My son and I were standing in front of our garden watching this video. This was our first time planting together. We almost got it right. We are already making plans for our summer garden next year using your tips. Thank you for helping us.
Love this video. So helpful! I’m trying to put together plants for our diy planter and now I have a much better idea of what to plant to maximise the space. Thank you! 💚💚😍😊
By far the BEST tutorial on companion planting I’ve read, seen or heard. Thanks for mentioning specific plant options and grouping them by function, I.e. sunflowers for vertical support, etc. Taking notes and showering gratitude!
Hi, I'm in sub-tropical Louisiana and it is HOT and HUMID here. You are a wealth of info. I'm hopeful to get to sign up for your Patreon sight this weekend. Tks for all you do. I've transformed my whole front yard to an Edible Foodscape..... tons of work for an 80 yr older, which keeps me going and happy as a lark :) I just recorded all of your info a out Trap craps, which I learned that I should've planted the flowers much before my veggies. (It's all a learning process LOL ). I DO have marigolds, calendulas, and blue astors bounding in one bed. Been gardening since 5 yrs old w my Mom, who loved gardening. Feed our 4 children from gardening and canning veggies, and now experimenting to teach self-sustenance to needy families. Tks for all you do; you're a great help...... :):):)
This video is so good, it's my third time watching it. I watched it all the way through the first time & then got a notebook out and took notes the second time. Now I'm going to watch it again with my notes in front of me to make sure I didn't miss anything. I love the way you put your videos together - so easy to listen to and understand. Thank you for taking the extra time to do that for all of us!
I know, right? My only "complaint" was that I kept making the mistake of trying to watch this at 1.5X speed or so, like I do for other videos. Too much action packed info to do that and absorb everything!
@@ttb1513 I do the same thing! I keep having to remind myself to turn the speed down on hers. Which I appreciate- I wish all the channels were like that!
Love it! I feel like the biggest difference companion cropping makes on insect resistance is the overall improved health of the plants by having more exudates to feed the soil. John Kempf says bugs will not attack healthy plants.
I've watched so many gardening videos on so many channels trying to learn to plant the best garden I can but in 11 minutes you've given more and better information than any of them. Thank you!
Best Garden Channel in Arizona in My Opinion.. don’t ever comment but I’m watching.. and appreciate the knowledge keep taking care of yourself I’m not in Az now but still locked in! 😎
I have noticed that mint and holy basil are also good traps for aphids. Holy basil was also very effective in luring away fruit flies and its very attractive to pollinators. Thunbergia and blooming colius are solitary bee magnets. A flowering plant called Cardinal's gaurd grows really tall and produce seasonal flowers attractive to bees even in very shaded areas. One of our foliage creepers really took over an area we planted strawberries on, when were preoccupied by home remodeling. But soon after we took them off, the strawberries which didn't fruit much before since we are in tropics, suddenly started to bloom a lot more. I'm guessing those creepers took up a lot for nitrogen so that the soil became more suitable for strawberries to bloom. So I guess inter cropping leafy plants with fruiting plants can benefit each other
You are such a wealth of knowledge. You've inspired me to grow my own garden here in Arizona. I just got your container gardening book yesterday. Thank you so much for what you do! 🌱
I just discovered your videos a couple days ago. You are an amazing teacher and have a very organized yard. I am from San Diego zone 10a. I have a clean canvas backyard and hope to start planting soon. THANK YOU FOR SHARING EVERYTHING!!
Very informational video. Thank you for taking the time out to transfer the knowledge youve gained over the years. Cant wait to get in the garden this year.
Very helpful and informative ! I will say that I think healthy soil makes the most difference in not attracting pests ( along with polyculture in general), vrs. companion planting, in my experience. I have had basil in with each tomato plants, in their half-barrel planters placed in areas around the back of the house, after moving to new home, and had a significant hornworm problem. The compost I'd bought from a local place which made it ( looked decent at 1st look and I wasn't as knowledge)- it turned out to be fairly thin ( little humus), dead-seaming stuff. Anyways, I'd also never had hornworms b4, coming from 5 hours north of this area in the upper Midwest. I didn't have much basil that 1st year, was sure to have one or more in with each tomato plant the next, but didn't seem to make any difference. What did help was that we had learned right away to leave the hornworms alive, which had the parasitic wasp eggs on their backs (although I did have my husband take them off the plants & to other side of yard ). The ones without that, we squished. I had grown nasturtiums with cucumbers up the wazoo, but my cuke beetle problem just kept getting worse. I was still learning about no-till and stuff, and didn't know how to get materials to make a lot of compost yet, and kept moving, so, my soil kept being sub-par in various ways. My cuke beetle problem was getting worse, even when moving to another state or having a garden where none had been ( at that home at all). I tried a couple OG/natural treatments for the downy mildew they spread, including heading it off at the pass the next year, to little-to-no avail. Finally, I tried something I recalled from the book " carrots love tomatoes" (or whatever) - tobacco. This idea was meant for preventing squash bugs, but I tried it and it's seemed to be what has TOTALLY eliminated my cuke beetle problem ! I still see a few around, but my plants remain un-attacked. I get plain, dried, chopped "pipe" tobacco and put a palm full in each hole at planting/transplanting time. Viola ! As my garden soil has gotten healthier at a couple locations b4 moving yet again, I have had less issues with a couple other things, like potato bugs. Also, on the corn/squash/beans "3 sisters" thing, novices need to be aware that this was prob. for dried beans when the natives did it, and others have learned since that trying to do green ( pole) beans this way, is super hard/impossible. At least if one's corn is planted densely, which I do for pollination. Also, for those of us up north, you may want more sun on your squash. This may work though if ones plants the corn as least densely as possible, idk, never tried it. Lastly, I'd add cantaloupe to the list of climbing/sprawling plants wich may do of growing up a tall, sturdy plant. The smaller-melon varieties, such as Minnesota midget, anyways ! Mine is doing great on a trellis this year, and the ones on the ground, I place on a brick to keep them from rotting b4 ripe enough.
Nasturtium are a trap crop- the idea is to distract bugs away from others by attracting it to the Nasturtium. I personally wouldn't plant it. I'll try planting carrots and see how that works for me.
These tips are out of the world, thank you so much for sharing them with us. Really love the guidance and how beautifully you were able to capture the natural beauty around you. Sending you much love.
We have always done raised beds but not square foot gardening or companion planting. We changed all of that this year. This is such a great video to help me to get started
Thank you for having a channel in the AZ desert. We struggle to grow much of anything due to backing up to undisturbed land. We have to create a bird netted garden space. This year we needed to redo our 4x8’ bed. We completely upgraded our soil in doing so. Now we have more tomatoes and cucumbers than the bed can hold. We also struggle with the excessive heat. Thanks again for your channel and expertise!
I implemented a mix of plants in the raised beds this year as well as pest deterrents and was happy with the end results …basil and holy basil were prolific and knee high and three feet wide…no pesticides or herbicides in this garden no worries about what goes into our bodies within control….we used sunflowers Mexican sunflowers marigolds zinnias basil marigolds etc beautiful and effective…thank you again for sharing with us all…stay blessed …
I’m heading out to plant a yellow hibiscus I purchased, then wtr plants in the green house. Tomorrow my daughter is taking me to a hotel for a very needed rest. There I will watch ag take notes review & I have saved the vid for further review🙂What a great video TY! When I return I will tackle my newly prepared beds with the encouragement from you👍🏻
Thank you so much. I started the first garden in my entire life last year and it was okay. Everything bolted or struggled from the head and I battled all sorts of pests destroying them. I really didn't want to use pesticides so I let it all go and decided to keep trying it. I think this will be so helpful!!!
The images used in your video were extremely helpful, as I was able to screen shot them to write down later in my gardening notebook. Thank you, excellent video. Subscribed.
I really enjoyed this video and found it very helpful. I'm implementing this information for my spring garden. So glad I came across this video now. It's November 2023 and I live in zone 7b. Thank you for this information.
Awesome video as always. Starting right saves you lot of elbow grease and heartburns. Your garden is an example to that, on how to do it right the first time. I live further north where only native plants thrive and nothing else. Protecting the plants from extreme weather conditions is the biggest challenge here. Lack of shade structures or trees results in stunted growth during summer . In each harvest all I end up having is knowledge rather veg or fruits as it's evident in many of my videos. You're doing a wonderful job. Keep it coming. Happy gardening.
Thank you for this information. I’ve been adding more flowers to the raised beds each year. Most of the ones you covered I start from seed anyway for flower beds. Time to add them to the vegetable beds, too.
Thank you for being knowledgeable and sharing that knowledge regarding pest control. It’s so hard to encourage people to stop when so many suggest it to new gardeners or people wanting to learn
Thank You SO MUCH! I learned so much in this video. I am going to share it with the teachers at my son's elementary school so that they may do a project about the bugs and companion planting! Keep us educated please! (I also have my own veg garden where I will do what You are doing this season!)
Thank you for this video. This is one of the best, most concise videos I've seen on this subject. You are a great teacher! P.S. Last summer I saw companion working with my own eyes. I saw the cabbage moth land on a marigold instead of my broccoli!
God bless you🙏amazing tips💞 they are really really useful. I'd like to mention another plant that is just wonderfull for to keep away pests from tomatoes, is the " flower queen of the night" it's just unbelievable how much can help ...but not only for tomatoes, for all my garden was helpful. When all my neighbors was using pesticides, my only pestside was this flower🤗. All kinds of pests was sticking in this white good smelling beautiful flowers leafs, but no one on my tomatoes and no on cabbege, no on colyflowwer, no on onions etc...
I'm SO GLAD I stumbled up on you. I was trying to a trellis I could fit into a Chevy Spark I found your vertical gardening video. I also happen to LOVE Arizona. You mentioned shade cloth in one of your videos. I don't have shade cloth but I do have some cloth resembling it. We're having 101 degree days in June. Nothing for you guys but here in the south eastern part of the country there's humid to come with it. Your videos have taught me so much. I'd just like to say thank you. When someone asks me Where on earth did you figure out how to use that for a trellis I refer them to your channel. Btw I got 4 pieces in the Spark!
Perfect timing to watch your video. I wanted to purchase a bk about companion planting for veg gardens. Thank you for the recommendation of the bk, "Plant Partners". Thank you also for the tip to implement poly culture practices in the garden to ward off pests, to encourage beneficial insects & pollinators so we could avoid toxic chemicals in our garden. Great info for heaving a toxic free & beautiful garden! I liked your video so much that I subscribed & looking forward to more good info. I'm a garden newbie, my spouse just built raised garden beds for me, soon we'll be filling them to plant & need all the good garden info I can get. We live in zone 5 & are supposed to have a wintry mix tonight.
I’m trying something different in my garden this year. I’m in zone 9 so I have everything and can plant and harvest year round. I’m gone all of June and July so as I harvest what’s left in my garden, I’m planting sunflowers
I'm SO GLAD I stumbled up on you. I was trying to a trellis I could fit into a Chevy Spark 😂 I found your vertical gardening video. I also happen to LOVE Arizona. You mentioned shade cloth in one of your videos. I don't have shade cloth but I do have some cloth resembling it. We're having 101 degree days in June. Nothing for you guys but here in the south eastern part of the country there's humid to come with it. Your videos have taught me so much. I'd just like to say thank you. When someone asks me Where on earth did you figure out how to use that for a trellis I refer them to your channel. Btw I got 4 pieces in the Spark!😂😂😂
My son and I were standing in front of our garden watching this video. This was our first time planting together. We almost got it right. We are already making plans for our summer garden next year using your tips. Thank you for helping us.
That is awesome!
What are you planting sooner?
Love this video. So helpful!
I’m trying to put together plants for our diy planter and now I have a much better idea of what to plant to maximise the space. Thank you! 💚💚😍😊
And that's how you perfectly share your knowledge in a succinct straightforward manner. Amen.
What a great video. No excessive chatter, great info, straightforward and engaging content. Great job!
By far the BEST tutorial on companion planting I’ve read, seen or heard. Thanks for mentioning specific plant options and grouping them by function, I.e. sunflowers for vertical support, etc. Taking notes and showering gratitude!
Hi, I'm in sub-tropical Louisiana and it is HOT and HUMID here. You are a wealth of info. I'm hopeful to get to sign up for your Patreon sight this weekend. Tks for all you do. I've transformed my whole front yard to an Edible Foodscape..... tons of work for an 80 yr older, which keeps me going and happy as a lark :)
I just recorded all of your info a out Trap craps, which I learned that I should've planted the flowers much before my veggies. (It's all a learning process LOL ). I DO have marigolds, calendulas, and blue astors bounding in one bed. Been gardening since 5 yrs old w my Mom, who loved gardening. Feed our 4 children from gardening and canning veggies, and now experimenting to teach self-sustenance to needy families. Tks for all you do; you're a great help...... :):):)
You're welcome! Sounds like you're keeping pretty busy. Best of luck to you and hope to see you in class :)
Easily the best companion planting video on UA-cam! Great job!
I very much appreciated that you gave some time for the information to stay on screen.
This video is so good, it's my third time watching it. I watched it all the way through the first time & then got a notebook out and took notes the second time. Now I'm going to watch it again with my notes in front of me to make sure I didn't miss anything. I love the way you put your videos together - so easy to listen to and understand. Thank you for taking the extra time to do that for all of us!
I know, right? My only "complaint" was that I kept making the mistake of trying to watch this at 1.5X speed or so, like I do for other videos. Too much action packed info to do that and absorb everything!
@@ttb1513 I do the same thing! I keep having to remind myself to turn the speed down on hers. Which I appreciate- I wish all the channels were like that!
Me too!!!
Love it! I feel like the biggest difference companion cropping makes on insect resistance is the overall improved health of the plants by having more exudates to feed the soil. John Kempf says bugs will not attack healthy plants.
Well said!
I've watched so many gardening videos on so many channels trying to learn to plant the best garden I can but in 11 minutes you've given more and better information than any of them. Thank you!
agreed
Best Garden Channel in Arizona in My Opinion.. don’t ever comment but I’m watching.. and appreciate the knowledge keep taking care of yourself I’m not in Az now but still locked in! 😎
I have noticed that mint and holy basil are also good traps for aphids. Holy basil was also very effective in luring away fruit flies and its very attractive to pollinators. Thunbergia and blooming colius are solitary bee magnets. A flowering plant called Cardinal's gaurd grows really tall and produce seasonal flowers attractive to bees even in very shaded areas.
One of our foliage creepers really took over an area we planted strawberries on, when were preoccupied by home remodeling. But soon after we took them off, the strawberries which didn't fruit much before since we are in tropics, suddenly started to bloom a lot more. I'm guessing those creepers took up a lot for nitrogen so that the soil became more suitable for strawberries to bloom. So I guess inter cropping leafy plants with fruiting plants can benefit each other
This was awesome! Heck, if some of the tips don’t work for me, at least my garden will be even more colorful & interesting! Happy Gardening ☺️
I especially liked the identification of plants @2:02. Creative way to communicate that info rapidly.
You are such a wealth of knowledge. You've inspired me to grow my own garden here in Arizona. I just got your container gardening book yesterday. Thank you so much for what you do! 🌱
So nice of you
This is one of the very best videos. Really makes sense.
I just discovered your videos a couple days ago. You are an amazing teacher and have a very organized yard. I am from San Diego zone 10a. I have a clean canvas backyard and hope to start planting soon. THANK YOU FOR SHARING EVERYTHING!!
Thank you so much! San Diego is a great place to garden.
What a beautiful garden!
Very informational video. Thank you for taking the time out to transfer the knowledge youve gained over the years. Cant wait to get in the garden this year.
It's a good content about companions planting 😊😊😊😊😊
Very helpful and informative ! I will say that I think healthy soil makes the most difference in not attracting pests ( along with polyculture in general), vrs. companion planting, in my experience. I have had basil in with each tomato plants, in their half-barrel planters placed in areas around the back of the house, after moving to new home, and had a significant hornworm problem. The compost I'd bought from a local place which made it ( looked decent at 1st look and I wasn't as knowledge)- it turned out to be fairly thin ( little humus), dead-seaming stuff. Anyways, I'd also never had hornworms b4, coming from 5 hours north of this area in the upper Midwest. I didn't have much basil that 1st year, was sure to have one or more in with each tomato plant the next, but didn't seem to make any difference. What did help was that we had learned right away to leave the hornworms alive, which had the parasitic wasp eggs on their backs (although I did have my husband take them off the plants & to other side of yard ). The ones without that, we squished. I had grown nasturtiums with cucumbers up the wazoo, but my cuke beetle problem just kept getting worse. I was still learning about no-till and stuff, and didn't know how to get materials to make a lot of compost yet, and kept moving, so, my soil kept being sub-par in various ways. My cuke beetle problem was getting worse, even when moving to another state or having a garden where none had been ( at that home at all). I tried a couple OG/natural treatments for the downy mildew they spread, including heading it off at the pass the next year, to little-to-no avail. Finally, I tried something I recalled from the book " carrots love tomatoes" (or whatever) - tobacco. This idea was meant for preventing squash bugs, but I tried it and it's seemed to be what has TOTALLY eliminated my cuke beetle problem ! I still see a few around, but my plants remain un-attacked. I get plain, dried, chopped "pipe" tobacco and put a palm full in each hole at planting/transplanting time. Viola ! As my garden soil has gotten healthier at a couple locations b4 moving yet again, I have had less issues with a couple other things, like potato bugs. Also, on the corn/squash/beans "3 sisters" thing, novices need to be aware that this was prob. for dried beans when the natives did it, and others have learned since that trying to do green ( pole) beans this way, is super hard/impossible. At least if one's corn is planted densely, which I do for pollination. Also, for those of us up north, you may want more sun on your squash. This may work though if ones plants the corn as least densely as possible, idk, never tried it.
Lastly, I'd add cantaloupe to the list of climbing/sprawling plants wich may do of growing up a tall, sturdy plant. The smaller-melon varieties, such as Minnesota midget, anyways ! Mine is doing great on a trellis this year, and the ones on the ground, I place on a brick to keep them from rotting b4 ripe enough.
Nasturtium are a trap crop- the idea is to distract bugs away from others by attracting it to the Nasturtium. I personally wouldn't plant it. I'll try planting carrots and see how that works for me.
you did a wonderful job of explaining companion planting. Thank you
chives are a good insect attracting perennial in North America. They come back strong every year
Packed densely with information, this little video. I gotta take notes!
You had me at "linked the studies below". Thank you Angela, these videos are top content for AZ gardeners!!!
Very informative 👍 My tomatoes really grow very well next to calendula 🌼💛🍅
These tips are out of the world, thank you so much for sharing them with us. Really love the guidance and how beautifully you were able to capture the natural beauty around you. Sending you much love.
We have always done raised beds but not square foot gardening or companion planting. We changed all of that this year. This is such a great video to help me to get started
I love how gardening connects me with nature and brings a sense of peace and tranquility to my life
Thank you for having a channel in the AZ desert. We struggle to grow much of anything due to backing up to undisturbed land. We have to create a bird netted garden space. This year we needed to redo our 4x8’ bed. We completely upgraded our soil in doing so. Now we have more tomatoes and cucumbers than the bed can hold. We also struggle with the excessive heat. Thanks again for your channel and expertise!
I implemented a mix of plants in the raised beds this year as well as pest deterrents and was happy with the end results …basil and holy basil were prolific and knee high and three feet wide…no pesticides or herbicides in this garden no worries about what goes into our bodies within control….we used sunflowers Mexican sunflowers marigolds zinnias basil marigolds etc beautiful and effective…thank you again for sharing with us all…stay blessed …
Thank you for all of your wonderful content! It has helped me to really transform my yard into an edible forest in AZ!
Half way through and I am really emjoying this, thank you! I can see my garden looking lush and life dense :D
I’m heading out to plant a yellow hibiscus I purchased, then wtr plants in the green house. Tomorrow my daughter is taking me to a hotel for a very needed rest. There I will watch ag take notes review & I have saved the vid for further review🙂What a great video TY! When I return I will tackle my newly prepared beds with the encouragement from you👍🏻
Thank you so much. I started the first garden in my entire life last year and it was okay. Everything bolted or struggled from the head and I battled all sorts of pests destroying them. I really didn't want to use pesticides so I let it all go and decided to keep trying it. I think this will be so helpful!!!
This video is worth its Weight in gold. Thank you so much❤
I love this! So glad the algorithm led me to your channel. 💕
The images used in your video were extremely helpful, as I was able to screen shot them to write down later in my gardening notebook. Thank you, excellent video. Subscribed.
I really enjoyed this video and found it very helpful. I'm implementing this information for my spring garden. So glad I came across this video now. It's November 2023 and I live in zone 7b. Thank you for this information.
I have rewatched your videos so many times they are fun informative and pack with great ideas thank you
you have honestly been the best video I have watched on companion planting and kept it interesting. will adapt these into my garden this year.
Awesome video as always. Starting right saves you lot of elbow grease and heartburns. Your garden is an example to that, on how to do it right the first time. I live further north where only native plants thrive and nothing else. Protecting the plants from extreme weather conditions is the biggest challenge here. Lack of shade structures or trees results in stunted growth during summer . In each harvest all I end up having is knowledge rather veg or fruits as it's evident in many of my videos. You're doing a wonderful job. Keep it coming. Happy gardening.
Thank you for this information. I’ve been adding more flowers to the raised beds each year. Most of the ones you covered I start from seed anyway for flower beds. Time to add them to the vegetable beds, too.
Thank you so much for your presentation, this is one I will be referring to often!
Fantastic introduction to companion gardening, thank you, definitely will be doing it this year.
Straight forward and helpful. Thanks.
Thank you so much. One of the most helpful videos I’ve watched as a newbie Gardner.😁🌱
Thank you for being knowledgeable and sharing that knowledge regarding pest control. It’s so hard to encourage people to stop when so many suggest it to new gardeners or people wanting to learn
I love and appreciate all the info you shared in this post! So much so that I’m subscribing love your gardens 💓💓💓
I'm so thankful your video popped up. Great content with relaxed presentation and very user-friendly information. I had to subscribe
Thank You SO MUCH! I learned so much in this video. I am going to share it with the teachers at my son's elementary school so that they may do a project about the bugs and companion planting! Keep us educated please! (I also have my own veg garden where I will do what You are doing this season!)
Love this! So much info in one place that's easy to find! Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you very much for all the information it’s very helpful.
Thank you for this video. This is one of the best, most concise videos I've seen on this subject. You are a great teacher! P.S. Last summer I saw companion working with my own eyes. I saw the cabbage moth land on a marigold instead of my broccoli!
God bless you🙏amazing tips💞
they are really really useful.
I'd like to mention another plant that is just wonderfull for to keep away pests from tomatoes, is the " flower queen of the night" it's just unbelievable how much can help ...but not only for tomatoes, for all my garden was helpful. When all my neighbors was using pesticides, my only pestside was this flower🤗. All kinds of pests was sticking in this white good smelling beautiful flowers leafs, but no one on my tomatoes and no on cabbege, no on colyflowwer, no on onions etc...
Thank you so much! Planning my gardens for the spring/summer. This helps so much.
❤this is a video I would share with less experienced gardeners, it truly touches on what we should be doing to help the environment
Oh my gosh this video is so thoughtful and insightful!! I wish more videos were as in depth as this one! Links and citations!
Fantastic video! There’s a lot of good ones around, but this is one of the few where I don’t just have to take your word for it. I was impressed ❤️
Thank you...a lot of condensed information..i have to write it down
Thanks for this wonderful video. I absorbed a little more wisdom about gardening ❤ every bit helps!
Thanks for all you information!!
My pleasure!
Amazingly informative. A great video for veggies garderners too! As pairing and planting method (square foot gardening) is discussed. Thank you!!!
Love how easy this was to follow!! Definitely will use 😊
Wow this is very very very helpful. How you explained the pairings made sense and will be easier to manage. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks very much for giving such valuable info for a beginner gardener .
Very helpful. Thanks.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
Glad it was helpful!
Well done, This is an excellent video. You're a natural!
Such a magical garden you have, Angela 🌻 🌱
Thank you so much for a very informative video. You inspire me a lot! Greetings from Argentina ❤
Beautiful flowering
Thank you for teaching us with both auditory and visual examples. 💜
So much good information. Thank you so much.
Hello Dear sister,you explained very nicely. I love garden .
Thank you for the great lecture. Very informational .
Beautiful flowers 💐
Thank you for this video! I needed it! I am a new Gardener. ❤
I like how well researched this is.
Thanks for sharing 🙂
Thanks for watching!
I'm SO GLAD I stumbled up on you. I was trying to a trellis I could fit into a Chevy Spark I found your vertical gardening video. I also happen to LOVE Arizona. You mentioned shade cloth in one of your videos. I don't have shade cloth but I do have some cloth resembling it. We're having 101 degree days in June. Nothing for you guys but here in the south eastern part of the country there's humid to come with it. Your videos have taught me so much. I'd just like to say thank you. When someone asks me Where on earth did you figure out how to use that for a trellis I refer them to your channel. Btw I got 4 pieces in the Spark!
Nice! Love it!
Thanks for sharing, I am planning on a small garden🎉🎉
Great info! I companion plant every year as I plan out my garden. Thanks for the video.
Perfect timing to watch your video. I wanted to purchase a bk about companion planting for veg gardens. Thank you for the recommendation of the bk, "Plant Partners". Thank you also for the tip to implement poly culture practices in the garden to ward off pests, to encourage beneficial insects & pollinators so we could avoid toxic chemicals in our garden. Great info for heaving a toxic free & beautiful garden! I liked your video so much that I subscribed & looking forward to more good info.
I'm a garden newbie, my spouse just built raised garden beds for me, soon we'll be filling them to plant & need all the good garden info I can get. We live in zone 5 & are supposed to have a wintry mix tonight.
Wow, you summarized & presented one of the most useful planting information so nicely. Very helpful. Thank you ^_^
Excellent video. Very well thought out and Clear, to the point, highly informative. Thank you.
Thank you from west Australia
Great video!!! Much needed info! Thank you!
Thank you very much! Very helpful and informative.
I’m trying something different in my garden this year. I’m in zone 9 so I have everything and can plant and harvest year round.
I’m gone all of June and July so as I harvest what’s left in my garden, I’m planting sunflowers
Thank you so much! I learned a lot and you presented it in a way that was easy to follow!
Glad it was helpful!
I'm SO GLAD I stumbled up on you. I was trying to a trellis I could fit into a Chevy Spark 😂 I found your vertical gardening video. I also happen to LOVE Arizona. You mentioned shade cloth in one of your videos. I don't have shade cloth but I do have some cloth resembling it. We're having 101 degree days in June. Nothing for you guys but here in the south eastern part of the country there's humid to come with it. Your videos have taught me so much. I'd just like to say thank you. When someone asks me Where on earth did you figure out how to use that for a trellis I refer them to your channel. Btw I got 4 pieces in the Spark!😂😂😂
Thank you so much Donna. My minivan has held it's share too!
Nice presentation. Calm.
Fantastic video and really informative!!!
Thank you for this video, im trying to improve my garden and its soil, and this info will be very useful for planning my next season!
Excellent. Thank you!
This was great, thank you!
Great video so much information. Thank you 😊 definitely buying the book.
Great info! I've been taking plenty of tips. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for these helpful and specific set of pairings and for sharing the reasoning behind them!
Great video, appreciated the information.