I am in north west Washington state. Our tomatoes are just starting to turn red. Corn is about 1 to 2 weeks away. Things are finally starting to come on and harvest. I love this time of year!!
I'm in the SF Bay Area and my garden is only now starting to flourish and the larger tomatoes are starting to ripen. Last year, I finally had to cut out the last few tomato plants in the beginning of Dec to make room for our large Christmas inflatables. They were still going strong but I knew it'd take forever to ripen in the cone so I cut em all off, placed them in a bin, and put a couple bananas in to finish the rolling process
Hi Jess I just wanted to thank you for the encouragement of making video tours of my garden and share a snippet of how that encouragement has grown into something positive in my life. Two years ago I moved to a different state and now my mom and I are states away from one another. I learned an appreciation for gardening from my mom, and I thought I had a brown thumb for a long time. We had some opportunities to garden together as adults off and on, but I was never as invested as my mom, who has always been connected to her garden in such a deep and holistic way. I have come to accept that I do things differently but I can develop my own relationship with gardening, and I have improved at it and finally feel like I have done the research to be more successful finally this year. I have the space I want, I put in some of the infrastructure last year, but never quite got the garden off the ground. My poor seedlings lived in little pots and produced a little but never reached their potential. I started early this year, grew from seeds moved them out and got them in the ground. Mistakes were made, but they are lessons learned. I am learning to grow in a completely different zone and fairly different climate, and it has been a weird year, but I have had a lot of successes this year. And I have learned a lot. In the process, I have been watching you for the last couple of years, and gaining tips, encouragement, and a sense of kinship and inclusion in a larger community. And I wanted to share this with my mom, who has moved and has been unable to have her garden this year due to a variety of factors. And so, I started recording garden tours on my phone for my mom and putting them in a shared folder. I don't watch them, or edit them, at least not yet, so she gets all the raw, camera shut downs from heat, the stuttering to find the words I want, and random pauses on odd things at times, but I narrate the whole time, and far a little while it feels like my mom is walking around my garden with me, and it is very special. So thank you for the encouragement to step outside my comfort zone, and to make a record to share and reconnect.
Jess: “I don’t think I’ve ever done anything tidy in my life.” Me: Same, friend! Same! My Mom would say amen and testify to this being one of her biggest challenges with me as her neurodivergent daughter 😂
That is so true... I take pictures of the beginning of me planting every year and then when the babies get about 4 to 5 inches tall then when they fill in the garden... Every year it looks different and great to see what it looked like from the year before...
Dog fennel, huh! I always called it "Donkey Food" because growing up, a neighbor had a cute little wooden donkey pulling a cart with lots of this growing around, and we would "feed" it to our donkey friend. ♥ It'll still be donkey food to me~
HI R&R, The tiny crunchy yellow teardrop pepper you ate at 33:10 in the vlog is called a BIQUINHO pepper. they’re fabulous pickled! Thank you for the garden tour. Your inground garden looks angelic this year.
Lol! I just shared 0:01 that. My daughter-in-law from Brazil just gave some pickled ones to me. She called it PIMENTA BIQUINHO or “little beak peppers”. Do you happen to know where I may get some seed for next year?
@@dlsdyer9071 oh, that’s awesome. I purchased my Biquinho pepper seeds from a local farm and garden store, but Baker Creek sells them as well in both red and yellow varieties. They are very prolific plants, so give them plenty of space to grow in almost bush like. Happy growing.
You took the words right out of my mouth lol. My health has planted me in bed in front of my TV. Roots and refuge are my number one favorite UA-cam channel hands-down. I also have a handful of UA-cam channels that ice follow close and never miss an episode. I am so thankful for roots and refuge, and how they taught me about how to fully utilize UA-cam and follow channels. Before roots and refuge entered my life I didn’t truly understand that people did that. I’d watch a UA-cam show to learn to do something and that’s it. Which is wonderful because if my health allows me, there isn’t anything that I can’t do thanks to UA-cam lol. Following roots and refuge has given me a link with the outside world and a community to connect with. I don’t feel as alone and isolated by my health. Roots and refuge is my lifeline to the outside world and I’m determined to get well enough to garden again. Because after I discovered roots and refuge, my garden thrived far beyond my imagination. I’ve now missed two summers of gardening, and I still never miss an episode of roots and refuge❣️♥️🌹
The Seminole pumpkin is the replacement for butternut squash in our area because the squash bugs pretty much leave them alone, but will devour the butternut squash plants along with the vine bore bugs... ❤❤❤ zone 9B just FYI 😊
Jess, you have made my day better. I woke up in a mood and I have tried to change my mood but nothing worked until you posted this video. You are literally the only person who hasn't gotten under my skin and I have watched this tour 3 times now. Thank you.
@@RootsandRefugeFarm Jess, my daughter-in-law gave me a jar of those little peppers in a vinegar brine. I asked her what they call them (she is from Brazil). This is what she said: In Brazil they call it "pimenta biquinho". But it looks like the name around here might be "little beak peppers".
Jess, last year you mentioned shade cloth for tomatoes in hot climates. I'm in So. CA, inland where it got to over 108°to 113° for a couple of weeks this summer. I took your advice and I've never had such success with my slicing tomatoes. Some of my celebrities were almost the size of softballs, and lots of them. Usually, I lose many of them to sun scald by mid summer, but the shade cloth saved them and my bell peppers. Thanks so much!❤ 😊 btw, I love seeing your amazing garden!
In regard to squash plants and pests: I can dig the find local plants deal. But, if you can't find locally grown seeds that are acclimated to the area, what I have done to at least deter the squash vine borer, is to use athletic tape at the base of my plants. Sometimes, as the leaves die back as the plant grows, I will re-wrap the base a little further. As for squash bugs: Jag Singh, (I think that's how his name is spelled), Places DE in a portable vacuum cleaner and goes around sucking the bugs off the plants, leaves them in there for a while, (I think a day or so), and then feeds them to his chickens. Sounds feasible.
My vac just showed up. My 17yo son is having a ball. Anything is better than working school. We were trying to figure out what to do with the cucumber beetles once we sucked'm up. Thanks! Just in time for Squash bug infestation.
Agree! When I have a hard time growing something I go to one of the many farmers markets around southwestern Ohio and I will buy locally-grown fruit and I will enjoy it and save those seeds!! 😉
We brought a Black Swallowtail caterpillar into the house from our dill this spring. We didn't get to see it emerge from it's chrysalis, but we did watch it stretch it's wings and fly away. It was amazing!❤❤❤ Now our plan is to plant dill basically everywhere and do it every year.
I LOVED the garden walk this video! You shine so bright when talking about plants and it really gave me a feeling I was walking with you as you told me all about the garden. I've watched for several years and enjoy all the tours but this was my favorite walk.
Many of my cucurbit seeds I bought this year did not seem to do as well. My older cucurbit seeds did ok or great....I genuinely feel that the added pressure on the garden industry is resulting in a number of mix ups, lesser quality seeds, and maybe even some of the organic seeds coming from plants that were unknowingly exposed to inorganic herbicides/pesticides. I have had a lot of mixed bag results this year (not all to blame on the suppliers) but I am very happy to see how many people are trying to garden. I think it's a great start towards healing the earth.
Thank you for being honest about your garden nt quite being what you had expected. I thought it was only me who felt this way. Now I am excited about making changes, adding or totally removing plants from the garden.
Jess,I just love your garden tours. You introduced me to Silver Slicers and they have been amazing. I have given away so many and been able to introduce this delicious cucumber to so many. They are shocked that it's a cucumber!!!
I loveeeeeee tomatoes & tom sandwiches! Grandma & Mom grew a garden every year & those garden lunches are some of my fav childhood memories xoxo picking & eating tomatoes in the garden are the best!
For anyone looking for the specific holy basil they grow you can get it at MIgardener or botanical interest stocks it now as well. Specifically it's a tulsi known as Kapoor and is distinguished by its bubble gum scent ❤ I know it's a question everyone always asks
You inspired me to try. I always joked that I had the "black thumbs of death" when it came to gardening. Your approach to enjoying the environment and connecting with the food you grow to nourish you, has nourished my soul. I have a small garden (this year!) and I've used your method of enjoying my space and noticing the pollinators, the birds and the environment to soothe me after work. I love my space and the feeling of being connected to my land, sharing my harvest with my friends. Thank you for nudging me onto this path! Best to you and your family from the Ottawa Valley, Ontario, Canada!
Hi Jess! I’ve been with you for quite awhile and I always feel like family! Tell Ben I am harvesting banana peppers, which I planted because of his influence! He is an influencer!!! My husband loves the peppers and so do I. 🥰
Ive “raised” many swallowtails. Until your new enclosure shows up, just put them into a jar with cheese cloth or something else porous over the top. They will be fine! You can do that with the large larvae too just keep them fed and provide a couple of sticks that have somewhat horizontal parts for them to attach to. Bask to the enclosure, you can add sticks to the inside of that too. When the chrysalis come out, the new butterfly will need somewhere to hang upside down to drain, dry and air out its wings so that it does not scuff them while they are so delicate. Once they go upright, they are still quite docile and will step onto your finger and perch there! ENJOY!!
This has got me so excited to film our second garden tour tomorrow. Despite the crazy heatwave we're having. Thanks for the lil' boost to my motivation, Jess! 💚
I love ❤️ the “Land Before Time” reference!!!! That was one of my nephews’ favorite movies when they were little. We must have watched it 150 times or better 😊
Yep, we've had one or two days get up to 100. Back in '95 we were in the mountains at 8000ft. I was pregnant with my daughter and she was a week late. My ankles were swelling, and I'd never had that happen before with 3 other pregnancies. We were building our house and living in a camper. It was so hot my husband strung up a hammock in the shade. He put a thermometer on the tree in the shade after I'd been there awhile. It was 104 in the shade! I'm thankful for this cool weather we've had here in CO this year. Unusual rain too! Instead of everything being dry and dead and worrying about wildfire from the beginning of July, I haven't hardly needed to water things, and this is mid August! Very thankful!
Unless you completely concrete the pathway in your cottage garden, you will be fighting a losing battle against Bermuda grass forever. We live near Dallas and had Bermuda for the first 25 years in our house. Bermuda grass is horrible for garden or flower beds. I would spend most of my summer trying to dig down deep enough to get the roots out, but the Bermuda always wins. Five years ago, I wanted to re-sod our yard to make it look good for our daugther's wedding weekend. Our landscaper talked me in to doing St Augustine. I really resisted, but finally said go for it. St Augustine spreads on top of the ground and is not invasive in any of my flower beds. Hallelujah!!! I still get an occasional piece of Bermuda sprouting up, but absolutely nothing like I used to deal with. Trust me, I feel your pain!
Jess, that is a good idea about filming your garden. I can start on my fall veggies ( video taping the fall veggies ). Then I can do my spring veggies and summer veggies. I do take pictures of my garden and veggies that I picked. I am also a visual learner.
Jessica, I love you. I appreciate your authenticity. I teach a little gardening class every spring and turn my students on to your videos every year. Love you. Thank you 💖💖💖
Here in Iowa it has seemed to be a fairly mild summer, too. A few really hot days, but mostly pretty comfortable. AND, we have been super blessed to have consistent rain. I've only had to water 4 times.
I just love how Bear 🐻 is right there with you… here in Nova Scotia my tomatoes are just starting to ripen… almost two weeks behind last year… our June was cold and very wet
I have celiac and I just harvested my first tomato of the year (western NY)… I mix yeast, honey and GF flour with some warm water to a thick pancake batter consistency. Let it get all bubbly… then I mix in salt, pepper, oregano and garlic powder. throw it on some foil in the air fryer… 400 for 8 minutes. Flip it. Another 8 minutes on the other side. It comes out like focaccia and a pita had a baby. I told that in half and use it as the vessel for my tomato sammich.
"Sometimes it's not perfect, but it still feeds you" honestly exactly what I needed to hear. I started my new garden entirely from scratch this year, and I've been struggling with the "imperfect/incomplete" garden. Because it takes time to correct the soil from grass lawn to garden, build infrastructure like some raised beds, etc. And I can recognize that, but there's still a little tinge of disappointment when I try to take photos of the whole garden. I pretty much haven't. Because I don't want to show off all the things I haven't finished.
I think your garden(magical land) is magnificent now, yet I’m looking forward to seeing the changes that you make along the way. I like that you’re actually letting your plans for your spaces grow and evolve. I think it’s going to be fun to watch how your dreams evolve and literally grow. Plants grow, so why can’t your plans…..🤔
I tried Clemson Spineless okra this year first time in Orlando Fl. Off just one of the 13 plants i have gotten over 50 delicious pods! I have to pick am and pm some days. I just stuck the seeds jn the ground with some rabbit manure. Growing like crazy since May some is almost 8 feet tall! So good! So easy! Okra will grow in the worst sandy dirt and handles drought!
Im currently trying to save my Sunflower Steve seeds from the sunflowers i grew this year. It is stunningly fascinating to see all the stages.... And i love how many baby blooms are growing off of the main stalk. One of them grew three big stalks from the base and now each has a bunch of lil baby sunflowers growing off the sides. I finally posted to my IG account.... And, so far, those sunflowers are the only pics i have posted.
Your garden tours, and even more so where are you live now, as you develop and grow your magical garden, it’s like an adventure as you move through the garden and turn corners you discover its magical secrets. You have the stone pathways and little clusters of plants and big jungles of plants. You never know what you’re going to find Tucktaway here in there. Rather, it’s the beautiful stones or the massive plants growing or that’s a figurine here and a fountain there… you have little seats and big seats tucked here and there. In my mind and heart I’ve named your garden and of course it’s called the magic garden lol. Yes, I’m talking about the old vintage story. I remember buying that book for my five children when they were little. I think I love the book even more than them hehehe 😁. Thank you for sharing this adventure with us. You are my connection with the outside world and I never take you for granted. It is a privilege and an amazing honor to hang out with you and visit your home via UA-cam.🙏🏼♥️
Can’t even imagine having a garden that huge! Dangggg 😂 I just did my first year of gardening in pots on my porch and that was a struggle. The pests in NC are FRFR😂 I am looking forward to fall gardening😊
❤ Love to see it! We live up in the Pacific Northwest 6b but it felt like a 5b this year, super cold nights, super hot days. Our tomatoes and everything are just now starting to ripen and things are just now taking off. I love to see your gardens taking off!! Gorgeous as always!! ❤❤
The tiny peppers that you couldn't remember the name on are called Biquinho and they are one of my favorites to just snack on in the garden! They are sooooo good!
Garden may be suffering from the heat but the herbs and pumpkins and squash and peppers and flowers are going good and it's looking wild!! Love it!! I grow the pumpkins and some squash in the compost pile and they do fantastic!!
On a completely unrelated channel, they completely got rid of bermuda grass by shallow tilling, then they manually pulling up all the visible root runners. Then they shallow tilled again, and manually pulled the roots, and again and again. Very labor intensive, but it's months later now and the grass has not come back.
I recently bought my retirement home, in the Caribbean. I'm planning zones now and about to plant a 2nd round of tomatoes and peppers. Planning my Tea Garden, and planning tea and more coffee. This had been my hardest zone to plan!! Closing herbs and spices has been a challenge!! You are an inspiration to me ❤
Thank you! 😊 I am filling tea bags with dried herbs from my greenstalks and inspired to hit the garden now to pull onions so the next round of something can be planted.
I post my daily garden hauls and monthly updates as Instagram stories that are saved n Instagram story folders. That is how I track when I plant and when I start getting produce,etc. have done this for about 3 years. I share them to Facebook, so they show up on my memories everyday and I can see how the previous years compare to the current.
I have to say that one of my favorite parts of your garden is to the left of the high tunnels. All of the Zinnias growing there are so beautiful. I just fell in love with big flower heads and the colors. Your Zinnias prompted me to look for some seeds so I can plant my own. Didn't buy any because I think it's too late in the season now, don't know??? Also, that one pink rose beside your greenhouse...the one you said bugs...or something damaged it. Saw it in a recent video and it was just beautiful. Can't wait to see what you do with the cottage garden by your green house. Jmo, you desperately need some shade. Especially in places that you plan on making more seating. I love all of your garden spaces, just remember that Rome wasn't built in a day and eventually it will become exactly what you envision it to be.
Wonderful, inspiring garden tour & advice! Thanks for sharing! I’m in Alberta, Canada & we still haven’t had a frost in my area, which is quite rare. I started digging my potato plants today. They can be left in ground for the early frosts but some plants were dying back a lot because our town deer ate their tops! Blessings to everyone 🤗💕🇨🇦
I've been gardening here in the desert Southwest for 4 years now and I have learned that I can grow Mediterranean things here great - artichokes, fennel, San Marzano tomatoes, and Italian squashes all do great here. But Asian varieties struggle with the heat and low humidity, and without a greenhouse I cannot control the environment enough to make them happy. I am zone 7b, so I can garden all year round since frost hardy plants will survive with a little bit of protection during the coldest days. Cold weather gardening is much easier than summer gardening around here! Especially years like this one.
When the flowers stop blooming and not benefit to the pollinators, cut it down! I agree about the morning glory and same for puncture vine (Goatheads!).
We’ve had no rain this summer and this is normally our wet season. Because if the drought my garden has seen over 110 degree temps. We’ve been in emergency mode just trying to keep our animals alive. Can’t wait for fall!!!!
Hey Jess , Glad you had a nice get away.. The garden flowers a beautiful.. The little pepper you are eating are called Biquinho or Sweety drop peppers and they have a small touch of heat, I think they are so cute , lol. It is always great to drop in for a visit.
JESS, my kejari melon is trellised on a cattle panel. 1 month ago, they started elongating. They have the typical kejari markings, but they are oval shaped. Oil vay! Itz always sumpin', lol Thank you so much for suggesting Silver Slicer cukes. They are wonderful! I have never had successful cukes, but this is a gorgeous plant, no bitterness, still slowly producing. Love em!
Jess, my tomatoes are still yellowish green and my cucumbers didn't even grow cucumbers. They had flowers on them then they died. My frost is October 8th in Pennsylvania.
In California we also have invasive morning glory vines. My neighbors have invasive passion fruit vines in their unkept backyard. The fruit is only edible for the birds, which then spread the seeds. I'm constantly pulling up the vines in my raised beds!
We're still dealing with bindweed in Arkansas! I am looking at all the morning glory seeds I had bought over the years, going, "What was I thinking?"🤣🤣
It takes 3+ years to see where things do best. I plant tomatoes in my home garden. Tomatoes just seem to avoid diseases in my home garden and are very risky in the community garden. My butternut squash thrives in the slightly shaded part. Potatoes were just ok due to too much rain so I will plant them deeper in higher soil and not add soil or hill them. Of course, the weather will be different next year.
I live in southern BC Canada. We are forecasted to be in the range of 100F for the next week. Puts a bit of a hitch in our gitalong as far as the fall crops go. Still trying even though our first frost is about a 4 - 6 weeks away. Nice garden tour and good advice about locally acclimated seeds. Thank you.
Absolutely you can keep peppers over winter! I had one that lasted all the way to May this year and then I failed at hardening it off again and it lost all its leaves and died right before she could have gone back outside. So sad but I’m going to try again this year! Lol. (Zone 8a, southern BC Canada)
The next sticker or tee shirt needs to have the phrase ‘sometimes it’s not perfect but it still feeds you’ on it with some ‘ugly’ produce! Jess says this at 35:36 ish
I wholehearted agree with you about gluten free breads, I'd rather go without. I have read a few places that sourdough bread, by way of the fermentation process, can break down gluten to a point where the body doesn't see it. As with everything on the internet, do your own research. After being diagnosed as celiac in 2018, via a blood test, My primary and I finally realized the test results didn't look right. I took another test with the same results so I went to a gastroenterologist who took one look at the tests and said, no way do you have celiac, these results are often misread. So now, tomato sandwiches are back on the menu!
Hey Jess, just a hint. Sheep love bindweed. If you ever have an area in your farm, that is insane with bind weed, put a few sheep in there. It will be gone in a day. We have very little bind weed on our property now because we have done this.
Everyone! I grew a 30lb watermelon that was ruby red inside! I am just beside myself!
😱😱😱 that’s amazing !!!!! Congratulations!!!!!!! 🍾 that’s literally such an achievement!!! U should be so proud of urself 🙌🏼
Wholly cow that’s amazing
@@deadbreakfast7714 thank you!
Woo hoo! 😊
Get it girl!!🎉
I am in north west Washington state. Our tomatoes are just starting to turn red. Corn is about 1 to 2 weeks away. Things are finally starting to come on and harvest. I love this time of year!!
I'm in the SF Bay Area and my garden is only now starting to flourish and the larger tomatoes are starting to ripen. Last year, I finally had to cut out the last few tomato plants in the beginning of Dec to make room for our large Christmas inflatables. They were still going strong but I knew it'd take forever to ripen in the cone so I cut em all off, placed them in a bin, and put a couple bananas in to finish the rolling process
Hi Jess I just wanted to thank you for the encouragement of making video tours of my garden and share a snippet of how that encouragement has grown into something positive in my life. Two years ago I moved to a different state and now my mom and I are states away from one another. I learned an appreciation for gardening from my mom, and I thought I had a brown thumb for a long time. We had some opportunities to garden together as adults off and on, but I was never as invested as my mom, who has always been connected to her garden in such a deep and holistic way. I have come to accept that I do things differently but I can develop my own relationship with gardening, and I have improved at it and finally feel like I have done the research to be more successful finally this year. I have the space I want, I put in some of the infrastructure last year, but never quite got the garden off the ground. My poor seedlings lived in little pots and produced a little but never reached their potential. I started early this year, grew from seeds moved them out and got them in the ground. Mistakes were made, but they are lessons learned. I am learning to grow in a completely different zone and fairly different climate, and it has been a weird year, but I have had a lot of successes this year. And I have learned a lot. In the process, I have been watching you for the last couple of years, and gaining tips, encouragement, and a sense of kinship and inclusion in a larger community. And I wanted to share this with my mom, who has moved and has been unable to have her garden this year due to a variety of factors. And so, I started recording garden tours on my phone for my mom and putting them in a shared folder. I don't watch them, or edit them, at least not yet, so she gets all the raw, camera shut downs from heat, the stuttering to find the words I want, and random pauses on odd things at times, but I narrate the whole time, and far a little while it feels like my mom is walking around my garden with me, and it is very special. So thank you for the encouragement to step outside my comfort zone, and to make a record to share and reconnect.
Jess: “I don’t think I’ve ever done anything tidy in my life.”
Me: Same, friend! Same!
My Mom would say amen and testify to this being one of her biggest challenges with me as her neurodivergent daughter 😂
I haven’t either 😂 but I still manage to know where everything is.
I have accepted that my garden will always be a little on the wild side.
I’ve never been tidy. I can always find anything I need. My favourite gardens are on the wild side 🌱
@@caraoiler711 don't worry, you'll grow out of that. Lollololol no insult. Fabulous blessings everyone and everywhere
@@witchininthekitchin see my other comment. Lol. No I'll type it for you. Fyi. You'll grow out of the knowing thing. Lol. Blessings everyone really.
"I dont think ive ever done anything tidy in my life" I laughed out loud. Yes! The more I try to make it neat and organized, nature has its own way.
That is so true... I take pictures of the beginning of me planting every year and then when the babies get about 4 to 5 inches tall then when they fill in the garden... Every year it looks different and great to see what it looked like from the year before...
Dog fennel, huh! I always called it "Donkey Food" because growing up, a neighbor had a cute little wooden donkey pulling a cart with lots of this growing around, and we would "feed" it to our donkey friend. ♥
It'll still be donkey food to me~
HI R&R, The tiny crunchy yellow teardrop pepper you ate at 33:10 in the vlog is called a BIQUINHO pepper. they’re fabulous pickled! Thank you for the garden tour. Your inground garden looks angelic this year.
Lol! I just shared 0:01 that. My daughter-in-law from Brazil just gave some pickled ones to me. She called it PIMENTA BIQUINHO or “little beak peppers”. Do you happen to know where I may get some seed for next year?
@@dlsdyer9071 oh, that’s awesome. I purchased my Biquinho pepper seeds from a local farm and garden store, but Baker Creek sells them as well in both red and yellow varieties. They are very prolific plants, so give them plenty of space to grow in almost bush like. Happy growing.
Perfect timing .... Being stuck in bed is infinitely more enjoyable with a good Roots & Refuge video ❤
You took the words right out of my mouth lol. My health has planted me in bed in front of my TV. Roots and refuge are my number one favorite UA-cam channel hands-down. I also have a handful of UA-cam channels that ice follow close and never miss an episode. I am so thankful for roots and refuge, and how they taught me about how to fully utilize UA-cam and follow channels. Before roots and refuge entered my life I didn’t truly understand that people did that. I’d watch a UA-cam show to learn to do something and that’s it. Which is wonderful because if my health allows me, there isn’t anything that I can’t do thanks to UA-cam lol. Following roots and refuge has given me a link with the outside world and a community to connect with. I don’t feel as alone and isolated by my health. Roots and refuge is my lifeline to the outside world and I’m determined to get well enough to garden again. Because after I discovered roots and refuge, my garden thrived far beyond my imagination. I’ve now missed two summers of gardening, and I still never miss an episode of roots and refuge❣️♥️🌹
Me too. In bed about 20 hours a day. Take care everyone
@@mikkileon6380 I hope that beat what ever you are battling right now. Stay strong, never give up x
@@MissBetsyLu goodness thats a lot of hours spent in bed. I hope you are able to find some relief from your problems x
@@raversmead thanks so much. Your sweet.. please keep praying. blessings everyone
The Seminole pumpkin is the replacement for butternut squash in our area because the squash bugs pretty much leave them alone, but will devour the butternut squash plants along with the vine bore bugs... ❤❤❤ zone 9B just FYI 😊
Added to my 🏡 notes. Thanks so much. Many grand blessings everyone everywhere
Thanks!
Jess, you have made my day better. I woke up in a mood and I have tried to change my mood but nothing worked until you posted this video. You are literally the only person who hasn't gotten under my skin and I have watched this tour 3 times now. Thank you.
Awww, well I pray for the tension gripping your heart to ease and for comfort to wrap around you like a blanket!
@@RootsandRefugeFarm Jess, my daughter-in-law gave me a jar of those little peppers in a vinegar brine. I asked her what they call them (she is from Brazil). This is what she said:
In Brazil they call it "pimenta biquinho". But it looks like the name around here might be "little beak peppers".
Jess, last year you mentioned shade cloth for tomatoes in hot climates. I'm in So. CA, inland where it got to over 108°to 113° for a couple of weeks this summer. I took your advice and I've never had such success with my slicing tomatoes. Some of my celebrities were almost the size of softballs, and lots of them. Usually, I lose many of them to sun scald by mid summer, but the shade cloth saved them and my bell peppers. Thanks so much!❤ 😊 btw, I love seeing your amazing garden!
In regard to squash plants and pests: I can dig the find local plants deal. But, if you can't find locally grown seeds that are acclimated to the area, what I have done to at least deter the squash vine borer, is to use athletic tape at the base of my plants. Sometimes, as the leaves die back as the plant grows, I will re-wrap the base a little further. As for squash bugs: Jag Singh, (I think that's how his name is spelled), Places DE in a portable vacuum cleaner and goes around sucking the bugs off the plants, leaves them in there for a while, (I think a day or so), and then feeds them to his chickens. Sounds feasible.
Jag Singh might become my new best friend! 😃👍🏻
My vac just showed up. My 17yo son is having a ball. Anything is better than working school. We were trying to figure out what to do with the cucumber beetles once we sucked'm up. Thanks! Just in time for Squash bug infestation.
Agree! When I have a hard time growing something I go to one of the many farmers markets around southwestern Ohio and I will buy locally-grown fruit and I will enjoy it and save those seeds!! 😉
We brought a Black Swallowtail caterpillar into the house from our dill this spring. We didn't get to see it emerge from it's chrysalis, but we did watch it stretch it's wings and fly away. It was amazing!❤❤❤ Now our plan is to plant dill basically everywhere and do it every year.
One year I brought in fennel covered in Swallowtail caterpillars and released the butterflies after they emerged. It was so fun and interesting.
I LOVED the garden walk this video! You shine so bright when talking about plants and it really gave me a feeling I was walking with you as you told me all about the garden. I've watched for several years and enjoy all the tours but this was my favorite walk.
Many of my cucurbit seeds I bought this year did not seem to do as well. My older cucurbit seeds did ok or great....I genuinely feel that the added pressure on the garden industry is resulting in a number of mix ups, lesser quality seeds, and maybe even some of the organic seeds coming from plants that were unknowingly exposed to inorganic herbicides/pesticides. I have had a lot of mixed bag results this year (not all to blame on the suppliers) but I am very happy to see how many people are trying to garden. I think it's a great start towards healing the earth.
Thank you for being honest about your garden nt quite being what you had expected. I thought it was only me who felt this way. Now I am excited about making changes, adding or totally removing plants from the garden.
Jess,I just love your garden tours. You introduced me to Silver Slicers and they have been amazing. I have given away so many and been able to introduce this delicious cucumber to so many. They are shocked that it's a cucumber!!!
For some reason seeing your accidental kiddie pool garden really made me think about your mom and how alike you two are ❤ it’s incredibly beautiful
Will is doing such an amazing job with the gardens and harvests. He’s a real asset to the farm.
I loveeeeeee tomatoes & tom sandwiches! Grandma & Mom grew a garden every year & those garden lunches are some of my fav childhood memories xoxo picking & eating tomatoes in the garden are the best!
If only the wondrous Golden Hour would last long enough to film a garden tour...❤
Daniel is the best!!! He would be such a fun garden friend to have.
For anyone looking for the specific holy basil they grow you can get it at MIgardener or botanical interest stocks it now as well. Specifically it's a tulsi known as Kapoor and is distinguished by its bubble gum scent ❤ I know it's a question everyone always asks
You inspired me to try. I always joked that I had the "black thumbs of death" when it came to gardening. Your approach to enjoying the environment and connecting with the food you grow to nourish you, has nourished my soul. I have a small garden (this year!) and I've used your method of enjoying my space and noticing the pollinators, the birds and the environment to soothe me after work. I love my space and the feeling of being connected to my land, sharing my harvest with my friends. Thank you for nudging me onto this path! Best to you and your family from the Ottawa Valley, Ontario, Canada!
Hi Jess! I’ve been with you for quite awhile and I always feel like family! Tell Ben I am harvesting banana peppers, which I planted because of his influence! He is an influencer!!! My husband loves the peppers and so do I. 🥰
Ive “raised” many swallowtails. Until your new enclosure shows up, just put them into a jar with cheese cloth or something else porous over the top. They will be fine! You can do that with the large larvae too just keep them fed and provide a couple of sticks that have somewhat horizontal parts for them to attach to. Bask to the enclosure, you can add sticks to the inside of that too. When the chrysalis come out, the new butterfly will need somewhere to hang upside down to drain, dry and air out its wings so that it does not scuff them while they are so delicate. Once they go upright, they are still quite docile and will step onto your finger and perch there! ENJOY!!
I grew the lettuce leafed basil this year aswell and I am blown away buy it!❤
I like using it on my burgers
I am near Memphis, tn. My garden has been toasted for about a month. Stripping it and starting to plant fall.
This has got me so excited to film our second garden tour tomorrow. Despite the crazy heatwave we're having. Thanks for the lil' boost to my motivation, Jess! 💚
Thank you for the tour. My garden is going into feral abundance mode and I love it. The areas where you can barely walk are my favorite.
I love ❤️ the “Land Before Time” reference!!!! That was one of my nephews’ favorite movies when they were little. We must have watched it 150 times or better 😊
Yep, we've had one or two days get up to 100. Back in '95 we were in the mountains at 8000ft. I was pregnant with my daughter and she was a week late. My ankles were swelling, and I'd never had that happen before with 3 other pregnancies. We were building our house and living in a camper. It was so hot my husband strung up a hammock in the shade. He put a thermometer on the tree in the shade after I'd been there awhile. It was 104 in the shade!
I'm thankful for this cool weather we've had here in CO this year. Unusual rain too! Instead of everything being dry and dead and worrying about wildfire from the beginning of July, I haven't hardly needed to water things, and this is mid August! Very thankful!
Unless you completely concrete the pathway in your cottage garden, you will be fighting a losing battle against Bermuda grass forever. We live near Dallas and had Bermuda for the first 25 years in our house. Bermuda grass is horrible for garden or flower beds. I would spend most of my summer trying to dig down deep enough to get the roots out, but the Bermuda always wins. Five years ago, I wanted to re-sod our yard to make it look good for our daugther's wedding weekend. Our landscaper talked me in to doing St Augustine. I really resisted, but finally said go for it. St Augustine spreads on top of the ground and is not invasive in any of my flower beds. Hallelujah!!! I still get an occasional piece of Bermuda sprouting up, but absolutely nothing like I used to deal with. Trust me, I feel your pain!
Jess, that is a good idea about filming your garden. I can start on my fall veggies ( video taping the fall veggies ). Then I can do my spring veggies and summer veggies. I do take pictures of my garden and veggies that I picked. I am also a visual learner.
Finally some confirmation that not everyone uses a garden journal! I take lots of pictures too. ;)
Jessica, I love you. I appreciate your authenticity. I teach a little gardening class every spring and turn my students on to your videos every year. Love you. Thank you 💖💖💖
Here in Iowa it has seemed to be a fairly mild summer, too. A few really hot days, but mostly pretty comfortable. AND, we have been super blessed to have consistent rain. I've only had to water 4 times.
I just love how Bear 🐻 is right there with you… here in Nova Scotia my tomatoes are just starting to ripen… almost two weeks behind last year… our June was cold and very wet
I have celiac and I just harvested my first tomato of the year (western NY)… I mix yeast, honey and GF flour with some warm water to a thick pancake batter consistency. Let it get all bubbly… then I mix in salt, pepper, oregano and garlic powder. throw it on some foil in the air fryer… 400 for 8 minutes. Flip it. Another 8 minutes on the other side. It comes out like focaccia and a pita had a baby. I told that in half and use it as the vessel for my tomato sammich.
I live in South Carolina and it has been super hot!
"Sometimes it's not perfect, but it still feeds you" honestly exactly what I needed to hear. I started my new garden entirely from scratch this year, and I've been struggling with the "imperfect/incomplete" garden. Because it takes time to correct the soil from grass lawn to garden, build infrastructure like some raised beds, etc. And I can recognize that, but there's still a little tinge of disappointment when I try to take photos of the whole garden. I pretty much haven't. Because I don't want to show off all the things I haven't finished.
I think your garden(magical land) is magnificent now, yet I’m looking forward to seeing the changes that you make along the way. I like that you’re actually letting your plans for your spaces grow and evolve. I think it’s going to be fun to watch how your dreams evolve and literally grow. Plants grow, so why can’t your plans…..🤔
I tried Clemson Spineless okra this year first time in Orlando Fl. Off just one of the 13 plants i have gotten over 50 delicious pods! I have to pick am and pm some days. I just stuck the seeds jn the ground with some rabbit manure. Growing like crazy since May some is almost 8 feet tall! So good! So easy! Okra will grow in the worst sandy dirt and handles drought!
Yasss I clicked on this so fast 🎉❤
Im currently trying to save my Sunflower Steve seeds from the sunflowers i grew this year. It is stunningly fascinating to see all the stages.... And i love how many baby blooms are growing off of the main stalk. One of them grew three big stalks from the base and now each has a bunch of lil baby sunflowers growing off the sides. I finally posted to my IG account.... And, so far, those sunflowers are the only pics i have posted.
Great Mug! You got me planting Zinnias and I thought I'd lost them this year but they finally came up and I love them so much.
I think this is the earliest I've ever been to one of your videos! Can't wait to watch!
Your garden tours, and even more so where are you live now, as you develop and grow your magical garden, it’s like an adventure as you move through the garden and turn corners you discover its magical secrets. You have the stone pathways and little clusters of plants and big jungles of plants. You never know what you’re going to find Tucktaway here in there. Rather, it’s the beautiful stones or the massive plants growing or that’s a figurine here and a fountain there… you have little seats and big seats tucked here and there. In my mind and heart I’ve named your garden and of course it’s called the magic garden lol. Yes, I’m talking about the old vintage story. I remember buying that book for my five children when they were little. I think I love the book even more than them hehehe 😁. Thank you for sharing this adventure with us. You are my connection with the outside world and I never take you for granted. It is a privilege and an amazing honor to hang out with you and visit your home via UA-cam.🙏🏼♥️
Yes finally! This is the ENTIRE reason I even follow your channel. More garden tours please!!!
I agree. More garden tours with lots and lots of details. Many grand blessings everyone everywhere
thnx Jess for sharing. love your channel. Your garden IS beautiful.
morning glories are my eternal garden nemisis
Can’t even imagine having a garden that huge! Dangggg 😂 I just did my first year of gardening in pots on my porch and that was a struggle. The pests in NC are FRFR😂 I am looking forward to fall gardening😊
Congratulations on first garden. Many grand blessings everyone
After watching your pottery vlog, I love seeing what mug you are drinking out of 😊. Great tour as usual!
❤garden tour ❤ I love me some Jess!!💕
❤ Love to see it! We live up in the Pacific Northwest 6b but it felt like a 5b this year, super cold nights, super hot days. Our tomatoes and everything are just now starting to ripen and things are just now taking off. I love to see your gardens taking off!! Gorgeous as always!! ❤❤
The tiny peppers that you couldn't remember the name on are called Biquinho and they are one of my favorites to just snack on in the garden! They are sooooo good!
Garden may be suffering from the heat but the herbs and pumpkins and squash and peppers and flowers are going good and it's looking wild!! Love it!! I grow the pumpkins and some squash in the compost pile and they do fantastic!!
This year I planted zinnias for the first time… I got a box of seeds from my local dollar general for $2 ! Money well spent!
On a completely unrelated channel, they completely got rid of bermuda grass by shallow tilling, then they manually pulling up all the visible root runners. Then they shallow tilled again, and manually pulled the roots, and again and again. Very labor intensive, but it's months later now and the grass has not come back.
I recently bought my retirement home, in the Caribbean. I'm planning zones now and about to plant a 2nd round of tomatoes and peppers. Planning my Tea Garden, and planning tea and more coffee. This had been my hardest zone to plan!! Closing herbs and spices has been a challenge!! You are an inspiration to me ❤
Thank you! 😊 I am filling tea bags with dried herbs from my greenstalks and inspired to hit the garden now to pull onions so the next round of something can be planted.
As ALWAYS JESS such great gardening info. Thanks for all of your inspiration 💚
I'm doing gluten free also, you have to try the carbonate seeded bread which is amazing!!!!!!
Thank you. I looked it up and sounds great but still has wheat protein in it. Isn't there gluten in wheat protein?
I post my daily garden hauls and monthly updates as Instagram stories that are saved n Instagram story folders. That is how I track when I plant and when I start getting produce,etc. have done this for about 3 years. I share them to Facebook, so they show up on my memories everyday and I can see how the previous years compare to the current.
Just want to say I love your mountain mug beautiful 😍
Bless you Jess ! The bathtub shouuld be a water featuure of some kinnd .❤
Lol i love the trust Will has in you. He bit into it before you said it wasn't hot.
I have to say that one of my favorite parts of your garden is to the left of the high tunnels. All of the Zinnias growing there are so beautiful. I just fell in love with big flower heads and the colors. Your Zinnias prompted me to look for some seeds so I can plant my own. Didn't buy any because I think it's too late in the season now, don't know??? Also, that one pink rose beside your greenhouse...the one you said bugs...or something damaged it. Saw it in a recent video and it was just beautiful. Can't wait to see what you do with the cottage garden by your green house. Jmo, you desperately need some shade. Especially in places that you plan on making more seating. I love all of your garden spaces, just remember that Rome wasn't built in a day and eventually it will become exactly what you envision it to be.
Wonderful, inspiring garden tour & advice! Thanks for sharing! I’m in Alberta, Canada & we still haven’t had a frost in my area, which is quite rare. I started digging my potato plants today. They can be left in ground for the early frosts but some plants were dying back a lot because our town deer ate their tops! Blessings to everyone 🤗💕🇨🇦
I've been gardening here in the desert Southwest for 4 years now and I have learned that I can grow Mediterranean things here great - artichokes, fennel, San Marzano tomatoes, and Italian squashes all do great here. But Asian varieties struggle with the heat and low humidity, and without a greenhouse I cannot control the environment enough to make them happy. I am zone 7b, so I can garden all year round since frost hardy plants will survive with a little bit of protection during the coldest days. Cold weather gardening is much easier than summer gardening around here! Especially years like this one.
ooohh lettuce leaf basil looks great!!
Plant onions around your eggplant for the flea beetles!
When the flowers stop blooming and not benefit to the pollinators, cut it down! I agree about the morning glory and same for puncture vine (Goatheads!).
I have injected BT in my squash plants plus sprayed with BT & it has really helped!
We only got 3 cucumbers this year and so far 1 baby melon. Northern Maryland.
You gambling on biting peppers is one of my favorite things to watch 🤣🤣🤣
I live on the edge
@@RootsandRefugeFarm 🤣🤙🏻
@@RootsandRefugeFarm lol.
We’ve had no rain this summer and this is normally our wet season. Because if the drought my garden has seen over 110 degree temps. We’ve been in emergency mode just trying to keep our animals alive. Can’t wait for fall!!!!
Gooood afternoon from central Florida! Hope everyone has a great afternoon!
Howdy, neighbor! Greetings from SW Florida! :D
@@oakanna44 🖐
I'm on the nature coast.
I’m on the Space Coast ( Brevard)
@@sheraeduncan2980 🖐
Awesomeness ❤
I want to build some raised beds like you have, those look awesome!👍👍
Hey Jess , Glad you had a nice get away.. The garden flowers a beautiful.. The little pepper you are eating are called Biquinho or Sweety drop peppers and they have a small touch of heat, I think they are so cute , lol. It is always great to drop in for a visit.
JESS, my kejari melon is trellised on a cattle panel. 1 month ago, they started elongating. They have the typical kejari markings, but they are oval shaped. Oil vay! Itz always sumpin', lol
Thank you so much for suggesting Silver Slicer cukes. They are wonderful! I have never had successful cukes, but this is a gorgeous plant, no bitterness, still slowly producing. Love em!
Over the years my garden has improved 95%! Thank you for all the help❤😊
Jess, my tomatoes are still yellowish green and my cucumbers didn't even grow cucumbers. They had flowers on them then they died. My frost is October 8th in Pennsylvania.
The bitter melon thrives
In a climate like ours
It likes humid and hot
And that’s what we’ve got
-lovely words by J. Sowards
In California we also have invasive morning glory vines. My neighbors have invasive passion fruit vines in their unkept backyard. The fruit is only edible for the birds, which then spread the seeds. I'm constantly pulling up the vines in my raised beds!
Your dedication to providing healthy home grown food for your family is so inspiring! Greetings from the smokey North. 😸
I love roasted seeds especially pumpkin
We're still dealing with bindweed in Arkansas! I am looking at all the morning glory seeds I had bought over the years, going, "What was I thinking?"🤣🤣
It takes 3+ years to see where things do best. I plant tomatoes in my home garden. Tomatoes just seem to avoid diseases in my home garden and are very risky in the community garden. My butternut squash thrives in the slightly shaded part. Potatoes were just ok due to too much rain so I will plant them deeper in higher soil and not add soil or hill them. Of course, the weather will be different next year.
Thank you for a beautiful garden tour!
Thank you Jess. Bear loves his mama. I love watching him in the background. Love you guys from NH
I live in southern BC Canada. We are forecasted to be in the range of 100F for the next week. Puts a bit of a hitch in our gitalong as far as the fall crops go. Still trying even though our first frost is about a 4 - 6 weeks away. Nice garden tour and good advice about locally acclimated seeds. Thank you.
Absolutely you can keep peppers over winter! I had one that lasted all the way to May this year and then I failed at hardening it off again and it lost all its leaves and died right before she could have gone back outside. So sad but I’m going to try again this year! Lol. (Zone 8a, southern BC Canada)
Just when I think I couldnt love you more, You throw in a Land Before Time, plant reference.
Thank you for sharing with us, and Bless You too!
The next sticker or tee shirt needs to have the phrase ‘sometimes it’s not perfect but it still feeds you’ on it with some ‘ugly’ produce! Jess says this at 35:36 ish
I wholehearted agree with you about gluten free breads, I'd rather go without. I have read a few places that sourdough bread, by way of the fermentation process, can break down gluten to a point where the body doesn't see it. As with everything on the internet, do your own research.
After being diagnosed as celiac in 2018, via a blood test, My primary and I finally realized the test results didn't look right.
I took another test with the same results so I went to a gastroenterologist who took one look at the tests and said, no way do you have celiac, these results are often misread. So now, tomato sandwiches are back on the menu!
Hey Jess, just a hint. Sheep love bindweed. If you ever have an area in your farm, that is insane with bind weed, put a few sheep in there. It will be gone in a day. We have very little bind weed on our property now because we have done this.