I agree with you about weeding being therapeutic for awhile. I love being outside with the quiet. I feel closer to God when I'm gardening and feel it's easier to talk to Him. And with this pandemic I'm glad I had a bigger garden for therapeutic purposes also. That being said, there's a big difference between weeding for an hour or so versus all day!
Hey! I was just wondering how well this worked out for you. Did you have any issues with weeds during this process? Does it work the same as mulch? I'm planning to go the cardboard route or no dig, or to just go old school and pull out the tiller to start our garden.
The purselane that you pulled from your onions in yummy in salads, and very high in vitamins and antioxidants. Win win. Pull it up, add to your garden abundance.
Some weeds I just cut the tops off, right at the soil line or below, leaving the roots to rot. This doesn't work with all weeds but the less the soil is disturbed the fewer weed seeds coming to the surface.
There is a place in my wooded area where someone threw away ( at least 25 yrs ago) a carpet scrap. It's too close to the tree roots to dig out. The plants grow through it but it's still intact.
A coworker kept telling me to check out your channel. I am happy he did. I’ve been binge watching your videos. I make videos by myself, which I can see your video quality is way better with help. You explain everything clearly, makes me wonder if your a teacher.
As an intermediate tool (between hoe and tiller), have you tried using what I call a "stirrup hoe" (a trapezoidal loop blade, one brand of which is the inappropriately named "hula hoe")? It goes under most of those medium sized weeds, cutting the root toward the bottom tip, or pulling it out altogether. Quick, effective, easy to use.
I've been using a scuffle hoe for about 60 years. Fantastic thing. It skims along just under the soil surface on the push and pull motion slicing off the weed from the root.
You're absolutely right about mulching your garden. However, to me weeding is half the fun and yes very therapeutic. I still mulch for disease control and maintaining moisture at the surface. I use fresh grass clippings while taking care not to place them too close to early shoots. Once plants are well established I'm a little less concerned. Clipping mat well and of course the nitrogen benefit is a big plus too. Given the size of your yard you would have plenty to work with! Do yourself a little favor and try grass clippings in a small corner of your garden this spring to see just how well clippings work as a mulch. The key to a successful garden has nearly everything to do with mulching early and often. Btw, I'm sure your natural beauty is a direct result of your love for fresh veggies and the outdoors. Love your channel!! karl..
I like to use a hoe that is similar in style to a dutch hoe, but the blade is only attached on one side. It's called a Swoe. The design makes it easy to hoe round the back of plants. I keep it very sharp so it is like a knife just cutting through the weeds. As long as you get the annuals before they start to produce seed, you can just leave them on the ground. Perennial weeds will need pulling eventually, unless they are young and you hoe regularly. In which case the root runs out of energy and they die. Thanks for sharing your approach to the weed problem.
My favorite method of weed control is mulching with EZ Straw which is mostly weed seed free. It keeps most weeds down and enriches the soil each year. But you've got to get it down when planting for the greatest benefit.
Wanna know a weed fix-all? Weed at night. I do it here in central Texas and get AWESOME results (except against the tough perennials like Johnson grass or ground ivy.) The annual weeds have no chance. I'll spend 15-20 minutes by flashlight and get our whole garden done in just a few days with a 3-pronged cultivator tool in just the top 1/2 to 1" of the soil. It's wonderful!
Great video. I have an 80x50 vegetable garden that by July I spend almost no time weeding. After I till and plant I go through the garden every few days with an assortment of hoes to disrupt the surface of the soil to stop weeds that are sprouting. I also till the aisles. Very few weeds need to be pulled by midsummer. As far as weeding being therapeutic I recall the words of Lennon and McCartney. “Doing the garden, digging the weeds, who could ask for more?”
One of those weeds you are pulling is purslane which is more nutrient rich than most anything else in your garden. Alse the red rood pig weed is in the same
We might think you’re a pro at farming. We got valuable ideas from your video and we’re going to share your channel with our customers who want to start a farm. Thanks for creating this!
You should try this weeding tool called a " hula hoe" . This keeps your dirt or soil in place, and will only take out the weed. Just a thought. I love your garden.
Agree!!! I love that hoe! It makes hoeing and weeding so much easier. You can break up a patch in no time because it is kind of like using a razor blade just under the soil!
This is great information! You know I think the note till method works great where it works great. Like up in Ireland on this one channel they’re utilizing it. Because all of their soil is eroding in washing away. So the no till method will stop that. Where as I live in the bottom of South Carolina. Well guess what? We have terrible nematodes. I have to grow mustard. You till that green mustard manure straight into the ground to kill those nematodes. So it’s a regional thing. Speaking of the flamethrowers. That Canadian market grower guy kills aphids with the flamethrowers👍👍👍
We use landscape fabric on our garden. Burn holes for the plants and I will tell you the grass is VERY minimal. Once you try this method you will never go back to traditional gardening.
I like to use a string trimmer. It is really fast. If you put collars around the stems of your plants, you can weed right up to the base of your plants.
Great video, I have a MASSIVE 6ft weed(trees now!)-problem/infestation over most of my back garden!! (due to a bad back injury never got done at all in 18months!!) Went from nicely landscaped to totally overgrown!!) So now have a mammoth task I have to try and get rid of the weeds, got an electric tiller, but I'm pretty sure I need a petrol one looks way too small and wimpey for the situation, in going to strim the lot down with a Stihl strimmer with a fixed blade down to a couple of inches then either till it or dog it over/out, was going to try to pull the rest out but I'm sure the roots are too deep, I might even have to just sacrifice the soil and throw down a load of caustic soda mix with water and kill everything, then start again over the top on spring with weed mat/cardboard and lay down some top soil over, or just level and pave the lot and then resort to raised beds throughout the garden and try just grass between them, really at a loss what to do! Also I've lost vehicular access to my back garden now and won't have foot access either until spring due to boundary issues. So I'm VERY limited and only have a week or so to plan what to do over the next year and prepare in next week or so for whatever I'm going to do!? Needless to say I'm extremely stressed about it and any advice what you'd do would be appreciated! Ps. It's an urban garden in England so only 65ft x15ft approx size. Partly patios and decking and rest grass at the moment which I was going to turn into beds for vegetables etc..
Wow, you have a lot of purslane growing around your crops! I love purslane. It is so so good for you. Highest content of vitamin A and 7 times more beta-carotene then carrots! So when I’m removing them I add them to smoothies or other recipes
Nice confirmation to my conclusions over the yrs. Used to be tempted to think: "I can't do it all right now so I'll get to it later." Nope--just pull a few as you harvest or water or pass by...few everyday and stay on top of it works best for me.
Do you have a video about fencing to protect your garden? I noticed your fence in this video and was wondering if it worked well at keeping critters and deer at bay.
It's not true that weeds compete. They have a symbiotic relationship with all plants. If you must pull them than just drop them back around you vegetables. They will now become much and fertilizer for your plants. I call it "weed and feed".
Thanks for the good advice to weed early, however at 71yr, I can’t get to the ground easily and if I do manage, it’s difficult getting back up. Found high raised beds help and also using a combination of heavy chip use and an organic weeding system using cleaning vinegar, table salt and a few tablespoons of blue Dawn dish soap. Doesn’t seem to bother the ph in the soil and makes the weeds die fast. I started doing the Back to Eden method 14 yrs ago to help amend my heavy clay soil and was rewarded by lots of earthworms. Make my own compost in 4 thirty gal. plastic trash containers and add that to my garden also. Really enjoy your tutorial videos and blog. Keep up the good work.
If you have trouble getting up and down, how do you build your raised beds? I found that it was a lot of work building mine, a lot of getting up and down.
@@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim My husband built the first two out of old steal roofing material. The way the boxes are assembled was the game changer for me. I didn’t have the upper body strength to put screws in a box on the ground. You assemble the end units first and put sides on separately. Three months after hip surgery I built two 4’x12’x16” Douglas Fir beds out of 2”x6” boards because treated wood wasn’t available. My husband bought the lumber for me and cut a few of them @ 45” for the ends of the box. I used 4”x4” posts for corners and screwed boards across them. I assembled the ends first then stood them on end and laid three 12’ boards across them forming one side of the box. Used 3” deck screws to fasten them. One side done, the box was turned over and I repeated the process. Used 2”x 16” MDF strapping pieces to keep the long boards from bowing out. Used corner triangle pieces of MDF on top of boxes to brace and make boxes stronger. I then took linseed oil and painted the wood boxes to preserve the wood. My husband placed the box upside down and lined the bottom of the box with hardware cloth mesh to keep gophers and moles out of the beds. He then attached metal handles at centers of each end to carry them. It takes two strong men to pick these beds up so I couldn’t participate in that part. I stood up most of the time building the boxes. Only sat in a lawn chair to oil them. Yes, my back was sore after! My husband was gracious to let me use his power screw driver😁
@@janetwestrup411 Wow, thanks for the thorough description! You guys really know what you're doing. Do you remember where you sourced linseed oil for cheap? I can't find any under I think $7 for 10oz.
@@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim My husband paid $20 for a pint of boiled linseed oil. Not cheap! However definitely worth the use of it. Purchased at Lowes in Roseburg, Oregon.
Wow! Your area looks so clear! We live on the other side of the mountain in Eatonville and we have had so much smoke. Praying you all are doing well and the smoke doesn’t find you. I love your garden and hope to someday grow a larger area similar to the one you grow!
I used to sit on a stool and weed my flower beds but now I just use a 3 or 4 tine garden rack to break up the weed roots. I removed the larger weeds and just leave the small weeds there to wilt and turn brown. It's so much easier.
It's definitely therapeutic, but I only like to weed in certain areas since we have a big field that fills up with goat heads now that we don't have any farming
Awesome, I like the cardboard & wood chips. We used newspaper & wheat straw for years. It was great for weeds & drought. I think we may try cardboard next time.
Did you end up with any ash on your garden from fires in Washington state? Portland, Oregon area is horrible and we have not been able to work in our garden or even harvest anything~when we can harvest I'm thinking a good rinse is good enough.
Have you ever used a weed control fabric between the rows? This year in our new garden we were flooded with weeds, if we neglected weeding for over a week it was a big task then. Not sure if the reason we had so many weeds this summer was due to all the rain we had in SE PA but I want the task of weed removal to be more manageable next year. Your thoughts...
I tried weed fabric for the first time this year and it has been a lifesaver and timesaver and backsaver. I highly recommend it, especially if you have weeds that are thicker than your lawn like I do and don't want to spend 2 to 3 hours everyday pulling weeds.
One thing someone told me is that during very cold cold months you plow the garden several times during those cold months and that will kill a lot of the weeds that are in the soil.
I like your weeding technique. I heard you say you put down cardboard and just was wondering about something. Over on Robbie and Gary Gardening Easy channel she mentioned that cardboard had chemicals in it therefore not to use it in gardens. I don’t know but you talking about using it reminded me of her comment. Have you heard that before? I suppose it could have chemicals in it since seems most things do these days. Like I said I don’t know but was wondering.
Wow that so cool and neat!!! My tiller was handed down but can't find a tire for it nor can u get off try match it and so heavy and hard to handle and since dad has had brain cancer he doesn't have the strength to use it much anymore. So I will have too look into one thess
I agree with you about staying up on the weeding. And Please wear ear protection with that tractor! If you have to raise your voice, you're losing hearing.
Hey Melissa, great video? I’m confused on whether I’m supposed to water my garlic that is planted in fall to over winter. Should I wait till spring to water? Also, do you think it will do fine growing in soil with a mulch of partially broken down woodchips?
Depends on how dry you get, we have enough rain here I never have to water my garlic. You need good draining soil so it doesn't rot and it likes fertile soil. Partially broken down wood chips should be fine around them, you still want the cloves planted in the soil. I pulled back the chips to get to bare soil, added some composted chicken manure, planted, then top dressed with straw.
@@MelissaKNorris Cool. I always save the best amaranth and lambsquarters for pot greens (like spinach or chard). Both are delicious and very nutritious. Thanks for the videos. You've offered some great info.
I agree with you about weeding being therapeutic for awhile. I love being outside with the quiet. I feel closer to God when I'm gardening and feel it's easier to talk to Him. And with this pandemic I'm glad I had a bigger garden for therapeutic purposes also. That being said, there's a big difference between weeding for an hour or so versus all day!
About 1:58, what your pulling out is called Purslane.
Pull the leaves off a d add to salad.👍
My wife and I started using the cut grass that we sweep up after mowing (a few acres worth of grass), in place of cardboard. So far, so good.
Hey! I was just wondering how well this worked out for you. Did you have any issues with weeds during this process? Does it work the same as mulch? I'm planning to go the cardboard route or no dig, or to just go old school and pull out the tiller to start our garden.
The purselane that you pulled from your onions in yummy in salads, and very high in vitamins and antioxidants. Win win. Pull it up, add to your garden abundance.
I noticed the same thing. I planted purslane this year.
Haha loved that....I don’t need that much therapy 😂😂
Right?!
I agree, don’t need hours of weed therapy!😜
Some weeds I just cut the tops off, right at the soil line or below, leaving the roots to rot. This doesn't work with all weeds but the less the soil is disturbed the fewer weed seeds coming to the surface.
Thanks for the information. Also, loved the dog in the background providing entertainment!
Never a dull moment around here!
I use old carpet between rows of plants, and around edges of garden. works great, and last for years.
Northstar7733 I'll bet it looks cool, too!
I've considered that but I was concerned about the less than organic materials leaching into my soil.
There is a place in my wooded area where someone threw away ( at least 25 yrs ago) a carpet scrap. It's too close to the tree roots to dig out. The plants grow through it but it's still intact.
I do that too. Sunday shoes can be worn in the garden. Old well loved carpet works best.
Can't you mulch the open places?? Like hay or straw. It will feed the ground with organic matter, retains soil moisture , controls weeds.
Okay, you're officially my new favorite Vlogger!
Wow, thanks!
A coworker kept telling me to check out your channel. I am happy he did. I’ve been binge watching your videos. I make videos by myself, which I can see your video quality is way better with help. You explain everything clearly, makes me wonder if your a teacher.
As an intermediate tool (between hoe and tiller), have you tried using what I call a "stirrup hoe" (a trapezoidal loop blade, one brand of which is the inappropriately named "hula hoe")? It goes under most of those medium sized weeds, cutting the root toward the bottom tip, or pulling it out altogether. Quick, effective, easy to use.
I've been using a scuffle hoe for about 60 years. Fantastic thing. It skims along just under the soil surface on the push and pull motion slicing off the weed from the root.
You're absolutely right about mulching your garden. However, to me weeding is half the fun and yes very therapeutic. I still mulch for disease control and maintaining moisture at the surface. I use fresh grass clippings while taking care not to place them too close to early shoots. Once plants are well established I'm a little less concerned. Clipping mat well and of course the nitrogen benefit is a big plus too. Given the size of your yard you would have plenty to work with! Do yourself a little favor and try grass clippings in a small corner of your garden this spring to see just how well clippings work as a mulch. The key to a successful garden has nearly everything to do with mulching early and often. Btw, I'm sure your natural beauty is a direct result of your love for fresh veggies and the outdoors. Love your channel!! karl..
You have one of the best camera people on UA-cam. Whoever that is love you.
We have a Troy bilt rear tine tiller, and the handle is adjustable so we can guide it walking beside it instead of the soil we just tilled.
I like to use a hoe that is similar in style to a dutch hoe, but the blade is only attached on one side. It's called a Swoe. The design makes it easy to hoe round the back of plants.
I keep it very sharp so it is like a knife just cutting through the weeds. As long as you get the annuals before they start to produce seed, you can just leave them on the ground. Perennial weeds will need pulling eventually, unless they are young and you hoe regularly. In which case the root runs out of energy and they die.
Thanks for sharing your approach to the weed problem.
My favorite method of weed control is mulching with EZ Straw which is mostly weed seed free. It keeps most weeds down and enriches the soil each year. But you've got to get it down when planting for the greatest benefit.
thanks for sharing!
Wanna know a weed fix-all?
Weed at night. I do it here in central Texas and get AWESOME results (except against the tough perennials like Johnson grass or ground ivy.) The annual weeds have no chance. I'll spend 15-20 minutes by flashlight and get our whole garden done in just a few days with a 3-pronged cultivator tool in just the top 1/2 to 1" of the soil. It's wonderful!
I do 6 raised beds, 4' x 8' and container gardening. My best way to control weeds, no fencing required.
If only I could grow veggies like I can grow weeds my garden would be rocking.
Yes! We would all have a bountiful harvest!
@Michael Bessette Love it!
Answer plant edible weeds!!!
Great video. I have an 80x50 vegetable garden that by July I spend almost no time weeding. After I till and plant I go through the garden every few days with an assortment of hoes to disrupt the surface of the soil to stop weeds that are sprouting. I also till the aisles. Very few weeds need to be pulled by midsummer. As far as weeding being therapeutic I recall the words of Lennon and McCartney. “Doing the garden, digging the weeds, who could ask for more?”
So glad to hear that you found something that works for you. Thanks for sharing!
One of those weeds you are pulling is purslane which is more nutrient rich than most anything else in your garden. Alse the red rood pig weed is in the same
Yes we have plenty in our homestead. Thanks for your comment!
I go out early morning, almost daily and pull weeds. That works for me.
We might think you’re a pro at farming. We got valuable ideas from your video and we’re going to share your channel with our customers who want to start a farm. Thanks for creating this!
You should try this weeding tool called a " hula hoe" . This keeps your dirt or soil in place, and will only take out the weed. Just a thought. I love your garden.
Agree!!! I love that hoe! It makes hoeing and weeding so much easier. You can break up a patch in no time because it is kind of like using a razor blade just under the soil!
My weeding tool of choice!
It doesn’t work everywhere though. We have one. Hated it at the last house, but it works great here! Different soil.
This is great information! You know I think the note till method works great where it works great. Like up in Ireland on this one channel they’re utilizing it. Because all of their soil is eroding in washing away. So the no till method will stop that.
Where as I live in the bottom of South Carolina. Well guess what? We have terrible nematodes. I have to grow mustard. You till that green mustard manure straight into the ground to kill those nematodes. So it’s a regional thing.
Speaking of the flamethrowers. That Canadian market grower guy kills aphids with the flamethrowers👍👍👍
We use landscape fabric on our garden. Burn holes for the plants and I will tell you the grass is VERY minimal. Once you try this method you will never go back to traditional gardening.
The weed fabric I tried in the past never worked, weeds came right through it
Consistency works wonderful. Your ideas are highly appreciated. Keep going forward.
Thank you so much!
The quality of your videos are so much better with the 1080p, sound also so much better, thanks :D
Thank you for the feedback!
I like using my hoss wheel hoe for all the big areas and heavier weeds and I use a stirrup hoe around my plants and tight areas.
So great you found what works best for you! Thank for sharing :)
We call that a shuffle hoe and it’s my favorite tool! ❤️👏🏼
You pulled up a lot of Purslane which is highly nutritious and tastes great. People in the US think it's a weed but it's delicious!
Referred to you from Mary's Nest. Ty!
Mary is such a sweet soul!
Thank you, good tips! Why not use weed fabric or thick mulch to prevent the weeds from ever sprouting in the aisles ?
Woven weed fabric works great.
I enjoyed your life extension technique for garden tools.
Yup yup! Duck tape and baling twine!! Also my go toos!
If you could are able to get mulch with leafy green matter, it will add even more nutrients to your soil as they break down. ;)
I like to use a string trimmer. It is really fast. If you put collars around the stems of your plants, you can weed right up to the base of your plants.
Nice! Great to hear you found something that is working well for you!
Great video, I have a MASSIVE 6ft weed(trees now!)-problem/infestation over most of my back garden!! (due to a bad back injury never got done at all in 18months!!) Went from nicely landscaped to totally overgrown!!) So now have a mammoth task I have to try and get rid of the weeds, got an electric tiller, but I'm pretty sure I need a petrol one looks way too small and wimpey for the situation, in going to strim the lot down with a Stihl strimmer with a fixed blade down to a couple of inches then either till it or dog it over/out, was going to try to pull the rest out but I'm sure the roots are too deep, I might even have to just sacrifice the soil and throw down a load of caustic soda mix with water and kill everything, then start again over the top on spring with weed mat/cardboard and lay down some top soil over, or just level and pave the lot and then resort to raised beds throughout the garden and try just grass between them, really at a loss what to do! Also I've lost vehicular access to my back garden now and won't have foot access either until spring due to boundary issues. So I'm VERY limited and only have a week or so to plan what to do over the next year and prepare in next week or so for whatever I'm going to do!? Needless to say I'm extremely stressed about it and any advice what you'd do would be appreciated!
Ps. It's an urban garden in England so only 65ft x15ft approx size. Partly patios and decking and rest grass at the moment which I was going to turn into beds for vegetables etc..
Just found your channel today and really enjoyed this first video. I'll be looking forward to seeing more from you!
Thrilled to have you here Teresa!
Wow, you have a lot of purslane growing around your crops! I love purslane. It is so so good for you. Highest content of vitamin A and 7 times more beta-carotene then carrots! So when I’m removing them I add them to smoothies or other recipes
Nice confirmation to my conclusions over the yrs. Used to be tempted to think: "I can't do it all right now so I'll get to it later." Nope--just pull a few as you harvest or water or pass by...few everyday and stay on top of it works best for me.
Pick that purslane. It's free extremely nutritious food that you don't have to plant. Wash well, trim off the roots and steam lightly.
Wow I love the back to eden gardening we do some also. You said your in the PNW. I am so just north of seattle. Your garden looks amazing.
Do you have a video about fencing to protect your garden? I noticed your fence in this video and was wondering if it worked well at keeping critters and deer at bay.
It's not true that weeds compete. They have a symbiotic relationship with all plants. If you must pull them than just drop them back around you vegetables. They will now become much and fertilizer for your plants. I call it "weed and feed".
I do that too
@pete smyth I did when I had chickens, it was fun to watch them. I would pull weeds just to give them (and me) some joy, win-win!
Here the weeds get so tall they shade out what I want to grow. Definitely competing.
@@willowriverranch7965 I think what they're saying is knock the weeds back until the plants you want are dominant x
In small doses, it's good therapy. Large spots, not so much! Fun video! Cheers from Minnesota!
Yes! Glad to have you here!
Those plants by the onions are edible and good.
Yes, they are. I pull them since they are taking nutrients from the onions. Thanks for your comment!
Thanks for the good advice to weed early, however at 71yr, I can’t get to the ground easily and if I do manage, it’s difficult getting back up. Found high raised beds help and also using a combination of heavy chip use and an organic weeding system using cleaning vinegar, table salt and a few tablespoons of blue Dawn dish soap. Doesn’t seem to bother the ph in the soil and makes the weeds die fast. I started doing the Back to Eden method 14 yrs ago to help amend my heavy clay soil and was rewarded by lots of earthworms. Make my own compost in 4 thirty gal. plastic trash containers and add that to my garden also.
Really enjoy your tutorial videos and blog. Keep up the good work.
If you have trouble getting up and down, how do you build your raised beds? I found that it was a lot of work building mine, a lot of getting up and down.
@@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
My husband built the first two out of old steal roofing material.
The way the boxes are assembled was the game changer for me. I didn’t have the upper body strength to put screws in a box on the ground. You assemble the end units first and put sides on separately.
Three months after hip surgery I built two 4’x12’x16” Douglas Fir beds out of 2”x6” boards because treated wood wasn’t available.
My husband bought the lumber for me and cut a few of them @ 45” for the ends of the box. I used 4”x4” posts for corners and screwed boards across them. I assembled the ends first then stood them on end and laid three 12’ boards across them forming one side of the box. Used 3” deck screws to fasten them. One side done, the box was turned over and I repeated the process. Used 2”x 16” MDF strapping pieces to keep the long boards from bowing out. Used corner triangle pieces of MDF on top of boxes to brace and make boxes stronger.
I then took linseed oil and painted the wood boxes to preserve the wood.
My husband placed the box upside down and lined the bottom of the box with hardware cloth mesh to keep gophers and moles out of the beds. He then attached metal handles at centers of each end to carry them. It takes two strong men to pick these beds up so I couldn’t participate in that part.
I stood up most of the time building the boxes. Only sat in a lawn chair to oil them. Yes, my back was sore after!
My husband was gracious to let me use his power screw driver😁
@@janetwestrup411 Wow, thanks for the thorough description! You guys really know what you're doing.
Do you remember where you sourced linseed oil for cheap? I can't find any under I think $7 for 10oz.
@@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
My husband paid $20 for a pint of boiled linseed oil. Not cheap! However definitely worth the use of it. Purchased at Lowes in Roseburg, Oregon.
Wow! Your area looks so clear! We live on the other side of the mountain in Eatonville and we have had so much smoke. Praying you all are doing well and the smoke doesn’t find you. I love your garden and hope to someday grow a larger area similar to the one you grow!
Plant purslane around the garden too. looks like a weed but it's good food
Some tuber weeds can be used for food or medical use.
Do you get Vine Borers in the NW? If so how do you prevent the pest from killing the squash?
I used to sit on a stool and weed my flower beds but now I just use a 3 or 4 tine garden rack to break up the weed roots. I removed the larger weeds and just leave the small weeds there to wilt and turn brown. It's so much easier.
It's definitely therapeutic, but I only like to weed in certain areas since we have a big field that fills up with goat heads now that we don't have any farming
I've used a garden weasel since the 70s. Look it up.
I had used pure vinegar on my weeds and it didn't kill them at all.
Thanks for sharing this information with us!
You pulled up the purslane! That's not a weed but a superfood!
Thanks Melissa 😊
You are so welcome!
....I guess you are east of I-5, and west of Cascade Foothills?
Good guess?
We are Skagit Valley.
Lol Eastern Skagit Valley up in Rockport, good guess!
What fertilizer you use? The leaves look so healthy.
I wish my wife would help me in the garden she sure likes eating stuff from it
How do you keep your light colored shirts clean. When I’m out in the dirt I somehow get it all over me. :-)
Thanks for this!😉👍
Welcome!
Beautiful garden. Thanks for the tips!💖🌹
You are so welcome!
Great video Melissa 😊
Very helpful, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
At the one minute mark, you’re pulling Purslane, ITS NOT A WEED, ITS FOOD!!!
I'm aware but it still pulls nutrients from the onions and I've got plenty more
@@destah3269 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hamish the Irish Amish if it is growing in an area you don’t want it in. It is a weed.
My big garden is 100×100 it's a weed , yep you can eat it , and it's good for you . But it don't take you over the winter.
@@MelissaKNorris - No it doesn't. Please do your research.
Have you tried Three sisters companion planting? Always been curious about it.
Awesome, I like the cardboard & wood chips. We used newspaper & wheat straw for years. It was great for weeds & drought. I think we may try cardboard next time.
Let me know how it works for you
Will do.
How do you orient your rows in the garden? Also same question for raspberry row, if you have experience with planting that?
What about Bull grass? I have invasive grass I can't get rid of
Did you end up with any ash on your garden from fires in Washington state? Portland, Oregon area is horrible and we have not been able to work in our garden or even harvest anything~when we can harvest I'm thinking a good rinse is good enough.
No, thankfully not. It was cloudy, but didn't get that close.
Have you ever used a weed control fabric between the rows? This year in our new garden we were flooded with weeds, if we neglected weeding for over a week it was a big task then. Not sure if the reason we had so many weeds this summer was due to all the rain we had in SE PA but I want the task of weed removal to be more manageable next year. Your thoughts...
I tried weed fabric for the first time this year and it has been a lifesaver and timesaver and backsaver. I highly recommend it, especially if you have weeds that are thicker than your lawn like I do and don't want to spend 2 to 3 hours everyday pulling weeds.
Yes, tried it before and it didn't work well for us.
One thing someone told me is that during very cold cold months you plow the garden several times during those cold months and that will kill a lot of the weeds that are in the soil.
@@robinhaas6895 well we definitely don't want to kill the good fungus do we. Oh well bad idea
You pulled out pigweed and purslane. You could have composted roots and made a salad...free food and high in nutrients
We eat it sometimes but I have so much that taking it out from that section doesn't hurt my supply :)
you have to try woven grown cover by growers solution...no muss no fuss..i cant praise enough
Thanks for sharing!
I like your weeding technique. I heard you say you put down cardboard and just was wondering about something. Over on Robbie and Gary Gardening Easy channel she mentioned that cardboard had chemicals in it therefore not to use it in gardens. I don’t know but you talking about using it reminded me of her comment. Have you heard that before? I suppose it could have chemicals in it since seems most things do these days. Like I said I don’t know but was wondering.
Good question. I have been thinking about this as well so would love to hear thoughts on that.
Not heard of them or that before. Yes, most things do these days, but I'll have to research to see if it is enough to make a difference.
I just charged my kitchen torch so I'm going to be burning some weeds in the next couple of days.
What is a kitchen torch?
Arvella Taratuta it’s a butane torch for making creme brûlée and all sorts of other things.
Thank you for posting this:)
Of course!
More wood chips and much less weeds will come through. 👍🏼💕🌸
I love this tiller where and what is this
And does t look like its killing you and u can start it
It's a BCS hand tractor, they have different attachments so you can swap out the tiller for other things too
Wow that so cool and neat!!! My tiller was handed down but can't find a tire for it nor can u get off try match it and so heavy and hard to handle and since dad has had brain cancer he doesn't have the strength to use it much anymore. So I will have too look into one thess
www.bcsamerica.com
I agree with you about staying up on the weeding. And Please wear ear protection with that tractor! If you have to raise your voice, you're losing hearing.
Thanks for the info. I appreciate your concern!
The black mesh weed cover that comes in tools right?
when will you add wood chips again? will u have a schedule like once a year, etc? tks for the video :-)
Yes once a year. You can do in the Fall or Spring.
@@MelissaKNorris good to know. thanks.
Hey Melissa, great video? I’m confused on whether I’m supposed to water my garlic that is planted in fall to over winter. Should I wait till spring to water? Also, do you think it will do fine growing in soil with a mulch of partially broken down woodchips?
Depends on how dry you get, we have enough rain here I never have to water my garlic. You need good draining soil so it doesn't rot and it likes fertile soil. Partially broken down wood chips should be fine around them, you still want the cloves planted in the soil. I pulled back the chips to get to bare soil, added some composted chicken manure, planted, then top dressed with straw.
Melissa K. Norris - Modern Homesteading Thanks! :)
Great job!
Thanks so much!
Nice looking garden but if u follow Charles Dowding's "No Dig" practices u will be 99% weed free.
It's even easier.
Oh man! I just want to eat that purslane!
Very interesting to watch the videos. Which state you guy's are in.
Washington State
I weed after watering they pull up intact instead of breaking off at the root
If there is no Bermuda grass in the garden I use back to Eden method exclusively. It's the best.
thanks for sharing!
I hope that you recognize the weed you are pulling is actually Purslane, a delicious, nutrlcious additive to your diet!
@Whoop!
I see you're pulling amaranth and purslane "weeds." Are you using them in the kitchen?
I don't the amaranth but do purslane. It grows all over here
@@MelissaKNorris Cool. I always save the best amaranth and lambsquarters for pot greens (like spinach or chard). Both are delicious and very nutritious.
Thanks for the videos. You've offered some great info.
I love your videos, but I am struggling to figure out how weeding is therapeutic!!! LOL
Ha! I did say it was a "little" therapeutic!
James Vatter I like to practice Ho'opono while weeding.
I actually had a pretty therapeutic spiritual experience this Spring.
What zone are you in? Just curious. I like the info you share.
I let some weeds survive because they are secret food or medicine. Am I the only one who does this?
@MsBizzyGurl If you like to do that then get some Joe Pie Weeds. They are excellent for that.
Yes, I cringed when she pulled up the puslane!
I saw your squash has white powdery on the leaves like mine. What is that? It seemed to cover every leaf and halt the squash growth. Any idea?
It's powdery mildew and copper or milk spray will kill it. If it's at the end of the season I don't worry about it too much