The Lazy Gardener's Spring Checklist | Do These 10 Things NOW!

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  • Опубліковано 18 тра 2024
  • 10 tasks to get your NO weeding, NO watering, spring garden started right, the lazy way...This video is brought to you by Squarespace. For a 10% discount at launch go to www.squarespace.com/anneofall...
    ****************************************************************
    Link to my video on composting 101: • How to Create FAIL-PRO...
    0:00 Intro
    0:50 Rake pathways
    1:19 Lay cardboard
    1:46 Lay mulch (and lots of it)
    2:47 Composting correctly
    3:48 Amend soil
    5:43 Use mushrooms
    10:33 Use what you got to get where you need to go
    11:04 Plant diversity
    14:22 Plant late
    15:34 Plant correct depth
    16:24 Most chaotic ad read ever
    17:38 Grow forth and prosper (with an unplanned surprise)
    Click here to support on Patreon: / anneofalltrades
    MORE ABOUT ME
    I'm Anne of All Trades. In NASHVILLE, I have a woodworking, blacksmithing and fabrication shop, a selection of furry friends, and an organic farm. Whether you've got the knowledge, tools, time or space to do the things you've always wanted to do, everything is "figureoutable."
    I became "Anne of All Trades" out of necessity. With no background in farming or making things, I wanted to learn to raise my own food, fix things when they break and build the things I need.
    12 years ago I got my first pet, planted my first seed and picked up my first tool.
    My goal is to learn and share traditional techniques and skills while showing my peers how to get from where they are to where they want to go, how to do the things they are passionate about, and what can be done TODAY to engage their own community and grow deep roots.
    Whether it's carving spoons, making my own hand tools, restoring my antique truck or growing heirloom tomatoes, the farm and workshop definitely keep me busy and support - whether financially through Patreon, through shopping my affiliate links, through buying merchandise, plans or project videos, or even just liking, commenting, and sharing my content with others helps me GREATLY to keep producing quality content to share.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 659

  • @sherikormoczy1422
    @sherikormoczy1422 Місяць тому +12

    So I’m new to gardening and never used mulch before. You said never to use mulch that’s not broken down on garden bed so as one that’s starting out would you recommend I used bagged mulch on the garden bed and then in the pathways use the mulch I can get from tree servicing co? At least to start out that way for this first year?

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +27

      Start a Lazy Garden From Scratch | NEVER Weed/Water Again!
      ua-cam.com/video/hfBSgHgcSc4/v-deo.html
      In case you didn’t catch the video above, the answer to your question is actually that you totally can use arborist chips the first year on top of your garden, but I recommend you screen them first so you can weed out the larger wood pieces, and mix your screened chips about 50/50 with compost.
      What I mean by screening is to build a square wood frame just a little bit bigger than your wheelbarrow and secure a piece of galvanized hardware cloth with 1/4” or 1/2” square holes in the bottom of the frame using 1/2” staples. It’s best if the frame is at least a few inches deep. Lay the frame wire side down over your wheelbarrow and put a couple shovels worth of woodchips into the screen. Shuffle the screen back and forth over your wheelbarrow so that the woodchips smaller than the holes in the wire fall down into the wheelbarrow. Use the larger chips leftover for your pathways and the smaller chips that collect in the bottom of the wheelbarrow as your mulch on top of the garden beds.

    • @gracewoods5322
      @gracewoods5322 Місяць тому +9

      I use mulched leaves on my beds around my plants. I mow the leaves and dump it in a location I can scoop from. The bottom is usually back to soil by the time I get to it.

    • @liebekatz1
      @liebekatz1 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@AnneofAllTrades I am looking forward to the next video. I am working on a garden from scratch. I haven't planted one in 3 years, so I am starting over.😒

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +3

      @@liebekatz1 we’ll get you started off right.

    • @plips71755
      @plips71755 Місяць тому +3

      You are absolutely correct. These folks are checking their data with any number of university horticultural agricultural departments. There is tons of information, all people have to do is read and not listen to people who don’t know what they are doing. Please folks.
      Now where wood ash can be used in small amounts to increase calcium etc and raise alkalinity levels - do it with advice of a proper soil sample sent through your local county extension service for like $8-$12. Every county in the US has one. You get the boxes, instructions etc to collect and send off.

  • @teebob21
    @teebob21 Місяць тому +132

    Note to newbie gardeners: Lazy gardening only works if you do the hard work up front. Great video; great information.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +54

      Truth, but if you think about the compounding nature of weeding and watering over time, one afternoon of work instead of an entire season of daily chores doesn't really seem that "hard" to me.

    • @happyhobbit8450
      @happyhobbit8450 Місяць тому +16

      It's a mind set -- think of how you can give your future self a gift ... do the preventive measures now so it's easier in the future

    • @mercurybard9794
      @mercurybard9794 Місяць тому +6

      @@AnneofAllTrades I'm trying to apply this and see if "lazy gardening" methods work for "disabled gardening". I've got days where I have all the spoons (i.e. energy and manageable pain) in the world followed by weeks of barely making it to the office and back. I'm usually useless for the month of August due to the heat and humidity here in the Midwest. My hope is that if I put in the work now constructing my beds and mulching them before I can even put plants in the ground, it'll be able to tide me thru the rougher patches.

    • @svetlanapil8089
      @svetlanapil8089 Місяць тому +3

      I love that part of it. I'm working hard right now growing soil that we didn't have from the beginning. Collecting every organic debris I can lay my hands on, building beds out of it dragging all this material around the yard that in the future I hope to call a garden without any hesitation. This year I have a large area that is ready to be planted. I'm dreading it a little bit not sure if some of the soil is really ready or it might be a big flop for this year. I know that in the following years it will get better for sure.

    • @TM.BECK14
      @TM.BECK14 22 дні тому +1

      ​@@mercurybard9794As a fellow spoonie I'll say methods like what Anne uses have really helped me a lot 🖤 Some days I have more energy and focus than others and I try to really use those times to my advantage to set up systems and accomplish tasks that will help me in the future when I can physically or mentally spend little to no time/energy. I'm still (sometimes painfully slowly) setting up my garden/yard to be anything useful but I know that once it's fully established things will be way easier to deal with.

  • @andrewsprout9281
    @andrewsprout9281 Місяць тому +129

    You could make this video once a season every year and I would absolutely watch them all 👍

  • @mercurybard9794
    @mercurybard9794 Місяць тому +25

    I use old shower curtains to drag things around the property -- compost mixes, tree trimmings, etc. -- like you use that kiddy pool. (Heck, if you look up my house on Google Maps, the current satellite picture was snapped while I must have been trimming the front bushes because you can see the shower curtain I was loading branches on clear as day. 😅)

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +1

      Hahaha that’s so smart. Sometimes I use tarps in a similar way

    • @bennym1956
      @bennym1956 Місяць тому

      Old, small tarps work great also !

    • @TM.BECK14
      @TM.BECK14 22 дні тому +1

      I often use tarps to do that but honestly that's a great use for old shower curtains that usually just end up in the landfill! Plus then I wouldn't risk tearing up a good tarp by dragging it around.

  • @viniciusnoyoutube
    @viniciusnoyoutube Місяць тому +82

    I'm lazy, now I just need a garden.

    • @sandycrum2020
      @sandycrum2020 Місяць тому

      😂

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  23 дні тому

      Start a Lazy Garden From Scratch | NEVER Weed/Water Again!
      ua-cam.com/video/hfBSgHgcSc4/v-deo.html

  • @tommielourogers4327
    @tommielourogers4327 22 дні тому +8

    I love that you promote the use of mushrooms in the garden.

  • @lauralinash5341
    @lauralinash5341 25 днів тому +13

    I started using cardboard 3 years ago when I learned about no till gardening with Charles Dowding. Didn't realize how much tilling disturbs the microbes, worms, and critters in the soil. I'm learning more and more about fungi, mycelium. Didn't realize that the white on the mulch was actually beneficial. Thank you for all the excellent advice! Happy "lazy" gardening!😄

    • @TM.BECK14
      @TM.BECK14 22 дні тому

      Same, years ago I literally used to get rid of mulch and soil that had that mysterious "white stuff" on it because I thought it was contaminated with something bad that would hurt my garden/yard ecosystem. I'm really glad I've learned better since.

  • @gracewoods5322
    @gracewoods5322 Місяць тому +42

    I asked the old timer at the feed store what he thought about the projected last frost date and planting. He said, "End of April/early May. If you put them in before that, they'll be chibberin' in the soil and won't grow as well once it is warm. I've seen em. You can see em just chibberin'. 😂

    • @mousepolice55
      @mousepolice55 21 день тому +3

      Old timers are the best. They have wisdom and will spill it all over you any way they see fit. No cares given. 😂

  • @lynndifer4163
    @lynndifer4163 Місяць тому +33

    ... it had never occurred to me that I could rake the pathway woodchips that had been breaking down all winter onto my beds to add easy decomposed matter to my soil. I had just been dumping new wood chips on top of my paths over and over as the mulch slowing "disappeared". I'll be going out in to my garden right now, that you

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +4

      That makes my heart sing

    • @danarzechula3769
      @danarzechula3769 Місяць тому

      Poor Lucy no water in the pool. No wonder she's cranky😂

    • @cherylcawood
      @cherylcawood Місяць тому +2

      Me too! Need to get to my allotment right now to fix this. Thanks​@AnneofAllTrades amazing video. I love you .. blueberries I stole from the forest 😂

  • @eedeescottagegarden
    @eedeescottagegarden Місяць тому +32

    I found this way of gardening a couple years ago. I now grow beautiful flowers and food not lawn. Glad I found you.

  • @ruthcalsada1440
    @ruthcalsada1440 24 дні тому +6

    This style of gardening has been a life saver for me.

  • @dozensides
    @dozensides Місяць тому +7

    I reckon a green thumb is inherited. I’ve noticed that I don’t get well received when I give a thumb up. This lady is bonafide and true. She is an ordinate source of good produce.

  • @TheUncarvedBlock
    @TheUncarvedBlock Місяць тому +26

    I love how curious the animals get while you're filming. So much fun.

  • @hummingbirdforestgardens
    @hummingbirdforestgardens Місяць тому +28

    I just dug my walkways into my rows today - it was glorious. The soil is getting more and more beautiful every year from this very same practice. :) Agreed.

  • @RustyBobbins
    @RustyBobbins Місяць тому +11

    I love this idea of transferring the old chips to the beds and then putting new chips in the patches!

  • @colleenrodamer9497
    @colleenrodamer9497 Місяць тому +20

    I compost everything meat eggs feathers I mean everything over the years this has served me well plus wood chips I’m good so far I’ve gardened since I was 11 I’m 67 now I’m just saying

    • @Brittanysplittany
      @Brittanysplittany Місяць тому +1

      Do you have any tips?

    • @stevescuba1978
      @stevescuba1978 Місяць тому

      ​@@Brittanysplittanyshe gave one....compost everything

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  23 дні тому +1

      @@Brittanysplittany How to Create FAIL-PROOF Compost in 3 Easy Steps
      ua-cam.com/video/zm7lRB-hZ5Q/v-deo.html

  • @jociahsonranch
    @jociahsonranch Місяць тому +16

    I love watching watching your lazy gardening videos. I love the fact that you are not wearing gloves either.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +19

      You’ve gotta touch the soil with your skin to get the mental health benefits it has to offer ;)

    • @jociahsonranch
      @jociahsonranch Місяць тому +4

      @@AnneofAllTrades I love it.

    • @SimplethingswithTamiVlogs
      @SimplethingswithTamiVlogs Місяць тому +3

      @@AnneofAllTrades exactly! It like earthing with your hands instead of feet!!

    • @nancysalerno7036
      @nancysalerno7036 Місяць тому

      In Europe they now want gardeners to wear masks to protect them from the soil. I thought it was well established that children who did not play in the soil were more sickly. Just one among many things they are getting wrong lately.

    • @danarzechula3769
      @danarzechula3769 Місяць тому +2

      I try so hard but my hands need dirt😂

  • @JohnThompson-en2er
    @JohnThompson-en2er 20 днів тому +2

    watching you from Az and even with or without rain we get weeds. Love your garden video. Trying to find my way through grief and love your videos. Huge thank you

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  19 днів тому

      Oh buddy. I’m so sorry you’re grieving. Howdy Donkey sends a big hug.

  • @sabrinaruth4858
    @sabrinaruth4858 25 днів тому +3

    That is the system I use …..put free wood chips in pathways, then use it in your planting areas when the chips have broken all down. Works perfect!!!!
    Love your gardens!

  • @Circuit_Design_Services
    @Circuit_Design_Services Місяць тому +14

    Planting late is something that we're just now learning :-) We always waited for the weekend after the "last frost", but then a couple weeks later things die off from the cold! We're waiting until June to plant tomatoes this year!

    • @JennieZ42
      @JennieZ42 Місяць тому +3

      The farmers almanac site will tell you the perfect days to plant everything for your zip code! Last frost dates can be deceptive because that's just less than like a 50% probability. it can still get too cold for certain plants.

    • @DoubleQz
      @DoubleQz Місяць тому +2

      Farmes almanac for my zone said 4/7/24 is last frost date but I'm going to wait until at least 4/22/24 to start.

    • @drhoy15
      @drhoy15 22 дні тому +1

      The method that I use is to look at ‘marker’ plants. Wild things like dandelion and clover. If they are flowering you know that it’s warm enough to plant. It doesn’t make sense to use calendar dates, they have nothing to do with how warm (or cold) it is. The plants ‘know’, the farmers almanac is just a light hearted suggestion based on previous history. Or you could be really scientific and use a soil thermometer that’s 6” long or a compost thermometer that’s 2’ long. Possibly even average the 2 temperatures. If soil is 10C you can plant everything except the ‘tropicals’ - tomatoes, peppers, squash etc.

  • @soulspaces
    @soulspaces Місяць тому +7

    This is how we do it!! We hardly ever spend money on our garden. It’s the best.

  • @rainspirit3973
    @rainspirit3973 Місяць тому +7

    Yes! Wow! She’s a great American example for everyone. Beautiful work. Labor of love.

  • @alexhuxley3355
    @alexhuxley3355 Місяць тому +19

    ....and your are not disturbing the planting bed either, not turning it upside down is good for the soil. Just top it up each year. People think the roots go really deep but most plants are very shallow

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +7

      Yeah tillage is simply not the way for longevity of soil health or nutritional availability for plants

    • @melanipalmer9517
      @melanipalmer9517 Місяць тому +2

      You ROCK!! Thank you so much!

  • @puckerfist6621
    @puckerfist6621 Місяць тому +19

    I got a truck load of mushroom spawn and spred it all over the garden,yard, and surrounding forest!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +1

      Good on ya

    • @Daedal71
      @Daedal71 Місяць тому +1

      Our wood chips seem to be naturally seeded with Inky Cap spawn. They're dainty and beautiful - and then they're NOT! (They turn into zombie mushrooms)

    • @drhoy15
      @drhoy15 22 дні тому

      Yes mushrooms compost is a great product if you can get it:)

  • @deneseburrell
    @deneseburrell Місяць тому +15

    Thank you for confirming my practices of procrastination and Hügelkultur, which basically means I dump all the old sticks, branches, leaves, sawdust, food scraps, and flower garden trimmings into my food garden every year. Going on 3 years of yummy food~

  • @zlatanfazlagic
    @zlatanfazlagic Місяць тому +26

    “Your show is fantastic! During your discussion about mycelium aiding soil aeration, it jogged my memory. After I mulched my garden with wood chips, I observed a significant increase in earthworms-a multitude of them! This spring, when I planted trees, I was pleasantly surprised by how quickly my soil transformed. The earthworms turned the once compact lawn into a light, fluffy soil that I’m confident plants will thrive in.”

    • @bradyndupree9205
      @bradyndupree9205 Місяць тому +4

      The holes they make and dead material they eat creates the perfect environment for plant roots to take hold. Their secretion is phenomenal for the plants too! You sir are winning.

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp Місяць тому

      Wait did you put bark on your lawn?

    • @bradyndupree9205
      @bradyndupree9205 Місяць тому

      @Padraigp I'm assuming he mulched his garden beds and the worms have worked their way through the grass maybe between beds or even just multiplying.

    • @zlatanfazlagic
      @zlatanfazlagic Місяць тому +4

      I got the wood chips from arborists just like Anne does. I covered my lawn with them almost foot high. Warms converted it to most beautiful planting soil within months. I can now plant veggies anywhere I want. Also I found no difference between areas I used cardboard over the grass and where I put chips directly so I would skip cardboard if you have enough chips. BTW a year later the chips have settled and decomposed to only a few inches thick layer.

    • @Padraigp
      @Padraigp Місяць тому

      @@zlatanfazlagic ah perfect ok. Thats a lot of bark so i dunno if I can do that deep but i am putting down a fake lawn for my aunt so if i put bark underneath then in a few years it might be decent again. The soil went to shite when the planes above started dropping poison and my aunt isn't a gardener so she didn't know to put anything like compost. Its grey dust now. So hopefully this will work out will help the weeds as well so finger crossed. Thanks for the tip.

  • @jennifermcalchemy9816
    @jennifermcalchemy9816 Місяць тому +4

    I love your advice, style and energy. Thanks.

  • @edgeofentropy3492
    @edgeofentropy3492 Місяць тому +5

    Laying down heavy mulch in the pathways, letting it break down over time, then raking it up on top of where you plant...that's a pretty good system .
    14:31 I live in Tennessee, so this is pretty accurate.
    16:02 Something I'm willing to live with versus hearing this in the inner city.

  • @user-nv5xv2ec2n
    @user-nv5xv2ec2n Місяць тому +5

    Fantastic guide indeed. Educational and straight to the point no BS. Thank You…✌🏽🙌

  • @fewferfev
    @fewferfev Місяць тому +9

    I love the idea of mixing the seed. Going to have to try that one in at least half my garden to experiment. ;). I did plant my tomatoes early because I hate working in the heat. Oh well.

  • @carolinekloppert5177
    @carolinekloppert5177 Місяць тому +3

    12 Seasons...! I feel you, coming from a peninsula swept by winds off the southern oceans !

  • @ericholljes9143
    @ericholljes9143 11 днів тому

    Love this one too!! I can't wait until I have some land and can actually take advantage of all this wisdom you share. You rock!

  • @JennieZ42
    @JennieZ42 Місяць тому +9

    Well this is my new favorite garden channel. I call myself "lazy" at work because I'll do extra effort to set me up to do less in the long run... So your method really speaks to me!
    Adding mushroom spores is genius. Is there a certain time of year that's best to do that step? I am somewhere between "the pollening" and "actual spring" 😂

  • @youmebornfree
    @youmebornfree Місяць тому +4

    Anne I have watched you here and there over the years and recently found your content again. I have to say you are an amazing woman. I don't see much of your husband but I hope yall are growing well together. I watched last years live announcement recently and that is the most of seen of him. He seems like a good dude. Yall seem like great friends. Relationships are work and so is homesteading so I can imagine at times throughout it can be difficult but finding your way back to that innocent connection that was the start of it all is so important. I wish yall well.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +11

      Thanks so much for the kind words of encouragement! Though we are now working together, Adam isn't *in* many of the videos because more often than not, he is behind the camera, and he prefers it that way. Since leaving his corporate job he does have more flexibility to help with farm projects on occasion when asked, it still isn't his favorite way to spend his time or energy, so I try not to ask more often than I need to, which honestly, isn't often. While anyone who has been married would be the first to tell you marriage is hard, I think one of the secrets to a healthy relationship is learning one another's strengths and weaknesses and working together to use both in whatever ways possible to benefit the whole. It's healthy to have separate interests, up to the point that they don't create separate lives. That's probably the most difficult and valuable lesson we've learned throughout our marriage.

    • @youmebornfree
      @youmebornfree Місяць тому +3

      @@AnneofAllTrades I appreciate you taking the time out of all your chores... I kinda feel guilty for even commenting in a way that might cause you to respond. I like the viewpoint of being "equally yoked" with your core beliefs. If those are different then its a difficult road to travel. If aligned than you can get anywhere. I am looking to buy land in the next month... I can't wait to start a homestead... I have a big to do list but only way to get there is one step at a time. Again thanks for your time Anne.

  • @kanewilton9708
    @kanewilton9708 Місяць тому +8

    Thanks for existing! Also to the UA-cam community!

  • @user-wg7ew7dn1n
    @user-wg7ew7dn1n Місяць тому +9

    We have three guinea pigs. The bedding is pine chips and when we clean them and change it all of it goes into the gardens--continuously. Once a year I do what you are showing here for my food garden beds--I rake off the mulch and top off the soil underneath and put the piggy mulch back. Then I cardboard the walkways and mulch with piggy mulch (we clean their cages 2-4 times a month--their cages are 4sq' and 6sq'--so LOTS of mulch.)
    The mulch is full of their poop and hay so we get extra goodness. Keeping piggies for pets or food or both is all around a great thing to do.

    • @mousepolice55
      @mousepolice55 21 день тому

      I didn't know people eat guinea pigs. Have you? Does it taste like chicken? (Just kidding) Seriously though, I honestly didn't know you could eat the guinea pigs. I'm going to have to look into that.

    • @user-wg7ew7dn1n
      @user-wg7ew7dn1n 20 днів тому

      @@mousepolice55 its big business in South America!

  • @ferchichiadam9560
    @ferchichiadam9560 Місяць тому +3

    I have been watching gardening videos for ages, I have never witnessed one as well explained as this, I really enjoyed it so thank you so much. Now I will go and watch the rest of your videos 😊. Saluts from Tunisia 🇹🇳

  • @kathleenomalley7838
    @kathleenomalley7838 Місяць тому +5

    Not to mention the additional uptake of carbon in the air, your type of gardening is great for decarbonization and healthier air quality.

  • @DuaneMckenzie80
    @DuaneMckenzie80 Місяць тому +3

    I love the mushroom idea. Thats a great idea for all that dead space!!

  • @patriciahogg5763
    @patriciahogg5763 Місяць тому +7

    Thanks for sharing!
    Love your energy!!!
    🌺🌸🌺🌸

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 Місяць тому +3

    We have been blessed with arborist chips beyond my imagination and now I need an end loader 😂.
    I garden in ground because it’s so dry here and dug the paths down initially and filled them with bark. It’s helped tremendously and now we are finally seeing worms 💃👏🏼💃👏🏼.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  23 дні тому

      If you haven’t already discovered this tip: use a 16 prong hay fork instead of a shovel moving mulch. You’ll realize pretty quickly you don’t actually need an end loader (though having one would be nice)

  • @patriciacinea3097
    @patriciacinea3097 Місяць тому

    What a relief! I've been saving the cardboard over the winter!

  • @Joni.b.
    @Joni.b. Місяць тому +2

    I am so very happy that your channel appeared in my feed! Fantastic!

  • @michelehumpartzoomian4383
    @michelehumpartzoomian4383 27 днів тому +1

    So happy I found you, I’m also a lazy gardener. Thank you for sharing your knowledge 🌱🌱🌱

  • @Daedal71
    @Daedal71 Місяць тому +54

    Please save yourself MORE work: drive your wheelbarrow on the bare cardboard to the end of the row, THEN dump it, so you don't have to drive in the uncompacted wood chips. Much easier!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +31

      Hahaha brilliant save there 😂😂 I often notice things like that when watching videos back and am like… what the heck was I doing??

    • @Daedal71
      @Daedal71 Місяць тому

      @@AnneofAllTrades 😅

  • @briannalarsen3601
    @briannalarsen3601 Місяць тому

    This was so incredibly in depth, yet concise. You're going to be my new favorite gardening channel! Thanks for sharing your wisdom!

  • @ontariogardening
    @ontariogardening Місяць тому +4

    My motto in life: work smarter, not harder! Great tips :)

  • @djk0125
    @djk0125 17 днів тому

    Thanks for all your explanation! I absolutely appreciate your channel! Thank you!

  • @johndoh5182
    @johndoh5182 Місяць тому +9

    The ONLY issue with cardboard is if it has coatings on it or colored ink. Typical cardboard boxes with black ink or very little colored ink is great to use, as in it's beneficial to the garden, as in it's excellent for these walkways and it's also used for some no-dig techniques.

    • @oldauntzibby4395
      @oldauntzibby4395 Місяць тому +4

      I think it's good to sort cardboard, discard the shiny coated layers, pull off tape and pull out staples. It may take a bit longer but it's worth it in the long run.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +2

      I wholeheartedly agree

    • @lizcox7286
      @lizcox7286 Місяць тому

      My cardboard hack is to leave them outside for a while especially if it’s raining. All of the tape becomes loose or dry and is easily pulled off. It also is more pliable to place in your garden bed or path

  • @beatcat1265
    @beatcat1265 Місяць тому +1

    Yay perfect video i need!! Im starting to move away from container gardening and raised beds and do exactly what you are doing!

  • @leemichaeljenkins7060
    @leemichaeljenkins7060 Місяць тому +2

    This idea I can learn to love .
    Great stuff and easy to follow

  • @rocosummers8045
    @rocosummers8045 23 дні тому

    Wow. So much accurate and well researched stuff. Had never watched a presenter making so much sense.

  • @ilovemichigan-1111
    @ilovemichigan-1111 Місяць тому

    You are my new favorite!!! Thank you so incredibly much for this! 💚🤩💯

  • @brandygibbs8189
    @brandygibbs8189 Місяць тому +1

    I really enjoy your videos. I am slowly changing to a permaculture type garden vs my raised beds. All your info is super handy. Thank you.

  • @Pros_Leo
    @Pros_Leo Місяць тому +8

    I'm just starting my own food garden this year. I'm happy to see that my very lazy sprinkling of seeds across carefully prepared garden beds is a perfectly valid technique.

    • @gracewoods5322
      @gracewoods5322 Місяць тому

      They do need to be seeds that will get along. Some plants cancel out each other's growth. That isn't to say they won't grow but that they won't do as well, will be weaker and subsequently more susceptible to pests and disease. Check into companion or guild planting. Good luck 🎉

  • @tamischmit1485
    @tamischmit1485 22 дні тому

    Ty for the info. weve had a garden but were never mindful about it. Now we live in the country and we want to plan it this time❤ this and ur channel are going to be soooo helpful

  • @Bigfoottehchipmunk
    @Bigfoottehchipmunk 20 днів тому

    So much good information and encouragement!
    Thank you.
    I planted my cabages between my rows of garlic this year. Hoping for lots of cabbages to ferment.

  • @teresehummel4502
    @teresehummel4502 Місяць тому +2

    Wow - thank you for the very concise and easy demonstration of how and where to plant wine cap spawn. Mine is waiting in my fridge for our Zone 5a spring to stay, and I LOVE how you're doing that! Huzzah for "lazy" gardening! I'm also almost ready to give up my raised bed board edges in favor of your method of walkways. 🙂 I am always so encouraged by your demeanor and your content! 💗

  • @FarmingandCookingFolkCuisine
    @FarmingandCookingFolkCuisine Місяць тому +1

    Khu vườn của bạn thật đẹp tuyệt vời ,chúng rất sạch sẽ,gọn gang ngăn lắp 👍.

  • @candiray
    @candiray Місяць тому

    First time seeing your videos and I've learned so much. This was very informative and I look forward to see how you started the garden to get it to this kind of easy maintenance level.

  • @Elianafinderfred
    @Elianafinderfred Місяць тому +2

    ❤ love this, the wood chips way of growing is not something that is widely known where I live, but it has made our berry garden soil health improve so much the past 8 months. Now the next project is our newly planned vegetable field. Our fruit trees are doing okay, properly better this year as they have been pruned for the first time in several years.

  • @stevescuba1978
    @stevescuba1978 Місяць тому

    Here i am in florida watching all my brassicas bolting from heat, and youre just getting started. I'm almost in the "too hot for most plants" season

  • @mandyloescher7627
    @mandyloescher7627 Місяць тому

    This is one of my favorite videos of yours it has changed the way I garden and love the simplicity of it. Great job

  • @deborahcox2951
    @deborahcox2951 Місяць тому

    LOVE everything you do!! Hope your hand is better and all healed!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому

      It’s probably time for another update on that, eh? It’s probably as better as it’s going to get, yep. I’ve permanently lost feeling and partial function in my thumb but I’ve found plenty of ways to adapt and am so thankful to be back to woodwork, milking cows and playing music again. Bonus, now when I smash my thumb hammering nails, I won’t even feel it anymore 😅

  • @ryp1984
    @ryp1984 Місяць тому

    thanks for this video, inspired and bought a bunch of seeds, going to make my whole back yard like this.

  • @randymartin5521
    @randymartin5521 Місяць тому +4

    We moved to AZ 3 years ago and I've built a raised planter that's 2'x4' and repurposed a 100 gallon metal trough that's basically a 2'x4' oval into another raised planter and just planted radishes, carrots, spinach and lettuce in them 3 weeks ago. I used old seeds, some of which came with us from Georgia that were dated 2018, and all have sprouted! I just thinned a few radish sprouts today. Brought the ones I pulled in, rinsed them off and ate them. Wow, those tiny little things were packed with flavor! Can't wait until they actually form radishes and I can harvest those.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому

      Good on you! Keep growing!

    • @dianeatpeace337
      @dianeatpeace337 Місяць тому

      Radish seedlings are super tasty! Call them 'Radish Microgreens' if you want to be fancy 😊

  • @trangn6564
    @trangn6564 Місяць тому +1

    Never thought of roots as transports for microbes ❤that’s so cool

  • @donnacreager8428
    @donnacreager8428 Місяць тому

    So good! I couldn’t help but dream of the day that school has an “In-Session”sign on it. Good to see your face my friend. ❤

  • @Butterflymessages
    @Butterflymessages Місяць тому

    Loved this video. Thank you Anne❤

  • @lisapieper3598
    @lisapieper3598 22 дні тому

    Excellent video, Anne! Thx for sharing!!

  • @thadhallows3911
    @thadhallows3911 Місяць тому

    Well, crap, I've been doing it for a while. I even bought a good tiller. Thanks for your valuable tips.

  • @Randyb4ut
    @Randyb4ut Місяць тому +1

    Awesome garden video. Thanks for sharing this video with us 👍.

  • @terryulmer969
    @terryulmer969 Місяць тому

    Great video. Thank you! James got me a wood chipper for Mother's Day a few years ago. I love it! ❤️

  • @Antarctica2025
    @Antarctica2025 Місяць тому +1

    Absolutely excellent! Your experience is appreciated.

  • @marilyngandhi8571
    @marilyngandhi8571 8 днів тому

    ❤👋🙂🇦🇺 Thanks for sharing your experience with us ❤

  • @TommasoScappini
    @TommasoScappini Місяць тому +1

    Here for the first time. I really like your videos. Thanks (from Italy).

  • @celeste9129
    @celeste9129 Місяць тому

    I am 51 and finally starting an in ground garden. I have endless motivation but my energy is not like it was 20 years ago. I'm learning so much from you. I've been fortunate to source a lot of supplies for minimal cost or free. I even got a garden fork for free (game changer!). Thank you for sharing your journey ❤

  • @ltlwlwl5057
    @ltlwlwl5057 Місяць тому +1

    You have a good personality. 😊

  • @celeste9129
    @celeste9129 Місяць тому +12

    Great idea with the mushroom spawn!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +10

      I’m very, very into mushrooms, stay tuned for a fairly wild video on them incoming soon :)

    • @isabellewyatt6802
      @isabellewyatt6802 Місяць тому

      I've used mushroom compost in the past and its great inexpensive option for a small garden. I've had mushrooms growing out form under a wooden stake that fell over.

  • @yovandarodgers9224
    @yovandarodgers9224 Місяць тому

    Love your energy!

  • @crushivintage
    @crushivintage Місяць тому

    Great channel. Great educational gardening videos. Lots of great advice. Thank you for spending so much time producing and sharing gardening tips with the world.

  • @debbiewedoe2564
    @debbiewedoe2564 Місяць тому +2

    Excellent video. I love lazy 🌞🌞

  • @fords_farm_5627
    @fords_farm_5627 Місяць тому +1

    I’ve been trying to figure out how to make walkways this is great!😊

  • @noalevi3240
    @noalevi3240 Місяць тому +1

    I just wanted to say .. Anne.. you are a badass. Im really enjoying your videos im inspired. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.

  • @dominickfiorenza2639
    @dominickfiorenza2639 Місяць тому

    Thanks for txt back , wish you and ur family well. I enjoy ur channel and keep up the good work, God Bless... My wife likes ur show also.

  • @andreaa8057
    @andreaa8057 Місяць тому +1

    This is my style of gardening! I call myself the haphazard gardener. I will definitely try the mushrooms!

  • @karonpowell750
    @karonpowell750 Місяць тому

    Excellent video. Thank you! It took away any confusion I may have had!

  • @equusgirl
    @equusgirl Місяць тому +1

    I love your videos! Please make more of food lazy gardening!

  • @TaylorParnell
    @TaylorParnell Місяць тому +2

    ❤❤❤❤ ADDED TO MY LIST TO DO THANK YOU ALWAYS ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @TheBarefootedGardener
    @TheBarefootedGardener Місяць тому

    So I tried the sheet mulching method on top of lawn, and it kinda worked but I still have a fair amount of turf grass. You do a fantastic job & know your stuff! Glad I did.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +3

      It takes about 2 years of cardboard and deep mulch to get rid of the grass entirely. My first year in this space I still had to use my weed eater a couple times to re-find my pathways, and then the second year there was still a small amount of grass and random weeds but by year 3 this space was pristine

    • @TheBarefootedGardener
      @TheBarefootedGardener 29 днів тому

      ⁠Good to know. Thanks @@AnneofAllTrades!

  • @betterlivingonabudget
    @betterlivingonabudget Місяць тому +9

    Love your channel! It's a huge goal to buy a home with acreage next year, and meanwhile I'm doing my best to 'city-stead, and learn all I can about the things I plan to do once God blesses me with the homestead I'm dreaming of.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +3

      That’s what I did for 6 years before we got acreage! Good on you for starting g where you’re at, with what you e got.

    • @khandonkey349
      @khandonkey349 Місяць тому +1

      Same here, I'm also a city steader! Started 4 years ago, all organic, reusing items from the neighborhood or free site and make my own compost leaf mold seaweed and a weed liquid fertilizer(I love by the ocean so seaweed is plentiful here. Basically trying to learn and make my big mistakes now so I'm ready if/when the time comes I need to grow most of not all our veggies. Last yr I learned the power of flowers, this yr I'm planting almost as many flowers as veggies! Great video enjoyed learning some new tricks and tips

  • @janettefessenden72
    @janettefessenden72 Місяць тому

    You are so inspiring and I love your content and zest for life. I just found your channel and I have already learned so much. Thank you !!!!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому

      Thank you so much! I’m so glad you’re here!

  • @tywarner9535
    @tywarner9535 Місяць тому

    Liked & subscribed. A very intelligent and creative way to share your lessons learned. Being a beautiful lady does hurt either. Thank you!

  • @maddys3955
    @maddys3955 Місяць тому

    This is great! Thank you! You are my hero 😂

  • @Charvyification
    @Charvyification 21 день тому

    Dis this yesterday thanks for the video ❤

  • @tomichelled
    @tomichelled Місяць тому +1

    I love the rounds being fired off in the background... Lol.
    It's difficult shooting for my UA-cam channel as well because I live on a busy street across the street from a fire department. I have two yappie Yorkies, And I'm right next door to a very busy business... But gunshots? That's a new one for me. Lol.
    Thank you Annie for all you do. Huge huge huge fan

  • @Qotus
    @Qotus Місяць тому +4

    Thank you for this wonderful video! I'm going to start growing on our allotment that has only 10 cm of soil and pure clay under, this will be the way I tackle that mess and build up the soil.

    • @Qotus
      @Qotus Місяць тому +3

      The only thing I wonder is that you say wood ash makes the soil more acidic, I thought it was the opposite that it makes it more alkaline?

    • @thetexianpatriot2201
      @thetexianpatriot2201 Місяць тому +1

      @@Qotusyou’re not mistaken.

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +2

      You are correct, I misspoke ;)

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому +3

      You are correct, I misspoke on the wood ash. It makes the soil more alkaline. But none of that really matters when you have fairly well balanced soil to start

    • @Qotus
      @Qotus Місяць тому +1

      @@AnneofAllTrades of course, just making sure! Our clay soil is acidic to begin with, so we use ash to bump the pH up.

  • @alexdeaver4823
    @alexdeaver4823 Місяць тому +2

    I've started to using mulched up leaves from our sycamore as a soft "mulch" and as my method improves each year I get less and less leaves. Plus I love including the path mulch migrating into the beds over time!

    • @bennym1956
      @bennym1956 Місяць тому

      Leaves and pine straw, free !!

  • @Sehemo108
    @Sehemo108 Місяць тому

    This was a great video! Even though I live in Finland, I got something out of the 12 seasons you have in Tennessee! Good luck with your efforts!

  • @rad1calreal15t
    @rad1calreal15t Місяць тому

    First time to your channel and I'm in love. Thank you for your lazy gardeners video. Started gardening after 2020s covid fiasco engulfed the world and I'm ALL in. Zone 8b here and have learned that evergreen strawberries have been my greatest success even though, haven't gotten a big yield during the first 2 years but this past winter, I left them in the raised bed covered with my huge oak trees dried leaves. They did wonderful with their runners, (with a little staking down help) produced over 50 individual plants. Not too bad from the 6 plants I started with. They are now happily residing in a 5 tier grow tower, with some sweet gem lettuce thrown in there, a 20"x40" raised bed, and finally a 6"x20" in diameter raised bed. Yields are coming through, not too much, maybe 3-4 strawberries every 1 1/2 weeks. I would have had more of a yield if it weren't for the pill bugs. They are in allll of my raised beds....they seem to thrive more in my strawberry patches. I've covered the circular bed since I have it right on the ground with some weed barrier cloths and brown paper bags as base and then filled in with raised bed potting soil and some amendments here and there from compost to strawberry fertilizer. Have been doing that in all my beds now that if they are on straight ground. I have extremely heavy clay soil here and I'm trying to use my tree's huge leaves every year to feed the areas of the garden I want to direct sow in. It's coming along nicely now. I've put some beer traps but I ain't catching enough of those rolly pollies to compromise my yield. So, I got some nylon string baggies to wrap around the strawberry as it grows and things were going well, until either a squirrel or a rabbit managed to un-string the baggie and got to the most mature one of the bunch! Now I've tied a bow to all the baggies, even the ones inside the netting dome I created over the circle strawberry patch. Any tips on pill bugs? Something that's natural. I use cold press neem oil ALOT and the Mosquito Bites (though not as much as I should). My biggest pests are : pill bugs in strawberries, gourds, lilies, snapdragons, peach tree, fungus gnats, rusting of the Carolina jessamine, leaf miners on the hollyhock leaves (hopefully this year they bloom as they are biannual) been waitin' for a hot minute, mites on carnation seedlings, beetles on roses, some type of flea, they mostly reside in the chamomile, stevia, forget me nots, I want to be lazy gardener but these pests won't let me!

    • @AnneofAllTrades
      @AnneofAllTrades  Місяць тому

      So glad you’re here! Stick around, we can help you solve most of those issues.