Black Locus (Pseudo Acacia) is also a great hardwood (stronger than oak) and very rot resistant buried in wet ground. I also use its thorny nature as a physical barrier hedge.
to make your holes, try two cans butted end to end. make holes and light a fire in the top one and burn with the bottom... alternately you can use a coffee can or large can with a few vent holes in it and attach a tuna can to a stick as well. then let tuna can rest on hot coals, can burn 3-10 holes before needing to reheat. we do the second method most often, using two cans and two peeps to alternate.. but we are no where near as large as you.. very intresting.. thank you
You may be able to afix that flame director to the tip of the torch for ease of use rather than using the bulky extra unattached material. I've seen stencils made out of scrap wood for a a square of mass flaming on Curtis Stone's videos. Congrats on accidentally nearly doubling your strawberry yield.
Beautiful videos, very useful and extremely helpful for beginners. I have watched the no dig videos and the various tools that you shared, again fantastic job. I have a couple questions - do you grow your own hay for the livestock? And do you own a tractor? We are tossing around if we should buy a tractor for ourselves, but we decided to go no dig method.
Beautiful salad mix, all your vegetables look so healthy! Im looking for some quality sprinklers for overhead watering, where did you get yours? Cheers!
Just found your channel and I LOVE IT! you have an amazing farm!..Definitely subbed your channel and gave it a big thumbs up! We got a small homesteading chanell too feel free to give any advice you have. I've been gardening now for 4 years but hope to one day get a working market farm.
It seems the root trainer pots use very flimsy plastic. From some researching it seems that we might get 1 to max 3 uses out of them. Great idea. Wish there was a sturdier product. Would you agree or do you have a different experience with these pots?
the pots are bought or grown that way and only moved from the green house to the field.. no need to be strong. i use a strip of newspapers for home grown pots (way smaller than this) but have bought these and they are more than servisable, and cost effective...
Rondi Anderson I believe he mentioned stringing hops a bit earlier in the video. The setup looks enough like hops trellises I’ve seen in the US to assume they are for hops.
Hi- your audio is cutting in and out-you might want to check the recording gear! BTW whats your secret for abundant strawberries. Our climate here in N. California is way too hot-over 100 degrees all summer. Thnks
I'm in high desert border of Central/Southern California with really long and hot summers too. We mulch our strawberries with straw or mulching fabric and grow them with pretty intensive spacing to control soil temps and get excellent strawberries all season long.
Enjoyed the silent intro - everything is looking PRIME! Also how am I not surprised that Albert is the group pyromaniac :D.
really enjoyed watching your method of making the holes in the sheeting, I learned loads watching this so thank you!
Black Locus (Pseudo Acacia) is also a great hardwood (stronger than oak) and very rot resistant buried in wet ground. I also use its thorny nature as a physical barrier hedge.
to make your holes, try two cans butted end to end.
make holes and light a fire in the top one and burn with the bottom... alternately you can use a coffee can or large can with a few vent holes in it and attach a tuna can to a stick as well. then let tuna can rest on hot coals, can burn 3-10 holes before needing to reheat.
we do the second method most often, using two cans and two peeps to alternate.. but we are no where near as large as you.. very intresting.. thank you
You may be able to afix that flame director to the tip of the torch for ease of use rather than using the bulky extra unattached material. I've seen stencils made out of scrap wood for a a square of mass flaming on Curtis Stone's videos.
Congrats on accidentally nearly doubling your strawberry yield.
Beautiful videos, very useful and extremely helpful for beginners. I have watched the no dig videos and the various tools that you shared, again fantastic job. I have a couple questions - do you grow your own hay for the livestock? And do you own a tractor? We are tossing around if we should buy a tractor for ourselves, but we decided to go no dig method.
you make the best videos
what kind of salad mix do u use
Beautiful salad mix, all your vegetables look so healthy! Im looking for some quality sprinklers for overhead watering, where did you get yours? Cheers!
Israeli made brass sprinkler heads are best bang for your buck imo.
Just found your channel and I LOVE IT! you have an amazing farm!..Definitely subbed your channel and gave it a big thumbs up! We got a small homesteading chanell too feel free to give any advice you have. I've been gardening now for 4 years but hope to one day get a working market farm.
It seems the root trainer pots use very flimsy plastic. From some researching it seems that we might get 1 to max 3 uses out of them. Great idea. Wish there was a sturdier product. Would you agree or do you have a different experience with these pots?
the pots are bought or grown that way and only moved from the green house to the field..
no need to be strong.
i use a strip of newspapers for home grown pots (way smaller than this) but have bought these and they are more than servisable, and cost effective...
You are right about the plastic. They are just like cheap seeding trays and don't last too long on the farm.
doesnt burning plastic release dioxins?
Why do you cover the soil?
Near the end of the video what plants are going to climb up the tall string lattice?
Rondi Anderson I believe he mentioned stringing hops a bit earlier in the video. The setup looks enough like hops trellises I’ve seen in the US to assume they are for hops.
Richard--I went to your website to order your book. Do you ship to the U.S. and how much is it in U.S. dollars?
Hi- your audio is cutting in and out-you might want to check the recording gear! BTW whats your secret for abundant strawberries. Our climate here in N. California is way too hot-over 100 degrees all summer. Thnks
I'm in high desert border of Central/Southern California with really long and hot summers too. We mulch our strawberries with straw or mulching fabric and grow them with pretty intensive spacing to control soil temps and get excellent strawberries all season long.
Dizzzzzy mornings .... :)
Wow
What is the composition of the soil mixture that was put in the holes with a spoon? - it was difficult to discern what was being told there. thanks!
Silent morning "DO OR DIE"