Thanks for watching folks & don't forget to click the subscribe button if you enjoyed the video. Share the clip around with family & friends if you think they'll enjoy it too. 🌱 🌱 Cheers all & have a top one. 😊 Rob
Rob brother could you please give me help with how to grow alots of turmeric in drum with holes, What things do i use in soil? And what distance should be maintained in plants?? Thanks
Lots of great tips Rob - we don't have any trouble growing turmeric either but you do have to abide by everything you said to grow a good crop. Cheers :)
I had things to do this morning, but now I’m watching this and after that I’m going to your main channel, and I’m not a bit sorry. Thank you for this tutorial, you have an excellent way of making everything sound simple and stress-free!
Excellent! Thank you. The more people who grow their own herbs and food and get back to basics, the less illness they will suffer. I give this to my dogs daily. We grow organically, win win. Cant wait to get it growing. We need a glass house probably. or 2 panes of glass and a couple pallet boards. Thanks again. Great to get local aussie info.
I think that's the best place to get them from if there are no nurseries stocking them 👍😊 Works out a bit cheaper sometimes as well 😉 Cheers Daniel & happy growing.
I am zone 5 b . I grow ginger and turmeric in an unheated greenhouse. I get 6 to 7 months of growing time but start my ginger and turmeric in the house in flats and under heat lamps.
Nice one Linda. What's the average yield per plant would you say? It might help others out growing in a similar climate that stumble across your post. Thanks & have a top one.
Jeez! I'm fair tuckered trying to keep up with your narration. I thoroughly enjoyed your presentation. You are very articulate and obviously knowlegable about your subject. I love to see and hear people who are so passionate about anything. Thank you!
Hi & thanks. I do tend to talk a tad fats when trying to get a load of information across in a short amount of time. Hope it did help you out some though. Cheers & happy growing. Rob.
Just started my turmeric growing in my kitchen shooting well there 10 inches long after 6 weeks Thanks for the tips will plant them out in the spring 👍
Hi, great clip, I have had good success growing turmeric in old fridges & dishwashers as the beds, a bit easier to set up than wiccian beds & a lot cheaper, just thought i'd share, cheers. Brian
Thanks for making this video. I'm in Arizona and our weather is very similar *only in opposite order* I'm going to be trying my hand at Turmeric and Ginger for the first time, so fingers crossed for a good harvest!
I started mine, that I got in the mail from an organic grower, in my worm bed( red wigglers) they sprouted well. Then I transplanted them to a large pot.
Hi Dale & thanks mate. 👍😊 I could of prattled on for a lot longer if given a chance. 😉 Any chance of an update clip on this seasons garden or projects? Hope all's well with you both mate. Rob & the Girls 😊
You can eat the baby turmeric leaf .....just finely chop the leaf and put into your fish curry or seafood while cooking them...it's so flavorful ....you can use the big leaf too....if you are grilling fish ..cover the fish with one or two big leaf depending on how big the fish is...
I started one in the heart of winter (January?) here in Finland. Planted it in surface soil of a small pot inside and it sprouted in April as the weather got warmer. Now the sproutsa re about 20 cm and I am replanting in a bigger pot (outside is still below freezing at night), moving to the terrace (heated at night and thinking of keeping the plant outside June-August and then either harvesting or moving it inside to wait for a harvest. Good tip to add heat retaining structures next to it, maybe a good pile of tiles :)
laura pohjola Is great to hear yours is going so well Laura 😊 Passive heating always is a bonus for heat living plants like these. Hope you get a good yield from the turmeric. Cheers & have a top one.
I love your accent! It makes you sound intelligent, knowledgeable and wise. You are an excellent teacher and very thorough. Thank you for a very well-thought-out lesson on turmeric.
Would like to visit that great continent at some point. Have made friends in a few different countries there through UA-cam over the years. Cheers Chris.
@@RobsAquaponics You are welcome Bob...you can come for a safari here in Maasai Mara among other fascinating destinations....I love your work though and have been loving to start a project just like yours... Cheers brother...
my pumpkin has died back giving my turmeric and ginger some extra warmth..i feel i should leave the pumpkin vine on the bed to decompose to help the turmeric with nutrients. great clip. thanks for thinking of us in the south.
+Elizabeth Veness Hi Elizabeth. They'll enjoy the extra heat & leaving the vine is a great idea. Just answered your question on our Facebook page about the bent stalks too👍 Cheers & all the best.
I grow ginger tumeric and galangal in upstate NY . I start them in February in the house then plant out into my unheated tunnels in May. I sell at the local farmers market
I am using a 6 inch pot and since I usually brood chickens here I have them in my chick brooder under heat lamps . It has been minus 12 F wind chills here in upstate ny . I pulled a few tumeric and there is a tiny bit of growth showing
Just found you whilst looking for a video about growing Tumeric in England. You're the best I've found. I buy it from an organic box delivery company but not had any luck growing it yet or ginger. I'll give it another go and follow your advice. I eat a piece raw after scraping the skin off if I have a painful tummy from diverticulitis and the pain goes away after about half an hour. I got that tip from a doctor who uses alternative methods. I'm hoping to cure myself with organic kefir and probiotics but in the meantime turmeric is better than pain meds. Thank you and much love.❤️
Hope you can get on top of it PinkFox. We have friends that suffer from it so shall pass the info on. Try to plant them out in a container so you can move them around to the warmest possible position. Hope that helps some.
Thanks for all your advise, I am a organic gardener in Redlands, I have processed my first lot of Turmeric thanks to you!!,I am also interested in wicking beds and aquaponics, so I will keep watching! I have a few u-tubers in Queensland but would love to have more if u can post their contacts on u-tube
Hi Francke. Am glad the clips have helped you out some. Here's a few that I follow that are fairly local. ua-cam.com/users/markyv69 ua-cam.com/users/martysgarden There may be more but that's all I can think of off the top of my head. Would love to know who you also follow that are local if you don't mind sharing. Sorry for the slow reply too. Have been slowly catching up on comments over the past few weeks. Cheers & all the best.
Thanks Rob for the great information. Ill be growing tumeric up here in zone 6A this year in containers. I love how big yours are. Because we do get a freeze, it will be bought in over winter and hopefully will be able to harvest some around Oct. Nov. I grew ginger last season with great success in containers so looking forward to trying this great herb. On a side note, I have been downunder a handful of times over the years (traveled the Gold Coast down to Melbourne)and the people are so cheerful and wonderful. You by far have such a positive energy about you. Much appreciated and thanks for sharing. Cheers mate.
Hey Soil Samurai.👍 Is great that you're having a crack at growing some turmeric there. I was told that if the ground doesn't freeze you may be able to overwinter them under a nice thick layer of mulch. Might be something to experiment with if you get a good crop. Sounds like you've seen more of Australia than I have. 😉 I've only been as far south as Canberra as a kid. We live about an hours north west of the Gold Coast out at Ipswich . Cheers mate & hope you have a top growing season. Rob.
This is the most helpful video I have reviewed a very big thank you to you Rob. It's autumn time here in Perth so I might kick some off in a few lack pots as you suggested
I just harvested mine cuz all the leaves looked dead n I thought I overwatered......... apparently they were doing their thing n I got a nice lil harvest😍 Thanks! N Happy New Year!
Black containers may be good in cold areas. But in the hot summer with low relative humidity here in Corvallis, Oregon, you would like to avoid black plastic pots. If you only have black plastic pots, you may want to block any direct sunlight shinning onto the surface of the pots cause it will heat up your pot to over 120F (at least 45 C). No plants can survive except for desert plants.
I still don't understand how anyone dislikes ur videos, some people must have horrible lives haha. I have learned a ton from your videos, thanks for sharing
Rob... so excited to have had my turmeric and ginger pop their shoots out of their home for the first month. Very exciting. Thanks for the inspiration. After spending a good month looking online for unsprayed seed root, I opted for organic root from the market. They germinated at nearly the same rate. Off by a single day between the turmeric and the ginger
Well, here we go Rob Bob. If I get one to grow (from the supermarket) that would be something. If not, as you say I'll go to an organic grower.Great video.Thanks so much., Rob.
Nice one mate. We have a few plants here that don't look like they will be dying back like they normally do. Has been a very mild winter so far. Cheers.
As always great to watch! Down here in Victor Harbor, SA, we could sometimes be counted as cool climate, I have turmeric in both wicking beds and aquaponics that has done ok for its first year, but might move them into my greenhouse over winter. Although, I am now constructing a second aquaponics area inside a new greenhouse, this should broaden the stuff I can grow and eat. Just have to train my bees to pollenate inside and then go back to their hives..... Cheers matey!
I've heard so much about the health benefits of tumeric I'm giving it a go. It gets a tad nippy in Blighty but following these instructions I reckon they'll be fine.
Howdy there Rob from the mountains of Tennessee US. I subscribed to your channel due to your aquaponics. A friend of mine four hundred miles south east(S.C. coast) was advising me to plant ginger, gongal(spelling is off), and turmeric as no one grows it here. I am a market grower and I am changing slowly from row crops to beds where they will work. The aquaponics water changes are planned to feed drip irrigation lines for the batch that is closest to the greenhouse. I have made up my mind and I am starting with koi so I will not have to heat the greenhouse as much. I am growing papaya seeds(well waiting for them to sprout) which is planned to make cuttings in the fall to over winter for spring planting as cuttings are mature enough to flower that way. Since I remembered this video, as I had youtube on auto play. Then my friend started talking to me about growing these items locally. Since I am growing for profit I need to know about weight from the crop. I am kind of in the middle between Nashville, Knoxville and Chattanooga and as my business plan is evolving I am venturing farther from home for markets. I am a farmer and I understand yeilds vary greatly but can you give me something to work with as to weight. Turmeric is $12.99 a pound. My short rows are a hundred feet long(30 meters). My idea is to split one row between ginger and turmeric by the green house which is 150 feet. A hundred and fifty pieces of turmeric is going to be pricey but then again if it works it will be a large cash crop. Thanks again for the videos, John
Hey John. Looks like you'r in around zone 7 from the map I saw. You could probably grow it there but an not sure it would give you a large yield without some sort of season extension inside a greenhouse as it's normally a 9-10 month crop. With ours we can get well over 2lb per plant but have has some produce under 1lb due to the position it was planted. I'm sorry I can be more accurate John
No problem Jeremy & hope the turmeric grow well for you there. 👍 Am working on a ginger clip at the moment that I hope to have out this weekend. Cheers & have a top one. Rob.
I have been trying ginger here for a couple years. Havent had great success but I get small pinky sized rhizomes that arent super flavourful. Maybe they get too much water.
I think it may may something top do with your short growing season too. Try doing a bit of an experiment & let some go for 2 growing seasons before harvesting. They will die back & you may want to protect them over winter so growing in a pot might help you there. Here's the ginger clip if you're interested, ua-cam.com/video/ukEn3T8B8to/v-deo.html Cheers & have a top one.
Really enjoyed this so much! Fantastic video with heaps of information. I had watched about 6 others before coming across yours and you answered every question I had about growing and harvesting turmeric that the others hadn't addressed so thanks! Subbied you too :)
Yes I do! :-) A piece my sister gave me that I knew nothing what to do with it. I stuck it in a pot and it didn't do much for ages (prob put it in upside down haha!) Eventually it sprouted leaves. I'm itching to dig it up soon and see what I've got. At least if it is a fail I now know what to do properly next time :) Cheers.
I am going to get some of these growing in the grow bags like you there Bob. Thanks for the video matey, I have a warm spot for the winter and some mini greenhouses. Going to get into this for sure. Happy Gardening Marty Ware (Australian Micro Farmer)
You're still the best Rob. So much information and easy to follow even for us Yanks. One question: would you ever leave part of a plant in the ground for next year and would it be any good? Thanks.
I tend to leave the whole clump in now & just harvest what we need as we have so many plants. Leaving half or so in undisturbed would be jus as good I think. Hope that helps some. 👍
I grow tumeric in zone 5 in a high tunnel . You need to start the tumeric in early Februaryin a warm place . I grow mine in a basement under heat lamps watering as the soil drys on the top of the 6 inch pots . It is April in NY and stlll too cool for the tumeric in the high tunnels which I do not heat . The ginger tumeric and galangal beds currently are growing chinese cool weather veggies as soon as they are harvested , I will add mushroom compost bone meal and plant out the galangal and tumeric roots oh and ginger .
Sounds like you might be able to grow in a "dutch bucket" set up/kind of like we do tomatoes? Where the bucket is filled with perlite... and there is about a 2" amount of fluid that sits in the bottom of the bucket ..either manually or semi automatic watering system.
Fantastic video! Going to give it a go. I live in snow country in Northern US with short growing season, so will have to start it outdoors now in spring in a container and carry it indoors for winter. :) ~Sheryl
+JuicingGardener (Sheryl Mann) I'd find the warmest spot in the sun you could for the pot. If it doesn't grow too big ion the first season you could always leave it in for another too ;) Hope it grows well for you Sheryl.
Thanks for watching folks & don't forget to click the subscribe button if you enjoyed the video.
Share the clip around with family & friends if you think they'll enjoy it too. 🌱 🌱
Cheers all & have a top one. 😊
Rob
Rob Bob's Backyard Farming & Aquaponics HDTV
Cheers. 👍
Rob Bob's Backyard Farm & Aquaponics
Rob brother could you please give me help with how to grow alots of turmeric in drum with holes,
What things do i use in soil?
And what distance should be maintained in plants?? Thanks
Yes I know its lovely obssessed
Lots of great tips Rob - we don't have any trouble growing turmeric either but you do have to abide by everything you said to grow a good crop. Cheers :)
+Self Sufficient Me
Definitely one for a warm climate like ours if you're after a good yield 👍
Cheers Mark.
Thank you from Canada🇨🇦
My pleasure Wandering Nature.
Happy growing. 🌱🌱
I had things to do this morning, but now I’m watching this and after that I’m going to your main channel, and I’m not a bit sorry. Thank you for this tutorial, you have an excellent way of making everything sound simple and stress-free!
I'm glad you found it helpful R&L. 😁😁 I hope your plants are growing well.
Oh god those flower !! We eat that. Most fav food😜
We have a load to harvest at the moment when I get the time.
Cheers Camile.
OMG tumeric is a gorgeous plant and flowers...I'm going to get me some organic tumeric..
Is one of our favourite plants to grow just for the beauty of it.
Cheers.
@@RobsAquaponics Thank you 🌿🦋🌤️🌸
Great! I could listen to you all day long!
Glad you enjoy the videos Gabriela. Hope the give you a useful idea or two as well.
Cheers & all the best.
Wow I did not know the TUMERIC has VERYVERY beautiful flowers.i will surely try to plant in pots. Thanks for sharing
No problem Juvy.
Cheers & have a top one.
Excellent! Thank you. The more people who grow their own herbs and food and get back to basics, the less illness they will suffer. I give this to my dogs daily. We grow organically, win win.
Cant wait to get it growing. We need a glass house probably. or 2 panes of glass and a couple pallet boards. Thanks again. Great to get local aussie info.
Am glad you enjoyed the clip AE. 👍
Cheers & happy growing. 🌱🌱
I bought turmeric from Whole Foods and they grew fine. I found they sprout much faster the hotter the soil temp is.
I think that's the best place to get them from if there are no nurseries stocking them 👍😊 Works out a bit cheaper sometimes as well 😉
Cheers Daniel & happy growing.
Brilliant advice, thank you for going into so much detail and addressing everyone around the globe! Greetings from Ipswich UK :)
Am glad you found it helpful Lois.
Cheers. 👍
I am zone 5 b . I grow ginger and turmeric in an unheated greenhouse. I get 6 to 7 months of growing time but start my ginger and turmeric in the house in flats and under heat lamps.
Nice one Linda. What's the average yield per plant would you say?
It might help others out growing in a similar climate that stumble across your post.
Thanks & have a top one.
We respect you guy, respecting all farmer your hand should be hot handshake
Thanks for that.
Cheers & all the best.
Rob.
Jeez! I'm fair tuckered trying to keep up with your narration. I thoroughly enjoyed your presentation. You are very articulate and obviously knowlegable about your subject. I love to see and hear people who are so passionate about anything. Thank you!
Hi & thanks. I do tend to talk a tad fats when trying to get a load of information across in a short amount of time.
Hope it did help you out some though.
Cheers & happy growing.
Rob.
Just started my turmeric growing in my kitchen shooting well there 10 inches long after 6 weeks
Thanks for the tips will plant them out in the spring 👍
Nice one Rob. Hope they grow well for you mate. 🌱🌱
Hi, great clip, I have had good success growing turmeric in old fridges & dishwashers as the beds, a bit easier to set up than wiccian beds & a lot cheaper, just thought i'd share, cheers. Brian
Great advise. Thank you for sharing.
Glad it was helpful Gratian.
Have a top one.
Another excellent video which told me all I needed to grow turmeric even though I'm in the UK.
Hope it grows well for you. 🌱🌱
Cheers.
Thanks for making this video. I'm in Arizona and our weather is very similar *only in opposite order* I'm going to be trying my hand at Turmeric and Ginger for the first time, so fingers crossed for a good harvest!
Nice one Amy & hope you have a great crop first time round 👍
Cheers & happy growing,
Rob.
I started mine, that I got in the mail from an organic grower, in my worm bed( red wigglers) they sprouted well. Then I transplanted them to a large pot.
Nice one Marjorie. That would have given them a fantastic start.
Hope you get a bumper crop.
Wow Rob! That was a lot more tips than I thought there would be! Well done sir! I give this video a green thumbs up!
Hi Dale & thanks mate. 👍😊 I could of prattled on for a lot longer if given a chance. 😉
Any chance of an update clip on this seasons garden or projects?
Hope all's well with you both mate.
Rob & the Girls 😊
Thanks for the tips. Australia cold winter mountain region and my plant first year flowering, been in the ground for 3 years.
Nice one. Do you just harvest as you need it ?
Cheers & have a top one.
I like what you have been doing with tumtec
Cheers Eddie.👍
Have a top one.
We make pickle with yellow one. It is called mango ginger in India
Thanks for that. I'm wanting to try both turmeric & ginger pickles with our next harvests.
Good bloke, and it's great to get info from the southern hemisphere for a change...
Hi from South Africa ;-)
Cheers Phil.
Happy growing🌱🌱
You can eat the baby turmeric leaf .....just finely chop the leaf and put into your fish curry or seafood while cooking them...it's so flavorful ....you can use the big leaf too....if you are grilling fish ..cover the fish with one or two big leaf depending on how big the fish is...
Hi there :)
Have used some of the young leaf previously in cooking but not a great deal. Might use it more next season.
Cheers & all the best.
Ya we eat leaf as well flower. Sooo good flavour!!
I started one in the heart of winter (January?) here in Finland. Planted it in surface soil of a small pot inside and it sprouted in April as the weather got warmer. Now the sproutsa re about 20 cm and I am replanting in a bigger pot (outside is still below freezing at night), moving to the terrace (heated at night and thinking of keeping the plant outside June-August and then either harvesting or moving it inside to wait for a harvest. Good tip to add heat retaining structures next to it, maybe a good pile of tiles :)
laura pohjola Is great to hear yours is going so well Laura 😊 Passive heating always is a bonus for heat living plants like these.
Hope you get a good yield from the turmeric.
Cheers & have a top one.
🌈ThankYou
You answered all questions
I'm glad I could help some Pamela.
Happy growing. 🌱🌱
I love your accent! It makes you sound intelligent, knowledgeable and wise. You are an excellent teacher and very thorough. Thank you for a very well-thought-out lesson on turmeric.
Thanks for that :) I try my best to make the clips informative with not too much nattering on ;)
All the best to you & yours,
Rob.
That's a thoughtful compliment. Very nice of you ❤️
I'm watching from Africa and like it here....
Would like to visit that great continent at some point. Have made friends in a few different countries there through UA-cam over the years.
Cheers Chris.
@@RobsAquaponics You are welcome Bob...you can come for a safari here in Maasai Mara among other fascinating destinations....I love your work though and have been loving to start a project just like yours... Cheers brother...
I appreciate the educational material for gardening turmeric and look forward to having some plants growing.
No problem & hope it helps you grow a to of turmeric Chris. 👍👍
Cheers & happy growing.
Planting if for the first time, thanks for the info
No problem mate.
Happy growing.
@@RobsAquaponics Thanks for the video, got me heading in the right direction
Thanks for this info video. I have been wanting to grow turmeric. I'm in Norther California. This has helped a lot.
Glad it could be of some help Loretta.
Hope the crop does well for you.
Cheers.
This is great! Thanks Rob! I shared this with a friend in N.California who takes turmeric & I feel she could benefit even more from fresh!
+Nancy Bush
That's great Nancy & hope it helps them out some. Flavour wise I think it;s much nicer fresh ;)
All the best.
Rob.
my pumpkin has died back giving my turmeric and ginger some extra warmth..i feel i should leave the pumpkin vine on the bed to decompose to help the turmeric with nutrients. great clip. thanks for thinking of us in the south.
+Elizabeth Veness
Hi Elizabeth. They'll enjoy the extra heat & leaving the vine is a great idea.
Just answered your question on our Facebook page about the bent stalks too👍
Cheers & all the best.
7 years ago ❤ I’m a New Subscriber I’ve got a lot of content to catch up on 👍
I grow ginger tumeric and galangal in upstate NY . I start them in February in the house then plant out into my unheated tunnels in May. I sell at the local farmers market
Nice one Linda. 👍 I wouldn't think you'd have much local competition there.
Cheers & have a top one.
I am zone 5
I am using a 6 inch pot and since I usually brood chickens here I have them in my chick brooder under heat lamps . It has been minus 12 F wind chills here in upstate ny . I pulled a few tumeric and there is a tiny bit of growth showing
Just found you whilst looking for a video about growing Tumeric in England. You're the best I've found. I buy it from an organic box delivery company but not had any luck growing it yet or ginger. I'll give it another go and follow your advice. I eat a piece raw after scraping the skin off if I have a painful tummy from diverticulitis and the pain goes away after about half an hour. I got that tip from a doctor who uses alternative methods. I'm hoping to cure myself with organic kefir and probiotics but in the meantime turmeric is better than pain meds. Thank you and much love.❤️
Hope you can get on top of it PinkFox. We have friends that suffer from it so shall pass the info on.
Try to plant them out in a container so you can move them around to the warmest possible position.
Hope that helps some.
Thank you so much Rob for looking into this for me....Thanks Carol O'Buck
No problem Carol & hope it helps you grow a ton of turmeric.
Cheers & happy growing.
Very wholesome video. Congratulations! Thubm up, many times!!
Thank you very much & have a great one. 😁👍
you are a garden god!
+Greg's Kitchen
That's some mighty high praise coming from a kitchen Goddess like yourself Mr Greg 👍😊 😉
Cheers mate.
Rob Bob's Backyard Farming & Aquaponics tk you
Rob Bob's Backyard Farming & Aquaponics l
TY TY TY
50 seconds into this video and I'm mesmerized by how expressive your face is! Now to finish watching the video :) Thank you for the info.
😊 Glad the clip was helpful Christy.
Hope the clip helps you grow some healthy plants.
Cheers,
Rob.
Thanks for all your advise, I am a organic gardener in Redlands, I have processed my first lot of Turmeric thanks to you!!,I am also interested in wicking beds and aquaponics, so I will keep watching! I have a few u-tubers in Queensland but would love to have more if u can post their contacts on u-tube
Hi Francke. Am glad the clips have helped you out some.
Here's a few that I follow that are fairly local.
ua-cam.com/users/markyv69
ua-cam.com/users/martysgarden
There may be more but that's all I can think of off the top of my head. Would love to know who you also follow that are local if you don't mind sharing.
Sorry for the slow reply too. Have been slowly catching up on comments over the past few weeks.
Cheers & all the best.
Thanks Rob for the great information. Ill be growing tumeric up here in zone 6A this year in containers. I love how big yours are. Because we do get a freeze, it will be bought in over winter and hopefully will be able to harvest some around Oct. Nov. I grew ginger last season with great success in containers so looking forward to trying this great herb. On a side note, I have been downunder a handful of times over the years (traveled the Gold Coast down to Melbourne)and the people are so cheerful and wonderful. You by far have such a positive energy about you. Much appreciated and thanks for sharing. Cheers mate.
Hey Soil Samurai.👍 Is great that you're having a crack at growing some turmeric there. I was told that if the ground doesn't freeze you may be able to overwinter them under a nice thick layer of mulch. Might be something to experiment with if you get a good crop.
Sounds like you've seen more of Australia than I have. 😉 I've only been as far south as Canberra as a kid. We live about an hours north west of the Gold Coast out at Ipswich .
Cheers mate & hope you have a top growing season.
Rob.
Soil Samurai Gardens gws
Thank you. Very very helpful
I'm glad it helped some.
Happy growing.
Thanks for the info and tips my friend. I didn't have much luck with our turmeric plants two years ago. Will give it a try again.
+Learn To Grow
They definitely like the heat if you can pop them in a warm spot Misilla.
Cheers & all the best to the family.
I love turmeric. Ill definitely try it! Please see how Im growing bean sprouts indoor! Thanks!
Cheers HHC. 👍😃
Thanks for the tips. I'm going to try growing some in my greenhouse.
Good luck!
Thanks Rob....here in India the leaf is used as a flavouring for a rice and coconut sweet.
Thanks. 😁
We use it in rendang curries as well Olinda. 👍
This is the most helpful video I have reviewed a very big thank you to you Rob. It's autumn time here in Perth so I might kick some off in a few lack pots as you suggested
Might be a bit too late now. Ours are all but died back due to the cooler weather in SE QLD . Best to get them out in spring.
Thanks for cool climate growing tips, Rob!
+OneYardRevolution | Frugal & Sustainable Organic Gardening
No problem Patrick. Are you going to have a crack at some ?
+Rob Bob's Backyard Farming I'd like to. I haven't seen the roots in the stores, an Indian grocery store should have them.
Spectacular, Sir!!! Thank you Kindly!!! Bless You!!!💟😊🍃
I just harvested mine cuz all the leaves looked dead n I thought I overwatered......... apparently they were doing their thing n I got a nice lil harvest😍
Thanks! N Happy New Year!
Nice one Kelly. Is great when you get surprises like that from the patch. 😁😁👍
Happy growing.
Black containers may be good in cold areas. But in the hot summer with low relative humidity here in Corvallis, Oregon, you would like to avoid black plastic pots. If you only have black plastic pots, you may want to block any direct sunlight shinning onto the surface of the pots cause it will heat up your pot to over 120F (at least 45 C). No plants can survive except for desert plants.
Hi rob....im from indonesia...thanks for u videos.i like to learn a lot from u🤗
Don't forget us here in the Caribbean, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.
+tinnybo
Sorry Tinnybo :/
Cheers.
I still don't understand how anyone dislikes ur videos, some people must have horrible lives haha. I have learned a ton from your videos, thanks for sharing
+Joe -n- Texas
Thanks Joe.
Doesn't really bother me after seeing all the feedback from folks like yourself mate.
Cheers Joe & all the best.
Thanks Rob Bob!! Perfect... just the bits of info I needed.
Well done, Sir!
Hi again & no problem, am glad the clips helped you out some.
Happy growing Michelle. 👍
Rob... so excited to have had my turmeric and ginger pop their shoots out of their home for the first month. Very exciting. Thanks for the inspiration. After spending a good month looking online for unsprayed seed root, I opted for organic root from the market. They germinated at nearly the same rate. Off by a single day between the turmeric and the ginger
That's great to hear Rob. 👍 Hope they both give you a great yield come harvest time.
Cheers.
Well, here we go Rob Bob. If I get one to grow (from the supermarket) that would be something. If not, as you say I'll go to an organic grower.Great video.Thanks so much., Rob.
Glad I could hep some & hope you get a great harvest. 👍
Happy growing. 🌱🌱
Thanks for the tips! I started growing ginger this year in containers, but now I think I'll try growing turmeric. I'm in the USA zone 7.
Nice one Chuck. How is the ginger growing for you so far?
Cheers mate.
I only planted it a few weeks ago and the days aren't super warm so it's only a couple of inches high, but I'm looking forward to seeing how it does.
Nice one mate. We have a few plants here that don't look like they will be dying back like they normally do. Has been a very mild winter so far.
Cheers.
Thanks Rob. Here Turmeric is very expensive. Will let you know once I am up and going. My aim is Turmeric, Garlic and Ginger
Thanks again. Blessings
Is great to hear you're having a crack at growing some Xhomase Xwii. 👍
Cheers & happy growing,
Rob.
As always great to watch! Down here in Victor Harbor, SA, we could sometimes be counted as cool climate, I have turmeric in both wicking beds and aquaponics that has done ok for its first year, but might move them into my greenhouse over winter. Although, I am now constructing a second aquaponics area inside a new greenhouse, this should broaden the stuff I can grow and eat. Just have to train my bees to pollenate inside and then go back to their hives..... Cheers matey!
I've heard so much about the health benefits of tumeric I'm giving it a go. It gets a tad nippy in Blighty but following these instructions I reckon they'll be fine.
I should probably be taking it daily for my back as well mate.
Hope you get a decent harvest from the plants Jeffrey. 👍
Cheers.
Very 👍
Turmeric leaves can be cooked as well with Asian curries very nice flavour
We use it in Rendang here.
LOTS HELP HOW TO GROW TURMERRIC THAKS
Glad I could help some Indira.
Have a top one.
Superb info your videos
Thanks MrBlackmolly.
You planting some turmeric out this season?
Cheers
Rob.
i love gardening and now right a way to my field here in Kenya to try turmeric but ginger failed me. be blessed Rob
Hope the turmeric grows better for you Susan. 👍
@@RobsAquaponics i have hopes though i haven't got the seedlings yet
Thx Rob, this is my first time trying it out and your video is very encouraging.💚
No problem Mar Garcia & hope you have a fantastic harvest.
Cheers & happy growing.
Rob. 🙂
Hi there from across the ditch, thanks for the tips 🖒🤗
No problem Glyn.
Cheers 👍
I love learning from you Mr. Rob!
+ndlz1
Thanks ndlz1.
Cheers & all the best.
Rob.
Howdy there Rob from the mountains of Tennessee US. I subscribed to your channel due to your aquaponics. A friend of mine four hundred miles south east(S.C. coast) was advising me to plant ginger, gongal(spelling is off), and turmeric as no one grows it here. I am a market grower and I am changing slowly from row crops to beds where they will work. The aquaponics water changes are planned to feed drip irrigation lines for the batch that is closest to the greenhouse. I have made up my mind and I am starting with koi so I will not have to heat the greenhouse as much. I am growing papaya seeds(well waiting for them to sprout) which is planned to make cuttings in the fall to over winter for spring planting as cuttings are mature enough to flower that way.
Since I remembered this video, as I had youtube on auto play. Then my friend started talking to me about growing these items locally. Since I am growing for profit I need to know about weight from the crop. I am kind of in the middle between Nashville, Knoxville and Chattanooga and as my business plan is evolving I am venturing farther from home for markets. I am a farmer and I understand yeilds vary greatly but can you give me something to work with as to weight. Turmeric is $12.99 a pound. My short rows are a hundred feet long(30 meters). My idea is to split one row between ginger and turmeric by the green house which is 150 feet. A hundred and fifty pieces of turmeric is going to be pricey but then again if it works it will be a large cash crop.
Thanks again for the videos, John
Hey John. Looks like you'r in around zone 7 from the map I saw. You could probably grow it there but an not sure it would give you a large yield without some sort of season extension inside a greenhouse as it's normally a 9-10 month crop. With ours we can get well over 2lb per plant but have has some produce under 1lb due to the position it was planted.
I'm sorry I can be more accurate John
Great information. So glad you mentioned using seaweed. It's a confirmation as this is the first time I planted turmeric.
I have found it helps to use a bit. Would prefer to be able to collect my own but we're a bit far from the ocean here.
Cheers & all the best.
Rob.
Thanks Bob for the imformation how to plant this miracle palnt. thanks God!.
I hope it will grow here in netherlands. I will try this summer. Thanks.
Nice one Teresa. Hope you get a get crop.
Cheers & happy growing.
Thank you.
Just Great!. Thanks for the tips from France !
No problem & hope they help you to grow a great crop.
Cheers & happy growing. 🌱🌱
I am going to try and grow some indoors and put it outside when the weather warms up. Thanks for the tip Rob.
Hi Mary. 😊 I think we might see some early sprouts here with the mild winter we've had.
Cheers.
Im going to give it a go on Vancouver Island. Thanks for the video Rob Bob!
No problem Jeremy & hope the turmeric grow well for you there. 👍
Am working on a ginger clip at the moment that I hope to have out this weekend.
Cheers & have a top one.
Rob.
I have been trying ginger here for a couple years. Havent had great success but I get small pinky sized rhizomes that arent super flavourful. Maybe they get too much water.
I think it may may something top do with your short growing season too. Try doing a bit of an experiment & let some go for 2 growing seasons before harvesting. They will die back & you may want to protect them over winter so growing in a pot might help you there.
Here's the ginger clip if you're interested, ua-cam.com/video/ukEn3T8B8to/v-deo.html
Cheers & have a top one.
Excellent Video. I'm in central California on the Monterey bay. zone 9 - I need to try my hand at growing this plant.
You should get a decent harvest from them in zone 9 I'd think Paul. 👍
Cheers mate & happy growing.
Rob.
This is awesome! 👏🏻 I’m in Ohio. We don’t have a long growing season but I’d love to give this a go indoors for the winter!
Hope it grows well for you inside Cara. Helps if you keep the house nice & toasty.
Cheers
Rob Bob's Aquaponics & Backyard Farm thanks!
Really enjoyed this so much! Fantastic video with heaps of information. I had watched about 6 others before coming across yours and you answered every question I had about growing and harvesting turmeric that the others hadn't addressed so thanks! Subbied you too :)
Hi Auntie Triza. 🙂
Am glad the clip have been helpful for you. Have you got some on the grow at the moment ?
Cheers & all the best.
Rob.
Yes I do! :-) A piece my sister gave me that I knew nothing what to do with it. I stuck it in a pot and it didn't do much for ages (prob put it in upside down haha!) Eventually it sprouted leaves. I'm itching to dig it up soon and see what I've got. At least if it is a fail I now know what to do properly next time :) Cheers.
Thanks for the educational videos! I love your accent and teaching style. I'm growing ginger and turmeric for the first time! Cheers :)
Hope you get a great harvest Sarah 👍😊
great video thanks Rob, definitely going to crack on with this come Spring. love your work
+kbarb1000
Hi there & thanks.
Hope it grows well for you.
Cheers.
Love this
Cheers Steveipod. 😁👍
So much great info! Thanks Rob!
No problem Cris. Have a great one mate.
I am going to get some of these growing in the grow bags like you there Bob. Thanks for the video matey, I have a warm spot for the winter and some mini greenhouses. Going to get into this for sure.
Happy Gardening
Marty Ware (Australian Micro Farmer)
+martysgarden
They'd love the coats weather I think Marty as it stays a bit warmer through Winter.
Cheers mate & all the best.
Yes, it's good concept to keep the roots warmer in the cooler months,,great stuff. Thanks for the reply Rob
Wow wow
That's a lot of tumeric
It definitely grows very well in our climate here.
Do you grow it yourself over in Jamaica?
Cheers.
@@RobsAquaponics I am in England at the moment, where I have some in the polytunnel presently.
I have never grown it in Jamaica,only here.
You're still the best Rob. So much information and easy to follow even for us Yanks.
One question: would you ever leave part of a plant in the ground for next year and would it be any good? Thanks.
I tend to leave the whole clump in now & just harvest what we need as we have so many plants. Leaving half or so in undisturbed would be jus as good I think.
Hope that helps some. 👍
@@RobsAquaponics Yes. I'll try leaving a couple for next year to see if it improved the turmeric growth. Thanks.
I didn't know that it comes that way. for some reason I though turmeric was ground seeds. Thank you for showing this, I learned some thing :)
+greendragons87
Glad to have helped you out some Green Dragons.
Cheers.
Thanks for the info Rob. Growing ginger now... Will try turmeric when I find some clean stuff..
Thank You for the wonderful video.
No problem Santosh. Are you going to try & grow your own ?
Cheers.
I grow tumeric in zone 5 in a high tunnel . You need to start the tumeric in early Februaryin a warm place . I grow mine in a basement under heat lamps watering as the soil drys on the top of the 6 inch pots . It is April in NY and stlll too cool for the tumeric in the high tunnels which I do not heat . The ginger tumeric and galangal beds currently are growing chinese cool weather veggies as soon as they are harvested , I will add mushroom compost bone meal and plant out the galangal and tumeric roots oh and ginger .
Nice one Linda. I need to get some more greens in here soon. Just need to find the space to squeeze them in.
Happy growing.
thanks Rob, Great video. I have my tools for planting now!
No problem & hope the plants do well for you 👍
Cheers & all the best for the coming season.
Rob.
Great video Rob
+Dan Herring
Thanks Dan.
Have a great one mate. 👍😊
Sounds like you might be able to grow in a "dutch bucket" set up/kind of like we do tomatoes? Where the bucket is filled with perlite... and there is about a 2" amount of fluid that sits in the bottom of the bucket ..either manually or semi automatic watering system.
Made a larger version of the buckets a few years back to grow ginger in. Worked pretty good too.
► ua-cam.com/video/pvrfBXIgxxA/v-deo.html
Cheers.
In the Caribbean growing well, I’m just looking for information thanks
Chewers Raul.
Fantastic video! Going to give it a go. I live in snow country in Northern US with short growing season, so will have to start it outdoors now in spring in a container and carry it indoors for winter. :)
~Sheryl
I have one turmeric plant growing indoor for almost a year in my hibiscus container. No flowers yet, will dig out next week.
+JuicingGardener (Sheryl Mann)
I'd find the warmest spot in the sun you could for the pot. If it doesn't grow too big ion the first season you could always leave it in for another too ;)
Hope it grows well for you Sheryl.
+VOTE4TAJ
Hope you got a nice harvest from it.
Cheers.
I'm in Wales uk, going to have a go of growing tumeric for fun.
Nice one Ceri & hope it grows well for you.
Cheers,
Rob.