If you shop on Amazon, you can support OYR simply by clicking this link (bookmark it too) before shopping: www.amazon.com/?tag=oneya-20 Highlights: 0:22 How we protected plants from the cold 0:22 Didn't remove snow from north wall and bottom of hoop house 0:50 Covered outside and inside of door with 6 mil greenhouse film 1:52 Why I did not use supplemental heat 2:23 Covered cold frame and low tunnels with 2 extra layers of 6 mil greenhouse film (5 layers of cover total) 3:42 Temperatures outside versus hoop house 4:34 How did the plants hold up to the extreme cold? 6:50 The plants we're growing are more cold hardy than most people think
the only time I have lost plants from cold, is when the leaf freezes. this makes sense of course, the frozen leaf loses cellular integrity and can not recover. the ground does not freeze here and your solution has mitigated that as well.
I never said or implied in any way that I don't harvest crops in winter. I have numerous winter harvest videos, including the 2 videos that preceded this one. Organic greens are not inexpensive.
@@nhlninetyfour Great idea, but it's too small for that. You would need at least 40" x 40'' floor area, plus room to work around it. There would be the danger of damaging the plastic with tools. But it would be great to build a large insulated compost heap outside, with water pipe coiled through it, and running into the greenhouse where it would constantly radiate heat, day and night.
I've heard that composting inside a greenhouse can release gasses that the plants will not like. It is better to compost in an isolated room and to run water heater system through it to circulate into radiators inside the greenhouse.
I agree. I really miss Patrick's posts. OYR is one of my favorite channels. I moved into a new place last year that has enough room in the yard so I can have a garden (and plan on adding a greenhouse in the future). It's also in 5b (but in the Rockies) so I can really appreciate Patrick's experience and can at least re-watch the old videos.
@@theCodyReeder -How ridiculous are you ? I've walked in every morning and air it out for the breeze to dry out the walls , not from asfixiation. You probably think CO2 is causing global warming .I grew a vege patch in green house for the coming Grand Solar Minimum and it serving me well .Ice age is coming - Like it or not .
The health and colour of your greens is nearly unbelievable!!! You must have INCREDIBLY fertile soil. And I’m so happy for you that there was so much sun!!!! You’ve inspired our family so much here in Nova Scotia when our temps don’t get quite that low (this year perhaps only -30 WITH wind chill). It’s just amazing what u can do and grow with a little effort and passion! Thank you!!
This is truly impressive. I live where it gets to -30C and -35C for a few days and sometimes even a a few days down to -42C or so, and I would never have considered it possible to grow vegetables even in a hoop house in this kind of environment!
Really hope you are doing okay - so many of us here miss your videos. You've been so informative and generous sharing with all of us. Hoping and praying you're well. :-)
I feel your pain! We had -49 and wind chills at -70. Nice old northern Minnesota weather. This gives me hope. We are hoping to build a greenhouse and hoop tunnel next year.
Bear River Mama We also live in northern Minnesota and have been planning a greenhouse of some sort for sometime now. Right now we are looking at earth shelter.
David Micheletti I considered an earth shelter as well but decided I wanted to make a little cottage greenhouse that could also be my she-shed/ art studio. I hope to put in a wood stove so I can use it year round. I have already started using hoop tunnels and they are great!!!! It adds so much growing time on a short season. I'm sure you can fully relate! Best of luck in your future build! I would love to know how it pans out! I am very curious how well the sunken greenhouse performs!
Really miss your videos and information. As we head into the winter re-watching your cold weather gardening videos. This is my first year finally with a small low tunnel. It’s my first attempt and hoping all goes well. Best to you and your family and Oscar too.
Thank you for the inspiration. I'm a fellow chicagoan and never thought it was possible. I grow indoors in the winter months Maybe it's time to expand the garden!
@@OneYardRevolution I live in the Toowoomba area- Australia on the range and fortunately get endless sunny days. Chicago... perhaps LED lights ? They are cheap to run power wise. It would be difficult if you have endless days below / close to freezing days , months on end . Consider moving yourself south? It may be imperative with the colder yrs ahead that are coming . ( not global warming... infact the opposite is true ,a cold trend in on the doorstep for the next couple of decades . Thats why I started my vege garden 18 months ago ,knowing inflation is coming due to crop losses by wild storms , hail, flooding, freezing etc . Get prepped 👍
Last year, my first green house, collapsed with the weight of the snow. Ofcourse that was my first attempt. This year I have better idea to improve the strength and was further looking for heating options, which I now have to begin with the fall/winter months here in the PNW. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Patrick! I am a longtime gardener of the old school methods. I recently discovered the magic of permaculture and I am just amazed at how awesome, practical and logical it is! Can't believe I've done it the wrong way all these years! I Absolutely love all your videos, so instructive and well structured! I binge them in every spare minute I get! I am from Montreal Qc, and with our harsh winters, I am sooo inspired by your hoophouse, I've never had the courage to try one for the whole winter because I though it would be pointless, but you inspired me! We will be building one this summer! We just purchased our new home with a decent (by Montreal standards) back yard and I CAN NOT WAIT to start our first raised beds, we'll be starting them this fall tho, as per your recommendations, we'll observe well the first summer, and we'll be doing the lasagna layering method to start up the good ground! I have a few questions for you: 1- I can't stop wondering how big is your back yard? We have young kids so at least a part has to stay grassy (clovers :) ), I wonder how much I should take up for the garden part... aaaaaand most importantly: 2- currently the yard is a wasteland where two huge shepherds run and make all their needs, the ground is a beige-grey dust where absolutely nothing grows... maybe too acidic from the dog urine... I wonder how we should decontaminate, or should we just dig up the parts for the garden, discard that soil and add on new ground (and then do the lasagna layers for the raised beds)? Huge thanks for your time, and by the way I am primarily french-speaking so sorry if some stuff is unclear.
Thanks Lina! Congratulations on your new home and future garden! The yard is 15.24 by 7.62 meters. I wouldn't remove any soil, but I'd probably build raised beds to ensure the soil is in good shape. I hope this helps!
Hello Patrick. Very impressive that your garden survived with so low temperatures! The greenhouse is a big deal. You have done a great job and your garden looks like a summer. Bravo Patrick. Congratulations!!!
Concerning heaters in your greenhouse, you can run the power cord through some PVC pipe that is buries underground. The power cord can emerge inside the greenhouse and plug into a heater. You can turn the heater off and on from inside the house.
Careful doing that. Power cords are not designed to be used that way, they use air to shed heat. If you put an insulated cord in a pipe and bury it, you could overheat it.
@@farstrider79 your right. Its safer to run NMD-U or TEK wire without pipe thats designed to be direct buried underground or run XLPE single conductor in pipe and junction boxs on each side that change over to Cabtire with plugins to use. Running cabling not meant for pipe degrades its ampacity that it can carry safely which leads to fires.
In the US we use UF (underground feeder), wire, conduit is relatively cheap and adds extra protection, also makes it easier to upgrade or add to late on. Just don't overfill the conduit and overheating the wire isn't a problem. Plenty of charts online to help with determining conduit size plan for the future.
That’s just amazing that the plants made it through that cold weather. I just finished my green house. I’m ready for seeds mid February.. And build some cold frames this year too. Thank you for all your insight on growing under cover..!! Have a warm fantastic day..!!
I love this idea of growing veggies and fruits during the winter. I live in southern Alabama so our cold is a very different cold. With our highs are higher but our colds are wetter and bone chilling at times. Because of the climate changes i put in a greenhouse 2 years ago. I heat mine with water barrels painted black. So far my bananas love it. I mainly keep my tropical plants in there because all my raised beds are set up to take hoop covers. But I still like to watch northern gardeners and how they grow food so in the future if i need to i can incorporate their ideas to my growing conditions as i need
This information is about the best I have seen on this subject. And it is timely for those who can begin preparing next winter. Especially first timers.
I will definitely look into a hoop house here in Wyoming we are 4b but a lot of the problem is the wind chill although we do get down to -40F almost every February it has to be worth a shot for cold hardy greens!
Hi Jon! 4B is more of a challenge that what we face, but you can definitely extend your season for a number of crops, and carrots, spinach, mache, claytonia, and kale should make it through the winter under double cover.
I am 4b also. Right now I have 4 feet of snow on my garden area. I am going to try a hog panel hoop and see how it does next year. I gotta remember the 2nd hoop too. . Thank you
Excellent information. Your very proactive in covering and uncovering plants. This is a huge asset. Successful gardening in both summer and winter is very hands on.
I have so many problems in my garden, but am so glad that snow & temps like these are not among them! Even though you & I live at identical latitudes, on opposite sides of the equator. I am constantly amazed by how you manage to cope with such extremes and make your garden so productive.
I'm watching this after we've just had a couple of days in the high 30's (celsius). It's amazing to see food growing in such cold conditions. I couldn't imagine it. Thanks for the informative video.
Amazing showing people the possibilities that are available for science in gardening! I designed a heating system for my dad's green house that could possibly heat in -35 but people always seem hesitant to try because they think the plants will die. I told him I could build a simple door (like what you would see in a decontamination unit in a space station except only for temperature loss) to make sure when the green house is open there would be no shock to the plants. He said he will try the heating the green house earlier this season but hopfuly he will warm up to the idea of growing in the winter because its obvious that is possible! Glad to see your video again because anything is possible! Happy gardening!
4:55 .. WOW!! That is impressive!!! I would not of thought they could have survived! I guess it's like we told growing up in the cold ... Bundle up in layers!!! GOOD JOB! Super Impressed!!
Great success! This polar vortex survival brings me inspiration for my winters. Our zone 2b winters are usually in the -30 Celsius for a week or so but it is the wind chill that brings down the so called warmer days. We have clear sunny days for most of winter. The lowest we had this week was -40Celsius with a wind chill down to -51 Celsius. Interesting to see the Polar Vortex on the maps go down to your area around Chicago and parts of Michigan. Stay warm Patrick, Mrs. OYR and Oscar.
Thanks Valerie! I imagine it would be tough to harvest through winter in zone 2b without heat, but you could definitely extend the growing season significantly.
@@OneYardRevolution We live in similar zone as Valerie (2a/b) Would it be possible, do you think, with an earth greenhouse with heat sinks and compost heaps?
I think I've commented this in the past, but your videos bring me so much joy all year round. But, especially in the winter. I am not fortunate enough to have a yard at the moment, so I can't do the winter gardening that you do. However, watching all of your lovely plants thrive in the winter just makes me so happy!
I was wondering how you made out in the bitter cold, you have demonstrated what is possible with the right set up. Thanks for providing the metric conversions, it is much appreciated. Enjoy all of those greens,
Unbelievable! Nice prep work for the extreme cold. And no supplemental heat source. Looks like Oscar fared pretty well during the cold too. Always appreciate your videos!
He is cozy in the hoop house with that thick fur. What is the dimensions of your fenced backyard garden? It looks a lot bigger with just snow covering the ground.
Nice. Couple years ago I planted carrots very late in the year. I seen this channel. I thought the carrots would just die in the cold, but decided to build a single layer low tunnel over the carrots. I was still growing carrots into the 3rd week of Dec. Had a nice harvest too. Thanks. I am thinking on some very late crops again this year.
I think this does it for me. I'm in central Illinois and had similar temperature. I have an idea to make my raised bed garden into a convertible hoop house for next season.
This popped up in my feed. Probably because of the time of year. But I got so excited that you were making new content! And then realized it was old, miss you guys!😢
I love this. Really. This is what I keep trying to tell people about. You CAN grow year round in so many places with a little planning. Excellent Patrick! Sharing!
Those are seriously extreme temps! I think my FAVORITE garden tools are cattle panels. They are cheap, sturdy, easy to find, and double as trellises in the summer. 2 cattle panels cover my 4'x8' raised beds and reclaimed plastic from packaging and shipping or from my job, family members collecting sheets of usable plastic or old sheets etc, bulk binder clips and duct tape... I put together some nice high tunnels for next to NUTHIN. In the spring, recycle the plastic and grow peas and beans and cukes right up and over those panels ;)
I like your cadence a great deal. Also I like that you are “to the point”. Not a lot of extra yak. THANK YOU! Also I liked the content. I’m gonna watch more. Great vid, brother.
4 роки тому
You mean you dont care about Skillshare or who donated to his Patreon? Who would of thought!
@@DontStopBrent lots of youtubers spends tons of time on their videos asking for donations, thanking a list of people for donations or promote paid promotions such as skillshare. Its nice not seeing any of that bs here.
Every time I saw the news this week i wondered about your greens. I cannot believe how amazing this is! I live telling people that you CAN grow veggies in the winter! It was cold where we live, too. I had to wear a sweater. :)
OYR Frugal & Sustainable Organic Gardening Ha ha! I grew up in Minnesota, but have lived in Arizona for 30 years! What a week you all had! What a great way to show how growing in the winter works, too!
You have just encouraged me to try to try this next winter. I live the the Adirondacks and it’s a zone 4a. If you can keep your greens alive with -23 degrees! I should be able to do it also. It’s nothing to get some nights -30 or below in January and February. I see how you do it and I am going to try it’s! Layer it when it goes below zero. Thank you for showing people it-can be done.
Great design, i've grown veggies off grid for over a decade and this is essentially what I do as well, cover everything multiple times so the convection is slowed down. The best approach is to have a compost pile behind the greenhouse too, lean the compost against some steel barrels full of water which act as a bulk head, then have the barrels inside the greenhouse, so you get the warmth of the compost but none of the offgas. works for tomatos in the freezing winter months.
I was wondering g how you faired this past week? Thanks for sharing and well done. Our pant in the hoop house survived without additional cover and low’s of -10
Finally! Something for us to hold on to for the upper states! I was always on the fence considering a greenhouse, but after seeing this, I'm game!......oh darn....ANOTHER PROJECT! LOL Thanks for sharing.
I learnt from my mechanical engineering subject that we can increase the insulation factor by enclose the trapped air between two window. My idea is could you try to use air bubble wrap between two sheets of the greenhouse cover and then seal it by using tape.
bubble wrap has good insulating qualities and works well in a greenhouse. you can use narrow strips of double sided tape to make it stick to the greenhouse plastic
To warm my winter greenhouse I've heated a few bricks in the oven and stacked them inside my metal wheelbarrow. It's just enough heat so the plants won't freeze overnight. Not perfect, but works.
@@OneYardRevolution Hi Patrick, I was wondering whether you made a video showing how you built your hoop house. I can see that you garden is fenced on all sides with wooden fences. Do you think that your hoop house would be strong enough to stand in a more open environment?
Love these winter hoop house updates! You inspired me to try lettuce, and it did great until a few weeks ago - using only the hoophouse cover. I’ll be working on the second row of cover, or the low tunnels inside the hoophouse for some early Spring crops. Thanks!
Plastic can really save the plants....and in my case in Southern Alabama, the Milkweed and Monarch caterpillars. Instant green house! Thanks for showing yours!
imagine he forgot about himself. the plants are toasty warm... while Patrick is in his house huddled under blankets with the toaster handle taped down and the oven door open....
I had a 13' x 25' greenhouse a few years ago. Heating cost , too much. Tree feel on top of it and destroyed it. Now I am making a greenhouse 10'x10'x10' greenhouse. If there is one thing that I get from this videos is the importance of layers. I know that all so well. You really had a very cold test. I want to try to grow some of the things that may be harder to grow in the winter, tomatoes, cucumbers. I am trying to grab all the info and place it in my head and come up with an action plan. Thanks for the video.
I live in Gunnison, CO, second coldest city in the lower 48, at 7700 feet. Last night was -24, which ain't unusual around here. I have not all that well constructed cold frames in a 21 x 60 hoophouse unheated). Depending upon how large the cold frame is a I have an incondescent (for the heat, not the light -- 40 or 60 watt flood) light bulb in each cold frame. Right now I have cold frames with either lettuce, spinach, or peas growing in them. I have grown scallions, beets, carrots, asian greens, kale, and tomatoes (yes tomatoes, they start coming up like weeds in December from the previous summer crop of fallen fruit). I usually put a piece of foam insulation over the cold frame top at night with a couple of bricks to hold it down when it starts getting really cold. This method works outdoors (no hoophouse) as well, but the snow makes it difficult to take care of. Tested to well below -30. A few years ago we had 4 weeks of -18 or colder every night and no problem.
Congratulations on your greens making it through the arctic blast! 👏👏👏👏👏. QUESTIONS: are your greens growing through this winter or just surviving? How do you water during the winter? I imagine it must be different than when it is warm. Have you started to plan out what this year’s beds will grow and where yet?
Thanks Linda! We don't water from December through mid-February. When we start watering 2 or 3 weeks from now, we'll water sparingly on warm days. Typically, plants don't grow during this period, but this year we saw growth through December and well into January because the weather was so mild.
Good to know. The greens look a lot better than just surviving! It has to be incredible to have fresh greens through the winter. Thanks for reply about watering. I hope you are planning on a video sharing your planting plans for this spring.
Dear Patrick, hoping all is ok. Missing your updates! If everything is ok, then I guess Ill be patient, if not, then Ill keep ya'll in prayers! Blessings from TX
Hi, Cody :) In the video "Nebraska retiree uses earths's heat to grow oranges in snow" by Kirsten Dirksen there is an interesting greenhouse concept with low-tech ground source heating. I don't grow plants during winter. Jet I could try to build a greenhouse in front of the garage and do it since it rarely gets below -20s °C in Latvia for the past few decades.
Wow, I thought for sure you would lose some plants, it been mighty cold 🥶! All that protection really works! That was Oscar in a mellow mood, I think he was enjoying the sun. Klaus
My jaw literally dropped when you uncovered those live plants in -31C. I never knew plastic can insulate this well. How about adding burlap and then plastic on top? Would that work better? I have some plants outside, not in a greenhouse that I'm afraid might freeze.
Stumbled across this after searching for ways to heat a greenhouse. This is a fantastic video. I'm in Prince Edward Island, and we rarely go below -20, most winter overnights are in the -10 to -15c . I have two greenhouses and overwintered spinach in a fish tub covered with glass, I think this upcoming winter I will do more. I try to get my fall cold loving crops started by Sept 1st
So true. Insulated blankets will not thoroughly protect, the more so with freezing wind. Adding plastic or any waterproof/resistant material over blanket keeps the heat and moisture like the science behind space blankets. Unfortunately, there are very few information out there regarding this method. Your video will surely save a lot of winter heartaches.
Excellent lesson for gardeners living in harsh winter climate. We are going to hit with -35c or -31F. I don’t have anything outside but next year may have a greenhouse.
Hi Denise! We don't water from December through mid-February, because plants are typically dormant during that period and don't need water. We'll start watering sparingly in 2 or 3 weeks.
Great job. It's minus 56 Celsius where I live in winter and planned a greenhouse this year. Just noticed your video 10 minutes ago. The snow helps for warmth. Even to warm your house add it all around foundation. Big difference. Igloos are very warm . So this concept is great . Where i live i think i would dig down 2 feet to make it extra warm as lower temperatures here. Will be subscribing .
If you shop on Amazon, you can support OYR simply by clicking this link (bookmark it too) before shopping: www.amazon.com/?tag=oneya-20
Highlights:
0:22 How we protected plants from the cold
0:22 Didn't remove snow from north wall and bottom of hoop house
0:50 Covered outside and inside of door with 6 mil greenhouse film
1:52 Why I did not use supplemental heat
2:23 Covered cold frame and low tunnels with 2 extra layers of 6 mil greenhouse film (5 layers of cover total)
3:42 Temperatures outside versus hoop house
4:34 How did the plants hold up to the extreme cold?
6:50 The plants we're growing are more cold hardy than most people think
Oscar Cameos:
4:14 4:34 6:21 8:16
the only time I have lost plants from cold, is when the leaf freezes. this makes sense of course, the frozen leaf loses cellular integrity and can not recover.
the ground does not freeze here and your solution has mitigated that as well.
You could possibly add a compost heap in one corner, that way the heat generated could warm the space.
What part of the world/country are you located?
We harvest and eat our winter crops all winter long. I'm not sure where you got the idea that we didn't.
I never said or implied in any way that I don't harvest crops in winter. I have numerous winter harvest videos, including the 2 videos that preceded this one. Organic greens are not inexpensive.
i love the occasional cat zoom-in edits. clear, informational, and cute.
You could compost inside the hoop house to keep it warm too
Good idea
@@nhlninetyfour Great idea, but it's too small for that. You would need at least 40" x 40'' floor area, plus room to work around it. There would be the danger of damaging the plastic with tools. But it would be great to build a large insulated compost heap outside, with water pipe coiled through it, and running into the greenhouse where it would constantly radiate heat, day and night.
Ohhh!! Good idea!
great idea!
I've heard that composting inside a greenhouse can release gasses that the plants will not like. It is better to compost in an isolated room and to run water heater system through it to circulate into radiators inside the greenhouse.
How I wish this channel would come back! It was SO informative and educational.
What happened to it, do you know?
I agree. I really miss Patrick's posts. OYR is one of my favorite channels. I moved into a new place last year that has enough room in the yard so I can have a garden (and plan on adding a greenhouse in the future). It's also in 5b (but in the Rockies) so I can really appreciate Patrick's experience and can at least re-watch the old videos.
well all he´s plants are dying on this movie. low dropping is a sign of dying.
@@junehansen7788 nah, you can see a video where he is harvesting these plants after they recovered
@@junehansen7788 "movie" :) boomer much, not to mention WRONG. haha:)
You know you’re a real gardener when shoveling snow is part of your daily chores in the garden.
I use a metal bucket with hot coals overnite to keep greenhouse warm. The plants love the CO2 and the warmth 👍😁
Hey, good idea.
Oh that's a really good idea. Thanks!
That's a really good idea.
Be sure to air it out in the morning before going in. Wouldn’t want to drop dead from carbon monoxide poisoning. 😅
@@theCodyReeder -How ridiculous are you ? I've walked in every morning and air it out for the breeze to dry out the walls , not from asfixiation. You probably think CO2 is causing global warming .I grew a vege patch in green house for the coming Grand Solar Minimum and it serving me well .Ice age is coming - Like it or not .
The health and colour of your greens is nearly unbelievable!!! You must have INCREDIBLY fertile soil. And I’m so happy for you that there was so much sun!!!! You’ve inspired our family so much here in Nova Scotia when our temps don’t get quite that low (this year perhaps only -30 WITH wind chill). It’s just amazing what u can do and grow with a little effort and passion! Thank you!!
It's nice to see your garden survived the cold. thanks!
Thanks Jeb!
The Legend!
Jeb!!!!!🐰
This is truly impressive. I live where it gets to -30C and -35C for a few days and sometimes even a a few days down to -42C or so, and I would never have considered it possible to grow vegetables even in a hoop house in this kind of environment!
Really hope you are doing okay - so many of us here miss your videos. You've been so informative and generous sharing with all of us. Hoping and praying you're well. :-)
Being in zone 5 and seeing this being possible is unreal! Thank you so much for the video!
I feel your pain! We had -49 and wind chills at -70. Nice old northern Minnesota weather. This gives me hope. We are hoping to build a greenhouse and hoop tunnel next year.
Bear River Mama We also live in northern Minnesota and have been planning a greenhouse of some sort for sometime now. Right now we are looking at earth shelter.
David Micheletti I considered an earth shelter as well but decided I wanted to make a little cottage greenhouse that could also be my she-shed/ art studio. I hope to put in a wood stove so I can use it year round. I have already started using hoop tunnels and they are great!!!! It adds so much growing time on a short season. I'm sure you can fully relate! Best of luck in your future build! I would love to know how it pans out! I am very curious how well the sunken greenhouse performs!
David Linken trust me, I am apparently not a typical Minnesota voter! I find it kinda embarrassing to discuss the Minnesota political lineup. 🙄
David Linken trust me, I am apparently not a typical Minnesota voter! I find it kinda embarrassing to discuss the Minnesota political lineup. 🙄
Ohhhhburrrrchillll
Really miss your videos and information. As we head into the winter re-watching your cold weather gardening videos. This is my first year finally with a small low tunnel. It’s my first attempt and hoping all goes well. Best to you and your family and Oscar too.
Thank you for the inspiration. I'm a fellow chicagoan and never thought it was possible.
I grow indoors in the winter months
Maybe it's time to expand the garden!
Hi Mary! Yeah, it can definitely be done in Chicago if you have a spot that gets plenty of sun in winter.
@@OneYardRevolution I live in the Toowoomba area- Australia on the range and fortunately get endless sunny days.
Chicago... perhaps LED lights ? They are cheap to run power wise. It would be difficult if you have endless days below / close to freezing days , months on end . Consider moving yourself south? It may be imperative with the colder yrs ahead that are coming . ( not global warming... infact the opposite is true ,a cold trend in on the doorstep for the next couple of decades . Thats why I started my vege garden 18 months ago ,knowing inflation is coming due to crop losses by wild storms , hail, flooding, freezing etc . Get prepped 👍
What is for dinner Mary?
Last year, my first green house, collapsed with the weight of the snow. Ofcourse that was my first attempt. This year I have better idea to improve the strength and was further looking for heating options, which I now have to begin with the fall/winter months here in the PNW. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Patrick! I am a longtime gardener of the old school methods. I recently discovered the magic of permaculture and I am just amazed at how awesome, practical and logical it is! Can't believe I've done it the wrong way all these years! I Absolutely love all your videos, so instructive and well structured! I binge them in every spare minute I get! I am from Montreal Qc, and with our harsh winters, I am sooo inspired by your hoophouse, I've never had the courage to try one for the whole winter because I though it would be pointless, but you inspired me! We will be building one this summer! We just purchased our new home with a decent (by Montreal standards) back yard and I CAN NOT WAIT to start our first raised beds, we'll be starting them this fall tho, as per your recommendations, we'll observe well the first summer, and we'll be doing the lasagna layering method to start up the good ground! I have a few questions for you: 1- I can't stop wondering how big is your back yard? We have young kids so at least a part has to stay grassy (clovers :) ), I wonder how much I should take up for the garden part... aaaaaand most importantly: 2- currently the yard is a wasteland where two huge shepherds run and make all their needs, the ground is a beige-grey dust where absolutely nothing grows... maybe too acidic from the dog urine... I wonder how we should decontaminate, or should we just dig up the parts for the garden, discard that soil and add on new ground (and then do the lasagna layers for the raised beds)? Huge thanks for your time, and by the way I am primarily french-speaking so sorry if some stuff is unclear.
Thanks Lina! Congratulations on your new home and future garden! The yard is 15.24 by 7.62 meters. I wouldn't remove any soil, but I'd probably build raised beds to ensure the soil is in good shape. I hope this helps!
Hello Patrick. Very impressive that your garden survived with so low temperatures! The greenhouse is a big deal. You have done a great job and your garden looks like a summer. Bravo Patrick. Congratulations!!!
Thanks!
Concerning heaters in your greenhouse, you can run the power cord through some PVC pipe that is buries underground. The power cord can emerge inside the greenhouse and plug into a heater. You can turn the heater off and on from inside the house.
Careful doing that. Power cords are not designed to be used that way, they use air to shed heat. If you put an insulated cord in a pipe and bury it, you could overheat it.
@@farstrider79 Electrical conduit
@@farstrider79 To be fair, if it's that cold, there is a lot of heat being drawn away.
@@farstrider79 your right. Its safer to run NMD-U or TEK wire without pipe thats designed to be direct buried underground or run XLPE single conductor in pipe and junction boxs on each side that change over to Cabtire with plugins to use. Running cabling not meant for pipe degrades its ampacity that it can carry safely which leads to fires.
In the US we use UF (underground feeder), wire, conduit is relatively cheap and adds extra protection, also makes it easier to upgrade or add to late on. Just don't overfill the conduit and overheating the wire isn't a problem. Plenty of charts online to help with determining conduit size plan for the future.
That’s just amazing that the plants made it through that cold weather. I just finished my green house. I’m ready for seeds mid February.. And build some cold frames this year too. Thank you for all your insight on growing under cover..!! Have a warm fantastic day..!!
Thanks! Best wishes with your February planting. I'll be planting undercover in February too.
As I watched you shoveling the snow to open the hoop house, I thought he's a gardening warrior. You teach us so much! Thanks!
Considering all the preppers out there this should be standard for everyone living north of Tennessee
I love this idea of growing veggies and fruits during the winter. I live in southern Alabama so our cold is a very different cold. With our highs are higher but our colds are wetter and bone chilling at times. Because of the climate changes i put in a greenhouse 2 years ago. I heat mine with water barrels painted black. So far my bananas love it. I mainly keep my tropical plants in there because all my raised beds are set up to take hoop covers. But I still like to watch northern gardeners and how they grow food so in the future if i need to i can incorporate their ideas to my growing conditions as i need
This information is about the best I have seen on this subject. And it is timely for those who can begin preparing next winter. Especially first timers.
This is very interesting. I love how clearly you go through all the temps inside and out and explain your process.
I miss my favorite gardener sooo much!!!!
I will definitely look into a hoop house here in Wyoming we are 4b but a lot of the problem is the wind chill although we do get down to -40F almost every February it has to be worth a shot for cold hardy greens!
Hi Jon! 4B is more of a challenge that what we face, but you can definitely extend your season for a number of crops, and carrots, spinach, mache, claytonia, and kale should make it through the winter under double cover.
@@OneYardRevolution thank you so much for your excellent advice and awesome videos. Do you and your wife not eat any animal products?
I am 4b also.
Right now I have 4 feet of snow on my garden area.
I am going to try a hog panel hoop and see how it does next year. I gotta remember the 2nd hoop too. .
Thank you
Thank you. You are an inspiration for Canadian gardeners like me. I live in Manitoba on 89 acres. Planning to Market next year, ( retirement).
Excellent information. Your very proactive in covering and uncovering plants. This is a huge asset. Successful gardening in both summer and winter is very hands on.
Thanks Perry!
I have so many problems in my garden, but am so glad that snow & temps like these are not among them! Even though you & I live at identical latitudes, on opposite sides of the equator.
I am constantly amazed by how you manage to cope with such extremes and make your garden so productive.
I'm watching this after we've just had a couple of days in the high 30's (celsius). It's amazing to see food growing in such cold conditions. I couldn't imagine it. Thanks for the informative video.
Amazing showing people the possibilities that are available for science in gardening! I designed a heating system for my dad's green house that could possibly heat in -35 but people always seem hesitant to try because they think the plants will die. I told him I could build a simple door (like what you would see in a decontamination unit in a space station except only for temperature loss) to make sure when the green house is open there would be no shock to the plants. He said he will try the heating the green house earlier this season but hopfuly he will warm up to the idea of growing in the winter because its obvious that is possible! Glad to see your video again because anything is possible! Happy gardening!
I'm curious how you adjust your watering when it's this cold out.
I would imagine the coverings prevent enough evaporation and simultaneously create condensation.
4:55 .. WOW!! That is impressive!!! I would not of thought they could have survived! I guess it's like we told growing up in the cold ... Bundle up in layers!!! GOOD JOB! Super Impressed!!
Great success! This polar vortex survival brings me inspiration for my winters. Our zone 2b winters are usually in the -30 Celsius for a week or so but it is the wind chill that brings down the so called warmer days. We have clear sunny days for most of winter. The lowest we had this week was -40Celsius with a wind chill down to -51 Celsius. Interesting to see the Polar Vortex on the maps go down to your area around Chicago and parts of Michigan. Stay warm Patrick, Mrs. OYR and Oscar.
Thanks Valerie! I imagine it would be tough to harvest through winter in zone 2b without heat, but you could definitely extend the growing season significantly.
@@OneYardRevolution
We live in similar zone as Valerie (2a/b) Would it be possible, do you think, with an earth greenhouse with heat sinks and compost heaps?
This is very encouraging as two years again, we have 20 below temps in Southwest Nebraska.
the cat is like "who are you talking too!!"🤣
This is amazing. I've failed for two winters now. After watching this I'll add more cover and try again.
Nice to see your garden doing well in the winter days! Happy Gardening!
I think I've commented this in the past, but your videos bring me so much joy all year round. But, especially in the winter. I am not fortunate enough to have a yard at the moment, so I can't do the winter gardening that you do. However, watching all of your lovely plants thrive in the winter just makes me so happy!
That's very sweet of you to say Lysa!
I was wondering how you made out in the bitter cold, you have demonstrated what is possible with the right set up. Thanks for providing the metric conversions, it is much appreciated. Enjoy all of those greens,
Thanks Margaret!
I really appreciate and amazed by the lusciousness of the crop. Usually when people show the greenhouse crops, they are sparce.
Wow! You are an amazing gardener, and an inspiration to lot of people. Keep up the great work and keep on sharing your garden videos.
Thanks! That's very nice of you to say.
aparnaganapati yes!! Please do Patrick!
Thanks for using the temperatures in Celsius.
Unbelievable! Nice prep work for the extreme cold. And no supplemental heat source. Looks like Oscar fared pretty well during the cold too. Always appreciate your videos!
Thanks! You should've seen Oscar when I tried to bring him back in the house. He clung to his shelf for dear life. lol
He is cozy in the hoop house with that thick fur. What is the dimensions of your fenced backyard garden? It looks a lot bigger with just snow covering the ground.
It's 25' by 50'
Nice.
Couple years ago I planted carrots very late in the year. I seen this channel. I thought the carrots would just die in the cold, but decided to build a single layer low tunnel over the carrots. I was still growing carrots into the 3rd week of Dec. Had a nice harvest too. Thanks.
I am thinking on some very late crops again this year.
I saw the black buckets early. Nice work!
Just your style of presentation and tone has a soothing effect on me. I am so grateful for finding your video. Thank you for making it! 🌻🌷🌼🏵🌹🌸🌺🌼🌷
I think this does it for me. I'm in central Illinois and had similar temperature. I have an idea to make my raised bed garden into a convertible hoop house for next season.
This popped up in my feed. Probably because of the time of year. But I got so excited that you were making new content! And then realized it was old, miss you guys!😢
Wow! I thought about your hoop house when I saw your temp on the news. Great job.
Thanks Cindy!
I love this.
Really.
This is what I keep trying to tell people about.
You CAN grow year round in so many places with a little planning.
Excellent Patrick!
Sharing!
Thanks for spreading the word!
Patrick - that is absolutely an amazing result. This was a very interesting clip for me - I can't imagine temperatures that cold.
Thanks Andy! I imagine it's a little bit warmer where you live. lol
Those are seriously extreme temps!
I think my FAVORITE garden tools are cattle panels. They are cheap, sturdy, easy to find, and double as trellises in the summer. 2 cattle panels cover my 4'x8' raised beds and reclaimed plastic from packaging and shipping or from my job, family members collecting sheets of usable plastic or old sheets etc, bulk binder clips and duct tape... I put together some nice high tunnels for next to NUTHIN.
In the spring, recycle the plastic and grow peas and beans and cukes right up and over those panels ;)
I like your cadence a great deal. Also I like that you are “to the point”. Not a lot of extra yak. THANK YOU! Also I liked the content. I’m gonna watch more. Great vid, brother.
You mean you dont care about Skillshare or who donated to his Patreon? Who would of thought!
Kaniel Outis I don’t get your joke.
@@DontStopBrent lots of youtubers spends tons of time on their videos asking for donations, thanking a list of people for donations or promote paid promotions such as skillshare. Its nice not seeing any of that bs here.
Every time I saw the news this week i wondered about your greens. I cannot believe how amazing this is! I live telling people that you CAN grow veggies in the winter! It was cold where we live, too. I had to wear a sweater. :)
Thanks Jeannie! I had to wear a sweater too...and a shirt, and a sweatshirt, and a coat...lol
OYR Frugal & Sustainable Organic Gardening Ha ha! I grew up in Minnesota, but have lived in Arizona for 30 years! What a week you all had! What a great way to show how growing in the winter works, too!
@@OneYardRevolution Did you forget the long johns? LOL
О Джини, это тепло. Я ношу 3 месяца в году куртку из натуральной кожи с мехом. И надеваю ее на свитер.))
BRRR! I am happy to live in a warmer climate! I like seeing snow from a sunny place.
You have just encouraged me to try to try this next winter. I live the the Adirondacks and it’s a zone 4a. If you can keep your greens alive with -23 degrees! I should be able to do it also. It’s nothing to get some nights -30 or below in January and February. I see how you do it and I am going to try it’s! Layer it when it goes below zero. Thank you for showing people it-can be done.
Beautiful. Thank you for this update. I Was thinking about you and trying not to complain when it hit 3°F on Long Island 😀
Thanks Susie! 3°F sounds nice!
Great design, i've grown veggies off grid for over a decade and this is essentially what I do as well, cover everything multiple times so the convection is slowed down. The best approach is to have a compost pile behind the greenhouse too, lean the compost against some steel barrels full of water which act as a bulk head, then have the barrels inside the greenhouse, so you get the warmth of the compost but none of the offgas. works for tomatos in the freezing winter months.
All I can say is Wow !!
I find keeping my compost bins running in the greenhouse provides a great way to keep the greenhouse warm.
I was wondering g how you faired this past week? Thanks for sharing and well done. Our pant in the hoop house survived without additional cover and low’s of -10
Thanks Jeff! I'm happy to hear your plants are doing well.
That is very inspiring, Patrick! Well done! You and your wife are probably the healthiest people in your neighborhood!
I mean because you figured out how to have organic produce all year! I'm looking at your hoop house construction videos again!!!
Thanks Mary!
Those greens look good enough to eat! ;) Solid work saving your garden!
Thanks Jose!
I posted this incredible video to my Facebook group. Where there’s a will, there’s a way. Thanks for sharing your incredible success.
Thanks Cheryl!
Awesome !!! Full season growing - and fresh salads all year round.
Thanks John!
Finally! Something for us to hold on to for the upper states! I was always on the fence considering a greenhouse, but after seeing this, I'm game!......oh darn....ANOTHER PROJECT! LOL Thanks for sharing.
I learnt from my mechanical engineering subject that we can increase the insulation factor by enclose the trapped air between two window. My idea is could you try to use air bubble wrap between two sheets of the greenhouse cover and then seal it by using tape.
what a great idea!
bubble wrap has good insulating qualities and works well in a greenhouse. you can use narrow strips of double sided tape to make it stick to the greenhouse plastic
To warm my winter greenhouse I've heated a few bricks in the oven and stacked them inside my metal wheelbarrow. It's just enough heat so the plants won't freeze overnight. Not perfect, but works.
My green and hoop houses kept us supplied with fresh homegrown greens this winter. The best investment we made in the garden.
I seriously need to build a hoop house next Fall! I'm tired of buying greens in the store during the winter.
Yeah, it's so nice to have fresh greens from the garden in winter. It makes winter seem to go by faster too.
@@OneYardRevolution Hi Patrick, I was wondering whether you made a video showing how you built your hoop house. I can see that you garden is fenced on all sides with wooden fences. Do you think that your hoop house would be strong enough to stand in a more open environment?
@@OneYardRevolution what about watering or fertilizing. How do you do that and how often?
I am so, so glad I found your channel. We will have a winter garden and live in the mid-west. Very cold.
Hope it warms up pretty soon
Thanks for sharing
Thank you. Your "Highlights w marker locations on video "? Wow! What a time saver & fact locator. Like your statements of purpose as well.
Love these winter hoop house updates! You inspired me to try lettuce, and it did great until a few weeks ago - using only the hoophouse cover. I’ll be working on the second row of cover, or the low tunnels inside the hoophouse for some early Spring crops. Thanks!
Thanks! Yeah, we've only been able to overwinter lettuce here under 2 layers.
Plastic can really save the plants....and in my case in Southern Alabama, the Milkweed and Monarch caterpillars. Instant green house!
Thanks for showing yours!
Nice job Patrick! You're a pioneer!! :)
Thanks!
Wow. You've totally changed my mind about greenhouses!
Lord, those temps are insane! Your home heating bills must be through the roof!😬
Depending on how well insulated and sealed his home is !
@@steakovercake3986 if his house is under 2 layers of plastic he should be good
@@QuantumLeap11 hahaha right
@@QuantumLeap11 lololol
imagine he forgot about himself. the plants are toasty warm... while Patrick is in his house huddled under blankets with the toaster handle taped down and the oven door open....
I had a 13' x 25' greenhouse a few years ago. Heating cost , too much. Tree feel on top of it and destroyed it. Now I am making a greenhouse 10'x10'x10' greenhouse. If there is one thing that I get from this videos is the importance of layers. I know that all so well. You really had a very cold test. I want to try to grow some of the things that may be harder to grow in the winter, tomatoes, cucumbers. I am trying to grab all the info and place it in my head and come up with an action plan. Thanks for the video.
I bow to thee, O' Patrick of the plants!
I live in Gunnison, CO, second coldest city in the lower 48, at 7700 feet. Last night was -24, which ain't unusual around here. I have not all that well constructed cold frames in a 21 x 60 hoophouse unheated). Depending upon how large the cold frame is a I have an incondescent (for the heat, not the light -- 40 or 60 watt flood) light bulb in each cold frame. Right now I have cold frames with either lettuce, spinach, or peas growing in them. I have grown scallions, beets, carrots, asian greens, kale, and tomatoes (yes tomatoes, they start coming up like weeds in December from the previous summer crop of fallen fruit). I usually put a piece of foam insulation over the cold frame top at night with a couple of bricks to hold it down when it starts getting really cold. This method works outdoors (no hoophouse) as well, but the snow makes it difficult to take care of. Tested to well below -30. A few years ago we had 4 weeks of -18 or colder every night and no problem.
That's great to hear, Robert! If you can do it there, it can be done anywhere in the lower 48. Thanks for letting me know!
Congratulations on your greens making it through the arctic blast! 👏👏👏👏👏. QUESTIONS: are your greens growing through this winter or just surviving? How do you water during the winter? I imagine it must be different than when it is warm. Have you started to plan out what this year’s beds will grow and where yet?
Thanks Linda! We don't water from December through mid-February. When we start watering 2 or 3 weeks from now, we'll water sparingly on warm days. Typically, plants don't grow during this period, but this year we saw growth through December and well into January because the weather was so mild.
Good to know. The greens look a lot better than just surviving! It has to be incredible to have fresh greens through the winter. Thanks for reply about watering. I hope you are planning on a video sharing your planting plans for this spring.
Dear Patrick, hoping all is ok. Missing your updates! If everything is ok, then I guess Ill be patient, if not, then Ill keep ya'll in prayers!
Blessings from TX
Thanks! Yes, all is well. I'll be back with a new video soon.
Fortunately if overcast it wouldn’t get that cold. 😊
Thanks for doing this! Watching this really helps. I need to keep plants alive with -100C outdoor temperature. 🤔
@@theCodyReeder holy crap that is cold! is that at the chicken hole base or at your in town place?
yes,
I will try to remember this if I start to moan at my winter situation.
best of luck every one
Hi, Cody :) In the video "Nebraska retiree uses earths's heat to grow oranges in snow" by Kirsten Dirksen there is an interesting greenhouse concept with low-tech ground source heating.
I don't grow plants during winter. Jet I could try to build a greenhouse in front of the garage and do it since it rarely gets below -20s °C in Latvia for the past few decades.
@@ArthursHD sounds interesting. where can I see this video?
Wow, I thought for sure you would lose some plants, it been mighty cold 🥶! All that protection really works! That was Oscar in a mellow mood, I think he was enjoying the sun.
Klaus
Hi Klaus! I was surprised to see that everything made it too!
My jaw literally dropped when you uncovered those live plants in -31C. I never knew plastic can insulate this well. How about adding burlap and then plastic on top? Would that work better? I have some plants outside, not in a greenhouse that I'm afraid might freeze.
no light then.
That's sensational! It really is. This story should be on the news.
Thanks Joan!
I'm wondering how the plants get enough light to survive when covered with so many layers. Can you speak to that please?
Finally someone doing winter garden videos! Nice work :)
Beautiful garden!!!thanks..
Thanks Javier!
It is incredible all the work to obtain those vegetables, here in the south of Chile, we also have low temperatures this winter.
Very impressive!
Thanks Krista!
Stumbled across this after searching for ways to heat a greenhouse. This is a fantastic video. I'm in Prince Edward Island, and we rarely go below -20, most winter overnights are in the -10 to -15c . I have two greenhouses and overwintered spinach in a fish tub covered with glass, I think this upcoming winter I will do more. I try to get my fall cold loving crops started by Sept 1st
Crazy awesome!
Thanks Jaq
Congratulations on your veggies surviving. Even veggies need TLC. Beautiful greenhouse.👍🏻
AAAAMAZING!!
Thanks Christopher!
So true. Insulated blankets will not thoroughly protect, the more so with freezing wind. Adding plastic or any waterproof/resistant material over blanket keeps the heat and moisture like the science behind space blankets.
Unfortunately, there are very few information out there regarding this method. Your video will surely save a lot of winter heartaches.
Awesome
Thanks!
Excellent lesson for gardeners living in harsh winter climate. We are going to hit with -35c or -31F.
I don’t have anything outside but next year may have a greenhouse.
Best wishes with your future greenhouse!
Just curious if you ever need to water in there during the winter?
Hi Denise! We don't water from December through mid-February, because plants are typically dormant during that period and don't need water. We'll start watering sparingly in 2 or 3 weeks.
@@OneYardRevolution do you have to water with cold water?
Great job. It's minus 56 Celsius where I live in winter and planned a greenhouse this year. Just noticed your video 10 minutes ago. The snow helps for warmth. Even to warm your house add it all around foundation. Big difference. Igloos are very warm . So this concept is great . Where i live i think i would dig down 2 feet to make it extra warm as lower temperatures here. Will be subscribing .