G'day, Everyone; most of you should be well into the new planting season, so I hope it's growing well! If something is not going to plan, don't be deterred. Just get more determined! Thanks for your support... Cheers :)
@kimmclean99338 ай бұрын
Our planting season is coming up very soon...Michigan USA 😊
@rohantherockwiththerocketh78718 ай бұрын
Always like watching your videos Mark, you really do try to give people the best information you can. Have a ripper mate!
@janewood86658 ай бұрын
There’s been no rain (2.1 mm) in Perth Western Australia for 6 months, it’s so dry and still quite hot. I’ve delayed any planting until things change. Also I’d love to grow sugar cane but can never find any!
@junewrogg61378 ай бұрын
I enjoy all your videos! Bring on the sweet potatoes :) Yams! I do envy all the citrus and sugar cane.
@myshinobi19878 ай бұрын
Hi Mark. Great video. We are fellow SEQ residents also. Can you please make a video about what crops we can plant now coming into the Autumn/Winter? That would be really helpful. Thanks again for your content. We love it 👍
@TheGunSmith8 ай бұрын
Steve Irwin is the father of conservation and Mark is the father of horticulture. Australia just keeps pumping out legends
@WayTooSuppish8 ай бұрын
So unfortunate that Australia is now a completely communist nation.
@gingerydelights35548 ай бұрын
Pumping out? Thats 2 people, you also gave us Iggy Azalea, settle down 😂
@TheGunSmith6 ай бұрын
@@gingerydelights3554 iggy azalea is fatherless and your negative comment is also fatherless behavior
@ethansmith90656 ай бұрын
@gingerydelights3554 his name is the gun Smith. He's not from Straya. You settle down😂😂😂
@gingerydelights35546 ай бұрын
@@TheGunSmith My comment was a joke, most Australians have a great sense of humor so your clearly not one 🤣 Jumping to calling someone fatherless in a comments section is wild, and you let us know that you don't respect any military man or police who died for their country. Now that's real fatherless behavior, being a brat in a comments section for attention.
@GroperJoeandFriends2 күн бұрын
I love how you show the good the bad and the downright ugly mark, but teach us all so much good info 😊
I can't grow most of these in Seattle. Wish I could!
@gg-gn3re8 ай бұрын
"banana" "unstoppable" oh the irony. Already nearly extinct several varieties and the last one is on it's way out lmao
@michaelcoletta45478 ай бұрын
Japanese bamboo (knotweed) is technically edible... and might be the most unstoppable of all plants.
@ellenorbjornsdottir11668 ай бұрын
@@marandamurphy Sugarcane should be able to get well underway, at the least, and sorghum, which can be used as a poor man's sugarcane, should be able to pull it off easily if you have irrigation or plant sparser to reduce the need.
@NANASplash8 ай бұрын
Thank you, my friend.
@adrianahill78848 ай бұрын
In Mexico, we use the rosella calix for hibiscus tea. The calixes need to be dried first, once they’re nice and dry, put a handful in a pot of boiling water. Once you start getting a stronger fragrance, remove from the heat. Add sugar (to taste) and ice. Let it finish cooling in the fridge, and serve it cold 😋
@valiaudet34158 ай бұрын
😮 sounds delicious 🎉
@KelleyAshbrook8 ай бұрын
Adriana! Greetings from El Centro. I love making jamaica from roselle calyx. Missing you and your family (saw your brother recently). I'm new to this channel but looking forward to trying some of his great ideas adopted to the desert where we live. Yes,
@adrianahill78848 ай бұрын
@@KelleyAshbrook hey!!! Wow! It’s such a small world 😅 hope you guys are doing well. And best of luck with your gardening adventures
@earthisflat7 ай бұрын
I grew hibiscus last year, the calixs were so damn tasty lol
@TheEncouragementKid4 ай бұрын
Yuuuuum
@jasminbuckley18798 ай бұрын
Hi Mark, we're in stuggletown a bit here in the southwest of WA. Drought like we've never seen before, the bush is dying, dams are empty, rivers drying up with no rain in sight for the future. It's hard to watch so much rain and growth without being "green" with envy! Thank you for your videos, they keep us going with thoughts of better times.
@susanlisson70668 ай бұрын
Northern suburbs of Perth here and yes, so green … with envy! 🙃 I lost all my chilli plants last year as well as my passion fruit vine due to excessive heat. Even with watering daily, sometimes twice. I grow succulents as a hobby and even those were half alive and struggling. I’m also in a windy coastal suburb so it’s been a harsh few years plant wise. Let’s hope this winter is nice and rainy.
@mssixty34268 ай бұрын
Same story, but not as unusual here in the desert Southwest of New Mexico. I lost all but an established tree and one rosebush in a protected spot - the lantanas thrive as always. This year I've bought 2 desert native trees to plant in the hopes of providing some shade for future plants and to cool my house.
@yvonnedaily2528 ай бұрын
The story here in the Ozarks of Northwest Arkansas has been one of a lot of Stormy wet weather. I added lots of mulch of shredded limbs and leaf to as many areas as possible.. including the fruit trees.. then I brought 2 pickup full loads of aged sawdust....on top of that I brought a load of dried cow manure and spread it Parsley over the top and tilled it in. All of those additives I figure will help build the soil and feed the plants so they prosper through hard times. There's too much to explain all the ins and outs of the trials and errors of my gardening endeavors but I usually eat quite well. I'm able to can, dry or freeze any surplus. I always save seed from growing heirloom or open pollinated plants. I moved from Arizona around the Phoenix area with a total different ground makeup and hot dry temperatures but I managed to grow corn out in the middle of the desert where other gardeners said it couldn't be done I did that by tiling up an area and banking it with about foot high edges and then flood irrigated it... Used mulch and goat manure to feed the dry sandy soil. When we bought the place we discovered that the original owner had built up the soil for 2 years before he put in an orchard of apricots, plums, a dwarf peach tree that put on baseball-sized peaches and figs. I tilt between the rows of trees and planted alfalfa which I found my goats preferred already dried in the form of hay... They gave me plenty of milk... My neighbor had lemon trees ... And he was allowed to graft the apricot and plum trees ending up with plumcots. . That proved very tasty and interesting. I'm 73 and still plugging along and will never stop learning something new everyday. BTW the gourd you grow reminds me of the Tromboncino squash.. it vines heavily and produces long straight squash if grown on trellis, or if left to sprawl on the ground makes all kinds of snake-like shapes... When it is green you can eat it cooked like a zucchini or you can wait until it's at its growing season and becomes like a winter squash and it will keep in a cool pantry for many months .. it then makes delicious soups, stews stir fries and delicious pumpkin like pie. It's a very versatile plant and what you call pumpkin. Everyone have a beautiful day... We all can never give up on our growing endeavors cuz that's what feeds our mouths...😊 So everybody just prepare for the worst and do our best...I wish the BEST for everyone worldwide 🌄💚🌿🫂❤️
@kathryntodd10028 ай бұрын
If sunflowers do well in your climate, you can use the sunflower stalks as poles! They need to be dried for about a week or so after the flower is harvested, but they turn into an almost bamboo-like pole.
@pman29168 ай бұрын
Never thought gardening could be so entertaining. I really enjoy your videos 😊
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the kind feedback 🙂👍
@MandyOnderwater8 ай бұрын
Gardening can be many things. It's actually a common practice among people with PTSD as it can be healing, or those with depression to help give them purpose in dark days, and so on. Plus, it has the added bonus of health benefits as you can control what pesticides (if any) you use. I would definitely recommend it :)
@Clyde__Frog8 ай бұрын
@@MandyOnderwater Someone I used to work for called it the 'Green Gym' Loved that expression.
@MandyOnderwater8 ай бұрын
@@Clyde__Frog ah that's pretty cool!
@tx.tactical31658 ай бұрын
I use to work in a greenhouse in high school, one of the most popular plants was the banana tree, plus we would eat the bananas while working...lol
@abigailg91888 ай бұрын
One of the few channels I give a 👍🏻 to before I watch the video.
@unnamed27378 ай бұрын
I grew rosella last year during our hottest summer on record, and as I watched my garden die from the heat, the rosella turned into a gigantic bush, bigger than any rosella I’ve ever seen.
@伏見猿比古-k8c8 ай бұрын
Rosella looking at all the other plants: Pssh, pathtic 💪
@glendaquick92908 ай бұрын
Are they perennials?
@nunyabiznes338 ай бұрын
@@glendaquick9290not really, but they live longer than most annuals. I've had one that went on for 2 years before it finally gave up. By that time should have already harvested a lot of seeds for replanting.
@DelfinoGarza778 ай бұрын
I'm from South Texas, and I think Texas is a mini Australia. So I really like your show. OK ready to get into it.
@janforaker31278 ай бұрын
DFW area here!! I like crops that reseed and like hot temperatures. Don't have so much to replant each year. Our water bill gets really high come July and August!
@libertycowboy24958 ай бұрын
South East Texas here...very much like northern oz!
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
I'm looking forward to visiting Texas one day soon! Eating at some of your famous barby joints is on my bucket list... Cheers 👍🙂
@MandyOnderwater8 ай бұрын
It's indeed quite similar! If you're ever stuck, Mark has a forum full of people happy to share their own experiences and knowledge. Questions are always welcome too :) It's called Self-Sufficient-Culture. It's also found in this video's description box. www.selfsufficientculture.com/
@janforaker31278 ай бұрын
@@Selfsufficientme we have a lot of barbecue places to eat along with Mexican food! You won't go hungry!
@tallulahbeaverhausen43828 ай бұрын
The amount of biomass you get with your crops is impressive ! As always, it's a pleasure to follow you in your garden !
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Thanks! That's true about the biomass and it's a good point too. Something I don't often think about but I should appreciate it more 👍🙂
@simohandle7 ай бұрын
@@Selfsufficientme Thank you for including biomass. North Queensland is STILL RAINING! Chop and drop is a technique to ensure access to the water and electricity metre so you dont get cut off. The Triffids will eventually be replaced with food plants. Thank you for showing your weeds. I feel better now.
@ruthdillon96637 ай бұрын
Sambung, Moringa and Sweet Leaf have been abundant this summer, they are high nutrition plants... Really enjoy your show. Thanks
@irili1008 ай бұрын
Hi Mark, the plant you called Egyptian spinach, is also in the hibiscus family, like okra and the cotton plant. It also grows in the Mediterranean region and the locals cook a soup from it called Malochia soup.
@mudpiemudpie7858 ай бұрын
Many Middle Eastern dishes use Egyptian Spinach. I make a dish with it that's almost like a soup. I make it with chicken and chicken stock, onions, and lots of Egyptian Spinach. It is most commonly made with beef or lamb. It's served over rice. It's called Molokhia. It's so, so good. I grow some every year and blanch and freeze the leaves to preserve them.
@yoop1778 ай бұрын
Does this come back every year after winter.
@cacogenicist7 ай бұрын
That sounds lovely.
@sapphiresymes44418 ай бұрын
Just found this guy! What a legend. And nice to find aussie gardeners too!
@k.p.11398 ай бұрын
I was SO EXCITED to have the El Nino back. It turns the rain loose for us here in Florida. Under the La Nina we tend to be dry and hot. WELL, that heifer kicked El Nino out the door, and is trying to take over, again. Already, our rain has stated to dry up. BUT, we here in Florida are having our first REAL spring in 3 years. So, I am thankful! My plants are the happiest that I have seen them in so long, I just walk out to look at them, and tell them how proud I am of them. 😆😆
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Great stuff KP! 👍😉
@Anne--Marie8 ай бұрын
Please send some of that rain to Sarasota!
@shebasheba7778 ай бұрын
I'm not looking forward to the La Nina summer, and hurricane season.
@k.p.11398 ай бұрын
@@shebasheba777 I think this one might be Irma 2.0. Watch Mark Sudduth Hurricane Track
@georgetuider6548 ай бұрын
It's been good here in north Florida. Things are doing well. I had a lot of cold damage from the prior winter so I think this spring feels even nicer.
@claire22ize8 ай бұрын
Mark is not kidding. It rained non stop for five months. We live up "the road"
@angelalewis36454 ай бұрын
🙌🏻
@kewage8 ай бұрын
Never a bore watching this channel. Also love the signature move "let's get into it"
@lmullens758 ай бұрын
Born and raised in Oklahoma, USA, and I also pronounce it toooomeric. 🤪 We grew rosella last year, and it was my 6 year old grandson’s favorite part of visiting our garden. He loved the sweet/tart taste of the calyx’s.
@sqeekable7 ай бұрын
Where I am in Nova Scotia our climates are so different, we can’t grow the same crops, but I still come to your channel to learn- I trust your knowledge& experience more than so many newbie KZbin gardening channels.
@Gala09088 ай бұрын
These video's always make me feel nice and calm :) Keep up the good work!
@Grapefruit4768 ай бұрын
In jamaica we call the rosella Sorrell it makes really good juice, if we had a national juice it would be in heavy running. We usually grow it as a seasonal crop for Christmas. We blend or boil it together with ginger, adding pimento beans and overproof white rum and sugar after, put it to chill in the fridge then have it throughout the entire December season especially around Christmas eve to boxing day. Thank me later😊
@glf24248 ай бұрын
LOL you big kid! I love it that you don't deny your inner child and have fun making a imaginary trumpet out of a gourd. lol Cheers!
@karenicox90262 ай бұрын
That’s what I love about Mark. So enjoyable
@julieallinson57298 ай бұрын
I’ve never heard turmeric pronounced any other way! 🤪 I mean yes - you have an accent … but ? Your garden looks so green and abundant, regardless of the rough season. Always happy to see your new videos pop up. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.
@Handles_AreStupid8 ай бұрын
I am growing a "hardy tropical" ornamental garden, and one rule is that plants that like humidity can be fooled by densely planting around them. The larger leafed plants produce a lot of humidity through their leaves just by photosynthesizing. This is likely why your bananas were so happy. Their water needs were colossal in a clump like that, but any additional water they got was just turned into humidity, which bananas love.
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Interesting point you made! Thank you 👍🙂
@伏見猿比古-k8c8 ай бұрын
So basically....Mark made a banana sauna.
@Handles_AreStupid8 ай бұрын
@@伏見猿比古-k8c Yes, but my favourite way to explain it is to say it's natures AC unit. If you ever get the chance, visit a bamboo forest in person. The temperature inside one is so much lower than it should be, and it is just because of this exact effect.
@noahhosking4958 ай бұрын
Kinda goes to show how important this type of framing is! Despite the conditions, you were still able to produce food
@mariadefatima64698 ай бұрын
Dry the bulbs of the rosella then put a handfull in cold water over night next day use the water put a bit of sugar very good hot or cold we drink it in egypt
@ShortbusMooner8 ай бұрын
I needed this- Florida is harsh on a garden.. 😁👍
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Love Florida! Can't wait to get back there again for a proper holiday 👍🙂
@ShortbusMooner8 ай бұрын
Please do come to the Tampa/ St. Petersburg side! Would love to buy you & the missus a round! 🍻
@katrinastatham51818 ай бұрын
In my world that’s exactly how you pronounce turmeric! Thank you for another great video. This helps me make decisions for my garden. I really like how you share how you eat your produce as well as all the growing tips. Happy gardening.
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
Thanks Katrina! All the best 👍🙂
@sandgroperwookiee658 ай бұрын
Same here re Tumeric pronunciation 👍 Who says that's 'wrong' 🤔
@glendaburness14928 ай бұрын
Australians can not pronounce "tu". Any words that start with these letters are pronounced "choo". For example Tuna is pronounced choona. Not a criticism, just the Australian accent. I've lived here most of my adult life but haven't fully developed an Australian accent, and people roll around laughing when I say the word Tuna as "t u n a". They often get me to repeat it and then laugh some more. On the subject of bananas. What are you feeding them? This season the hands on my bananas are spindly with tiny sporadic bananas along the flower spike. 5 hands like that now. At the worst of the rain 2 of the stems with these hands just keeled over before any fruit could even ripen. They are "Lady Finger" bananas and planted near the bottom of a short slope, but high enough that they can drain properly. I'm in SE Qld.
@downunderveggiegardendiaries8 ай бұрын
Absolute rubbish. These are bogans who also pronounce three as free.
@jeanrichardson20448 ай бұрын
I lived briefly in NSW in the early 1970s. The state was just coming out of a 7 year drought which had been pretty dire. My boss showed me a crop of Jerusalem artichokes and another of asparagus. Both had been planted by his father many years before. He and his family did not cultivate or use either, but I used both regularly for myself while I was there and both cropped generously.
@jessieb72908 ай бұрын
I’m from the uk and as someone who’s seen lots of rain and cold weather for months now…it’s so nice to see the sun in your garden. I’d love to grow bananas but don’t have a greenhouse. I’ve started some seedlings off in the shed for now and crossing my fingers 😂 so far cabbage, mustard, Italian salad, tomatoes and peas have started to sprout.
@abyssal_phoenix8 ай бұрын
Tip from across the north sea: hardier varieties of leeks, spinach, kohlrabi, kale, radish and onion can be grown in the weather we have! I have my first harvest of radish and massive amounts of spinach now. Sowed and grown outside (but coveted at first) in mid February!
@terryrogers78998 ай бұрын
@@moe4561 treasure where you are. I'd love to grow some of the cold weather plants, and fruits, but sometimes it gets too hot here for them.
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
There is now a Super Dwarf Banana which only grows head high. I'm testing some in containers. They would be perfect for a small hot house. All the best for your new developing plants this season 👍🙂
@jessieb72908 ай бұрын
@@moe4561 yeah I find it interesting historically, too. Like in Elizabethan times, cinnamon was imported and other spices like black pepper. As I’m part Italian I’d find it bland too, but I find that kind of stuff interesting and am so grateful for different types of foods and seeds out there. I have lemon pepper seeds and really want to grow them, but I’d have to think of a heat solution first. I’m also trying kohl robi this year and never had it before. It’s shooting up so far.
@jessieb72908 ай бұрын
@@Selfsufficientme Thanks. I’ve seen the dwarf banana plants before at a craft fair, they were £70 each. It was tempting but the expense plus the lack of a hot house ☹️ maybe one day. I do love the versatility of bananas. Also apparently butterflies like the banana skins, due to the sweetness.
@dearbronte6868 ай бұрын
So nice to see an Australian version of self-sufficiency gardening videos!
@ArtemisGreenleaf8 ай бұрын
Love this video! Here in Houston, summer is like living in a bamboo steamer.
@ARoseGrowsInHarlem8 ай бұрын
It’s so cool to see what thrives when the weather gets extreme. Thank you for sharing! That Rosella looks wonderful. ❤
@RoyHolder8 ай бұрын
Welcome back Mark, good to see you!
@rogerandroid21865 ай бұрын
Excellent. The tougher it gets, the more you come out on top. Well done.
@curtisscott92518 ай бұрын
Fantastically informational. Every place where food can be in short supply should have lots of these edible plants just grown everywhere at random. Can you imagine what a difference these would make in a country like North Korea!
@JodiMontano8 ай бұрын
I'm on a newly established homestead, working on starting my garden. Last fall, you let us know there was a Black Friday sale, plus your discount, on a couple of Birdies Raised Beds. I bought 3 of the 6-in-1 tall and finally got them set up yesterday. Today, I lined the bottoms with hardware cloth and a layer of cardboard, then filled them part way with logs and sticks. I don't have access to leaves, so I'll dump in pine shavings to fill the gaps, then top them with compost. I can hardly wait to start planting in them!
@Selfsufficientme8 ай бұрын
All the best with your new property and raised beds! Starting a new garden from scratch... how exciting! 👍🙂
@MandyOnderwater8 ай бұрын
That sounds like a bang-on idea! Use what you have. If you're new to gardening and are looking for tips, or are simply looking to share your progress... Mark has a forum! It's found in the video's description box, and it's called Self Sufficient Culture. www.selfsufficientculture.com/
@SJ-fj1cjАй бұрын
American living in Papua, Indonesia. Our climate is almost identical so your videos have been a God-send. Not a whole lot of growing in Indo content out there! Thanks for the excellent content.
@sbrownson61558 ай бұрын
My grandmother used to grow that Italian gourd. She called it a cacouts. She would cut it into rings scoop out the soft seed area and peel it. Then stuff it with minced beef mixed with onion and tomato. Cover it in a good tomato sauce with basil and bake it covered till it was tender and the beef cooked through. It was delicious.
@vaevictis69908 ай бұрын
Jerusalem artichoke (sunchokes) are amazing. They also thrive up here in Canada. They can survive underground in -30 C, popping up when soils thaw. You can't stop it! It's actually the only starch tuber native to northern north America. Sand, clays, etc doesn't matter (with reduced yields of course)
@sharont28788 ай бұрын
I have never tried Jerusalem artichokes before and what do they taste like. Cheers mate
@likkleginger8 ай бұрын
@sharont2878 delicious, sort of creamy ...can make some people windy! In UK we sometimes say farty-chokes.
@sharont28788 ай бұрын
@@likkleginger delicious and creamy sounds pretty good..do they have like a certain taste , like say do they taste like any other veg or do they have a taste all on their own?. ..farty hmm I have enough problem in general with farting as it is and don't really need to add to that 🤣😂😂 and thanks for answering my question. Have a great day 🦘🐨🇦🇺
@vaevictis69907 ай бұрын
@sharont2878 potatoes? But water chestnut? They are strange. But good. Their inulin fibre content is good for diabetes BUT is tough on the gut and causes flatulence. Best to pre-cook or ferment. I ferment, then mashed and cooked and used to thicken stews
@missrachael17092 ай бұрын
I love them too! Sweet and nutty. Makes a beautiful pureed soup and delicious roasted or pureed. There's a lovely Ottolenghi chicken with Jerusalem artichokes recipe too. A good source of prebiotics I believe. Plus amazing soil conditioners. Peace.
@AnttiVi8 ай бұрын
I think that Jerusalem Artichoke is called "ground artichoke" in Finland. It can even survive under the ground over our harsh winter so definitely good for harsh conditions.
@Ridley3698 ай бұрын
Always loving grilling up some dinner outside, then coming in to sit and watch your new videos! It's a treat to see what you've got growing out there! Here in subtropical southeast Virginia, I'm doing well off with corn, chard, lettuce, spinach, around 50 Everglades Tomato plants, peppermint, coriander, rocket, cucumbers, eggplant, onions, strawberries, sweet and Thai basil, zucchini, pumpkins, sunflowers, green beans, chilis, and finally 1/8 of an acre of my property dedicated to sorghum. May be missing some, but that's off the top of my head! Hoping to get some more bananas planted out soon, as well. Looking forward to more videos as you get into your Fall season! Cheers
@georgetuider6548 ай бұрын
Greetings from north Florida! Thanks a lot for the trumpet blast at the end... It woke my Labrador Retriever up and she came running over. It must be some kind of dog signal to commence licking my arms.
@brianchristman25988 ай бұрын
Those gourds (and pumkins for that matter) are an easy way to grow food for your chickens and pigs too, they store well and the animals love them.
@readbooks99858 ай бұрын
My aunt taught me how to eat Egyptian "Spinach." She cooks the tender shoots (never the older leaves) with a little water with fish sauce or just salt and it's delicious. It's one of my favorites. And better than regular spinach.
@valiaudet34158 ай бұрын
I'm loving how people know how to cook these veggies 🎉🎉
@jillhumphrys93498 ай бұрын
I grew turmeric once in Arkansas, zone 7. I got enough to make a 1/2 cup of powder!
@angelachouinard45818 ай бұрын
It's always heartening when you do something that shouldn't work and it does. I absolutely wish I could grow bananas. I thing it's time to turn all the bottles that never got to recycling into a greenhouse.
@Maxwell-ct7dm8 ай бұрын
Hey Mark, I hope this message finds you well. I wanted to share a video idea with you that I think could add an interesting addition to your channel. I was thinking it would be great if, during your next garden cleanup session, you could film the process. The idea is to capture a "Bird's Eye view" style video, similar to some of your previous videos where you zoom out to film the entire garden. It would be wonderful to have a long, unedited video showcasing the beauty of your garden, filmed from your balcony. This way, viewers can enjoy the serene ambiance of the Australian countryside, complete with the sounds of birds chirping in the background. I've noticed that these "long style background ambience" videos have been gaining popularity on KZbin lately, so there might be other people who would appreciate it as well. Of course, this is just a suggestion, and I understand if you're busy with other projects. I just figured if you were going to clean up/weed the garden anyway you might as well get two birds stoned at once and make it worth your while by getting some potential content out of it haha. Keep up the fantastic work on your channel.
@1970ADH8 ай бұрын
Hi Mark, can you do a video of you transplanting the banana suckers? It would be very interesting to watch👍🏼
@natalyagopaul15598 ай бұрын
In the Caribbean, we call Roselle- Sorrell. At Christmas, it's made into a lovely drink. Some even add rum to it.
@fletchybabe61728 ай бұрын
I use a cookie cutter to get the skin off the Italian long gourd, slice discs off then press the cookie cutter to separate the skin 😉😁🌱☀️
@NihilusTheGreat8 ай бұрын
I just put in the sunchoke/jeruselum artichoke as well as a maypop/passion fruit vine in my garden this year. Zone 8a United States. Looking forward to the bounty!
@marciaferries11688 ай бұрын
It is fantastic watching you go through with the climate over your side. I'm in WA and we are still going through a drought. I applaud you for not creating a giant shade cloth structure. I honestly can't justify doing that to 200sqm of land mass
@Lemongrasspicker8 ай бұрын
Have you ever considering trying long beans? Might work well for your hot summers. Great video!
@Kellstaa8 ай бұрын
My most favourite channel of all time! Valuable, informative content with ease and the special Mark touch! Ur a hoot and bloody good bloke! Thanks for sharing mate
@LaineyBug20208 ай бұрын
Those asparagus peas would look amazing sliced as a garnish or in a salad!
@killerx41238 ай бұрын
Bananas Turmeric Jerusalem artichoke Egyptian spinach Sugar cane Rosella Asparagus pea Passion fruit Japanese/Kent pumpkin Italian gourd And also some yam/sweetpotato
@georgemcconnell54058 ай бұрын
I've been hearing about Australia's crazy weather this year. This video peaked my interest to see what plants were withstanding it.
@nicholaswilliams5978 ай бұрын
Mark ...the Roseland plant ..in Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇹 we call it sorrel and it makes an amazing drink just look up "how to make sorrel drink" trust me you won't regret it
@chrismckell53538 ай бұрын
I liked the cameo appearance of the lady bug 🐞 on the rosella bush.
@FallofftheMap8 ай бұрын
Your giant passionfruit (we call them badea here in Ecuador) looks a lot different than my variety. My badea is thriving at 2400m elevation in a cooler climate than the internet says they can survive (8c to 24c). It's one of my favorite fruits because the flesh tastes like a melon but the pulp and seeds still have the typical tangy floral passionfruit flavor that is great for juice and ice cream.
@abyssal_phoenix8 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the winter we had here. I've never ever saw as much rain as this year and last year. My backyard became a pond very often, yet with that combined with occasional frosts, winter onions, different Mediterranean herbs and flower bulbs survived and thived. Even my grape survived the flooding. I didn't expect that one. Plants can be way more resilient than people give them credit for!
@papapetad8 ай бұрын
Cheers Mark. Always nice to see you mucking about your garden, dropping little tips and tricks along the way :)
@tangobayus7 ай бұрын
Very timely, given all the rough weather in North America.
@bchukran8 ай бұрын
I looked up Egyptian spinach and found that it's the same as "molokhia"! I just bought seeds for that one and am about to plant them. Thanks for the information! I don't live in Australia, but I do live in very hot and humid Texas. 😀
@Defensive_Wounds8 ай бұрын
Cape Gooseberries are a tough harsh conditions plant too! The heatwave here in Perth was so bad there are huge old trees all over the city from end to end that have died! Hedges everywhere - I had a massive infestation of Mealy Bugs on a big line of Hibiscuses along with the heatwave and dead reticulation so no ladybugs to eat them! There is a really awesome looking old Eucalypt tree nearby my house which is several hundred years old that was gutted out completely by a bushfire decades ago and it regrew to thrive, but this heatwave killed that old tough tree!! I wish I took a photo of it before it died...it was a wide thick trunk but it is all burned out so hollowed out and mostly gone apart from a few edges.
@davidhammant25627 ай бұрын
Mark You should have a channel for food preservation ect that you do to keep all the food you grow.
@randomyoutuber822725 күн бұрын
Rosella is Called Sorrel in Jamaica and is used for A delicious drink in Christmas time
@melanieallen89808 ай бұрын
ooohhh asparagus pea sounds amazing..I need2 grow this!
@chabridgettumusiime89948 ай бұрын
❤❤❤I love Farmer Mark's Garden videos and how he chews on the raw food , his accent is fatherly . You are a good farmer Bambi . Thank you. You inspired me to just grow any thing sweet peppers I pray they fruit
@creativephebecooks8 ай бұрын
My goodness! Your delivery is on point and so engaging. You've got me gingered up to sow a few seeds to grow some crops this summer! In fact, i just soak some ginger to get them planted tomorrow. Thanks Mark 😊
@Magiccc8 ай бұрын
Thank you for all of the work and effort you put into these videos. It's clear that not only are you passionate about gardening for yourself, you're passionate and thoughtful about getting others to start gardening and make the best gardens they can so you work to be informative and educational as much as you work to be entertaining. You nail the balance perfectly, and it does not go unappreciated. Thank you for all you do and all the wonderful ideas you give people like me every time our growing seasons come around ❤
@terryrogers78998 ай бұрын
Thank you such wonderful new plants I'd never heard of. Love to try the Italian cucumber. I now have Jerusalem artichokes, and i grow Loofah. The plant that makes sponges when mature and dry, but are very edible when young and tender, just like zucchini. bananas start out here, but get frozen before they can make fruit. But I sure want to try some of the others mentioned. I live in Llano Texas-Central Texas.
@katesmiles42088 ай бұрын
For viewers who live in the southeast or southwest of Queensland, the humble choko is a tough and vigorous vine. Best picked small (apple size), this vine produces a huge amount of fruit. It has a mild flavour with a surprising sweetness to it. It is ideal for the back fence or any neglected part of the garden. Over the last 3 years I have never needed to water mine. It seems the only care required is pruning and harvesting. Oh, and leave a couple behind to regrow the following season 😂 I got mine from a local organic fruit and vegie shop.
@stevebramblet71928 ай бұрын
Hi what is "choko"? Haha thanks
@tonyad.8 ай бұрын
Love sliced pumpkin grilled, the gourd in the end of the video we call Cucuzza or Italian squash, they are better to eat small. the plant grows a lot of squash.
@milohobo91868 ай бұрын
We have harsh summers here in southwest Louisiana. Thank you for this video!
@maryrenaud67328 ай бұрын
I’m in hot humid SE Florida, torrential rains in summer, scorching Sun when not raining…so thank you very much! When you are fermenting/pickling veggies, would appreciate your comments on what you used for liquid and powder!
@carolannhartley3598 ай бұрын
And quantities. I think I mean ratios.
@greenofhearts8 ай бұрын
I live in Florida and I have grown so many things you have recommend! You grow a survival garden for sure! But WHAT was that really large orange spotted bug!! YIKES!!
@chezelleconroy29518 ай бұрын
I’ve never seen New Guinea bean dried out! Mad. Thanks for another great video, Mark!
@sokunthy20068 ай бұрын
We normally cut banana flowers when it finishes having fruits. We don't leave it with the fruit to save energy for the fruit. We also use banana flowers (sugar banana) for some soup, salad,...
@gambitsfox42168 ай бұрын
Your asparagus pea is called winged bean here....I've been meaning to try those. I've grown Eyptian spinach and love it! I snacked on it after the hurricane came through my city. I haven't tried rosella but I have grown and eaten false rosella. It has dark purple leaves and beautiful purplish flowers. It also tastes like cranberry. That new Guinea bean looks interesting. My mom has a ton of passion fruit growing wild in her front yard but we have never seen any fruit. Great vid!
@lorraine19598 ай бұрын
From Tassie, haven't tuned in for a while, love your informative down to earth shows, thanks Mark 👌🏽
@SigmaLigma.8 ай бұрын
Add galangal to the list. I'm a bit north of you and galangal stays green and lush all year round. Even when you miss treat it.
@Loosybaboosy8 ай бұрын
I'm a couple of hour south from you. What a wet summer!! Very helpful video. Thanks
@WorthyWorkmen2024Ай бұрын
The Asparagus pea leaf rejection was wholesomely entertaining 😂, Thank 11:10 you for all of your informative content brother ❤
@ConsoleForGabe8 ай бұрын
I’m a subscriber, but I recently rediscovered your channel. I have to say that your presentation style and knowledge is very impressive and enjoyable to watch. You seem to know the ins and outs of everything in your garden. It feels like you have memorized the information so well that you could speak for hours about it. Really enjoyable stuff here. I’m happy that I found your channel again. How many years or how long did it take for the garden to reach this level? Impressive!
@2johnthebaptist8 ай бұрын
The rosella is called sorrel in the Caribbean. We make a delicious Christmas drink from the fruit
@Dream_more_age_less8 ай бұрын
That turmeric looks amazing 😍
@jody-annesullivan45478 ай бұрын
Blessings for your crops despite the rain. Opposite here in WA - no rain whatsoever since last year in my neck of the woods. xx
@arialblack878 ай бұрын
Lovely video! We live in hot and dry, not humid, but it is always nice to know more plants that will do well in our long summers (even if we need to add some water. Greetings from southern Spain
@leonieshanahan64398 ай бұрын
This summer was hell not just for the garden. Hooray for cooler weather here now..happy gardeners
@jodeemonckton12518 ай бұрын
Wow! Such diversity there Mark. Great info.
@lorenrobertson80398 ай бұрын
Great video! I sure miss foraging for passion fruits. I loved them so much. They were actually once the state fruit for the state I'm living in in the US...Tennessee back many years ago. They called them Maypops. So many different types of this species that grow in different areas. Here they don't ripen much until late in the summer to early fall season. More folks should grow their gardens like you do and not weed them or put chemicals on them. I'm too disabled now to garden or forage, but enjoy watching you young folks that can!
@VIpanfried7 ай бұрын
That’s the way I pronounce turmeric too, Self Sufficient!
@viennperidot11198 ай бұрын
Learning from the chronic drought up here in the Midwest I made Oilla and buried them while digging compost in to prepare for the growing season this year!
@natsellar89828 ай бұрын
Nice video Mark. I know how you feel about trying to keep your garden under control in a hot summer. Exhausting but rewarding.
@carolinelloyd18588 ай бұрын
Hi Mark, don't forget you can eat pumpkin vines and leaves as well! Stir fry them and add a dash of butter as a side of greens with a beautiful nutty flavour