A nursery explained to me that a "Trade gallon" is the uncompressed volume of the soil you compress it into the container. A fluffed up gallon of potting mix compresses into a trade gallon pot when you plant something.
I think growing smaller is better in the sense that you have less turnaround time and can start a new crop as well as less materials IE watering, fertilizing and soil great video
I'm selling food-forest type plants in little red solo cups. Most are $4-6 each. I love that I can fit over $600 worth in my little Kia Soul and take them to the farm swaps or farmer's markets or flea markets. Tiny is where it's at for me.
YES!! One of the most valuable thing a grower can learn is mastery over every square inch of their space, regardless of size. Max out WHATEVER you have.
Another way to look at it and most people don't think about this is a 1 gallon pot is going to be a lot smaller hole than one of those three gallon pots, so a lot less digging. A lot more work digging a 3 gallon hole compared to a 1 gallon.
Excellent content for us small scale backyard nursery people, I'm a big fan of your channel. We started our backyard nursery about 2 to 3 years ago and sold some plants last year and sold out of some plants. Thanks for everything.
Just recently found your channel. Very useful and well explained information. You're putting a lot of good thoughts in mind on how to make extra money doing something I already enjoy doing. I already do all of my vegetable gardening in containers. This would be a natural extension.
You do such a great job of putting out new content when I would think there isnt' anything left to say. No shade, I love your channel. To see the visual is totally helpful when we are considering buying a case of pots without seeing it.
Me living in the Washington DC area, looking at the price of that pot going “SIX DOLLARS?? DO YOU MEAN 26?!?!?” I have never been more convinced to chop up all my plants and sell them!! This was a great video, glad the algorithm brought me here
Lol! I've been a plant air layering maniac for the past month because I happened to purchase a property a few years ago that the former owner had planted all kinds of hard to find, and much sought after shrubs, trees and hedge bushes that have been growing for 40 years!you can totally do it!
I discovered your channel the same time I was talking to my friend about starting my own (little) greenhouse eventually. You're making me believe it's feasible even if only as a hobby that may pay for itself. Thanks for so much detailed useful advice and tips. I'm from NB Canada and I've seen retail prices that made me think growing my own would be a wiser investment since I live in the country and have the space. What started as an experiment this summer has found me scrambling for a solution to over wintering an accidental crop of mostly petunias 😄 I also have a seed collection from plants I self pollinated. (that was tricky) I cloned my favorites first then got curious about cross pollinating. I'm getting off topic here. I'm putting a plan in action and I hope my hobby grows into something that'll take root and help me propagate some hundred dollar bills 😆😆😆
Just found your channel and subscribed :) Starting my backyard nursery and food garden soon. One year into chickens for eggs and I think I got the hang of things! Very simple and well thought out topics, thank you! By any chance do you explain how to market to stores or retail customers? Thanks!!
Interesting information, thanks. I think you may have underestimated the 50 cell trays at 1:11. 55+5 of those 50 cell trays fit in that area (3,000 cells total with a gap big enough for an extra 5x5 half tray) I think you multiplied without allowing for the length of each being twice the width. I was interested to hear it's easier to sell more small plants than big ones too.
My biggest problem in my backyard nursery is predicting how many plants to propagate because the worst thing is ending up with bigger and bigger plants and potting them up and up to the point where it's discounted just to move them. I'm getting better at what plants move fast and limiting propagation on things that are slower to sell. Honestly, weeds are still my biggest problem!
A very good way to start in my opinion is hedging slow but extremely easy no need for pots or compost(once you have decent soil) sell them bare rooted in the winter
Thank you! I look forward to your videos! and thank you for being specific on trade pots. I couldn't determine what you were saying....and I'm Southern! 🤣
@@savvydirtfarmer I was hearing tray and kept searching for it and couldn't find it. But, you made it perfectly clear. thank you. and you speak fine. 😀
Thanks for all the videos, I have started some propagations and I have order some liners for the Spring. I am ready to go for 2022. I do have a question about fertilizers. How much and how often during the spring and summer?
Where do you get your filler/compost? A lot of people don't have good soil they can readily dig out for free, and buying potting mix is unrealistically expensive. So it's nice the final value could be $2,000, but what's the profit one could realistically make after the cost of the pots, the filler, the water, and whatever other expenses there might be (fungicides, or fertilizers, or pest control, or ????). I'm guessing there's still some profit to be had, but it's probably less than $1,000?
Cost to produce a plant varies greatly. My two general rules are keeping cost down by propagating as many of my own plants as I can and selling plants while they are small. The bigger they get, the more you have in them (potting soil, time, fertilizer, etc). Here's a link to my potting soil mixture... it's exactly how I make mine.ua-cam.com/video/3ZwCpeSduWA/v-deo.html
@@savvydirtfarmer Thanks for the link, I watched the whole video, but still, cost? I find it funny that someone makes a video about how much money one can make selling what they've grown, but doesn't mention anything about the costs involved for all the stuff needed to grow those things. It's nice that you gave a tutorial about making potting mix, but again, if the potting mix costs more than the value of the plants (which I doubt), what's the point in a backyard nursery other than for a hobby? A suggestion to you would be to give a "realistic" profit video vs. a this is "how much it could be sold for video". I do think that would get a lot of views. Not trying to be negative about your videos, I think they're informative. I also think realistic profits are key to 'the series you're making. Thanks for taking the time to reply. I hope to see more videos from you since I'm thinking of selling some plants myself from my small urbanish backyard.
@@middle-agedmacdonald2965 I've done a video on starting a nursery for $1,000, with cost of each element included. I have links to all kinds of products and tools I use, with prices of each. I have many times in videos mentioned prices I have paid for various wholesale plants I have bought in. I have not done a specific break down of what my average $6 plant costs to produce, including pot, potting soil, and fertilizer... but it's under $1 for plants I propagate myself.
I want to start a backyard nursery. Where do I go to see what are my regulations for my area? Do I need a business? If you had to start over with $1000 how would you start it?
I realise this is to give people an idea of what they can do in a given space but most will not want to fill a 10'x10' block with plant pots. You will save a lot of labor filling two 4x10 blocks with a 2 foot aisle down the middle for easy access to any of the plants.
Of course. But as you correctly said, the purpose of this video, "is to give people an idea of what they can do in a given space." I can't possible cover every contingency, every person's growing zone, every person's unique layout, every person's capabilities, every person's climate, etc. It's just to give you an idea that your small space might be worth more than you think. By the way, thanks for commenting and watching!
I've started propagating & am setting up a corner of my yard for a 100 sqft nursery. I bought a 50% shade cloth that wasn't nearly enough shade for peak North TX summer. Is 70% enough or should I go 90%?
Where are you guys located? The prices are lower than around me. I’m a landscaper and I buy plants from wholesale nurseries at 7 for 1 gal, 20 for 3 and I resell to clients for 14 and 35
I don't know much about dahlias. Hydrangeas? Grow them throughout the growing season. Sell them when they are whatever size you want to sell them at (1 gallon, 2 gallon, 3 gallon, etc). The longer you grow them the more you'll get for them, but also the more money you will have in them.
I have a local source. But you can get them online from amleo.com or greenhousemegastore.com. A word of caution... apparently, there is a "pot shortage" right now. ????
Very doable... the amount of plants you can grow in a small space is incredible! My math is actually wrong on this when I did the plug trays. The amount is quite a bit higher.
I would make the most of the space from day 1. Master growing in 100 square feet, then 500, and so on, before even considering what to do with everything else.
hi there.Great channel. i,m from the UK and hoping to open a Nursery here. these plants you show for space , how much would you expect it to cost to grow these plants and what would you expect your profit to be???.
Every plant is different. Some plants can be propagated one season and sold the next. Most take 2 years. Most of my plants are sold for $7 each. If I propagate the plants myself, I have somewhere around $.50 in each plant, plus the time it takes to grow it. If I buy in small plants and grow them out, I probably average $2 in each plant ($5 profit), but less growing time.
Im sorry if this question has been asked already but do you run your home nursery full time or do you have a regular job and run your nursery part time ?
@@savvydirtfarmer thank you for replying , I just LLC'd 3/4 of an acre lot and its a small orchard and nursery and I have planted the fruits trees already like walnuts pecans almonds olives cherries apricots plums peaches and grapes now I am trying to work on the nursery side of the small business but out here in California because of the worker shortages the whole sale fruit tree sellers are not leaving to much meat on the bone for resale , their excuse is there weren't enough workers to graft this year and supply and demand drives the price up .I am thinking of just planting seeds and grafting trees myself.
You can also have a raised bed (about 8 inches high) full of sand with cuttings (one cutting per square inch) and sell rooted cuttings for .65-$1.00 each which may bring in more money per square foot of grow space due to less pots and soil taking up the grow space; many people will buy rooted cuttings to pot up and plant in their yard at a later date or resell in a year after the plants have grown to a size retail customers will pay for. Edit: so take the 100 sft you have and 1 inch per cutting. That’s 144 cuttings per square foot. At .65 cents per cutting that equates to over 9k for the same space with a lot less work. That’s being conservative too. Depending on the plant they may sell for more than .65 cents per. More money for less work? I’m in!!!!
The thing is you are giving numbers for selling plants like this was pure profit. How much were the 400 trade pots, how much the soil? how much the seed, how much the water etc... quickly the picture changes quite a bit.
For less than 100 bucks you can have soil and pots to fill with seed or cuttings if you garden, root, seed etc at least in my area by bulk or wholesale
3:33 seeing you putting all those gallon pots on the ground in time lapse...you could've just used a calculator using the diameter of a pot instead and wouldve been done in 10 seconds
It's worth a large fine, if you do not follow local laws, and for some reason, local governments come down hard on people selling "plants", without involving the local government.
Jeez! UA-cam is putting ads just 90 seconds into videos, and it's usually some wishy washy irrelevant crap, then it removes all the buffering of the video I just waited on. This platform just functionally SUCKS, same as Amazon etc.
That was a little painful to watch, I had to stop and measure 1 ~ trade gallon and find out how many it'd take to make approx 10 feet then multiply it by the same number to find the square...
You don't have to fill in the whole area with the gallon pots. Just count 1 row wide and 1 row long, and multiply the 2 numbers (Area = Length x Width).
Creates a vastly different visual effect this way… there’s way more in view here than quick, simple math. The most watched segment of the video is the 1 minute we put the 400 pots out. And, we did just do the math with the plug trays and 3 gallon, mate.
You can do a lot with 100 square feet... a lot more than this!!
A nursery explained to me that a "Trade gallon" is the uncompressed volume of the soil you compress it into the container. A fluffed up gallon of potting mix compresses into a trade gallon pot when you plant something.
You need to work on your math 20 by 20 is 200sq ft
Thank you for sharing this. It gives me lots of hope!
@@tomfu8883 Is it?
Apparently Tom Fu doesn’t listen.
I think growing smaller is better in the sense that you have less turnaround time and can start a new crop as well as less materials IE watering, fertilizing and soil great video
I'm selling food-forest type plants in little red solo cups. Most are $4-6 each. I love that I can fit over $600 worth in my little Kia Soul and take them to the farm swaps or farmer's markets or flea markets. Tiny is where it's at for me.
YES!! One of the most valuable thing a grower can learn is mastery over every square inch of their space, regardless of size. Max out WHATEVER you have.
Another way to look at it and most people don't think about this is a 1 gallon pot is going to be a lot smaller hole than one of those three gallon pots, so a lot less digging. A lot more work digging a 3 gallon hole compared to a 1 gallon.
Absolutely - that's one reason people are eager to buy smaller plants.
@@savvydirtfarmer especially in red clay LOL
Even though I don't sell plants, I still find your channel fascinating. I've learned so much by watching your channel.
Awesome! Thank you!
So regardless of the size chosen, revenue = $22 to $27 per square foot. Great info - thanks.
Mabye with tables like bunk beds you almost doulbe your plants and give a small walk way in the middle.
Excellent content for us small scale backyard nursery people, I'm a big fan of your channel. We started our backyard nursery about 2 to 3 years ago and sold some plants last year and sold out of some plants. Thanks for everything.
Great!
What plants sold out?
Just recently found your channel. Very useful and well explained information. You're putting a lot of good thoughts in mind on how to make extra money doing something I already enjoy doing. I already do all of my vegetable gardening in containers. This would be a natural extension.
That's what we're trying to do - give people ideas they can adapt to their situation. thanks for watching!
You do such a great job of putting out new content when I would think there isnt' anything left to say. No shade, I love your channel. To see the visual is totally helpful when we are considering buying a case of pots without seeing it.
Thank you so much!
Me living in the Washington DC area, looking at the price of that pot going “SIX DOLLARS?? DO YOU MEAN 26?!?!?” I have never been more convinced to chop up all my plants and sell them!! This was a great video, glad the algorithm brought me here
I’m at about $8 for most of my plants now. 😀
Lol! I've been a plant air layering maniac for the past month because I happened to purchase a property a few years ago that the former owner had planted all kinds of hard to find, and much sought after shrubs, trees and hedge bushes that have been growing for 40 years!you can totally do it!
I discovered your channel the same time I was talking to my friend about starting my own (little) greenhouse eventually. You're making me believe it's feasible even if only as a hobby that may pay for itself. Thanks for so much detailed useful advice and tips. I'm from NB Canada and I've seen retail prices that made me think growing my own would be a wiser investment since I live in the country and have the space.
What started as an experiment this summer has found me scrambling for a solution to over wintering an accidental crop of mostly petunias 😄 I also have a seed collection from plants I self pollinated. (that was tricky) I cloned my favorites first then got curious about cross pollinating. I'm getting off topic here.
I'm putting a plan in action and I hope my hobby grows into something that'll take root and help me propagate some hundred dollar bills 😆😆😆
Great! The most important thing you said is, "I'm putting a plan in action." Without the action, the rest of it doesn't matter. You can do it!
Lol...that was a Lot of extra work, but that thumbnail was totally worth it !! Thanks Great info Sir!!
Life of a UA-camr... do what you gotta do!
I just discover your channel and this is the greatest idea, thanks for all the very useful information that you share
Thank you 🙏🏻
Sure thing!
Thank You for your videos, hope y'all do well this year.
Thanks, you too!
I loved the best video I've seen and I found it very good explained God bless you.
Great! Thanks for watching
Just found your channel and subscribed :) Starting my backyard nursery and food garden soon. One year into chickens for eggs and I think I got the hang of things! Very simple and well thought out topics, thank you! By any chance do you explain how to market to stores or retail customers? Thanks!!
I do all selling via Facebook. Glad to see you getting started!
This Is a great channel, love these videos
Glad you like them!
me too!
Really enjoy your videos and information! I'm from west tn as well. I love gardening and you have inspired me to try and make my hobby profitable.
You can do it!
Great video Craig, love watching your channel very informative and relaxing thanks.
Thanks 👍
Thank you! So glad I found your channel as I get started m. Keep up the good work!
Thank you! Will do!
Love your stuff kick on love it
Interesting information, thanks. I think you may have underestimated the 50 cell trays at 1:11. 55+5 of those 50 cell trays fit in that area (3,000 cells total with a gap big enough for an extra 5x5 half tray) I think you multiplied without allowing for the length of each being twice the width. I was interested to hear it's easier to sell more small plants than big ones too.
Could be... glad you got the point. Thanks!!
You are SO helpful. Thank you for this information.
Glad it was helpful!
Great idea. Thanks for this perspective!
My biggest problem in my backyard nursery is predicting how many plants to propagate because the worst thing is ending up with bigger and bigger plants and potting them up and up to the point where it's discounted just to move them. I'm getting better at what plants move fast and limiting propagation on things that are slower to sell. Honestly, weeds are still my biggest problem!
I hate weeds. Bad.
Thanks for the information! You have been really helpful
thanks for watching!
A very good way to start in my opinion is hedging slow but extremely easy no need for pots or compost(once you have decent soil) sell them bare rooted in the winter
Thank you! I look forward to your videos! and thank you for being specific on trade pots. I couldn't determine what you were saying....and I'm Southern! 🤣
That's why I said, "t-r-a-d-e." I can't speak very well and people think I'm saying "tray." 🙄
@@savvydirtfarmer I was hearing tray and kept searching for it and couldn't find it. But, you made it perfectly clear. thank you. and you speak fine. 😀
Thanks for all the videos, I have started some propagations and I have order some liners for the Spring. I am ready to go for 2022. I do have a question about fertilizers. How much and how often during the spring and summer?
I use a slow release fertilizer that I apply one time in the Spring... it releases throughout the summer months so no need to re-apply.
I feel like I owe you something for this knowledge. I'll use some of your links or something lol thank you
Your comment is thanks enough... I enjoy making these videos. When I stop enjoying it, I'll stop doing it. thanks for watching!
I felt the same way 😄 I've been telling anyone I know that's interested to checkout this channel
Thank Craig
I'm blessed with an acre an half an a well Thank God
Great content as always, thank you - Eric
Thanks for watching!
How would you keep deer and rabbits away, water all the ones in the middle, etc.? 👍👍. Thanks!
Sprinkler waters everything. Deer and rabbits? Fence.
This is great info!!! Thank you♥️
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much for your valuable information!!
Glad it was helpful!
Great video! Can you give a link to where you purchased your trade gallon pots?
Apparently, there is a shortage on pots right now. For the most part, I get mine from a local nursery supply place.
Can’t you measure the diameter of the pots and calculate? Also, don’t you leave space to work around the pots? Thank you
yes. But when you make videos for UA-cam, a visual effect is more powerful and keeps attention longer than a verbal explanation
Where do you get your filler/compost? A lot of people don't have good soil they can readily dig out for free, and buying potting mix is unrealistically expensive. So it's nice the final value could be $2,000, but what's the profit one could realistically make after the cost of the pots, the filler, the water, and whatever other expenses there might be (fungicides, or fertilizers, or pest control, or ????).
I'm guessing there's still some profit to be had, but it's probably less than $1,000?
Cost to produce a plant varies greatly. My two general rules are keeping cost down by propagating as many of my own plants as I can and selling plants while they are small. The bigger they get, the more you have in them (potting soil, time, fertilizer, etc). Here's a link to my potting soil mixture... it's exactly how I make mine.ua-cam.com/video/3ZwCpeSduWA/v-deo.html
@@savvydirtfarmer Thanks for the link, I watched the whole video, but still, cost? I find it funny that someone makes a video about how much money one can make selling what they've grown, but doesn't mention anything about the costs involved for all the stuff needed to grow those things. It's nice that you gave a tutorial about making potting mix, but again, if the potting mix costs more than the value of the plants (which I doubt), what's the point in a backyard nursery other than for a hobby?
A suggestion to you would be to give a "realistic" profit video vs. a this is "how much it could be sold for video". I do think that would get a lot of views.
Not trying to be negative about your videos, I think they're informative. I also think realistic profits are key to 'the series you're making.
Thanks for taking the time to reply. I hope to see more videos from you since I'm thinking of selling some plants myself from my small urbanish backyard.
@@middle-agedmacdonald2965 I've done a video on starting a nursery for $1,000, with cost of each element included. I have links to all kinds of products and tools I use, with prices of each. I have many times in videos mentioned prices I have paid for various wholesale plants I have bought in. I have not done a specific break down of what my average $6 plant costs to produce, including pot, potting soil, and fertilizer... but it's under $1 for plants I propagate myself.
Thank you! Good info!
Thank you very much.
Welcome 😊
I want to start a backyard nursery. Where do I go to see what are my regulations for my area? Do I need a business? If you had to start over with $1000 how would you start it?
Where can we buy the pots ?
amleo.com or greenhousemegastore.com have both been good for me
Thank you so much for sharing
No problem 😊
I realise this is to give people an idea of what they can do in a given space but most will not want to fill a 10'x10' block with plant pots. You will save a lot of labor filling two 4x10 blocks with a 2 foot aisle down the middle for easy access to any of the plants.
Of course. But as you correctly said, the purpose of this video, "is to give people an idea of what they can do in a given space." I can't possible cover every contingency, every person's growing zone, every person's unique layout, every person's capabilities, every person's climate, etc. It's just to give you an idea that your small space might be worth more than you think. By the way, thanks for commenting and watching!
Nice video mate,
I've started propagating & am setting up a corner of my yard for a 100 sqft nursery. I bought a 50% shade cloth that wasn't nearly enough shade for peak North TX summer. Is 70% enough or should I go 90%?
70 is fine. Too much shade and your sun-needing plants are going to suffer.
Where are you guys located? The prices are lower than around me. I’m a landscaper and I buy plants from wholesale nurseries at 7 for 1 gal, 20 for 3 and I resell to clients for 14 and 35
NW alabama
What is the black stuff keeping the weeds and grass down?
Woven ground cover. I have a link in my newer video descriptions for "bootstrap farmer." You can find it there.
@@savvydirtfarmer thank you ☺
I really wanna grow dahlia, ranclus
I’m also big fan of hydrangea s
What good time for growing these plants
I don't know much about dahlias. Hydrangeas? Grow them throughout the growing season. Sell them when they are whatever size you want to sell them at (1 gallon, 2 gallon, 3 gallon, etc). The longer you grow them the more you'll get for them, but also the more money you will have in them.
Where do you buy your trade gallon pots?
I have a local source. But you can get them online from amleo.com or greenhousemegastore.com. A word of caution... apparently, there is a "pot shortage" right now. ????
I know you've come a long way, what do you think about levels in at 100 sq ft space? bottom shade plants, top sun plants:)
Very doable... the amount of plants you can grow in a small space is incredible! My math is actually wrong on this when I did the plug trays. The amount is quite a bit higher.
Can we grow dahlia n sell it
Dahlia is a great plant to sell!
If You started over how would start?
I would make the most of the space from day 1. Master growing in 100 square feet, then 500, and so on, before even considering what to do with everything else.
When people buy those plugs, do they buy the entire tray? Or you split/cut the plants out somehow?
They are usually bought by the tray... most commonly 72, 50, 38, 21 count. Lots of sizes available.
@@savvydirtfarmer If you can get $1.50 per plug there's no reason to bother repotting.
@@glennr9913 True but repotting for $ could get you $$$$
You sir, have a lot of pots!
thanks for explaining :)
hi there.Great channel.
i,m from the UK and hoping to open a Nursery here. these plants you show for space , how much would you expect it to cost to grow these plants and what would you expect your profit to be???.
Every plant is different. Some plants can be propagated one season and sold the next. Most take 2 years. Most of my plants are sold for $7 each. If I propagate the plants myself, I have somewhere around $.50 in each plant, plus the time it takes to grow it. If I buy in small plants and grow them out, I probably average $2 in each plant ($5 profit), but less growing time.
@@savvydirtfarmer ok . Great thanks for replying. Top channel !
Im sorry if this question has been asked already but do you run your home nursery full time or do you have a regular job and run your nursery part time ?
Just a very part time hobby turned side gig for me. In the course of a year, I don't actually spend a ton of time working on it.
@@savvydirtfarmer thank you for replying , I just LLC'd 3/4 of an acre lot and its a small orchard and nursery and I have planted the fruits trees already like walnuts pecans almonds olives cherries apricots plums peaches and grapes now I am trying to work on the nursery side of the small business but out here in California because of the worker shortages the whole sale fruit tree sellers are not leaving to much meat on the bone for resale , their excuse is there weren't enough workers to graft this year and supply and demand drives the price up .I am thinking of just planting seeds and grafting trees myself.
Much appreciated.
thanks!
You can also have a raised bed (about 8 inches high) full of sand with cuttings (one cutting per square inch) and sell rooted cuttings for .65-$1.00 each which may bring in more money per square foot of grow space due to less pots and soil taking up the grow space; many people will buy rooted cuttings to pot up and plant in their yard at a later date or resell in a year after the plants have grown to a size retail customers will pay for.
Edit: so take the 100 sft you have and 1 inch per cutting. That’s 144 cuttings per square foot. At .65 cents per cutting that equates to over 9k for the same space with a lot less work. That’s being conservative too. Depending on the plant they may sell for more than .65 cents per.
More money for less work? I’m in!!!!
can I sell emerald greens in trade gallons and for how much?
Sure! I'll be selling mine for $7 or $8 in a few weeks in trade gallons.
@@savvydirtfarmer would that be after 2 growing seasons? So 1 year after propagating? Or 2 years propagating?
@@FLPnotc Propagate year 1. Grow out year two. Sell next Spring. May be ready to sell fall of 2nd year.
@@savvydirtfarmer is there a plant I can sell in the meantime while waiting for emralds to grow? Any short term plants to sell? Bamboo maybe?
I see a 66% increase in your square footage by going vertical. 3 shelves high.
Have a look at the cash flow analyzer.
The thing is you are giving numbers for selling plants like this was pure profit. How much were the 400 trade pots, how much the soil? how much the seed, how much the water etc... quickly the picture changes quite a bit.
Just a thought exercise to show what the numbers can look like, as I stated in the video. Plenty of my other videos talk about cost, profit, etc.
For less than 100 bucks you can have soil and pots to fill with seed or cuttings if you garden, root, seed etc at least in my area by bulk or wholesale
3:33 seeing you putting all those gallon pots on the ground in time lapse...you could've just used a calculator using the diameter of a pot instead and wouldve been done in 10 seconds
You're obviously not a youtuber.
Seedlings time soon
Very soon!
If I tried to grow anything on the ground snails would eat it all up in no time
20x20 is 400 sf
yes it is
It's worth a large fine, if you do not follow local laws, and for some reason, local governments come down hard on people selling "plants", without involving the local government.
Good grief
Jeez! UA-cam is putting ads just 90 seconds into videos, and it's usually some wishy washy irrelevant crap, then it removes all the buffering of the video I just waited on.
This platform just functionally SUCKS, same as Amazon etc.
They put ads on ALL videos as far as I can tell, monetized videos or not.
That was a little painful to watch, I had to stop and measure 1 ~ trade gallon and find out how many it'd take to make approx 10 feet then multiply it by the same number to find the square...
It’s the price you pay for a good thumbnail pic. 😀
You don't have to fill in the whole area with the gallon pots. Just count 1 row wide and 1 row long, and multiply the 2 numbers (Area = Length x Width).
Like we did with the plug trays and 3 gallon pots?
I’m guessing they did this for some fun video content & for yt viewers to visually see pots all lined up.
And didn't even have shelves to count!
All of your prices…
I would expect to pay double what you charge.
rather copy MR FORD, with doing a production line,
PRODUCTION LINE!!?
20 by 10 is 200 SQ feet
20x10 is 200 sq ft
Fiya
It was really a waste of time laying all those pots out mate, you should have just done 1 vertical and 1 horizontal row and multiplied them !
Creates a vastly different visual effect this way… there’s way more in view here than quick, simple math. The most watched segment of the video is the 1 minute we put the 400 pots out. And, we did just do the math with the plug trays and 3 gallon, mate.
Have a nice day.
@@savvydirtfarmer you're so patient 😆
I like the visual effect. I'm not in the mood to do math 😜
You could have just done the math x*y=z
Like on the plug trays and the 3 gallon?