5 Tips How to Grow a Ton of Onions in One Container or Garden Bed
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- Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
- If you would like to know how to grow a big harvest of onions watch this video for my five top tips on onion growing!
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Self Sufficient Me is based on our small 3-acre property/homestead in SE Queensland Australia about 45kms north of Brisbane - the climate is subtropical (similar to Florida). I started Self Sufficient Me in 2011 as a blog website project where I document and write about backyard food growing, self-sufficiency, and urban farming in general. I love sharing my foodie and DIY adventures online so come along with me and let's get into it! Cheers, Mark :) - Навчання та стиль
in Denmark we always grow onions and carots in the same bed, they support each other in a great natural pest control. onion bugs don’t like carot bugs and carot odeur - and vice versa.
Great tip, I'll have to try that!
@@GKW25308 Yes do! I always plant onions or wild garlic around my raspberries, it keeps animals and pests at bay
Away To Anywhere Thank you for this tip
funlovincop thank you very much, your going to make me look like a genius. After I get my reward I let my Wife know it was your Idea.😉
I’ve got a carrot plot on their own, stunted.
One carrot from same stock in with the onions, growing incredibly well
I appreciate your videos so much! No bullshit glamour shots or unnecessary musical montages or pontificating- just straight up USEFUL information.
Lamyka L.
And humor!
Bro he had like a 2 minute music montage of him just picking onions
i saw a glamour shot! HEEHEE much respect
He blasted dumb music while picking his onions and has pointless cringe worthy slow mo shots..you don’t have to lie to make friends 😂
5:01 You've got a powerful and healthy pair swinging below your belt there, my guy!
Was just gonna comment the same thing!
Had to be on purpose lol
@@coderc5753 I like to think so!
Balls of steel
Those two will make you cry for sure...
I store my onions in pantyhose and tie each one off like a sausage link, all you do is trim the tops off and they slide right in then I hang them in a dark closet and they last for months. I just cut off a link when I am ready to use one.
I am just getting into your video's - this may be my 4th. one watched. I live in the U.S. here is North Carolina, but regardless of that, you give such thoughtful and detailed advice when it comes to each plant, taking the guess work out of it. Not only do you make it all seem so much easier, but truly fun and enjoyable. I Love to garden. I also LOVE finding others like you that don't make it look and sound so clinical and exact. I appreciate you! Thank you so much! God bless!
I love his videos too. We live in NE Tennessee
I totally agree with you about not being so technical!!! I’m from west central Georgia, USA. I grew up on a farm ( youngest of 6 ) but didn’t get to learn alot of techniques. My area of expertise was in weeding and picking beans. My dad passed away in 1992 so I’m learning gardening from alot of trial and error. Your videos are so informative and fun. And mostly “quick “, bc as you know, if you’re gardening, you don’t have alot of extra time, so getting straight to the point is extremely helpful. If i do have extra time, it’s always spent doing laundry, cleaning, cooking, etc..,😂 Thank you again for such a bright spot in my day 🤗👍🏻❤️
North Carolina here too
Alabama here. 😊. This is one of my favorite UA-cam channels.
Mississippi Gulf Coast here. I love his videos! And I agree that he gets straight to the point. Great teacher!!
I cut the bottom off of onions and plant them. I regularly add ash to my onion farms. (I use plastic kiddie pools for planters.) This is my first year. Thanks for all the great videos. You’re my gardening professor.
Good Idea using the plastic swimming pools. I have one in the garage and Will use it now.
What kind of ash?
Wood ash or bat guano is good, happy growing :)
Onion prices in the philippines have been rising very quickly these past few months. My mom likes gardening and I've been trying to convince her to try farming onions. This video might be very helpful in just that. I'll this to her later.
Indonesian Onion farm ua-cam.com/video/d1oWEBQt6OY/v-deo.html
And? Any updates?
Onion price is going up worldwide. For years, good people scare me from planting onions. They also said onions are so cheap why waste time to plant. I wonder what they think about the price now in Australia with recession inflation post convid plandemix
@@kellysoo Pretty much once Biden in America and the EU started blocking oil drilling, that caused a global fertilizer shortage (because fertilizer is a waste product from drilling) which of course leads to food shortages. Many countries now have to deal with Russia to get fertilizer and Russia of course is playing favorites since they don't exactly want to feed countries that are fighting them.
Do it I’ve started my snow peas and every 2 days ived picked at least a take away container a a week it’s worth it
I just wanted to say that I love your videos. Gardening can be very intimidating, but you are so funny AND knowledgeable it just makes learning it with you a breeze. Keep it up man you are doing great work! Don't change your style!
Thanks for the info! Quick tip for those looking at "no-till" methods in raised bed such as these. Get yourself a nice fat PVC tube, drill lots of holes 3-5mm in diameter (more below the soil line than above) stick it in the ground as far as you can and fill it with composting worms such as red-wrigglers. Then just feed them your kitchen and garden scraps. Does a fantastic job at keeping the soil fertile with minimal effort.
Hmm
The Steve Irwin of onions. Love it
Grew up helping my dad with his big garden. Finally got a home of my own and built a small garden with room to grow. Just found your channels and love listening/watching while I’m out working in my garden. Thanks man!
I really appreciate how easy you were to understand with slow speaking clearly and not over explaining things just simple this is what works! Going to try this for my garden this year 😍
I bought some rolls of galvanized flashing at Home Depot . Figure out how deep you want them then I used tin snips and cut the roll in half to make two round circles line up the two ends of one half and don’t try to hold them together with bare hands us vice grips once you’ve ligned up the two over lapping ends hold it together with vice grips drill first hole through both ends and install a pop rivet then proceed to other end then the middle , about 6 rivets should do it . There’s no bottom . If you use them for potatoes all you have to is lift it up and there’s your taters oila
You probably won’t see this because it’s an older video. But I am 10 seconds in and I love your personality and energy. Immediately subscribing.
in my village we tie them using the dried stems like a braid, then hang them to dry, the same can also be done with garlic, and peppers even
Must be southern Mediterranean. They do that. Makes nice kitchen or other sunroom decoration and keeps insects away because they hate smell of garlic or onions, peppers and also basil, which keeps flies away. So do African daisies. And marigolds will repel mosquitoes.
@@anon2131 Excactly
You dry peppers? Do you cut the stalk long, plait them and just leave them with plenty of air circulation?
@@justsomebloke6784 yes, same as with onions and garlic bulbs
@@JoaniMaster Wow, thanks, good to know as I've sown a lot of peppers and I'm well into preserving for the winter.
Really like your content. You explain things very clearly and put a lot of thought into how you make your episodes.
"You do get have to be self sufficient in everything. Just be self sufficient in something..."
Brilliant!
Self sufficiency is great! It empowers you to tell the offensive politically correct NWO system to just go fuck itself! You don't need it wrecking your life, stripping your freedom, independence and sense of human freedom and respect.
Butchered!
Exactly its good you have mentioned it
Red double ball onion pic didn’t go unnoticed bro
@Steven Hughes amazing how you prove Cindy correct so effortlessly.
Yeah. Only ladies may insult!
@@cindys.w.8566 Look'in for a little action sweetie?
@@cindys.w.8566 It's amazing how easily men rush to prove you right isn't it Cindy? They're not only pigs they're dumb too.
@Steven Hughes WTF?
I've been looking for someone to tell me just this! I have a smaller space that I want to plant LOTS of onions in, then use them as they grow. I'm not a fiddly gardener, so measuring everything was turning me off the whole process. Thank you for the great instructions!
Inspiring! I've grown onions in a heavy clay soil with varying success. Love onions and envious of your growing climate, albeit each climate and soil type works well for different veggies. I'm in Scotland and I can tell you haggis, neeps and tatties is a popular dish because sheep, turnips and potatoes thrive here ;-)
What is that Dish?
@@PatriotMilitaryMom neeps and tatties is turnips and potatoes. 🤤
Turneeps, potaties
Thanks, Mark! I've been growing onions for a few years now. I started with a bunch of grocery store bought 'green onions'. I've always made note of the root ends that most people generally just cut off and throw away... but one day, just before I tossed a handful of those roots in the garbage, I hesitated. I was thinking, hmmm, I wonder if they'll just 'regrow', like grass, if I just stick these little, one-inch root bottoms into a pot of dirt? So, I did! I've literally not had to purchase grocery store green onions since! I merely snip off the greens as needed, and they simply pop back up, as lawn grass does! It's been so nice to have FRESH green onions in my cooking.
I'm currently experimenting with the rooted bottoms of yellow and red onions as well, to see if they can regrow into full onion plants again. I'll have to keep you posted on any success in that area! :D
I also have done this!😆
How did you get on?
@@catherinesyme901 Potatoes seem to do really well! As do carrots!
Found this for you :)
ua-cam.com/video/Mcsy2q2ueBM/v-deo.html
Thanks Mark. As a novice this is so helpful. Clear instructions. Looking to learn more. Thank you.
the onion/testicle shot at 5.00 - priceless!
I don’t always grow whatever it is your episodes are about, but regardless I watch your videos because just a quick analogy you’re like the Morgan Freeman of the garden so you’re really easy to listen to and plus your information is really good to
My Dad grew onions 2 years in a row. He said for 2 years he had no skin on his knees. He tried everything to protect them and came up with the final solution of growing potatoes.
lol
Mark, I've recently watched many of your videos. You are assertive, informative, & down right entertaining. Thanks for sharing your ability & vast knowledge! God bless!
Just want to say that I turn to your channel for gardening tips. We really enjoy your videos as many people do. My wife and i are switching to Galvanized raised garden beds at our acreage next spring here in British Columbia Canada (Okanagan area) due to watching your channel. Most of all we want to try the Egyptian walking onions for next year. Keep up the great work you do! Best wishes to you and your family.
35 seconds in and I'm smiling 😂 loveable guy.
Thanks for the advice, I am venturing in this business and need as much info as I can get.
I’m delighted to hear you’re in the subtropics. You are the first warm weather gardener I’ve found. Thanks!
Austin Texas
I planted Egyptian Walking Onions this month. Love your approach to gardening and growing food. The books aren't always the final word on everything, especially your own experience and common sense. I love your videos.~~Zone 8, Texas, USA
Yeah the books are a guide as they say and also each yard is different (even in the same area) due to local influences and microclimates etc. Thanks mate and all the best! :)
Hey mate. I can't stop watching your videos. I admire your passion and skill. Best of luck.
I LOVE the "crowing them in" tip, especially because I have very limited space. Love your channel. Thank you!
Could I suggest throwing a few quick cooking videos into your channel? So much amazing produce, I'd like to know some of your favorite ways to use it all! Thanks for the great content.
Typically, cooking vids are not that popular on my channel but I agree I could incorporate some footage within videos showing quick cook-ups using the produce. Thanks for the suggestion! Cheers :)
@@Selfsufficientme if you do cooking do two seperate channels as people might only come for one or the other, which is why cooking isn't popular.
@@Selfsufficientme yay. .that's good. But make two channels
Great tips!
I have been growing onions in my backyard for two years and just didn’t know when to harvest. Thank you for the useful information.
I accidentally bought short day onions but they still grew through winter spring and were (at best) tennis ball sized but mature and tasted good. They were jaune paille des vertus heirloom. Perfect for French onion soup.
I got some Shirley Hammond multiplier onions and they went from 20 to 50 in one season... not too bad.
That’s so interesting. That just proved Mark’s point. I always get worried if I don’t follow the “rule” written on the seed packet. Sometimes, I also plant without reading as I find the more I read the packet the more confused I become.
Searched for the longest time for this vid. I knew I saw someone planting right into the garden from seed. Thank you. Trying my hand at that in some fabric buckets this year. Zone 6b so I'm starting them 4/1.
I grow Egyptian Walking Onions here in eastern Canada, and they live through the winters very well. The tall-stemmed flowers develop into many little bulbs which I gather and store in the root cellar. In winter I set them under a grow light in trays of compost, and they produce onion greens which can be harvested again and again.
Didn't they just walk away?
@@terrykennedy7422 they come home to roost
Lol😂
I never dreamed as a child I would say this but I LOVE ONIONS!!! Thanks for the info & confidence booster.
I love onions and I love your channel
My great great uncle Alfred breed and was actually the founder of kelsae onions in the 1940's and his son continued cultivating in the 1970's, noy long the royalties were sold to a local garden centre but unfortunately a good majority of the seeds were destroyed in a fire at the garden centre, we are trying to get the royalties back to keep the variety in the family,its amazing to see how far they have gone I never thought they would venture to places like Australia, we are still cultivating them and trying to save the variety hopefully we can 🤞
Onions UNDER the sausage. You just changed my life. Again.
Janet Farnworth I put onions and peppers under, over, and in between the slits I made in the sausage 😂🙈 can’t get enough!
I was sitting in church when that hit me. I got the look from the Pastor when I cracked up, he also appreciated the picture. 60 years ago my Grandpa told me with his whisky voice and homemade cigar “Boy, you need to marry yourself a Bowlegged Woman” then all the old men in the feed store laughed and laughed, I had no clue what he was talking about. My Grandma’s disgust should have made it clear. It was a full 40 years later I’m sitting in my living room surrounded by my grandchildren, Daughters and Sons in Laws and I stand up and just burst out laughing and say “Marry a Bowlegged Woman” I would have never thought of that.
Abby Babby I don’t get it! Bow legged, I’m bow legged and I don’t get it 🤷♀️🙈
Dana Karloz Dana, are you Male or Female? Are you asking for clarification?
Abby Babby yes, I’m asking for clarification. I’m a girl
I've been looking for this very information for the past few days! Thank you sir!
I like that a lot "You don't have to be self sufficient in everything. Just be self sufficient in something....." I am now sitting here making a list of every fruit and veg we like to eat and regularly buy as a family. Then I plan to work out roughly what we spend on them over the year and will pick something as a focus crop to hopefully save us a good amount of £££ in the future
Thank you sir for all of the knowledge that you freely provide. May you be blessed.
Perfect timing, I’m about to plant onions and shallots here in Florida. Thanks Mark!
My family and I eat SO MANY onions! One day, when we can have a yard, I will grow onions
Wao young Lady you should try to have an onion company
I want a house with yard too. Bu buying a tiny house in NYC is crazy expensive, let alone the one that has yard :(
@@kuratortrivia795 You can always plant onions n vegetables in your balcony..search in UA-cam
@Horatio KJV Bible not everyone is American or Christian for that matter
@Horatio KJV Bible okay? I'll admit I thought you was talking to the OP. But I have several questions.
Firstly, I can see which way you lean by your wordplay of 'demoncratic', why do you do this?
Secondly, you're essentially saying that all the republicans are leaving more liberal leaning states for Freedom? Why would Freedom only be achievable in these _"Republican Christian states"?_
Thirdly, why bring up Christianity into it in the first place if you're not a Christian? You have Bible in your username.
Lastly, how can you be sure that someone is going to want to move to a whole different city just because of your comment? What if they don't want to live in a republican state because it clashes with their own political views?
Your garden is so amazing!!! Sending you lots of blessings!!
So informative 👍🏽 Self sufficiency is the way to go. Hats off to you. 😊
The bending over is to keep the seed head from forming if you are running late on your harvest. Whwn the plant forms seeds, it uses energy from the bulb which makes your onion spongy
Good tip. Thanks. Was wondering why mine grew nicely then bolted to seed and went all spongy. Got heaps of seeds but no onions. Can't eat the seeds...Don't taste as good as the bulbs I never got..
Now I know why.
Yes, it's true, bending over the stalks isn't necessary for harvesting and eating right away, but it is necessary, as you say, to prevent them from going to seed and draining the energy from the bulb. Also, bending over the stalk, forces it to dry out which makes long-term storage possible. Otherwise, the stalks remain moist and keep growing a bit after harvest, making winter storage unsuccessful.
@@chachadodds5860 thank you for that last bit. Id noticed the problem and just cut the stems off during drying them, so thanks for letting me know. this can give me a head start!!
@@anon2131 yes and sometimes if the green tops get bent over prematurely it can prevent bulbs from forming. I check the tops now and then, removi some if they are slacked over or will cut the top back an inch or two of its still early in the season. If it's later I'll just be sure to leave 1 or 2 unbent greens per plant. Seems to allow the bulb to form nicely.
Top video, and a great personality to watch. Thanks!
Timing alliums is an essential skill; its always nice to see someone who knows their onions! I love my Egyptian walking onions, too! Cheers, Mark!
Outstanding information as usual. I'm growing onions for the first time this year, I tried last year but not one sprouted. Dodgy seeds I'd say. This year the whole packet came up!!! I'm looking forward to harvesting onions as they are something we use a lot of in cooking. This video was VERY helpful.
@@Bigguy_33 can u send to Ireland will pay
5:01 now who is being mature, the onions or you? 🤣👍🏼
Tonya he’s brother nature 😂
1:56 ummmm
3:01
It's the onions under the sausage
ua-cam.com/video/braHfDqUQUE/v-deo.html
WOW, I have a kiddy pool that I'm going to try all this in! Good info. Sharing!
I just love your videos, and I can't wait to grow onions. We LOVE them in my house.
Your explanation is so clear and logic It's really helpful Thanks a lot👍👍👍
Putting the condiments under the Hot Dog/ sausage. 😍😍😍 where have y’been all my life?!
I will have this type of bountiful abundance soon .. Lucky guy , keep up the awesome work ! Love it ..
What a very comprehensive video. So much useful information. I watched three other videos before I came upon this one. I will be sharing this one and I will be saving it. I look forward to growing onions they're so healthful. Thank you so much I've also subscribed you channel.
Just beautiful!!! Love your gardens & content!
I love these “tips to grow a ton of...” videos. More please, sir!
I live in Minnesota, USA, which has a VERY different climate. I subscribed anyway, though because I like your camera personality so much. I imagine I'll be able to use what you teach and alter it to fit my climate, regardless. Thanks for your help!
fitting the climate may be important for survival
Exactly! That's why I'm here in the comment section because I'm wondering "what about the climate where I live?" How can I grow during the brutal coldness of winter?
Thank you for subscribing to my channel and understanding the value of consuming content about gardening from climate zones other than your own. I personally learn a lot from gardeners all over the world in different climates to mine because the fundamentals of food growing don't change wherever you are - timing is the only real difference and perhaps knowledge of what plants can withstand extremes for those who live in very hot or cold areas. Apart from that, thousands of growing tips and tricks (many yet to be discovered by us gardeners) can be applied no matter where one resides so seeking knowledge from as many places as possible makes good sense. All the best :)
@@misschameazy6399 It depends on a few things: firstly how cold your winter gets and what you like to eat. In other words, nothing will grow in the snow unless you artificially change the environment like have a hothouse or grow room with lights indoors etc and even then you may only be able to grow cold hardy greens. But if you hate greens like kale, for example, and wanted to grow tomatoes or heat-loving cucumbers in winter then to do this successfully is very challenging and impossible without some specialised equipment. That's why most people grow their fruit and veg seasonally usually through the warmest time of year - these timings do change depending on where you live but what doesn't change no matter where you live (and this is the biggest point) are the fundamentals of growing good food crops at home - many tips and tricks expanding on the fundamentals can be gleaned from anyone with experience in growing food (like myself) to help you improve your growing success. So whilst it might be handy to find what others in the same area as you are growing at a particular time, and even how they're doing it, don't discount what you might learn from others not from your exact climate or timezone. Cheers :)
Here in Minnesota you need long day varieties. Also, starting them indoors 12 weeks before planting them out is a must for sizable bulbs.
I really love the still shots, where he looks super surprised and amazed at the fruits and vegg.
I dont know whar to say. Im just all jaw dropped and super amazed of your method and how productive it is. I live on an island thats very humid and want to give onion planting a try. Thank you sir. 🤙👍👍👏🤩
I need to learn how you made that garden bed it's perfect for me, can't wait to learn how to garden this year.
Lovely
He already did that video girl
Mark - I am missioning in Sao Paulo Brazil and will, God willing, will be back in NZ next year, and looking for a place be with God in a wild place. Your videos are an inspiration for me. I plan to grow my own own security! Bless you.
You should be able to grow lots of produce in NZ that's for sure! All the best :)
Wow. Thanks for making this video. I am a young grower and had little knowledge of growing onions.
Thanks Mark.🙂 I'm happy this popped up in my feed because my onions didn't do well last year. I think that where I planted them didn't get enough sun. It's about time here to try again.
Blessings!
Inspiring! You are really good and smart guy, thank you.
Go here to get Birdies Raised Garden bed in the USA: shop.epicgardening.com/ and use SSME2020 for a 5% discount. In Australia & New Zealand go to birdiesgardenproducts.com.au/ or birdiesgardenproducts.co.nz/ and use Code SSMEbird for a 5% discount. Cheers :)
Could I use this exact same setup indoors using led lights. Please get back to me, thanks.
You have awesome videos and I love the slow motion effects XD!
What is with your logo?
@@TheChromePoet sub tropical indoors? I'd like to see your setup
Just found your channel I think it's great. Can't wait to try growing onions now.
I used to grow a smaller variety of onions and I would pickle them in the fall. So good!
My favorite videos are your Top tips for growing____. I learn a lot, view several times. take notes. Thanks bunches!
Thank you, great information. I love container growing also.
Love this method!! I have become obsessed with planter gardening this year. Love your channel. 💜
How did they grow? Did you get a decent harvest? I've got a planter set up and I'm just interested?
@@drsamuelbeckett2998 Hi Dr. Beckett!
The first year didn't do so well as I didn't have the proper draining.
I believe that's the key.
This year we are going to be using more mulch and chicken and horse manure.
I am very excited to try this.
We used to have at least 50 pounds of tomatoes at least 3 times a season but Last year didn't do well at all, so I believe the soil doesn't work enough nutrients, so I am saving all scraps for compost. Looking forward to this season!!
All I can say is WOW. This works great and I will do it this year. I have an old water trough behind the barn.
Thank you for sharing this. I have learned alot from your videos. Love the way you show plantings from start to finish.
good stuff mate ,can u show us how u store produce ?
absolutely love your energy. totally dedicated my whole backyard to thrive off of food we grow all thanks to your videos.
That's an awesome video, finally a video without all the nonsense, keep making more videos dude! And garden is off the hook amazeballs!!
Really good and unforgettable lesson. Thanks.
I have 2 old dryers to recycle I am going to removing the drums and use them as raised beds! We have an old washer drum used for storing wood.
Your two old dryers could become raised beds, themselves. Keep in mind that though the dryer/washer drums are nice to use, you'll lose moisture through the sides, because of all the little holes.
Awesome idea!!!
Old washer drums would be great for growing container potatoes!
What a great series, learning a huge deal and you're very entertaining. Nice low key adult humor with one of those onion shots or perhaps its my dirty mind.
Hey Mark - thank you for revealing the mysteries of growing onions. Much appreciated.
THANK YOU! I started my onions without seeds, using root sprouting from water. I had used the inuin for a meal and thought I'd try seeing if any riots would form from the bottom end.....it did, then I transplanted to soil when the roots were 1.5" - 2" long. They sprouted quickly. I didn't know how close together one could plant them, do thank you! Awesome video. Seems onion, garlic, ginger utilize the same growing systems & needs to grow.
Love your sense of humor while holding his onions
G'day Mark! Love Aussie brown onions. I grew them as a test for new variety this past growing season, I live in Mid Atlantic area of USA, we had record rains, none of my regular stand bys did great..but the Aussies did fantastic! Love the ease of growing in small space, the hardiness, and of course flavor. They are my new favorite onion! God bless. 🍅🥑🌶🍓🍍
Linda Hipple just curious, where did you find Aussie brown onions? I’m in NC, would love to try them too. And did you use seeds or sets? Thanks so much
@@1Melody1963 Rare Seeds.Com or Baker Creek .Com
@@1Melody1963 seeds work well for me. Started indoors 4wks before last frost. Planted in containers with good container mix. We had record rains regularly. Never needed to water except when 1st transplanted. They looked crowed..no worries, great green bunching fresh onions then they make great reg onions too. Garden on! 👍😀
Linda Hipple Thank you for the info. I will definitely give them a try. We had plenty of rain here too. But it’s much better than drought. Happy Thanksgiving!
G'day Linda, yes I agree these browns are easy to grow and taste excellent - certainly my favourite onion also! Cheers :)
Thank you so much for this video! I'll be growing them for the first time.
Thanks to your videos I've been binging...i think this year I will be successful :) thank you so much
You have such a nice "Bulb Sack" at 5:00 into the video. :D Made me laugh. You have a great video here, crowding, didn't know this. Thank you for the information.
I was thinking the same thing!! I think he did this intentionally!! haha
Ball sack 😂😂😂😂 he didnt realize that until you told it
I crowd other types of plants, too. Our area is very dry and it's hard to grow much. I get accused of wasting water and people wonder how I can keep on top of weeds etc with so much garden I do myself, as a weakling female with few tools. I hardly use a y water and avoid unnecessary hard garden labouring he bedding over weeding etc. The trick is simple. Crowd the plants so they support each other through hot dry summer heat and smother out the weeds. You still get a few but they are easy to pull. I deliberately plant certain creepers etc that grow well here simply because they keep other tougher weeds at bay and I can then easily pull out the creeper weed repressing plant when I want to clear the soil to plant something new. I also plant certain plants that stray animals he feral cats or stray dogs etc hate. It keeps them out of my garden. But I still haven't figured out how to keep blue tongue lizards out. They keep reproducing and you get a fright when you go to tend the garden and see one staring at you as if to tell you you are trespassing on its own private habitat. I yell "Move!", but it just keeps staring at me and stubbornly refuses to budge as it suns itself. It's easy to accidentally walk on one and squash them. I tried to explain there is a beautiful surf beach nearby to sunbathe, not my garden
.... But these lizards now rule our spaces and gardens here.
I was wondering if anyone else noticed that!🤣😂🤣
Great video, comprehensive and well presented as always!
Always great listening to you from Malaysia. Good informative descriptions
Thanks for your time and kindness
Hmmm tomato and onion sandwiches with salt and pepper. ...prickled onions..fried onions. ..so many choices
Floor onions.......(ok, so that's been done to death!)
@@becsterbrisbane6275 are they like little cocktail onions ?
Prickled onions are delicious!!
Andrew, those big fresh onions would make great onion rings, with a homemade beer batter ! ! ! Yum
I like my onions served sliced and lightly sauteed with a few drops of Maggie seasoning and a dash of seasonal, served on top of a good medium rare steak. Sausage is good also, but if i eat sauteed onions with my sausage then i also need to include green peppers. Man I'm hungry.
Very good idea of growing onion at short place.Thank you very much
Great very clear instructions, will try this one 👍
Ha ha ha ha ha ha 5:01 - brilliant pic mate. Cracking video as usual Mark, and an awesome crop of onions. Cheers Adam
Onions under the sausage mate....
In Texas-some parts of which are like where you live-a university has developed a variety of onions that's called the 1015, because the seeds are meant to be planted around October 15, just as you suggested, in the last month of consistent growing temperatures.
I always thought it was because of the Farm rd 1015 here in the Valley...I learned something new today!😂
What a beautiful and very well organized garden 🥰
I'm getting ready to start building my own raised garden beds for next year to plant my first crops with your help, of course, I am so excited I was raised helping plant and picked potatoes greens and beans so wish me luck I think I may need a tad haha so glad I found your channel I'm here in the US in Alabama I lived my entire life in Florida I'm sure the temps and humidity are a bit different here so I need to check what exactly I can grow and what time of year is best I cant wait to see more of your videos keep them coming love your channel