lot like you as far as loving animals, cooking & then the gardening, but I sure love all the food you get from a garden! We have grown at least 75% of our produce last year
@kyfaithhavenfarm92285 жыл бұрын
I’m in Zone 6B. South central Kentucky. It is usually warm by now with cold weather crips already harvested. Not this year. We’ve had a super rainy cold year. I just got the garden planted last week. It’s been back in the fifty’s this week. So, I planted cool weather crops as well as the summer crops lol.
@kyfaithhavenfarm92285 жыл бұрын
Oh, deer and squirrels are our only problems. But man.....
@jafstuff5 жыл бұрын
I am in Idaho Falls, ID...Rural, Zone 5, windy and unpredictable. Raised beds are great and this year I did not do it but in the past have secured black plastic over the raised beds to increase soil temperature and it worked great, tomatoes and peppers had a canning harvest, wahoo. I also have an herb garden sheltered on two sides by the kinda barn and the wood shop and this year I am replacing some of my very aged herbs to refresh everything. I do not do anything to the herb garden except occasional weeding. I often reduce the herb footprint and give the perimeter plants to neighbors. Herbs come back no matter what the winter dumps on them.
@kptown13 жыл бұрын
This was an encouraging comment to see. We just purchased property in Bone and have been wondering about possibilities.
@StillmeadowFarmAndrea5 жыл бұрын
Great info! We're in Zone 6a, Michigan. Like you, the most challenging thing about our zone is the shorter growing season. We usually plant memorial day weekend to be safe :)
@theprairiehomestead5 жыл бұрын
Same!!
@tathimitchell5 жыл бұрын
I'm in Maryland zone 7 and garden in a tiny backyard garden. Wyoming looks so beautiful. Would love to visit one day. I've lived in the U.S for 15 years now, but always in the East coast.
@Greens55115 жыл бұрын
I live is zone 3 in MN and yeah it kinda bites when I work so hard to plant my own seeds and it is time for brassicas to go in and then we get that same snow I am sure u got... very frustrating.....but I just keep plugging away at it. Comments; those corners of sharp tin on ur raised beds would concern me with little ones, heck even me, one could really get sliced up on them. I loved ur comments about raised beds being warmer soil...I am starting to transition to them..kinda a lot of expense and time, but worth it!
@simply_andreastewart3 жыл бұрын
So we are in zone 9b. We get some freeze… minimal freeze 😂 So interesting to see how different it is for you. We have a LONG warm season. This year I ripped out tomatoes because I didn’t want them there, not for any other reason, because those babies survived the winter and still had tomatoes!! The hardest thing here is that it gets HOT. Instead of the ground getting super hard in winter it’s dried out and is really hard to did in right now. So I can still plant a second crop but it’s a lot of work to work the soil right now.
@MrsThebault5 жыл бұрын
We’re in one of those rare 8b zones on the BC coast. My biggest challenge is that I want the season to be even longer!
@rebekahpagedesigns4 жыл бұрын
Zone 2b - yes we divide them into a and b up here because any bit of difference is important lol. My biggest challenge is not having to figure it all out by trial and error! Very difficult to find helpful advice. I think your harsh prairie climate might be the closest I can find on youtube.
@ibislife5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your video, and I will look into the other videos as well. I am at zone 4, Norway. Our spring is late as well. We had a snowfall last week, but now I hope we are out of the risk of frost nights. New garden, mini homestead, just planted a cherry tree (housewarming gift from my mother) and a blackberry bush. I have no idea how to keep them, so I hope they will survive! :-)
@amyaxelson15525 жыл бұрын
I am in zone 3, NW corner of North Dakota. I will buy many things that are cold hardy for zone 2, just because of the -40 plus sometimes we have. This year I lost 3 mock orange, (blizzard orange) bushes that were +6 years old because of extreme weather overwinter. I cried. I miss that wonderful smell. Too large to cover for winter, so what does a person do. Now having the hard work of digging these 6 foot bushes out!
@MissNatashaMarie5 жыл бұрын
Zone 6, our last frost date is June 1st. The plant starts and I are ready☺️ Thanks for the tips!
@valh98585 жыл бұрын
Zone 7 here in Maryland. Our biggest problem is too much rain in the spring. Last year, almost everything drowned. We also have extremely high humidity come summer, so fungal diseases are rampant. I am going to experiment with hoops/plastic this winter. I think I'll be able to grow some cold hearty stuff. I would move to WY in a heartbeat, but hubby has family here! I love the cold.
@ciara63093 жыл бұрын
New subscriber, so happy to have stumbled across your channel. Do you recommend a specific company for seeds? We are in zone 4.
@clmierau5 жыл бұрын
I'm in zone 5 as well, while we have woods around us we are still windy. This is the first year that we have hoop houses, all the other years I would just wrap my plants in plastic. Starting in the house is essential. The season is just too short and not very warm.
@TrekieGal5 жыл бұрын
Perfect timing Jill! Just moved to NW ND, zone 3b/4a but about the same growing season as you.
@taytaysharrard4 жыл бұрын
I'm in zone 10!! basically the exact opposite haha more having to work around the heat rather than the cold
@amandarsmi4 жыл бұрын
I'm in zone 9b, so I know what you mean. I do love the options for winter since it's still in the 60s right now in December
@triciasklodowske56535 жыл бұрын
What about putting black plastic down soon as the snow is gone ? It will help warm up the soil very nicely. I'm in 4/5 zone, N. MI. This spring till late June, rain !!! A lot of the big farms didn't plant till end of June. Now we're looking at another very rainy fall. Hoop house's help. Would love to put in a sunken greenhouse. Hope you didn't get hit to bad over the weekend. Stay safe and warm.
@Peggyanns5 жыл бұрын
I’m in northern Vermont. Zone 3b. It snowed here this morning.
@baileelayn-gordon23075 жыл бұрын
We are in Addison County VT, zone 4a for us! I'm working on adding some low tunnels and cold frames for next year!
@Peggyanns5 жыл бұрын
Hi neighbor! Your by the lake and a lot closer to Burlington than me. I’m in Orleans County.
@HelgatheHorriblez5 жыл бұрын
We are working on a Walipini for our yard in NY. We also start very early with planting indoors.
@GOdeg-kn2mc3 жыл бұрын
Hi Jill; Take 2. Dang computer. We are in zone 4b, Big Horn County, north central Wy. Thank you for your video and blog. We have a unheated greenhouse that I start seeds in late March to hopefully have nice plants to put out 1st of June. I also look for zone 3 plants for the landscape, much safer in my opinion the a zone 4 plant.
@debbiewalker91955 жыл бұрын
I'm new to my area and a beginner to this whole gardening thing. I think I'm in Zone 4b. Our last frost date is mid June, first is mid Sept. (short season). I think my biggest challenge is going to be the creatures, deer, chipmunks, rabbits, etc. The deer, just today ate my flowers that popped up and were about 3" tall.
@lousylou2 жыл бұрын
We're looking at Cody. I'm so nervous about gardening!
@eileenpalumbo65785 жыл бұрын
Zone 5 New England. We have had so much rain that we are behind with planting. We are also still having nights in the 30's. My started tomatoes are really needing to get outside, but still not warm enough.
@oldauntzibby4395 Жыл бұрын
If you look on a zone map my place is supposed to be zone 4. However we have bouts of ultra cold (34 below zero F just before Christmas, 23 below in February this year) and we often have periods of no snow and cold winds that suck the moisture out of the soil and any perennials or trees. So I always look for plants that can take zone 3 climate. Another problem we have is the giant temperature swings. We'll have days in the 50s that get the sap flowing and then we'll have a week of Sub-Zero that freezes the sap. I have to wrap my young tree trunks with white cloth to help protect them. And be sure to remove the cloth in the spring or you'll girdle the trees (ask me how I know this).
@amandarsmi4 жыл бұрын
We're in zone 9b in AZ. The biggest hurdle is the heat/sun!! Most things I plant in the winter would be spring or fall plants other places. I have great luck with tomatoes here 😄
@williamproctor86143 жыл бұрын
I’m thankful you have this channel. We plan to move from Indiana to Pinedale area or maybe Newcastle area west of the Hills. Interested in starting corn indoors, and how to amend soil in Wyoming. Do you get much hail in late June through September ? A hoop house was an idea until I heard your comment about hail. Growing in Indiana is fairly easy and low effort, this will be a major change.
@debbiebell45984 жыл бұрын
My husband built me tall raised beds. I'm in a wheelchair so the bending to the ground is no longer a possibility. This year because it's harder to go to a garden center to get already started plants I tried to start my own and I can get them to grow, I just can't seem to keep them alive. I purchase good starter and soil for transplant. I use filtered water since our water is so hard and softened so I know they wouldn't like the salt. I've tried using water from our barn pump that doesn't get softened and well nothing seems to work. The water is always room temp. The plants seem to get leggy, I do feed them but maybe not enough. Also since I'm growing them on my kitchen table maybe they aren't getting enough sun. I do turn on our really bright kitchen light during the day but since we have covered porches there really isn't anywhere to put them where they get the kind of sun they'd get outside. BTW I'm zone 5 here in mid Michigan as well.
@inyayardhomestead56935 жыл бұрын
G'day, here in Australia I'm in zone 4 hot arid area we have to deal with hot dry winds, dust storms and wild animals such as kangaroo's, emu's and feral goats. But can still garden even with all those challenges. God bless you guys.
@barbaraferreira90485 жыл бұрын
Hi! Wow and I thought I had a cold winter here... I live in Amsterdam and I guess if I translate to the USDA map I we would fit in zone 10... love the video and how you live your life!!
@rebeccaanne30834 жыл бұрын
Barbara Broek zone 10 is tropical in Canada!
@TRuth.T5 жыл бұрын
We were uograded to zone 4 in WI. ;)
@tanarehbein77683 жыл бұрын
Yeah I went from zone 4 to 5 without ever moving 😅 but I still have to pamper the z5 perennials. I'm at 3580 elevation with cold winter winds and five months of ground frost. Yeah right, zone 5...
@beverleysimmons78855 жыл бұрын
Oh I know your world. Zone3b. Yes I do warm my soil with a cover. Plant week after our long weekend. Use extenders for before and after. Very careful with plant material. Southern Ontario Canada 🇨🇦 unlike you I could garden all year. I am testing going under my new led spectrum lights to produce basics inside. Happy hardening to you.
@megmcginnis2395 жыл бұрын
Zone 8 on Whidbey Is. WA. Biggest struggle is long period of nice weather than we get hit with wind and cold.
@BacktonaturelivingCom3 жыл бұрын
We are in zone 6b, according to your zone map, on our Rocky Mtn Homestead due to the fact that we don't get below -5 F during our winters. Our biggest challenge is that we are at 9000 ft elevation and get up to 9 ft of snow that doesn't melt completely until June. But we usually don't get a hard frost until mid October but out last hard frost has been as late as June 26th.
@HomesteadTessie5 жыл бұрын
i loved this video!!
@denisestone84915 жыл бұрын
I always thought that cooking and gardening went hand in hand. I guess that might be because my grandmother always had fresh fruit and veggies for cooking. I live in zone 6b and have problems with ground animals....chipmunks, moles, gophers...they love my worm/compost area most.🙄😑😬
@theprairiehomestead5 жыл бұрын
some years are so tough! We don't have critter problems, thankfully-- but I can only imagine how frustrating that is!
@rsa90823 жыл бұрын
Yep another zone 4-5 Gardner here. It’s just not as long up here 😂
@debarnold50195 жыл бұрын
I am also zone 5 in the Denver area and we have the same weather patterns. I struggle the same way you do. It is tough to watch videos from Alabama and Kentucky that already have their tomatoes in. My biggest struggle is with keeping enough water on my vegies. Everyone says to water about 1/2 to one inch of water a week and that just doesn't work here. Spinach and brassicas are my gardening nemesis.
@lorijeanyeilding35595 жыл бұрын
I live outside of Bend, OR. My biggest issues are short growing season and the dirt here is volcanic sand. It has no nutrients and retains no moisture. It is very acidic from all of the pine. Deciduous trees don’t do well here. The deer eat anything that they can reach. People feed them. They mass produce. They starve. There isn’t any hunting allowed here so there are too many of them for the food available. Our outdoor season is from May to September. I make compost and add a lot of amendments. If it’s not in a container or raised bed it doesn’t grow. My chickens have never met a worm. They don’t live here.
@kathrynhutton93323 жыл бұрын
She now has a green house!
@beccam5075 жыл бұрын
We're in Maine, Zone 5a, and I don't have as big of a garden as you, but I start a lot of my plants inside. I planted spinach and beet seeds directly into the ground last week, and so far they're sprouting. We've had a rather showery and cloudy spring however, so nothing has taken off yet... Today is low forties and rainy, bleh. At least we don't have snow!! 😁
@ka61485 жыл бұрын
We're in maine as well. Zone 4 central maine..
@beccam5075 жыл бұрын
Lovely weather we're having 😉 Maine isn't so bad for growing, you just have to work with the weather and against the bugs!
@PopleBackyardFarm5 жыл бұрын
nice raised beds
@jewelstar36665 жыл бұрын
5b, we’re at 8,000 ft on the Continental Divide in New Mexico. the last frost date June 15, 1st frost date 3rd week sept. My question is when to plant bare root that is sent from a seed company. I plant after they send, but I’m not having good luck with a lot of the plants. They just don’t do anything.
@cloudburstsinmycoffeecup56485 жыл бұрын
I’m from California in zone 9b. We are commercial farmers in addition to gardeners. Gophers tend to be an issue where we are.
@theresathreadgill13865 жыл бұрын
Zone 8a. Carrots and potatos in by Mar 1, tomatos and peppers not till Apr.
@Learningthetruth73 жыл бұрын
Moving near you to Rigby, Idaho. From Puget Sound so my gardening technique is surely going to change.
@kptown13 жыл бұрын
We just purchased property in Bone ID. Lots to learn ♥️
@Dan-yw9sg5 жыл бұрын
We are moving to zone 4a. Looking to do the greenhouse/hoop house to extend the growing season. Thanks for the informative video!
@EdensApple805 жыл бұрын
6a New England here. Rather humid so my battle tends to be fighting blight and other diseases and then of course pests 😀
@canadiangirl51595 жыл бұрын
Pretty much the same weather I'm getting north of you in Central Alberta. I'm zone 3b-4 and the land we rent out to a farmer is wonderful, but what I'm left with near the house is hard clay. I have been putting in raised beds now.
@joyceday28235 жыл бұрын
Like your ideas for cold weather gardening. I have seen videos on Alaska gardening where they put like a window frame and window in over the ground to grow in the colder weather. Any more ideas I would appreciate them to possible extend gardening season.
@beckysocia16423 жыл бұрын
I live in a zone 3!! so we just built a high tunnel.. I can finally plant like a zone 5 or 6! Now our sandy soil is the biggest issue. It does not hold the water.
@LifefromAshes0014 жыл бұрын
So glad I stumbled upon this channel!! I'm in Ontario Canada we're done 5a I can totally understand the struggle lol we have lots of currants and gooseberry bushes they produce beautifully, we have had to fight birds like crazy they'll way them before ripening. This year we are building a fenced surround so we don't get robbed lol great channel Luv from Ashes xo ☕😊❄🍜🌄
@jamesalanstephensmith79304 жыл бұрын
Helpful! Looking to permaculture in Maine. Same zone, I believe...
@ClickinChicken4 жыл бұрын
zone 3b. not enough time in season, getting started late with seeds, cold nights 50 degrees, too many trees.