Starting Your First Vegetable Garden (Without Breaking The Bank) - Complete Presentation

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 307

  • @davidthegood
    @davidthegood  3 роки тому +26

    Thank you for watching. Plant propagation is way easier than most people think. If you want to propagate just about anything, check out my book "Free Plants for Everyone" here: amzn.to/2YiGHtP
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    Get my free composting booklet: www.thesurvivalgardener.com/simple-composting/
    "Compost Your Enemies" T-shirts: www.aardvarktees.com/collections/vendors?q=The%20Survival%20Gardener

    • @nereidapr1
      @nereidapr1 2 роки тому

      I totally agree. When I don't have commercial nutrients. I use left over coffee, egg shell, vinegar. I found a way to do compost. Since I'm in a wheelchair but I do garden in my balcony and I was given a raised bed at the level of my wheelchair but I asked would you like to do it with these cement blocks. They were left over from the construction of the of my house. Great video

    • @siouxsiesiouxwilson7247
      @siouxsiesiouxwilson7247 2 роки тому

      Fantastic

    • @rastaxhosa3283
      @rastaxhosa3283 2 роки тому

      Blessed

    • @junedewar5190
      @junedewar5190 2 роки тому

      I love the manual tiller I bought from Amazon for about $12. It is easier than digging with a fork although I use a fork to dig up rocks and large stones. I like the six pronged tiller although the description the seller put on the last one I bought detailed four pronged it was actually six prongs. The colour is yellow.

  • @amyhorrocks603
    @amyhorrocks603 4 роки тому +103

    Worth it to mention -- leave enough room between the beds for your wheelbarrow to get through. :)

    • @bonniehiniker419
      @bonniehiniker419 4 роки тому +6

      Yep. I didn't do that quite wide enough. The gardens grew so robustly I am waking tops off the tomato plants so they ripen fruit while not forming flowers not ripening b4 frost

    • @TheRealJennHill
      @TheRealJennHill 2 роки тому +2

      Great reminder before I get my beds set up tomorrow

  • @teca1775
    @teca1775 4 роки тому +91

    Your the first gardener I"ve seen talking about maintaining their tools. How refreshing. 40 years in the landscape industry, I"ve seen people buy hoes and shovels and never sharpen them. Maintaining my tools was one of the first things I was taught. :)

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  4 роки тому +5

      Glad to hear it

    • @bonniehiniker419
      @bonniehiniker419 4 роки тому +5

      Me too! My pa taught me to use file grinder and whetstone!

    • @OfftoShambala
      @OfftoShambala 3 роки тому +4

      Martha Stewart covered that in the 90’s!

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 3 роки тому +13

      People give me a hard time with my tools. I get them dirty and beat them up when I use em, but I ALWAYS wash them when done, I never just lay a tool down. Stand it up, stick it in the ground whatever, don’t lay it down!
      And for sure reason people like to give me a hard time for keeping things razor sharp. If I hoe a single row I’ll still carry a file and probably touch up the edge about ever 100 feet, to some it looks like a waste of time, maybe it is, but for my time I’d rather use a sharp tool that works than fight with a dull tool and pay for it the next day. But most folks seem to keep their tools dull as can be and think a sharp tool is dangerous…

    • @Skashoon
      @Skashoon 2 роки тому +1

      I’m trying to determine how to sharpen my curved-blade, corn knife. I ran into some barbed wire entangled in weeds, out of sight. Any suggestions?

  • @creative227
    @creative227 2 роки тому +11

    I am a o dig convert. Too old to double dig and with age I’ve learned the virtue of patience and letting Mother Nature do her job!

  • @mattpeacock5208
    @mattpeacock5208 2 роки тому +21

    I thought your "easier method" included machines! Insteal it was child labor! I LOVE IT! It takes me back to being a kid

  • @reaganviking
    @reaganviking 4 роки тому +21

    I dug a couple more beds this year and it was so much easier than last year bc I used a pick to loosen the dirt first. Best $26 ever spent at Harbor Freight

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  4 роки тому +5

      Way to go. Good tools make a world of difference.

    • @annemcgirt5296
      @annemcgirt5296 Рік тому +6

      I ordered a garden fork that is like a shorter, fatter tined version of David's broad fork. I had only used a tater digger before that and it apparently went only on the surface without getting in there. The fork gets down in there. I don't know what my garden area in my back yard was in a previous life, but it seems like there must have been lots of cinderblocks "busted" there! I get down about 8 inches and hear "clunk" I have filled 3 5 gallon buckets with pieces of cinderblocks, many are about 4"X8" long. I hope that will let me have some decent sweet potatoes and carrots next year! I wish I had dug these up in my younger days (71 is really no time to start digging these block parts) but better late than never, right?

    • @annemcgirt5296
      @annemcgirt5296 Рік тому +2

      Oh, a couple of years ago, my husband asked what I wanted for our anniversary. I asked for and got a sledge and a wedge. This year for my birthday, I asked for a new axe and a new short shovel. When I'm not digging and hitting cinderblocks, I'm hitting roots. Since I have to dig to get to be able to swing the axe to chop them, I use the hole that I've dug to make a little biochar from limbs, branches and even roots!

  • @ADVJason
    @ADVJason 4 роки тому +15

    So in November I moved to a new home on 6 acres. I have been wanting to have a garden for a long time. I probably could have at my last place but I never really did anything. As soon as I knew I was getting this house I had started planning a garden. Now I am a complete beginner.. well one year trying (and going away most of the summer) at the other house and a few tomato plants doesn't really count I feel. This year I have made a couple raise beds. Used several existing Flower beds / raised beds and had a neighbor nice enough to till up a big garden for me.
    I bought a couple new tools and a few transplants and seeds as I found them and said to my self "I want to try that" I find it relaxing to go out and water, weed, or just work in the garden. Hard work ..sometimes. It will be worth it when something produces food. For now watching beans and other plants come out of the ground is pretty amazing. I'm in Ohio and my place was pretty wet to start with so I'm just got most stuff planted. enjoying every minute.
    Love the videos and books. I have leaned a bunch. I bought the audio book Grow or die first and now have that printed book and two others. Good stuff. Thanks for helping me become more self sufficient.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  4 роки тому +9

      Thank you for writing. Really, starting a few small spaces will teach you a ton, then you will be able to handle a lot more. Make a small area highly fertile and productive and it's easier to scale up.

    • @ADVJason
      @ADVJason 4 роки тому +3

      @@davidthegood Kind of what I was thinking. I have several small places and hope they all do well bey figure they all won't. I figure it is a learning year (the first of many I am sure) Try this try that and really learn what works here. I have been loving it so far.

    • @cexe2120
      @cexe2120 3 роки тому +2

      Hi! Watching this video more than a year later. I hope your first garden went well!

    • @ADVJason
      @ADVJason 3 роки тому +2

      @@cexe2120 not bad. Some good some bad...all fun. this year has been a challenge so far.

  • @Dr.JulieJames
    @Dr.JulieJames 4 роки тому +6

    That is how I feel in love with Gardening digging the plots I still love to make the plots...

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 Рік тому +1

    Year after year I've dug up the old tomato plants, roots and all, and throw them out, or burn them, (I don't want to add or propagate a potential pathogen to the compost). With that said, the root systems only go six inches deep, no matter how deeply they are planted. One year they were put a foot deep in HIGH quality, homemade compost yet the roots at the end of the season were still only six inches deep. I will be switching to the sideways root technique (two weeks before planting, (turn the pots on the side, the plant grows upward, giving about a 90° angle between the roots and the vine). I might even get the root system a foot long before I plant the tomatoes).
    Here's the QUESTION:
    How deep have the root systems gotten for you, or other folks in your viewing audience ?
    As always, many thanks for this and all of your videos, answers, and knowledge you have gifted to us. God be with you and your plants !

  • @simoncox4421
    @simoncox4421 2 роки тому +3

    Dear Dave, one of the things that have surprised me was this. I planted surplus spring Onions(Scallions), from the super market, for a number of years and some have flowered and provided seeds. This year I planted a couple of super market Brown Onions and they have also flowered and provided seeds.

  • @msb8013
    @msb8013 3 роки тому +1

    I think that's my favorite jam there. Two rounds of that bass and I'm all in after hearing it only 3 times. That's how you know you gotta good one.

  • @maydaygarden
    @maydaygarden 3 роки тому +13

    The original reason for the "June Bride" tradition was so she would have a baby by Feb/Mar and be able to help in the garden/field for the spring planting season. A few years later, the kids would be old enough, albeit an early age, to begin helping with the animals and fall harvest. I grew up in the San Joaquin Valley and come from a long line of decendents whose farming roots began in Tennessee. David gets it from a comedic standpoint, but it's a long forgotten cycle as the reason for the "June Bride".

    • @kathleensanderson3082
      @kathleensanderson3082 3 роки тому +9

      I think, also, by June the spring planting was finished, but the harvest hadn't started to come in, so there was time to take a short break. And it was easier for people to get together for a celebration in June than in the winter.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Рік тому

      Oh! That makes so much sense! In was sure wondering about that.

  • @lleesti1346
    @lleesti1346 2 роки тому +3

    amish paste tomatoes!!! I planted some, they did much better than any others. I didn't realize they were an heirloom till after a hard frost. found a couple of stragglers froze, but I have them thawing to snag the seeds!

    • @umiluv
      @umiluv 2 роки тому +1

      Nice! I just bought some of those seeds too. Those and San Marzano. My family loves it when I make pasta so gotta grow the Roma paste tomatoes to can and make fresh pasta sauce.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Рік тому

      Yep! I just bought my one and only AP seedling so I'm desperate to not kill it!
      Hoping to find something that's great for my region and yet can imitate Italian cuisine.

  • @sek4110
    @sek4110 3 роки тому +4

    I have bought 2 of your books and my friend sent another of your books. I also ordered seeds from your daughter (tomatoes)to support your family. I know it is not much but I want to help. I just planted a dwarf banana tree in my yard. I planted it where I can see it so I do not plant and forget :). I do not know what I am doing yet but hoping to figure it out here in Punta Gorda Florida. I am blessed to live in the same state as you!!! Thank God I have a well and my water is free!!!!!

  • @thomasa5619
    @thomasa5619 4 роки тому +12

    That fork is impressive
    I can only drive a fork an inch into the dirt where I live

    • @reaganviking
      @reaganviking 4 роки тому

      Get a heavy pick

    • @reaganviking
      @reaganviking 4 роки тому +5

      ...or do a no dig garden with cardboard/newspaper and chipped tree branches

    • @geoffreyshubert2263
      @geoffreyshubert2263 3 роки тому +2

      yes I struggled with that myself. The only thing that worked for me was adding to the top soil not digging it in. I made raised beds out of concrete blocks initially later with logs, added logs, manure, hay weeds cardboard compost you name it - got an actual functioning garden. I did use bought manure and compost the first year.

    • @thomasa5619
      @thomasa5619 3 роки тому

      Sorry didn’t see responses
      I guess it’s fine claylike material, it’s compacted tho
      It’s also a tiny condo so I don’t want to have arguments with management about building a raised garden (I think I can but I don’t want to do anything permanent)
      I’m just trying to get something growing in it, got a couple dozen sunflower seeds germinated, trying to get tomatoes to germinate happily but they don’t get watered cause I’m away at work, or they drown. I need to fine tune my technique.
      There’s a quite large tea tree in the corner so the garden kinda self mulches (the leaves that fall off are dense not light and crumbly like real deciduous trees)

    • @umiluv
      @umiluv 2 роки тому +1

      Container gardening is a lot of fun too. I did that on my apartment patio in Los Angeles and it helped a lot with not having to buy herbs. I had herbs and one tomato plant to learn about gardening. It was really fun and saved me a lot of money on not having to buy herbs.

  • @shawnysup
    @shawnysup Місяць тому

    Thanks for being a good guy David

  • @OfftoShambala
    @OfftoShambala 3 роки тому +4

    You can start gardening without breaking the bank by getting you a plastic storage bin, something most people have or can be acquired for ten shells or less... put holes in bottom with a drill or soldering iron or other socially unacceptable things... something many people have... soldering irons run about ten shells or less, I think... at harbor freight... then if you have shrubs or trees that need trimming, you can chop up the cuttings*, or get a landscape company to drop off a pile of wood chips*, do that... put the chips and some size appropriate logs about a third of the way in... after soaking them (this can be done in the bin before you put the holes in or have an extra bin without holes, to soak the chips and cuttings sticks etc) ... then get a bag of Kellogg’s potting soil for less than ten shells... fill the bin and direct sow seeds that will likely do well for the season... use the lid to keep the seeds and seedlings moist and warm at first... ie cover at night... if necessary, remove in day after sprouting ... you don’t need a shovel, you won’t break the bank or your back... the bin can be moved in and out of the sun as needed... it can be raised eventually ... use a couple of old chairs you found in an alley, many options... if you don’t have a hose, a watering can would be helpful which can be gotten for under ten bucks. If you can, it might be a good idea to put in a couple cans of sardines from the dollar store down in between the layer of chips and soil... and a hand sized rake would be helpful and not necessary... at any rate, a person could make one or two of these bins every month for roughly 20 shells until you have as many as they want or need ... once you tell everyone you need bins, people will start giving them to you... and you will start finding all kinds of free stuff you can use as you go along ... if you ever have to move, you can take your garden with you too ... *wood chips and garden cuttings are best if they are a year old, but they don’t have to be... also the wood chips make it so you don’t have to water as much and act as a slow release fertilizer... and you don’t need to buy as much soil

  • @gangofgreenhorns2672
    @gangofgreenhorns2672 2 роки тому +1

    Synth tone is just terrific in the start of this.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  2 роки тому

      Thank you! That is a vintage Fender Rhodes electric piano - the real deal!

  • @zhartheProprietor
    @zhartheProprietor 4 роки тому +3

    I've been procrastinating but your Compost Everything book is ordered from Castalia. "Good" video.

  • @jpoornakumar5262
    @jpoornakumar5262 2 роки тому +3

    I love watching your videos. Iam also inspired alot to do gardening. Great content.
    With lot of love from
    India.

  • @Patriot-od6xk
    @Patriot-od6xk 2 роки тому +3

    Great video David!

  • @Chastitythompson
    @Chastitythompson 4 роки тому +3

    Awesome video, awesome music. So appreciate the time it takes to do these. 🙌🏼🙏🏼

  • @lisakelley9451
    @lisakelley9451 4 роки тому +33

    I love your videos... learn so much! Some friends are closing on a property in my neighborhood this week. She's lived in apartments for decades and could only container garden. Now she's going to have 7 exquisite acres in the East Texas woods! I'm sending her this video. She'll love it!

  • @lightbender5605
    @lightbender5605 2 роки тому

    I am in Central Florida!!!

  • @diannevaldez8670
    @diannevaldez8670 2 роки тому +3

    I love your "easier way". I have a big family too and I would gather them and explain what "we" were going to do and I would add "and by WE I mean you". Ahh, the power was intoxicating!!!! :) :) Just kidding. We all did work because we are a family and that's what family does. You are too funny though!!!

  • @nymalin
    @nymalin 4 роки тому +6

    20 seconds in you have me laughing. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it. :D

  • @valdastolk7175
    @valdastolk7175 3 роки тому +2

    David why aren’t you mulching your beds to conserve water?

  • @shanemillard608
    @shanemillard608 4 роки тому +3

    Great video man. Love your attitudeA

  • @TheFarmDream
    @TheFarmDream 4 роки тому +3

    Great work. Keep on sharing!

  • @michaele.4702
    @michaele.4702 3 роки тому +6

    Personally I think you should go 4ftx 4ft path, and then you can rotate out between being beds and being paths as need be, if you have much spare woody material drop that as bed fill and raise the bed higher.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Рік тому

      I like the idea of alternating paths and beds, but won't a year of using ground as path make it super hard and compact, and not good for planting?

  • @grammaellen4984
    @grammaellen4984 Рік тому +1

    David, love your humor & your info. I am a fellow frugal. I am trying to learn more about composting & I am trying to inspire others through my group "Gardening & Composting" to I have tried to download what you talked about "Start Composting today". However, the link isn't working. Can you send it to me? I would love to get it & be able to share it. thanks

  • @biglou4452
    @biglou4452 3 роки тому +2

    Love the video 🙏

  • @dirtcheapgarden22
    @dirtcheapgarden22 4 роки тому +2

    Great intro.

  • @annemcgirt5296
    @annemcgirt5296 Рік тому +2

    I have had a problem with my (not so friendly) neighborhood squirrels. They seem to prefer things like beets and carrots. I read that they didn't like garlic planted in a bed so there I was, planting garlic all over the garden. Got up the next morning to a new set of dig holes. You got it, not only did the squirrels work more on the beets and carrots, now they're going after the garlic and my leaf lettuce. If I could only catch one, I would make an example of him/her for his/her friends who seem to believe that I put seeds in the ground for THEIR lunch.
    Any suggestions anyone?

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Рік тому +1

      I've shot mine.

    • @annemcgirt5296
      @annemcgirt5296 Рік тому +1

      @@davidthegood Unfortunately I live in town. The local police don't take kindly to shooting in town!! Got some tulle and am getting ready to try it. Saw in a video that their claws get caught in it and they will avoid the tulle. Watched one come off the roof, climb DOWN my wood fence and go straight for the spinach. They have stripped several plants down to the stalks!

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Рік тому

      Slingshots are good for killing squirrels and they don't go "blam".

  • @jude5815
    @jude5815 2 роки тому +2

    Yeyyy !!! BRISBANE Queensland Australia! Not sure you mean our Brisbane Do you have a City called Bris US ? Thank you for saving every one a hec of alot of time just brilliant you guys🌴🌊⛱️🍉🍎🍓🍠🥝🍌🍍

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Рік тому

      Nope - I meant YOUR Brisbane, Jude! Thanks for stopping by.

    • @jude5815
      @jude5815 Рік тому

      @@davidthegoodThankyou for doing such a great service so helpful David worldwide Amazing you and your family.

  • @tamararoberts9307
    @tamararoberts9307 3 роки тому +2

    Antique tools are far better to use than new ones

  • @angeladrury7060
    @angeladrury7060 2 роки тому +1

    Is there a special way to prep dried peas you buy for food to be planted as seed? I planted a bed of dried lady finger peas and so far only one has sprouted so far. Help!!!

  • @edward4467
    @edward4467 2 роки тому

    Nice ground

  • @chriskincaid6035
    @chriskincaid6035 4 місяці тому

    Thank You ...

  • @lisalph8922
    @lisalph8922 3 роки тому

    Squirrels chewed up my spaghetti lines in California too. Argh! I did switch to soaker hoses and they seemed to resist the varmints.

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- 2 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/MmX1pXQHf4E/v-deo.html

  • @kristinatidwell6563
    @kristinatidwell6563 4 роки тому +1

    I've tried to plant lentils in CENTEX and they've germinated, but about 2" they just flop over and die. 2nd planting I tried giving them a wooden ice cream stick to hold them up, but they still died about the same height. They're kinda wimpy plants. Maybe try again in the winter? I was going to put them on a climber but hmmm. I need to speak to a gardening group here in Texas.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  4 роки тому +2

      Yeah, they cannot take the heat. Black-eyed peas are better in the heat, lentils and favas in the cool season.

    • @kristinatidwell6563
      @kristinatidwell6563 4 роки тому +4

      @@davidthegood I planted great northern, black eye peas, pinto beans and black beans too. Squash and cucumbers are taking off. Lots if food to eat, that's the name of the game. ♥

  • @cathyhumphries5870
    @cathyhumphries5870 4 місяці тому

    WHAT IF IT IS A NEW TOOL WITH A SHINY HANDLE, SHOULD YOU SAND IT AND THEN PUT THE OIL ON?❤️🙏

  • @ShineYourLight83
    @ShineYourLight83 3 місяці тому

    Thank you for this video im going to start my very first in ground garden!!!! Do you have a method to pre treat the area for bugs prior to planting?

  • @loveishope4406
    @loveishope4406 2 роки тому

    @The Survival Gardening Channel with David The Good. I dont have a yard so I am gardening in 22 gallon tubs for the third summer. I use rabbit compost and fish fertilizer. I cant find worm compost locally. Am I doomed or is there something else I could look for? Would like to just stop stressing about it and just enjoy gardening but I see people say its so necessary.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  2 роки тому

      No, you don't need worm compost. Any compost will work.

  • @mizjo17
    @mizjo17 3 роки тому

    David, where are you gardening? Are you in South America?

  • @babetteisinthegarden6920
    @babetteisinthegarden6920 4 роки тому +1

    TFS

  • @eyreland
    @eyreland 2 роки тому

    Dump ALL incumbents.
    Plants get nutrition from roots they send out underneath the 3 food wide walk path between raised beds.

  • @joebobjenkins7837
    @joebobjenkins7837 3 роки тому

    Would you prefer we watch videos via unauthorized?

  • @archenema6792
    @archenema6792 4 роки тому +1

    The Midnight Trowel makes sure the garden always has new residents. The Midnight Trowel has heard of this thing called money. The Midnight Trowel finds it amusing.

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 4 роки тому

      So David, I was going to call you after making this comment, but my phone has erased the call log from last summer, and I didn't save you to contacts so I could avoid the temptation to annoy you.
      I'll try to email you, probably from a new address. I do want to send you something free from internet middleman tax, and I do want to reserve a copy of that new 2nd edition, free from Bezos tax. The rest of the week will be extremely busy, so I'll probably try on the weekend.🙂

  • @MovingMountainsMM
    @MovingMountainsMM 2 роки тому

    Regarding compost you said “as long as you keep the smell down”… how do you do that??

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  2 роки тому +2

      We just cover the stinky stuff with more brown material: leaves, dry grass clippings, wood chips, shredded paper, that sort of thing. Even a thin layer is effective.

  • @karricompton
    @karricompton 2 роки тому

    If I dig on my land, all I get is sand. We don’t have nice brown dirt like you do. So we have to buy it.

  • @Yaqeen2013
    @Yaqeen2013 4 роки тому +1

    Have you tried no till bed? Charles Dowding has proven it works. No back breaking :-)

  • @robinlillian9471
    @robinlillian9471 4 роки тому +3

    Easier way that doesn't require child labor: Cover the area of your choice with black plastic/row cover. Weigh down with rocks or bricks. After a couple of months, take off the covering & see dead grass. Make a few holes, and plant something big & sturdy like pumpkins or zucchini. Cover over the rest of the area with newspaper or cardboard (never did cardboard) and cover it with a thick layer of mulch. Next year after it is all broken down, hoe it really well to be sure to kill what is left of the grass. If you want to grow enough to feed yourself right away, I suggest renting heavy equipment for a couple of days to till up your garden.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  4 роки тому

      Yes, I have done both of those. Good methods. Plastic cover works best in the heat of summer.

  • @spanky4244
    @spanky4244 Рік тому +1

    “I’m tired of digging grandpa” “well that’s too damn bad” lots of work is no joke I just double dug eight 24’ beds this year.. first year no till.. I wish my starting soil looked as good as yours but I’ll get there

  • @kkjaved
    @kkjaved 6 місяців тому

    I get the same results without tilling at all. Tilling destroys the soil structure.

  • @nancyfahey7518
    @nancyfahey7518 4 роки тому

    You mentioned sour milk so I got my container of organic milk and added it to my sweet smelling compost tea. Big mistake. Phew!

  • @gailjohnson2106
    @gailjohnson2106 3 роки тому

    How often should I water my compost?

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- 2 роки тому

      When it’s dry. It should be good and moist but not soggy. When I get the pitchfork out and flip/and mix it. I hose the layers down. Been composting for YEARS. My gardens ALWAYS have good homemade compost. in summer I make hot compost and it’s awesome. 👍 Good luck!

  • @carolgreenhill5684
    @carolgreenhill5684 2 роки тому

    I wished I could put these practices into immediate action. Unfortunately the land I live on there is absolutely no way to create good soil to grow in without bringing in loads of soils and supplements. My ground is cement hard , compacted so hard that allows no water infiltration that must be pick axed tiny bits at a time. It is disappointing

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  2 роки тому

      Is it possible to grow a mixed cover crop on top of it? A wide range of seeds and root types may break it up. Adding gypsum can help flocculate it as well.

    • @carolgreenhill5684
      @carolgreenhill5684 2 роки тому

      @@davidthegood I can't penetrate the ground except with pickaxe. Then the ground flies into tiny particles and you have to add soil of some kind, but it won't hold water. Another problem I have is all the property is on a steep decline. Any bits of humus or other substrate that has broken down washes away. I gave Never been able to germinate seed

    • @carolgreenhill5684
      @carolgreenhill5684 2 роки тому

      @@Jacob41C I dont know how to figure out the degree of steepness. I can tell you that unless I get light sprinkles from the sky, the water runs off.

  • @christianmistieburris7931
    @christianmistieburris7931 4 роки тому

    I'm in FL as well (SWFL)... are you really planting lettuce in June??

  • @sharonross4535
    @sharonross4535 3 роки тому

    Are you living in Florida now?

  • @minkoil00
    @minkoil00 2 роки тому +1

    41:48 planed parenthood be like

  • @Gran-T
    @Gran-T Рік тому

    May I have a link to your daughter's seed store. Thank you.

  • @artstamper316
    @artstamper316 Рік тому

    Why do your links have 404 errors?

  • @lll8638
    @lll8638 4 роки тому +1

    Wait where does he live

  • @celiawatsom5091
    @celiawatsom5091 Рік тому

    😊

  • @christianeniss5768
    @christianeniss5768 Рік тому

    I like seeing working so hard, oh no ......lol
    I personally prefer a much easier way.......lol

  • @brianreinhardt7907
    @brianreinhardt7907 3 роки тому

    I like your hat. Can I buy your hat?

  • @keansalzer8364
    @keansalzer8364 2 роки тому

    Watching this during a burp break at Golden Corral. Going to have to build a four foot pathway between beds. Do they sell chocolate ice cream seeds? Didn't realize people are stocking gold. I have a basement full of Hershey bars to trade if it all goes to hell. For ammo I have a slingshot and roasted Macadamia nuts covered in sea salt. Grew up shooting a slingshot. I may have to rethink my life because of this video. Oooohhh they just brought out the glazed ham and stuffing. Got to go.

  • @qtzt8278
    @qtzt8278 4 роки тому

    👍💖

  • @ryankahlor3563
    @ryankahlor3563 3 роки тому

    And you can compost your enemies

  • @shlomovenezia101
    @shlomovenezia101 2 роки тому

    just like decorateing a pizza

  • @mikec6111
    @mikec6111 5 місяців тому

    Really fat guy here, I like at least 3ft.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  5 місяців тому +1

      I went keto and lost my extra weight. Carnivore works too. Thank you.

  • @juknjp421
    @juknjp421 3 роки тому

    lol nobody thats FAT is going to be garden weeding or any kind of weeding for that matter, its Golden Coral, then couch and TV! once again @DavidTheGood LMFAO

    • @DenimBlueRue
      @DenimBlueRue 4 місяці тому

      I'm fat and I love gardening. I make compost, I use hand tools. I rarely eat out because of my food allergies to tomatoes, potatoes, almonds and pecans. Some of us are fat because our metabolisms are broken from decades of eating commercially grown crops and listening to big pharma to handle the problems caused by the food. We garden because growing our own food is the only way to stay healthy. That, and it's so much cleaner than watching TV!

  • @michaele.4702
    @michaele.4702 3 роки тому

    Ill bet you $50 I can teach people how to start a vegi garden cheaper then you.

  • @gershhayes796
    @gershhayes796 2 роки тому +11

    Man, this video is 2 years old, but it's one of my favorite.
    I show this to anyone that has a lot of questions about gardening in Florida. Thank you.

  • @jeremysaunders9003
    @jeremysaunders9003 4 роки тому +15

    Great video, my friend told his son he will grow him anything he wants, I can’t wait to see his beef burger 🍔 plant. 😆

  • @kjrchannel1480
    @kjrchannel1480 4 роки тому +14

    I have had the displeasure of seeing hordes of earwigs chomping all my plants they could eat at night. There are also times when you can have dozens of starts from seed packets that don't have a home because some seeds are more viable after a few years than one might think. Although Beefsteak tomato's are quite boring to grow compared to multicolored varieties, you get far more seeds in a packet that can last for a few years in my case.

  • @leadsmith5873
    @leadsmith5873 2 роки тому +8

    This has to be one of the most useful videos I've ever seen. Thank you for this great video. Also, I really appreciate how you take care of your tools and treat them with care.

  • @myfuturepuglife
    @myfuturepuglife 2 роки тому +15

    Right! I started out with a couple rotting landscaping timbers and a few bricks and rocks. I didn't know what I was doing anyway but I learned some very valuable lessons the first year, and the second year. I'm in my third growing season and I still love it and I LOVE the always learning part!

    • @kathychatty7017
      @kathychatty7017 Рік тому +1

      But what if it is your personal soil

    • @myfuturepuglife
      @myfuturepuglife Рік тому +1

      @@kathychatty7017 We started our first garden in the front yard. It was mostly clay under 3 to four inches of top soil and grass in our front lawn. It was a lot of work but we started with our native soil and just kept learning more about how to make your own soil GOOD soil to grow in. You got this!

  • @coreyellerbe
    @coreyellerbe 4 роки тому +11

    HOW DARE YOU TILL THE GROUND!!!!!!!!!

  • @homesteadrevivals
    @homesteadrevivals 2 роки тому +7

    At the very least, it's nice to fit a wheel barrow between beds. In our case, as we age, we've grown to appreciate being able to get a riding mower pulling a trailer between plantings.

    • @AuntNutmeg
      @AuntNutmeg 11 місяців тому

      How wide might that be (the riding mower and trailer, I mean)? My husband and I (60 and 58) are shopping for our homestead property. I expect we will be moving in the next 3 to 9 months. I'm considering how I want to tackle getting beds in for food and herbs. Yes, most of those decisions will depend upon the property itself, but I'm thinking about spacing and whatnot now. That way when I'm all excited to get going I don't put things too close together!

  • @deestupi
    @deestupi 4 роки тому +23

    "You can hit the golden corral then come home and weed" lol it's like you know me

  • @ausfoodgarden
    @ausfoodgarden 4 роки тому +11

    I normally space the beds just an inch or 2 wider than my lawnmower,
    Works well for me
    And it's great to see you putting an edge on your tools.
    That was the most useful lesson my grandfather ever taught me 😊

  • @janicesgarden5748
    @janicesgarden5748 4 роки тому +10

    Thanks David this is the way I garden. Although I don't need to start or break up new soil anymore.
    And love composting.

  • @GrandmasFoodGarden
    @GrandmasFoodGarden 2 роки тому +5

    Thanks for both the education & humor!😂

  • @vonries
    @vonries 3 роки тому +7

    I see you like a modified version of the "French bio intensive" method except the sod and plant spacing. I like the original, version myself, to each their own. But your still getting it good and deep. I know a lot of people are going to a no dig method, but I like it deep at least the first year.

  • @annamccosker7878
    @annamccosker7878 Рік тому +4

    Oh-m-geesh!! I was cracking up laughing when your sweet little girl was working with the shovel! You are so funny, love your sense of humor. 😊

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Рік тому +2

      She is really a great helper - thank you.

  • @MarielasSister
    @MarielasSister 4 роки тому +7

    Another benefit to growing seeds is that there are different varieties easily available vs transplants.

  • @puraairbnb
    @puraairbnb 2 роки тому +3

    Learning so much for this videos.

  • @o.o1163
    @o.o1163 3 роки тому +7

    Having your daughter help is exactly what you should do💐🤗. I've got 3 grandsons and they help me too

  • @carolynsteele5116
    @carolynsteele5116 4 роки тому +7

    This was great, simple and to the point! I love your videos and your jokes.

  • @shashakeeleh5468
    @shashakeeleh5468 Рік тому +2

    Hi Dave! Meant to ask how long is that machete blade? I need a good machete but because my arms are short, I'm limited. (I'm catching up on all your videos. Been sick with Lyme flairs during that virus thingy, which I did NOT get.)

  • @amandathurston2720
    @amandathurston2720 2 роки тому +3

    You can DIY a wick system, put a bucket with holes with a piece of cloth hanging out, and a slightly larger solid bucket with extra fertilizer water! And you have a self wicking system

  • @danielmarkworth2072
    @danielmarkworth2072 2 роки тому +5

    I’m an Australian currently living in Canada, Ontario. I enjoy your channel. You have said you have lived in most growing climates. Have you lived / grown in a Tundra climate? Do you know of any gardeners you can recommend living in a zone 4-5 on UA-cam/books to study? Thanks David.

  • @johnnyroadcrew3841
    @johnnyroadcrew3841 4 роки тому +6

    Enjoyed the lesson and yes most of those things are in my journey here in the UK. Not all but a lot. Still longing to learn more though. Lovage (Levisticum officinale) is a nice one to grow.
    PS How did you know about my torture implements?

  • @wilma6181
    @wilma6181 2 роки тому +3

    Love watching. One question can this be done in haed clay that can be used to pave the highways and last forever.

  • @NaturalMysticRetreatCenter
    @NaturalMysticRetreatCenter 4 роки тому +4

    Really got me exited about breakin out the old ho i keep in the dusty closet with the torture equipment

  • @Beltloop29
    @Beltloop29 2 роки тому +3

    You are a good man David the Good.

  • @domesticgoddess5584
    @domesticgoddess5584 3 роки тому +3

    Why all this hard work when cardboard and layering is so easy?

    • @ramz1455
      @ramz1455 2 роки тому +1

      No dig is a good method but thats if you have enough compost to make a bed or two. Here you can some compost to the tilled ground and worm castinga if you have it

  • @jolyanpratt2350
    @jolyanpratt2350 4 роки тому +5

    I just. Love what you do and you inspire me to do more Thank you David.