Yes! I consistently have such a good laugh at epic-vids. I only wish there was a UK gardening channel that was light hearted and comedic like this one! 😆
Since we are sharing stories: when I first came across an aloe Vera drink, I didnt know what aloe could do. Drank the whole liter bottle in one day. I was thoroughly relieved the next day.
Hey guys, I don't know if you have ever made salt-preserved lemons, but I made a batch of salt-preserved LIMES a few months ago when I had an abundance of Mexican limes on hand, and they were amazing!!! I used some in a batch of machaca meat, and it was fabulous. Quick and easy to do, and they keep forever in the fridge for cooking or cocktails. Just search on salt-preserved lemons and you'll see recipes, but substitute with limes. Also, I finally have some decent blooms on my finger lime tree; I can't hardly wait!
Whenever I see videos of people growing and eating the food that they harvested it makes me wish I was friends with them so that I could also get in on that! 😆 Every time they showed a new fruit my mind would start to think of things I could make if I had some, like apricot tart, apple strousel, fig newton's, strawberry short cake and peach cobbler.
My family eats about 10lbs of strawberries a week. I'm a new gardener and desperately trying to learn how to grow them 😆😭. Love the videos. You guys crack me up
They really grow like weeds. Tip: buy a hanging basket from a box store... usually has 6-8 plants in it. I started a 4x8 bed 3 yrs ago like this and this year the plants were overflowing.
As others are saying, strawberries are super easy to grow. Also, I noticed that since the homegrown ones are super flavorful, even when slightly underripe, that we eat much fewer of the homegrown ones. Just one is an amazing treat for us. I feel like for the few plants we have, we get strawberries for awhile. It is not that many daily but each one is a delicious treat. Combine that with a few tomatoes, some herbs, some greens, and the garden becomes a lovely place to hang out and graze.
I have to say it, Jacques and the nectarines reminded me of my pup and my first strawberry plant. I had literally one strawberry grow and I was SO excited to actually harvest it. On the day it was ready, I go out, ready to pick, and see her with her little lips pulled back as she delicately plucks my one single strawberry. She looked so happy I couldn't even be mad. So, Jacques, your spirit animal is a black and white am staff mix named Maggie. ❤️🍓🍓🍓
I feel the same way about apples. Sometimes I just skin them so I don't have that experience. I always thought it was just my weirdness and I was alone feeling that way. Thank you Kevin for revealing that and making me feel better. God bless you and Jaques.
Kev, Tuned in to Next level gardening's q & a today and someone asked Brian if he was going to do a colab vlog with you. He said he would love to if you were interested. That would be awesome.
OMG the bromance you have combined with the editing is what every other gardening channels is missing. The more ridiculous you get, the more I am enjoying your videos. Fun times!
We harvested like 80 Asian plums this year, and that tree was only in the ground for 2 years. That thing is only 4 feet tall, and every branch was full of fruit. SoCal is great for citrus, but it seems that stone fruits perform well too.
Literally spend my nights with my husband watching new videos!!! You all have inspired us to grow. We ran across you a year ago and it’s now a weekly adventure for us. Thank you so much for helping us connect and find a passion that brings us together!!!! Btw the peaches look amazing!!!! Can’t wait for my tree to start producing
hahaha thanks guys.. loved your chicken's reactions to fruit.. I don't think I've had a fresh apricot, dried and tinned yes.. peaches, strawberries, and nectarines yumm thank you for showing us your garden, love it..
I love videos with Kevin and Jacques so much. Whether you are harvesting and tasting, planting seeds, setting up garden beds and planting, or just trying to outdo each other at some kind of gardening, I love it all 😁
"something about the moon dynamics" LOL that's me connecting every little sign with the universe 🔮 Kevin takings pics of his cat while sleeping, RELATE!!!
My dad had a dwarf peach tree that even after aggressive culling, produced such big fruit he had to jam 2x4s under the branches to hold them up! Ahhh the cobblers from that tree... Hope your peaches are sweeter next year guys!
My friend's dad in Oregon grows peaches, and there is nothing as primally satisfying as picking a peach off the tree and sinking your teeth into it. I bring a flat home, and my dad makes jam with them! It's so good.
I've been growing peaches and nectarines for a few years and definitely pick them when they just pop out of the tree like you did. Sometimes I just wait for the fruit to fall on the ground and get them like that. If you don't have the threat of animals picking them on the ground, you can just add lot of mulch to soften the impact of the fruit and accomplish maximum ripeness on the tree by picking them when they fall on their own. There are some varieties that like to cling to the fruit longer and they rot on the tree, so watch out for that.
Did Jacques just blame Babka for the smashed peach!!!? Lmbo...you both are awesome! I never knew anyone who didn't like apples! What about apple pie or homemade applesauce? Thanks for all you both do!
Every video with Kevin and Jacques together is amazing. Kevin exudes so much more happiness (and better jokes) when Jacques is around. Love you guys together!
I’m not one so much for the insane or frenzy phrasing, but your crazy whacky style is an awesome trend to set for the gardening world, really unique, great video!
I have all those trees, my Anna is like a lemon all year producing ! NEVER can tell when to pick my apples , jeeze either too early and sour or too late and mushy , got my Eva down Delicious Keep on doing guys your great
I swear I was thinking of putting strawberries in one of my tall 6 in 1 birdies beds next year. I'm considering 'Ozark Beauty' but need to do a bit more research before I decide. Strawberries do well in zone 4. I envy your massive assortment of fruits! My cold climate 🇨🇦 limits me but I have apples, pears, raspberries, high bush blueberries, haskap berries, and now I'm determined to add strawberries 🍓 to the list! p.s. Babka is adorable! She looks 'round' ..... is she expecting kittens or just well fed? p.p.s Honeycrisp is a very good 🍎! Excellent texture.
I am in high altitude zone 4 and strawberries produce like crazy here - I have Fort Lauramie variety and love them. Also I always try to forage for the wild one!
9:15 I don't know if olives are similar to what we typically call stone fruit, but they're harvested by clamping a shaker device to the tree and putting a tarp underneath to catch the fruit.
You talking about dried apricots, reminds me of what happened of when i stayed at my grandparents. After dinner and just before bed my grandad brought out of the fridge, some cucumbers in vinegar. I think i was about 8 or something. I liked salt and vinegar crisps and pickled onions so i thought i would have some with my grandad. Meanwhile, my Nan is saying i think you have had enough and i am like, no these are nice. Cut a few hours later to me chucked into the bath as apparently both ends as didn't. I was reminded of this as we had a takeaway fish and chips treat dinner tonight. Our child usually doesn't like pickles but they volunteered to eat a small gherkin and they liked it! They didn't eat it whole but it's, an advancement. We can try them with Branston pickle and cheese sandwich next and then olives. Apart from anchovies, which even i don't like and the increase in chilli heat, there is no bounds to cooking now! Apart from Mussels that is because, hubby and i are both allergic to. For a primary/elementary school white kid from the UK, these days i'll take that to the bank. On the flip side, my 17 yr old niece and her bf is visiting soon with her bf from NL and i was told that the vegetables needs to be purified into their meals.... Tbf, having tasted my older sisters cooking, it is bland af and definitely takes after my mum's cooking. Before she passed away when i was 10, i remember my dad always joking about how he could tar mac the road with my mums gravy and yeah it was true! lol. My dad made friends with the the new neighbours from across the road in the block of flats, that were from Malawi and i got to hang out with the kids, learn about the "toilet" technique, religion and how to make food with spices. When i ended up in care due to a separate situation, I got to spend more time with my nan learning how to garden and cook. That is when i started my gravy training and it took about 15 years to perfect it. With cooking and gardening, it's a passion that takes years to pin down. I am really jealous of the size of your property as that would be an easy £1.5-2m where we are on the outskirts of London!
I was all set to aggressively prune my first strawberry blossoms set, to try it out. But then we had a VERY dry spring in New Mexico. Lots of wind and sun, which resulted in sad little leaves and only two or three blooms. We got absolutely drowned today, so I'm hoping they bounce back.
That was quite a bit of fun. My husband loves to pick a lemon, cut a slice and put it in his water. He can make one lemon last about a week. The lemons can keep on the tree for it seems like a year or close to it. We love having citrus right outside. I need to get a few more cold hardy citrus though. The lemon tree needs a little bit of protection in the winter here in 8b. Let the peaches sit a bit if you like them really ripe. If they do not sweeten up, you can always cook them, either plain or with syrup. Personally, I like my peaches hard and I only like white peaches. Yellow peaches have a flavor I can eat only if I cook them, so I do not bother. I kind of have almost the same thing with yellow vs white nectarines.
I love apricots.. I also love dried spicy mango .. I dont have a tree but I make them myself and omg! I sometimes end up eating up to 3 mangos worth and yep.. next several days are not fun.. but oh man it was soo worth it...lol..
I'm considering a fruit tree in the front yard to replace whatever the previous owner's removed and left the stump hole. I was told the previous tree may have had termites so I'm a little paranoid about putting anything there and inviting trouble. Grew strawberries for the first time and there was some trial and error on when to pick them. Finally figured out the right perfectly ripe smell.
Great video, I was smiling the whole time. MAN, it's gotta feel great to start harvesting fruit from your trees. We planted a bunch last year (in MN) and more this year, so we may get some, but I can't wait.
So jealous of your fig tree. I used to gather the brown figs from a tree on campus at Southwestern College to make preserves but they started a major overhaul on the 3 acre Landscape Technology area and their fig trees were sacrificed for the project. They had a yellow fig, like yours, but they used to get upwards of 4-5 inches long with a skinny neck that was at least half the body length. Let them grow longer before harvest, if you can wait that long. Yum!
When I lived in California the house I bought had an apricot tree in the backyard. B E S T fruit ever, right off the tree and warmed by the sun. I really miss that tree.
I have always said the same thing about apple's. Not worth eating raw. The skin and texture. But love them processed in pies, jam, juice, sauce, etc. Good looking fruit harvest. I'm jealous about the citrus and figs. Can't grow citrus in the midwest with our winters.
Hey Kevin and Jacques! Check out Edge of Nowhere Farm. They are a newly established farm in Wittman, Arizona and have really great tips on fruit tree care. I think you’ll love them!
You know your friendship is perfect when it allows you to be your wonderfully weird self. I laughed out loud so many times in this video. You guys eat fruit like you're wine connoisseurs.
Yummy. Your Apricots have me drooling! Just found you two and this delicious, warm-feeling entertainment in February, during a mini blizzard in 'ClayBanks', Michigan. I feel so much better, THANKYOU! 🤤🍃🍓🍑🍐🍏😋🍃💚🌻
lmbo...Stone Fruit Frenzy sounds like a video game. I can tell the berry fever is at its peak because this episode was so chaotic! 🤣 I'm jealous of all those peaches though.
I’m so excited to see you’re growing a pomegranate cause I’m also based in California and feel like it’s been hard finding info about growing it in our climate. Though I am in the Bay Area so it may be a bit more trial than San Diego but it’s by far my favorite fruit and am determined to grow them. I currently have 2 trees that are both in their 2nd year of being in the ground (both were kept in a giant pot for about a year before being put in the ground). These are my 4-5th attempt of growing a Pom tree and am very excited to say they are both baring a lot of fruit. Today I found a pest on one of them that I’ve never seen before (I believe they might be leaf-footed plant bugs) and I’m curious what troubles you will encounter and how you’ll solve them ☺️ so excited and proud to see of how much you’ve expanded your plant knowledge and how far your content has come since I first found you through the pothos propagation video!
Apples, Cherries, Pears, and Peaches do very well here in Northern Nevada. My neighbor has a 30ft paradise apple tree that is covered in fruit and my dwarf 10 foot pear tree gave me enough fruit last year to make quite a bit of sauce with it. Awesome to see you harvesting alot of stone fruit in a hot climate like San Diego.
You guys just need to travel the country planting gardens wherever you go. I volunteer to go first! And then you need to come back the end of summer to harvest. Love your videos!
I can hardly wait until my fruit trees produce! I bought 8 bare root young fruit trees in February. These are my first ever! Will they fruit next year? I picked all the flowers off this year, so they will focus on root growth, but am so ready to enjoy my fruit orchard! 🍅🍐🍎🍑🍐🍅🍎🍑
Hi guys this was I think by far my favorite video 📹 💖. First hello from Texas zone 9. I would recommend the earli grande peach 🍑 😋 I planted one in my garden and the fruit is sweet and the tree is very prolific I harvested mid may till early June this year. The tree is about 2 yrs old and already about 8ft tall. Also I'm so jealous I would love to have an apricot tree but I don't know that it would do good in my area since it's always a million degrees here. Oh and have you ever given your flock Cucumber mine love it. As always you garden is my Inspiration keep up the amazing work ❤️ ✨️ 👏.
Super funny video! Would love to see a pond update. Also have you planted or at least heard of a Palestine Sweet Lime? Trying to find one around LA somewhere.
Listen fam I'm gonna be honest - the more unhinged the content is getting, the better. I am fully here for this. Keep it up!
😂😂😂
💯
Same same
Facts 😂
The Berry Boys and the wasted sign with the GTA music 🤣🤣🤣
Kevin gets sassy whenever Jacques is in a video, I love it 🤣
They're setting up their Only Fans
The editor went crazy on this one and I appreciate the jokes a lot,gave me a good laugh. This video really made me feel so much better haha.
You guys are hysterical. Please never part because I can only imagine how good this will be when you're like 70.
You guys are hilarious! Love this kind of interaction from you. It’s real, it’s funny and it’s informative. Best thing I’ve watched all week!
Yes, this!!
Yes! I consistently have such a good laugh at epic-vids. I only wish there was a UK gardening channel that was light hearted and comedic like this one! 😆
"While I was away Jacque took it upon himself to harvest 100% of the Nectarines..." 😂😂
Your apricot story at the end had me in tears haha
Since we are sharing stories: when I first came across an aloe Vera drink, I didnt know what aloe could do. Drank the whole liter bottle in one day. I was thoroughly relieved the next day.
Oh Annie
That whole peach picking scene was a "that's what she said". Go ahead Kev, give it a tug and see if it comes...😭😭💀
LOL I had to resist giving the camera a little wink ;)
This why I love Kevin. He makes gardening so much more interesting compared to other channels 😂
@@epichomesteading the "oh yeahs" were enough
Glad I wasn’t the only one thinking it haha! You guys are hilarious! Also, loved the GTA reference with the dropped peaches!
I laughed out loud for real at that.
That’s hilarious! I had a friend who thought she was allergic to cherries, because she ate the whole bag at once! Everything in moderation!!🍒🍒
Hey guys, I don't know if you have ever made salt-preserved lemons, but I made a batch of salt-preserved LIMES a few months ago when I had an abundance of Mexican limes on hand, and they were amazing!!! I used some in a batch of machaca meat, and it was fabulous. Quick and easy to do, and they keep forever in the fridge for cooking or cocktails. Just search on salt-preserved lemons and you'll see recipes, but substitute with limes. Also, I finally have some decent blooms on my finger lime tree; I can't hardly wait!
Sounds fantastic!
Whenever I see videos of people growing and eating the food that they harvested it makes me wish I was friends with them so that I could also get in on that! 😆 Every time they showed a new fruit my mind would start to think of things I could make if I had some, like apricot tart, apple strousel, fig newton's, strawberry short cake and peach cobbler.
My family eats about 10lbs of strawberries a week. I'm a new gardener and desperately trying to learn how to grow them 😆😭. Love the videos. You guys crack me up
They really grow like weeds. Tip: buy a hanging basket from a box store... usually has 6-8 plants in it. I started a 4x8 bed 3 yrs ago like this and this year the plants were overflowing.
As others are saying, strawberries are super easy to grow. Also, I noticed that since the homegrown ones are super flavorful, even when slightly underripe, that we eat much fewer of the homegrown ones. Just one is an amazing treat for us. I feel like for the few plants we have, we get strawberries for awhile. It is not that many daily but each one is a delicious treat. Combine that with a few tomatoes, some herbs, some greens, and the garden becomes a lovely place to hang out and graze.
I never laugh as much as I do when I watch garden videos with both of you. I learn a lot and just enjoy the videos so much. Keep them coming!
Kevin please do a video on what kind of pest control you use for your garden and how you manage the birds with your fruit trees !!
I have to say it, Jacques and the nectarines reminded me of my pup and my first strawberry plant. I had literally one strawberry grow and I was SO excited to actually harvest it. On the day it was ready, I go out, ready to pick, and see her with her little lips pulled back as she delicately plucks my one single strawberry. She looked so happy I couldn't even be mad. So, Jacques, your spirit animal is a black and white am staff mix named Maggie. ❤️🍓🍓🍓
I feel the same way about apples. Sometimes I just skin them so I don't have that experience. I always thought it was just my weirdness and I was alone feeling that way. Thank you Kevin for revealing that and making me feel better. God bless you and Jaques.
Kev, Tuned in to Next level gardening's q & a today and someone asked Brian if he was going to do a colab vlog with you. He said he would love to if you were interested. That would be awesome.
Down!
@@epichomesteading Awesome. Can't wait for the Epic Next Level colab.
You fellows had me laughing this whole video. You're hilarious when you're together.
You guys are so funny together I laugh almost as much as Jacques! So entertaining to just check out your garden
😂
The chaotic energy on this one was hilarious, also epic harvest!
OMG the bromance you have combined with the editing is what every other gardening channels is missing. The more ridiculous you get, the more I am enjoying your videos. Fun times!
We harvested like 80 Asian plums this year, and that tree was only in the ground for 2 years. That thing is only 4 feet tall, and every branch was full of fruit.
SoCal is great for citrus, but it seems that stone fruits perform well too.
Literally spend my nights with my husband watching new videos!!! You all have inspired us to grow. We ran across you a year ago and it’s now a weekly adventure for us. Thank you so much for helping us connect and find a passion that brings us together!!!! Btw the peaches look amazing!!!! Can’t wait for my tree to start producing
Those fruit trees are absolutely poppin! Loved this video! 😍🙌
Babka the cat sleeping under the tree 🥰
hahaha thanks guys.. loved your chicken's reactions to fruit.. I don't think I've had a fresh apricot, dried and tinned yes.. peaches, strawberries, and nectarines yumm thank you for showing us your garden, love it..
I love videos with Kevin and Jacques so much. Whether you are harvesting and tasting, planting seeds, setting up garden beds and planting, or just trying to outdo each other at some kind of gardening, I love it all 😁
"something about the moon dynamics" LOL that's me connecting every little sign with the universe 🔮
Kevin takings pics of his cat while sleeping, RELATE!!!
Kevin and Jacques together are my favorite videos. Too funny.
My dad had a dwarf peach tree that even after aggressive culling, produced such big fruit he had to jam 2x4s under the branches to hold them up! Ahhh the cobblers from that tree... Hope your peaches are sweeter next year guys!
I love stone fruits but I have developed an allergy to them (fresh, I can consume cooked), so I'm eating these vicariously through you!
My friend's dad in Oregon grows peaches, and there is nothing as primally satisfying as picking a peach off the tree and sinking your teeth into it. I bring a flat home, and my dad makes jam with them! It's so good.
The balance between fun and education is what y’all got right. I learn so much and stay for the laughs. You guys rock!
The most I've ever laughed at a gardening video. More with the two of you please! & chef's kiss to the editor
I laughed the entire time lol. I wish I could grow citrus in my area but it gets bitter cold in winter :(
The dried apricot story had me LOL! 😂
Great video! Just noticed my star fruit tree was starting to bloom today. I know that excitement when your ready to pick
The wasted "that's what she said" moments haha ;) It was the Kevin and Jacques content that earned my subscription for the homesteading channel!
I've been growing peaches and nectarines for a few years and definitely pick them when they just pop out of the tree like you did. Sometimes I just wait for the fruit to fall on the ground and get them like that. If you don't have the threat of animals picking them on the ground, you can just add lot of mulch to soften the impact of the fruit and accomplish maximum ripeness on the tree by picking them when they fall on their own.
There are some varieties that like to cling to the fruit longer and they rot on the tree, so watch out for that.
The way you both go complete ham with each other has me in hysterics! Please do all your videos like this 🤣
Love the interaction, you guys rock. 👍
As a Southern Californian, I'm super impressed with the stone fruit. I always thought our winters were too warm for those.
Omg Babka the epic homestead dragon is living my dream life!!!!
Did Jacques just blame Babka for the smashed peach!!!? Lmbo...you both are awesome! I never knew anyone who didn't like apples! What about apple pie or homemade applesauce? Thanks for all you both do!
Every video with Kevin and Jacques together is amazing. Kevin exudes so much more happiness (and better jokes) when Jacques is around. Love you guys together!
I’m not one so much for the insane or frenzy phrasing, but your crazy whacky style is an awesome trend to set for the gardening world, really unique, great video!
I have all those trees, my Anna is like a lemon all year producing !
NEVER can tell when to pick my apples , jeeze either too early and sour or too late and mushy , got my Eva down Delicious
Keep on doing guys your great
I swear I was thinking of putting strawberries in one of my tall 6 in 1 birdies beds next year. I'm considering 'Ozark Beauty' but need to do a bit more research before I decide. Strawberries do well in zone 4. I envy your massive assortment of fruits! My cold climate 🇨🇦 limits me but I have apples, pears, raspberries, high bush blueberries, haskap berries, and now I'm determined to add strawberries 🍓 to the list! p.s. Babka is adorable! She looks 'round' ..... is she expecting kittens or just well fed? p.p.s Honeycrisp is a very good 🍎! Excellent texture.
Ozark beauty is a great one!
I am in high altitude zone 4 and strawberries produce like crazy here - I have Fort Lauramie variety and love them. Also I always try to forage for the wild one!
I planted Albion this last year, and they are under performing under great conditions. I'm in zone 9-12ish.
9:15 I don't know if olives are similar to what we typically call stone fruit, but they're harvested by clamping a shaker device to the tree and putting a tarp underneath to catch the fruit.
That was so fun 🤩! Thanks for the smile that stayed on my face the whole video!!!! 😂🤣😍
You talking about dried apricots, reminds me of what happened of when i stayed at my grandparents. After dinner and just before bed my grandad brought out of the fridge, some cucumbers in vinegar. I think i was about 8 or something.
I liked salt and vinegar crisps and pickled onions so i thought i would have some with my grandad. Meanwhile, my Nan is saying i think you have had enough and i am like, no these are nice.
Cut a few hours later to me chucked into the bath as apparently both ends as didn't.
I was reminded of this as we had a takeaway fish and chips treat dinner tonight. Our child usually doesn't like pickles but they volunteered to eat a small gherkin and they liked it! They didn't eat it whole but it's, an advancement. We can try them with Branston pickle and cheese sandwich next and then olives. Apart from anchovies, which even i don't like and the increase in chilli heat, there is no bounds to cooking now!
Apart from Mussels that is because, hubby and i are both allergic to.
For a primary/elementary school white kid from the UK, these days i'll take that to the bank.
On the flip side, my 17 yr old niece and her bf is visiting soon with her bf from NL and i was told that the vegetables needs to be purified into their meals.... Tbf, having tasted my older sisters cooking, it is bland af and definitely takes after my mum's cooking. Before she passed away when i was 10, i remember my dad always joking about how he could tar mac the road with my mums gravy and yeah it was true! lol.
My dad made friends with the the new neighbours from across the road in the block of flats, that were from Malawi and i got to hang out with the kids, learn about the "toilet" technique, religion and how to make food with spices. When i ended up in care due to a separate situation, I got to spend more time with my nan learning how to garden and cook. That is when i started my gravy training and it took about 15 years to perfect it. With cooking and gardening, it's a passion that takes years to pin down.
I am really jealous of the size of your property as that would be an easy £1.5-2m where we are on the outskirts of London!
Babka has a bright future as the garden scapegoat.
Euphoric, energetic, focused, joyful... was that sativa? Lol, great tone and content! 😀
I harvested Honeyberries (haskaps) & strawberries today. Raspberries are coming soon . . . I must have berry fever, too.
Warm, juicy fruit - straight from the tree - dribbling down your chin and onto your shirt.
Nothin' better! ❤🍓🍎❤
You guys are like a comedy team. Ya need to take that act on the road!
I was all set to aggressively prune my first strawberry blossoms set, to try it out. But then we had a VERY dry spring in New Mexico. Lots of wind and sun, which resulted in sad little leaves and only two or three blooms. We got absolutely drowned today, so I'm hoping they bounce back.
Oh no! Good luck with them though
My strawberries🍓🍓 are strugglin' in the heat. When it cools.....they grow!
That was quite a bit of fun. My husband loves to pick a lemon, cut a slice and put it in his water. He can make one lemon last about a week. The lemons can keep on the tree for it seems like a year or close to it. We love having citrus right outside. I need to get a few more cold hardy citrus though. The lemon tree needs a little bit of protection in the winter here in 8b.
Let the peaches sit a bit if you like them really ripe. If they do not sweeten up, you can always cook them, either plain or with syrup. Personally, I like my peaches hard and I only like white peaches. Yellow peaches have a flavor I can eat only if I cook them, so I do not bother. I kind of have almost the same thing with yellow vs white nectarines.
I love apricots.. I also love dried spicy mango .. I dont have a tree but I make them myself and omg! I sometimes end up eating up to 3 mangos worth and yep.. next several days are not fun.. but oh man it was soo worth it...lol..
I'm considering a fruit tree in the front yard to replace whatever the previous owner's removed and left the stump hole. I was told the previous tree may have had termites so I'm a little paranoid about putting anything there and inviting trouble.
Grew strawberries for the first time and there was some trial and error on when to pick them. Finally figured out the right perfectly ripe smell.
Great video, I was smiling the whole time. MAN, it's gotta feel great to start harvesting fruit from your trees. We planted a bunch last year (in MN) and more this year, so we may get some, but I can't wait.
So jealous of your fig tree. I used to gather the brown figs from a tree on campus at Southwestern College to make preserves but they started a major overhaul on the 3 acre Landscape Technology area and their fig trees were sacrificed for the project. They had a yellow fig, like yours, but they used to get upwards of 4-5 inches long with a skinny neck that was at least half the body length. Let them grow longer before harvest, if you can wait that long. Yum!
When I lived in California the house I bought had an apricot tree in the backyard. B E S T fruit ever, right off the tree and warmed by the sun. I really miss that tree.
Wow! I need to get some fruit trees planted. Thanks for the fun and informative video. I will check if I can grow those vatities in my zone.
I have always said the same thing about apple's. Not worth eating raw. The skin and texture. But love them processed in pies, jam, juice, sauce, etc. Good looking fruit harvest. I'm jealous about the citrus and figs. Can't grow citrus in the midwest with our winters.
Agree!
You guys "hitting" the limes had me in tears
Hey Kevin and Jacques! Check out Edge of Nowhere Farm. They are a newly established farm in Wittman, Arizona and have really great tips on fruit tree care. I think you’ll love them!
I love it when u are harvesting with Jacques, it is my favorite type of video and you guys make me laugh.
😄thanks for the giggles and knowledge
You know your friendship is perfect when it allows you to be your wonderfully weird self. I laughed out loud so many times in this video. You guys eat fruit like you're wine connoisseurs.
You guys should put a net below the apricot tree to catch them when you shake the branches
Yummy. Your Apricots have me drooling!
Just found you two and this delicious, warm-feeling entertainment in February, during a mini blizzard in 'ClayBanks', Michigan. I feel so much better, THANKYOU!
🤤🍃🍓🍑🍐🍏😋🍃💚🌻
Pick all those trees. All you gotta do is shake them. 🌞🥰
lmbo...Stone Fruit Frenzy sounds like a video game. I can tell the berry fever is at its peak because this episode was so chaotic! 🤣 I'm jealous of all those peaches though.
How is this channel not to 1M subscribers yet? You guys are amazing!!! Loving the content!
😂 I love you guys so much…congratulations on all the fruit to come! So exciting
I would love to see you make jams,jellies,ciders,candies,and wine with your fruits!
I’m so excited to see you’re growing a pomegranate cause I’m also based in California and feel like it’s been hard finding info about growing it in our climate. Though I am in the Bay Area so it may be a bit more trial than San Diego but it’s by far my favorite fruit and am determined to grow them.
I currently have 2 trees that are both in their 2nd year of being in the ground (both were kept in a giant pot for about a year before being put in the ground). These are my 4-5th attempt of growing a Pom tree and am very excited to say they are both baring a lot of fruit. Today I found a pest on one of them that I’ve never seen before (I believe they might be leaf-footed plant bugs) and I’m curious what troubles you will encounter and how you’ll solve them ☺️ so excited and proud to see of how much you’ve expanded your plant knowledge and how far your content has come since I first found you through the pothos propagation video!
Apples, Cherries, Pears, and Peaches do very well here in Northern Nevada. My neighbor has a 30ft paradise apple tree that is covered in fruit and my dwarf 10 foot pear tree gave me enough fruit last year to make quite a bit of sauce with it. Awesome to see you harvesting alot of stone fruit in a hot climate like San Diego.
I never laughed so much from a gardening video. You just can’t write this stuff!
The snapshot of the stone fruit frenzy killed me. The faces you guys made just made the episode great in the first 27 seconds!!
i never thought about dried apricots being a full apricot before. could easily eat whole bag and not realize the potential result :o
As always, thanks for sharing!!🙏
Your excitement is contagious! Love this one, such a wonderful friendship as well.
Great video thank you both for sharing .
You guys inspire me everyday to mKe my garden the best it could be.
Fun video. Can’t wait to harvest ours. Now, where to get that hardy peach tree 🤔
Your apple tree did well for that small tree in zone 10b.
You guys just need to travel the country planting gardens wherever you go. I volunteer to go first! And then you need to come back the end of summer to harvest. Love your videos!
Very informative!
The chickens gave the peach 🍑 no love.!
Lol 😂
Uncle Jacques and Kevin great video🤣
Hilarious!!! Love your channel Kevin! And well done on growing such epic fruit!
I love seeing you guys have fun. It's nice to see your personalities shine through the screen. :)
I can hardly wait until my fruit trees produce! I bought 8 bare root young fruit trees in February. These are my first ever! Will they fruit next year? I picked all the flowers off this year, so they will focus on root growth, but am so ready to enjoy my fruit orchard! 🍅🍐🍎🍑🍐🍅🍎🍑
Hi guys this was I think by far my favorite video 📹 💖. First hello from Texas zone 9. I would recommend the earli grande peach 🍑 😋 I planted one in my garden and the fruit is sweet and the tree is very prolific I harvested mid may till early June this year. The tree is about 2 yrs old and already about 8ft tall. Also I'm so jealous I would love to have an apricot tree but I don't know that it would do good in my area since it's always a million degrees here. Oh and have you ever given your flock Cucumber mine love it. As always you garden is my Inspiration keep up the amazing work ❤️ ✨️ 👏.
This was a joy to watch!
Super funny video! Would love to see a pond update. Also have you planted or at least heard of a Palestine Sweet Lime? Trying to find one around LA somewhere.
You two are so funny together 😂 love this channel the most!