The Easiest, Most Abundant Edible Plants to Grow in a Garden - Gardening in a Cold Climate

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
  • In this video I share the easiest and most abundant foods to grow in your garden in a colder climate. If you are gardening across the Northern states of the United States, Canada, Western Europe or similar climates then this information is very applicable to you. However, I also have grow many of these foods in Southern state of Florida and have seen abundant gardens in Southern California growing many of these foods. I share about 40 plants to grow and I focus on two main criteria - easy and abundant. These are foods that are great for beginner gardeners and are likely
    to produce a large amount of food. I also cover some information on preserving the bounty, which is an absolute key to success in climates where a shorter growing season exists. By applying this knowledge you can decrease your trips to the grocery store drastically and eat the
    healthiest and most delicious fresh food around! Make sure to share with your neighbors.
    Get more tips for growing food at: www.robingreenfield.org/freese...
    See my new video: Beginner Gardening Tips for a Successful Garden
    • Beginner Gardening Tip...
    Edited by Daniel Saddleton www.hiphikersmedia.com
    Filmed by and photo by Ornella Le Rouzic - @ornellalr on Instagram - www.ornellalr.fr
    Robin Greenfield is a truth-seeker, activist, social reformer and servant to Earth, humanity and our plant and animal relatives. He lives simply and sustainably to be the change he wishes to see in the world. Through living closely connected to Earth, he rejects the status quo of consumerism and demonstrates a way of being in gratitude, mindfulness and presence. His life is an experiment with truth and integrity.
    Robin’s public activism involves dramatic actions designed to provoke critical thought, self-reflection and positive change. His activism creates nuanced conversations on the critical issues of our time, with a focus on solutions for living in harmony.
    His life’s work has been covered by media worldwide and he has been named “The Robin Hood of Modern Times” by France 2 TV and “The Forrest Gump of Ecology”.
    Robin has committed to earning below the federal poverty threshold for life and donates 100% of his media earnings to grassroots nonprofits, with a focus on supporting Black and Indigenous women-led organizations.
    This channel is a resource for all who seek to liberate themselves, to live in truth and integrity, and to live in harmony with Earth, humanity and the plants and animals we share this home with.
    Robin Greenfield and Dear Friends share means of achieving liberation and harmony through sustainable living, simple living, tiny house living, foraging, growing food and medicine, minimalism, zero waste, earth-skills, food sovereignty, community resilience, compassionate communication, activism, Black Liberation, Indigenous Sovereignty and living in service.
    Find Robin Greenfield on:
    Website: www.robingreenfield.org
    UA-cam: / @robin.greenfield
    Instagram: / robin.greenfield @Robin.Greenfield
    Facebook: / robingreenfieldpage
    Robin Greenfield’s work is offered as a gift to the public domain. This content is Creative Commons and is free to be copied, republished and redistributed. Learn about Creative Commons and follow the guidelines here: www.robingreenfield.org/creat...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 706

  • @jammin4284
    @jammin4284 3 роки тому +571

    My wife HATED when I turned a larger part of our suburban back yard into a vegetable garden.
    Tonight I came home to find she picked fresh bell peppers for dinner.
    Success.

    • @baconandeggs9113
      @baconandeggs9113 3 роки тому +21

      Shell warm up to it. Free food right

    • @jk897
      @jk897 3 роки тому +17

      LOL divorce her

    • @roseybeesley4110
      @roseybeesley4110 3 роки тому +6

      How sweet, you keep on growing veg.

    • @JasonGodwin69
      @JasonGodwin69 2 роки тому +12

      lmao women am I right guys?

    • @da1stamericus
      @da1stamericus 2 роки тому +41

      @@JasonGodwin69 some of us have it the other way. My hubby wanted me to keep the patio, plant free. Now he's thankful for how much we save eating our own veggies, as we prefer eating organic. I now have a 1000 sqfoot garden.

  • @LaineyBug2020
    @LaineyBug2020 4 роки тому +86

    Something that works well for the plains area is what the Natives called 3 sisters. Corn, then plant the pumpkins so they can use the corn stalks for stability, then plant beans at the base of both for groumd cover to keep away pests & balance soil. Then when you harvest them, you put them all together in a stew called 3 Sisters Soup!

    • @myriamvalentin4
      @myriamvalentin4 Рік тому +1

      Wow! Thats amazing. Thanks for sharing!

    • @WorldOfARandomVegan
      @WorldOfARandomVegan Рік тому

      Nice!

    • @TothebatmobileJoy
      @TothebatmobileJoy Рік тому

      You should try that next to your palms!

    • @joshuaperry4112
      @joshuaperry4112 Рік тому +3

      Corn,beans, squash. Grown in soil and enriched with fish carcasses. It's what saved the Pilgrims.

    • @tyrone6820
      @tyrone6820 Рік тому

      Not like everyone and they moms ain’t heard that shit already. 🪑

  • @emilymarguerita2781
    @emilymarguerita2781 4 роки тому +343

    Living in urban southern Ontario and I’m growing:
    -cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, cabbage, brussel sprouts, leeks, summer squash, zucchini, 3 types of winter squash, lettuce, kale, spinach, Swiss chard, radishes, peas, beans, melons, potatoes, 4 types of berries, carrots, beets, parsnips, onions, a bunch of different herbs, and apples!

    • @Amanda-hw3zj
      @Amanda-hw3zj 4 роки тому +3

      That’s awesome!

    • @skyler-evz2034
      @skyler-evz2034 4 роки тому +3

      In a greenhouse?

    • @emilymarguerita2781
      @emilymarguerita2781 4 роки тому +12

      symphy neveah nope! In my backyard

    • @jeffengel2607
      @jeffengel2607 4 роки тому +7

      How are the melons going? I'm nearby (upstate NY) and I've worried they'd have too short/cold a growing season here.

    • @constancemiller3753
      @constancemiller3753 4 роки тому +11

      You are awesome Emily. Carry on Canadian gardens🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱👩‍🌾

  • @lt1136
    @lt1136 4 роки тому +98

    August 8 is Sneak Zucchini onto your Neighbor's Porch Day!

  • @837503845kuty38506
    @837503845kuty38506 3 роки тому +13

    I want somebody to look at me the way you looked at that squash 😂

  • @Passioakka
    @Passioakka Рік тому +3

    Living in the north of Sweden, close to the artic circle (at the same lat as Fairbanks, Alaska). I grow cucumbers and tomatoes + peppers in a greenhouse (goes outside IF the summer becomes ok). I grown peas, beans, onions, garlic, beetrots, carrots, turnips, sallat, wintersquash, varietes of kale and potatoes. Thyme and mint may survive if we get a cold winter with a lot of snow. I have apples and plums, black and white currants, strawberrys and gooseberrys...but there´s a problem with the mooses and deers now when we haven´t got any dogs anymore. I also have juneberries and will plant some lonicera caerulea this autumn.
    We may have a short season but with presowing and wintersowing (for example kale and carrots in april, carrots directly on cold soil or onto the snow and kale in trays, then shoveling snow over them). Our summernights with a lot of light and colder weather gives a good growth and sturdy plants. Not much pests up here too, some field snails, caterpillars on the kales and carrotflies but using net reduces that problem.
    Just remember; low planting (no raised bed for strawberrys for example) gives the best condition surviving winter when growing perennials up north!

  • @maryegerton6848
    @maryegerton6848 4 роки тому +166

    I dug a hole and put a large planter in the hole so the top was level with the ground. Then I planted mint in the planter. That plant came back every spring, and was completely contained. It was the most beautiful plant I had. It actually looked like a small bush because the planter was round. Nice for mojitos and tea and jelly, etc.💚

    • @lindsaywait8763
      @lindsaywait8763 4 роки тому +22

      Mint IS super easy, we have chocolate mint that I cold brew overnight with lime juice and sugar for the most delicious limeade!

    • @jadeperri5183
      @jadeperri5183 4 роки тому +2

      How deep was the planter? Did it have drainage holes in the bottom? Or like one of those coconut fiber lined ones (don’t know what they’re called)

    • @maryegerton6848
      @maryegerton6848 4 роки тому +9

      Tiana Fernandez I think it was maybe 12 to 16 inches deep. It had drilled drainage holes on the bottom. Not to big because I didn’t want the roots to wander.

    • @jadeperri5183
      @jadeperri5183 4 роки тому +3

      @@maryegerton6848 thanks!

    • @maryegerton6848
      @maryegerton6848 4 роки тому +13

      Tiana Fernandez if I were you I would put a small piece of window screen or some kind of cloth on the bottom of the pot on the inside so that the roots don’t make their way out of the pot and into your garden. The window screen is best though, because it won’t decompose. 💚

  • @riceflower89
    @riceflower89 4 роки тому +107

    Mint can be grown from a clipping easily. My mint was propagated from a dessert garnish. I brought it home and put it in water until it formed roots and then planted it.

    • @laurabehenna9602
      @laurabehenna9602 4 роки тому +5

      Glad you mentioned saskatoons / juneberries / serviceberries. They grow great in the northwest and the midwestern Plains. Canadian breeders have bred some extra delicious , prolific varieties including Thiessen and Smokey. You can propagate them from cuttings too. The berries make wonderful pies and cobblers. They're a good substitute for blueberries if blueberries don't grow in your area.

    • @sophie3869
      @sophie3869 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah. My family’s grown mint since before I was born. It’s so hardy and it spreads so fast that when often end up ripping it up (we use it all) instead of picking a few leaves

    • @marjoriegarner5369
      @marjoriegarner5369 2 роки тому +8

      mint will choke out an entire garden area, and it's almost impossible to control. Grow it in pots. As you would grow rosemary, but not in winter, inside, as rosemary is best grown. Rosemary, as a house plant, needs plenty if light, like grow lights. I have a rosemary plant that is over seven years old. Outsude in summer, inside in winter. You don't need much to produce a lot if mint. It's easily dried for winter use, as many herbs are. I live on the Continental Divide, at very high elevation, where it freezes at nite every month if the year. Cold nights, long winters, hot days, in summer. Very short growing season. Certain crops do well, others don't survive because of cold nights. fruit trees don't survive, except for crabapples. Learn what grows well, and do that. Grains are another story. I love Montana. But it's a challenge for gardening. But it can be done, as I have for over 50 years. It's so wonderful to grow and nourish plants. It's the life cycle. Real food is the best food. What grows in your area is what's best for your body. Exotic foods are not so good for the body, so what grows in your area is most nourishing. Shipping foods is generally a waste of resources. I will be 80 in a few months. Been at this for a long, long time. You gotta love it. And study it. It's life. It's a passion. its the best.!! greetings from Montana, at almost 6,000 feet high. Two seasons here. Ten months of winter, and July/August.

  • @stschubs
    @stschubs 4 роки тому +15

    As someone who almost completely lives off their northern (zone 2b) garden year round, we grow amazingly large onions! This list pretty much nails it. A couple of suggestions food wise; asapragus. It's a short season, but it can also be an abundant perennial. It takes 3 years though but then grows 20 years. You can also store beets like carrots, in sand. And a great way to get your greens in the winter, is to get a grow lamp and grow indoors, we eat fresh lettuce that way all year. If you can't grow berries, there's lots of northern parks that you can forage in and freeze your harvest with :) We also grow over 100 tomato plants and can sauces, diced tomatoes, etc. Lastly, we are a CSA, and when people help us on our farm, we give them food in return, I'm sure we're not the only ones like that! Try asking if you can do a barter system like that. Small farmers always need help :)

    • @Robin.Greenfield
      @Robin.Greenfield  4 роки тому +1

      Keep up the great work!

    • @MFV77
      @MFV77 4 роки тому +1

      Hi! I’m in 4b in the Black Hills, where we get plenty of snow (and hail!). I’m duly impressed that you’re able to grow so much food! We’re currently installing a greenhouse as a season extender. Where do you suggest planting the asparagus? Earth garden or greenhouse? Thx!

    • @nolancampbell4451
      @nolancampbell4451 8 місяців тому

      I live in 4b which I thought was agricultural hell, but hey that sounds much worse. Pretty inspiring

  • @cecillegagne6900
    @cecillegagne6900 4 роки тому +188

    Can you do an episode on less well known plants that thrives in colder climates that are good for self sufficiency? I would find it interesting. I live in Canada

    • @uniteamerica9446
      @uniteamerica9446 2 роки тому +19

      Check out a channel called Learn your land. Also check out a seed company called Richters. They're Canadian but I've purchased many seeds from them in USA. They have a huge selection of vegetable and herb seeds also medicinal and foraging type plant seeds. They're a great company with quality seeds. I think it would be wise to have some foraging type plants growing in the wild that you can get to when the economy collapses. I don't have any interest in that channel or that seed company. My only interest is to help people.

    • @cecillegagne6900
      @cecillegagne6900 2 роки тому +1

      @@uniteamerica9446 thanks ill check it out

    • @Elensaire93
      @Elensaire93 2 роки тому +1

      @@uniteamerica9446 thank you! 🥰

    • @peadarocleirigh1896
      @peadarocleirigh1896 2 роки тому +4

      @@uniteamerica9446 I'm working near Moscow and a close friend has a greenhouse & unused raised beds plus lots of spare space to start new beds and plant perennial edibles as dual ornamental / edible.
      Buying quality seeds in Russia is tricky with my poor Russian language skills.
      Was going to order from home (Ireland) but Canadian seeds might be more suited to the climate here...
      I will search the Can company you mentioned.

    • @uniteamerica9446
      @uniteamerica9446 2 роки тому +1

      @@peadarocleirigh1896 yes they are a very reputable company. They can probably be shipped to you over the north pole. Good luck with your garden.

  • @elli2193
    @elli2193 4 роки тому +81

    Garden tips for cold climates are so rare - thank you!
    I live in 6a in Germany. Not all plants you recommend do grow well here - tomatoes only in a greenhouse, winter squash with luck, but most often it's too cold and wet for them to ripen in our short season. But we have forest all around - with lots of raspberries, blackberries, strawberries, and blueberries - all for free, you just have to pick them. A really good perennial fruit you didn't mention is the chinese quince. It is really easy to grow and produces many fruits which are great for preserving.

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 2 роки тому +7

      This is a great comment. I find the USDA hardiness zone is good for North America and China because summer and winter temperatures are much wider apart than in Europe. 6A is brilliant for many garden crops in the Midwestern USA because summers are hot and humid, but 6A in Europe is often cool and wet in the summer despite having the same winter minimums as say southern Indiana. This is where growing season length, temperature, and sunlight are the real indicators of gardening success, but unfortunately this is much harder to put on a map. Hardiness zones are much more important for frost sensitive perennials, such as apple trees, which many varieties like a good freeze out of the growing season, but can't tolerate Boreal temperatures very well. A great example of this I think is maize, which likes humid heat up to a point, and so the cool summers of northern and eastern Europe prevented its mass adoption there, unlike the potato which thrives in just about any temperate climate.
      I'm from the corn belt, which is notorious for having brutally hot summers for how brutally cold our winters can get. I've been to Louisiana in July and that is definitely hotter and muggier than the lower Great Lakes, but only as a more extreme version of the same thing, and they don't have to wear parkas in January.

    • @88marome
      @88marome 2 роки тому +3

      I... what?! Where in Germany? Germany has very warm climate imo! And I've grown tomatoes on my balcony in the middle of Sweden, with no problem!

    • @elli2193
      @elli2193 2 роки тому +6

      @@88marome Sweden has many different climates, colder and warmer ones - as well as Germany, believe it or not.
      It depends, where exactly you live - every little town in the world has it's own special climate. And every street in this town, too. There is no THAT climate in one whole nation and state.
      But, by the way - a balcony is something I do not have. And you cannot compare a balcony with a garden. Huge difference!

    • @stoverboo
      @stoverboo 2 роки тому +10

      We found that we can grow tomatoes and peppers by putting them in buckets on our asphalt driveway. The dark asphalt absorbs and then radiates enough heat that we have produced bumper crops of warm weather vegetables for the last three years while using this method.

    • @sharoncourt75
      @sharoncourt75 2 роки тому +3

      Elli i am in zone 6a usa, i started my permaculture by planting fruits trees, since they take a few years to produce, I chose alot of dwarf and semi-dawrf, now i add it raspberries and blackberries thornless, I do find onnion even under the snow, the laves shrivel and then new ones come back, I have Russian quince and medlars, apples, plums and pears

  • @RC-bl2pm
    @RC-bl2pm 4 роки тому +56

    I live in BC and Im telling you Swiss Chard is the best! Its incredibly tasty, super easy and it comes back like grass after you take some.

    • @JulieWolf
      @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +1

      copicing chard hmmm?

    • @arayasuebsee858
      @arayasuebsee858 3 роки тому +5

      Kale, swiss chard and arugula grow back like weeds in BC. Not complaining because I love eating them!

    • @tsunamis82
      @tsunamis82 2 роки тому

      Some say you can grow this stuff on the back of a truck.

  • @corax2012
    @corax2012 3 роки тому +33

    He knows his stuff. I grew up in the Alaskan outback, and I can say he is someone to listen to.

  • @shadowslayer552
    @shadowslayer552 2 роки тому +1

    THANKYOU finally someone who pronounces Wisconsin correctly

  • @GlidingChiller
    @GlidingChiller 4 роки тому +230

    > Cold climate
    > "Here in souther France"
    *sobs in German*

    • @elbotho
      @elbotho 4 роки тому +6

      All plants grows here as well but maybe lean a bit more on the Sauerkraut :)

    • @isabellezablocki7447
      @isabellezablocki7447 4 роки тому +5

      Well it gets cold around Toulouse in the winter (where Rob is ) but I guess not as much as in Hamburg.

    • @karlkenny2851
      @karlkenny2851 4 роки тому +18

      Try Ireland!

    • @Dref0r
      @Dref0r 4 роки тому +59

      Meanwhile, in Finland

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy 4 роки тому +38

      If anyone wants more cold climate permaculture, this is my jam. 5 year food forest, 100s videos from a Canadian engineer permaculture practitioner. I try to teach science of not just what to do, but why, and how it works. Watch Robs videos but check me out when you are done.

  • @Dlowr7
    @Dlowr7 2 роки тому +1

    I'm watching this while I'm high and I'm usually a huge meat eater. Watching this though, this gave me unexpected emotions for the vegetables. They're just so beautiful and want to help us. He has absorbed the plant personalities and has become a truly beautiful person who seems genuinely happy and friendly. It is the vegetables who are beautiful in their bright colors and life giving energy.

  • @erikakraemer6963
    @erikakraemer6963 4 роки тому +11

    Currant bushes (Ribes, not the raisin kind) are really important at least in Finland, since they tolerate quite cold weather and produce a lot of berries (black, red, white, green are different kinds) with minimal effort from the gardener. They can be found in basically every old garden. Here it's also allowed to pick e.g. berries and mushrooms in the forest, no matter whom the land belongs to, as long as you're not too close to any houses. So people often pick their own wild blueberries (bilberries?), lingonberries, cranberries and cloudberries or buy them from someone else that picked them.

  • @ruzicatowers8693
    @ruzicatowers8693 2 роки тому +1

    Alberta here, SO NEEDED THIS !!

  • @JamieHanks
    @JamieHanks 4 роки тому +39

    The kale I have planted in my Ohio backyard is doing great, but I found that the other seeds, I planted in late April were a mistake this year, being it was too cold and wet in the soil for them to germinate I believe. At any rate, my grandma is an experienced gardener, and I am going to help her till her garden today and share in the planting over the next week and enjoy food with her later this summer. She keeps saying there is no rush to plant and we still have time, I love her patience versus mine back in April. 82 looks wonderful in her eyes.

    • @serenakoleno9338
      @serenakoleno9338 3 роки тому +2

      Kale is great here in mid- Michigan! Mine lived through the mild winter last year, one outdoors in a large planter, one in basement near a window. I am still picking kale and beet greens along with chives in the middle of November. I set up a kind of cold frame but under estimated how low the winter sun dips, so it is not completely in the sun.

    • @serenakoleno9338
      @serenakoleno9338 3 роки тому +3

      I need to clarify: picking kale, etc. From regular garden, not cold frame.

  • @foreverirish132
    @foreverirish132 4 роки тому +81

    I’d love to see a day in your life and how that goes ❤️

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy 4 роки тому +19

      If anyone wants more cold climate permaculture, this is my jam. 5 year food forest, 100s videos from a Canadian engineer permaculture practitioner. I try to teach science of not just what to do, but why, and how it works. Watch Robs videos but check me out when you are done.

    • @Robin.Greenfield
      @Robin.Greenfield  4 роки тому +15

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy Sounds excellent! I'd love for you to make a video for my channel so I can feature you. Please email films@robgreenfield.org

    • @Robin.Greenfield
      @Robin.Greenfield  4 роки тому +12

      Faith,
      I will do that this year. :)

    • @foreverirish132
      @foreverirish132 4 роки тому +1

      Rob Greenfield looking forward to it ❤️

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy 4 роки тому +2

      @@Robin.Greenfield wow that would be super fun. I emailed you! :)

  • @JulieWolf
    @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +9

    Mint and Sunchokes planted last year have taken over a "garden" I started in a DNR forest clearcut! Lupine flowers coming along too. Take over edibles!

  • @ladyofthemasque
    @ladyofthemasque 2 роки тому +5

    One of the things I invested in was an Excalibur dehydrator, and then I learned how to prepare and dry various greens with it, which I then blend into a greens powder that I add to moist foods in the winter, to put those nutrients into my family's diet at a time when we just won't have all that many fresh greens to eat. I'll put together blends with parsley, kale, spinach, cabbage, brussel sprouts, swiss chard, mustard greens, radish greens, carrot greens (spicy notes!), beet greens & more, and then sometimes add in things like powdered onion, garlic, black pepper and stronger-flavored herbs like basil, thyme, oregano, ginger, so on and so forth, depending on what sort of flavor profile I want.
    I try to make the blends in small batches so that I can swap it up for different tastes every so often, and I ALWAYS label what goes into them. (One of my friends cannot have alliums, so no garlic, chives, onions, shallots, etc, while her partner cannot have any nuts or legumes, and my sister cannot have any sort of bell or chili pepper, though black & long pepper are okay for her to have--I always make sure anyone eating my cooking tells me in advance not only what they don't like, but what they cannot or at least really should not have.)

  • @sherrijackson4933
    @sherrijackson4933 4 роки тому +16

    We love pumpkin. We puree and freeze it and we pressure can it as well. It's so good for breads and muffins all year and we save our seeds and regrow the next year.

  • @gavinbrinck
    @gavinbrinck 2 роки тому +1

    thank you Robin ! revisiting this video again a year later, learning more, and looking forward to even more abundance this season . shalom !
    Gavi :)

  • @OldReddingFarm
    @OldReddingFarm 4 роки тому +34

    Storing carrots in sand huh? Super interesting never heard that. Saw someone up in Alaska storing her carrots up in pine shavings . very interesting.

    • @einfachweggehen2785
      @einfachweggehen2785 4 роки тому +11

      Here in Europe this is a very common way to store carrots, and it functions very well. Put some humid (not too humid) sand in a bucket and bury the carrots. Than you can store them in a cool, but frost-free cellar for months. You can do so with many other root-vegetables also. Just try it :-)

    • @kirstineschulzjensen7925
      @kirstineschulzjensen7925 3 роки тому +3

      we have always stored roots in sand for the winter

    • @serenakoleno9338
      @serenakoleno9338 3 роки тому

      What other methods besides sand and wood shavings?

    • @ifsheisgonetowherethere6259
      @ifsheisgonetowherethere6259 3 роки тому +1

      @@serenakoleno9338 I'd also like a video on building a root cellar like my grandparents had when my mom was a child. None of them are around anymore. Now I am the grandparent.

    • @marjoriegarner5369
      @marjoriegarner5369 2 роки тому +1

      @@serenakoleno9338 wash and thoroughly dry carrots, cut the tops off, so they don't re grow from the tops, and store in plastic bags(gallon size), in fridge veg bins. Dry them again as the weeks go by. Keep carrots, dry, in bags, in fridge, for months. Be sure tops of carrots are cut off, to stop regrowth. poke holes in the plastic bags so they have air circulation in storage. dry, but cold, is key. Sand doesn't work as well...it's heavy and a chance for mold. I tried it...not so good, unless temp and humidity are just right. Encourages regrowth.

  • @nataliakmiec3014
    @nataliakmiec3014 4 роки тому +32

    You are so refreshing, I need more of this kind of content on the internet

  • @abundentainpermanenta6020
    @abundentainpermanenta6020 2 роки тому +6

    Currants, gooseberries, jostaberries, asparagus, nettles (great nutritious wild crop), grapes are also a very neat crop in colder climates, aronias, nuts, almonds. Great recommendations you made, same on my list! :) Ty

  • @doubledeckers
    @doubledeckers 4 роки тому +22

    A great selection. Leeks are good for anyone who (like me) has trouble growing bulb onions. Chop and freeze them for use year round.

    • @JulieWolf
      @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +1

      Plant leeks next month (July) for over wintering).

    • @Diniecita
      @Diniecita 3 роки тому

      Lol. Winter harvest isnt a thing in very cold climates.

    • @sandram.johnson2754
      @sandram.johnson2754 3 роки тому

      @@Diniecita Yep

    • @vikkicaldwell4590
      @vikkicaldwell4590 2 роки тому

      try "yellow potato onions", they seem to be easier to be successful with

    • @athletemum
      @athletemum 3 місяці тому

      Kale and leeks make it through our snowy winter 🙂👍

  • @williammaxwell1919
    @williammaxwell1919 Рік тому +1

    Okay, WOW! You're enthusiasm is infectious and needs to be acknowledged for it's possitivity ~ thank you

  • @TheRealHonestInquiry
    @TheRealHonestInquiry Рік тому +3

    My new favorite green that definitely belongs on this list is Purslane. Grows like a weed and has a non-bitter, slightly lemony flavor with a satisfying succulent crunch. Flowers and seeds are edible and once it flowers you will have thousands of seeds to spread everywhere! Also excellent in soups and I love adding it at the very end of a yellow curry.

  • @tracyvernon2426
    @tracyvernon2426 4 роки тому +20

    Hi Rob,good to see you are well :) this is the video I was waiting for as I live in the uk! I moved to a new place 6 months ago and put in 8 raised beds to try and be as self sufficient as I can,I have a couple of videos on here if interested :) i'm growing,beetroot,turnips,potatoes,peas,runner beans,tomatoes,carrots,sweet peppers,chilli peppers,all kinds of herbs,a tayberry and loganberry over one arch and blackberrys over another,2 fig trees,raspberry's an apple and a cherry tree,also got some new seeds on the way for other vegetables. A friend and I dug out a pond to encourage frogs a couple of weeks ago and I even potted a nettle up I found whilst weeding!

    • @JulieWolf
      @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +4

      Did the same whle foraging nettle last yr. Still in the pots. I want to find a closer place for them to take over so I can forage close to home. Love Nettle. Eat it daily raw! How? In a banana bleuberry blender drink every morning with all my healthy additions like fresh tumeric, spiralina, etc.

    • @serenakoleno9338
      @serenakoleno9338 3 роки тому +2

      Add some feeder goldfish to your pond and use water to water plants. Just be sure to replenish with rain water as needed.

    • @tracyvernon2426
      @tracyvernon2426 3 роки тому +1

      @@serenakoleno9338 We have plenty of rain here lol,I have a large water butt that collects rainwater form my guttering to water the plants.

  • @emilym155
    @emilym155 4 роки тому +23

    Zucchini’s are amazing too because depending how you cook/spice it can be sweet or savoury! My favourite is chocolate zucchini bread but that’s definitely not all from my garden 🥴

  • @RubinaMerchant
    @RubinaMerchant 4 роки тому +17

    Home grown food tastes totally different! Thank you. Want to start growing more already! Xx

    • @lavona8204
      @lavona8204 2 роки тому +2

      No joke. Home grown cilantro packs a punch! You don't need nearly as much.

  • @nikkig4847
    @nikkig4847 Рік тому

    I love when a man is passionate about gardens.

  • @AngelLiu1
    @AngelLiu1 4 роки тому +30

    I just started growing potatoes in a bucket so very looking forward to harvesting it!

    • @marjoriegarner5369
      @marjoriegarner5369 2 роки тому

      must have good light, drainage and cool temp to grow well inside.

  • @ashash4life
    @ashash4life 4 роки тому +16

    I live in Ohio :( & have a container garden on the back deck of my apartment that I only pay $350 for
    Got a great deal! I live in a small town, so my parents live not even 5 minutes away and my mom has a garden, in her backyard & so that’s helpful but I would love to live where you lived in or near San Diego, to grow food year round.
    I know it’s expensive but I’m working towards living off grid.
    I have family out West, too! 💚

  • @TheMCvamp
    @TheMCvamp 4 роки тому +19

    I would love a video on safe canning. I’m scared haha

    • @sherrijackson4933
      @sherrijackson4933 4 роки тому +6

      If you're in the US get the ball canning book. It walks you through step by step. Started with simple water bath canning like pears or peaches. Once you try it, you will see how easy it is.

    • @briannemorna4268
      @briannemorna4268 3 роки тому +5

      Homestead heart is an excellent channel to follow. She's great and easy to follow.

    • @cassstephens9910
      @cassstephens9910 3 роки тому +1

      I'm stuck on trying this out because of this, too 😌!!

    • @marjoriegarner5369
      @marjoriegarner5369 2 роки тому

      canning must be done with exact temperatures, etc. Get a book or pamphlet from your county extension office. A local guide.

  • @LucyHeartfiliaasdfghj
    @LucyHeartfiliaasdfghj 4 роки тому +3

    currant is also a really great berry to grow

  • @wendyburgess2962
    @wendyburgess2962 2 роки тому

    Good. I’ve finally found someone who can guide me on my particular climate. Woohoo.

  • @fonkbonk503
    @fonkbonk503 3 роки тому +6

    I live in GA and I have been growing nectarines and peaches and I will make some of them into jam

    • @serenakoleno9338
      @serenakoleno9338 3 роки тому

      I have used 2 cinnamon sticks and a few whole cloves to can pints of peaches. No sugar necessary. Tasted delicious.

  • @marionkine
    @marionkine 4 роки тому +9

    I'd love to produce so much fruits and veggies that i HAVE TO make pickles, preserves, and jams 😅❤🙏 one day 💕

    • @kirstineschulzjensen7925
      @kirstineschulzjensen7925 3 роки тому +1

      seriously! All you need is about three berry bushes! we have 1 bush red currants, 1 black of the sort and 1 gooseberry. About 5 years old and they give enough for SEVERAL jams. If you have more space get 3 blueberry bushes. this is all we have and it sustains our smoothies for months. I hope you reach your goal one day!!!

    • @marionkine
      @marionkine 3 роки тому

      @@kirstineschulzjensen7925 i have no yard sadly at the moment 😆 thank you for the wishes 🙏❤

  • @arlene7057
    @arlene7057 4 роки тому +6

    Broccoli and Broccolini ... I grow them mostly for the leaves...the heads are bonus...ABSOLUTELY my Favorite Green! ... also want to mention Figs, Persimmons and Asian Pears ... I Love my Asian Pear Trees 😁 ... GREAT INFO!!! ... Thanks again Rob! 😁🙏

    • @JulieWolf
      @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +1

      Trying to propagate fig cuttings this yr in PNW. I know its done I just have to find enough sunlight (I'm in a forest). My Persimon didnt make it. Ill try again. Oh try planting the end of a cabbage for collard like greens. Delicious. It may even make anew head of cabbage. It was sitting in the back of the fridge all winter and sent out roots that spoke to me (plant me! plant me!)

    • @annbyrne3186
      @annbyrne3186 3 роки тому +1

      Where could I buy Asian pear tree

    • @arlene7057
      @arlene7057 3 роки тому

      @@annbyrne3186 i just bought mine at a local hardware store in the spring when they offer plants for sale...15 years ago... you might try a plant nursery 😊

  • @gardengirl7446
    @gardengirl7446 3 роки тому +1

    Bok choy is another winner! Beautiful greens and nice crunchy stems like celery! It's hardy through winter in many places.

  • @VondaInWonderland
    @VondaInWonderland 3 роки тому +2

    I live in Albuquerque, it's super hot in the summer, and somewhat cold in the winter. I grow tons of chili and tomatoes and potatoes, and herbs. I have fruit trees too. I haven't been able to grow melons, squash, pumpkin, carrots, or beans. I tried greens this year and got so many mosquitos. I don't know what to do, but I just keep trying ♥

  • @jodiebrignell6981
    @jodiebrignell6981 4 роки тому +6

    Don't throw your pumpkin vine on the compost pile. Once cooked, they aren't spiny. Use them to wrap your meal :) Morag Gamble has a video about pumpkins and using the whole plant. Also, if you pickle your sunchokes, you'll get less gassy after eating them.

    • @huncher.puncher
      @huncher.puncher 4 роки тому +1

      thanks for the tip! I gotta try using pumpkin leaves as banana leaves substitute when making tempeh

  • @lelou12
    @lelou12 2 роки тому +2

    Even if you have really cold winters, you can leave your carrots in ground and harvest them in the spring, same with parsnips. They get sweeter from the cold and come out perfect!
    You can also store them in ground if you harvest them in fall. My neighbor puts her carrots in a feed bag and bury it 3 feet deep in her garden. They keep fresh and tasty, without a cold room!

  • @foodforestfolderol
    @foodforestfolderol 2 роки тому +8

    For those in dry climates, many of the "invasive" plants do just fine without much water and don't grow so wild. Sunchokes have no problem and I don't water them at all. Grapes can be grown without water during the summer assuming they have sufficient water during the winter.

  • @rkotitan10
    @rkotitan10 3 роки тому +6

    I will abundantly produce my produce of the abundance. Lol Love his vids, could listen to him all day!

  • @susannethigpen271
    @susannethigpen271 4 роки тому +5

    I love beets--and I do eat the greens!! I even make a raw shredded beet salad with onions and oil and vinegar dressing!!

    • @MFV77
      @MFV77 3 роки тому

      Yummy!

  • @Grandpa6696
    @Grandpa6696 2 роки тому +1

    Looks like France to me 🥰🥰🥰 love from France 🇫🇷

  • @tonyaltobello6885
    @tonyaltobello6885 4 роки тому +14

    I can't wait for you year of growing in a temparate climate. In your livestreams I said you really made me happy when you said that because I live in zone 7 and I took a lot from your year in Florida and I think if I have knowledge of the extreme hot climate and the extreme cold climate I can take certain things from both to apply to my climate. Much love, -Tony

  • @cherylcomento4649
    @cherylcomento4649 3 роки тому +4

    What you said about Jerusalem artichokes is so true I thought I had gotten all of them up from last year and they’ve taken over my 4 x 4 raised bed

  • @LandElevated
    @LandElevated 4 роки тому +14

    We might think you’re a pro at farming. We got valuable ideas from your video and we’re going to share your channel with our customers who want to start a farm. Thanks for creating this!

  • @faithrineer2538
    @faithrineer2538 3 роки тому +34

    Can you do a video on how to harvest seeds / replant each year without having to buy a new plant from a nursery every year?

  • @jessicaw3853
    @jessicaw3853 2 роки тому +4

    Soo happy you mention Sunchokes/Jerusalem Artichokes 🙂
    Great tips 🙏🏽 thank you 🙏🏽 for someone like me who intends to repurpose half the garden for food, and part of a Nature Farming communal garden (following Kamaguchi-san philosophy).
    Would like to add stinging nettle - which I eat as one would spinach. There’s always a patch in my garden where I allow it to grow. It’s available year-round and I even eat the seeds for extra boost (and make shampoo and fertilizer from the bigger, older leaves)
    Greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱

  • @SageRosemaryTime
    @SageRosemaryTime Рік тому +1

    Definitely inspiring. your enthusiasm is catching.

  • @sweaterdoll
    @sweaterdoll 11 місяців тому

    I'm glad you did this as petty much none of the plants in your other video would have worked here. Unfortunately, we are SO shaded, I'm a terrible gardener, and the only sunny spots are so far from the water. So we're doing more perennial wild foods that can handle shade and natural rainfall.and sunchokes, potatoes, burdock, salsify, and scorzonera in the sunny area. We grow crow garlic, wild garlic, nettles, comfrey, chickweed, dandelion, dock, dames rocket, apricots and berries and herbs and medicinal plants. We're dedicated to growing all our produce, but most won't be domesticated varieties. I really wish we could grow cabbage and beets but so far, no luck. We dry almost everything for winter soups, stews, omelets (we also have chickens) and we also ferment. I like that you focus on a few items because, really, people don't need food to be entertainment. It just has to be total nutrition with enough fats and salts to go with it.

  • @Olhamo
    @Olhamo 3 роки тому

    Sandor Katz's book is wonderful.

  • @Connor-tv5gu
    @Connor-tv5gu 4 роки тому

    Love it!

  • @JulieWolf
    @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +2

    Carrots you can harvest all winter when planted in July in the PNW vs storing them.

  • @drunkviggo7263
    @drunkviggo7263 Рік тому

    You look so relaxed in that sweater bro.

  • @lindseyzacek5211
    @lindseyzacek5211 Рік тому

    I've been following you since the beginning and I'm happy I did I'll never forget the video of you digging up that giant yam Vine

  • @KhetKhamar_bd
    @KhetKhamar_bd 4 роки тому

    Wow!!!
    I always wait for your video.😍

  • @JulieWolf
    @JulieWolf 4 роки тому +8

    Congradulations on your year. I was following you for a while there. Soooo glad you made this northern climate video. I'm in the PNW.

  • @eabird4358
    @eabird4358 2 роки тому +1

    I'm so happy you said Sun chokes. I love them so much. How about walking onions and asparagus. Get older roots.

  • @lindamackenzie6881
    @lindamackenzie6881 4 роки тому +1

    So excited for this video!

  • @jeancampbell4341
    @jeancampbell4341 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for this advice! X

  • @plantgurugangsta7299
    @plantgurugangsta7299 3 роки тому +1

    You are my new favorite gardener, sheit your my new favorite channel!😁❤✌😉

  • @barnabaskalydy6260
    @barnabaskalydy6260 7 місяців тому

    This was exactly the one video I was searching for. Thanks a lot Rob!

  • @alisonburgess345
    @alisonburgess345 2 роки тому

    Yep that's me - in a cold(ish) climate. It's about storage. Currently I'm investigating how to store eggplants (probably jarred with herbs and oils). I can store fresh - potatoes, carrots, onions, garlic, beetroot). Frozen - peas, beans, broccoli. Sauced- tomatoes. Other things keep growing through winter - greens, spinaches etc... It's such a lot of fun!

  • @bonnieparker1238
    @bonnieparker1238 Місяць тому

    Wow! Best video ever! Thank you! You are overseas and I wonder why but not my business. Glad you know the US. Dang! Can’t say it enough, best video ever!

  • @nordica8008
    @nordica8008 3 роки тому +1

    Love this, thank you!!!

  • @wabisabi3343
    @wabisabi3343 3 роки тому +1

    This is so helpful. Thanks Rob!

  • @ateoh7808
    @ateoh7808 4 роки тому +1

    Hope to see your book soon Rob, take good care!

  • @minajeetjemineetje3002
    @minajeetjemineetje3002 3 роки тому

    Love your energy!

  • @temsutilaaier6526
    @temsutilaaier6526 4 роки тому

    Love your videos 👍 just so refreshing.

  • @DenisBogoTixier
    @DenisBogoTixier 4 роки тому

    Merci Rob

  • @franciska5892
    @franciska5892 4 роки тому +1

    This makes me so happy. Good vibes :)

  • @dvdsmlprstylr
    @dvdsmlprstylr 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for all this info! Much appreciated :)

  • @danielle.moore.22
    @danielle.moore.22 4 роки тому +1

    Great information here! Thanks Rob😊

  • @Nitrotix1
    @Nitrotix1 2 роки тому

    Love beets, radishes, kale, and lettuce. Salads everyday

  • @kathleenkaar6557
    @kathleenkaar6557 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks for cold weather ideas!

  • @tikoy1955
    @tikoy1955 4 роки тому

    Great video. Very informative.

  • @stylemeblacknwhite2888
    @stylemeblacknwhite2888 3 роки тому

    This was so helpful. Thank you!

  • @acorneroftheinternet4179
    @acorneroftheinternet4179 4 роки тому +3

    This is so incredibly helpful, thanks!

  • @gailwarrington3841
    @gailwarrington3841 4 роки тому +5

    Rob, mint will grow from a cutting. In the spring cut off the top and take most leafs off and place in water. It will grow roots and then plant out, will take a few weeks but really easy

  • @izzzzzz6
    @izzzzzz6 4 роки тому +7

    It's mint and chives vs strawberries in one of my patches.

  • @MrDanrn999
    @MrDanrn999 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you making this video!

  • @WisdomIsPrecious
    @WisdomIsPrecious Рік тому

    Awesome video

  • @martinjacob580
    @martinjacob580 4 роки тому

    Thanks Rob ;)

  • @ladytorres8323
    @ladytorres8323 3 роки тому +2

    ❤ A heart to show appreciation and keep your channel moving forward!!

  • @sagittariusviking8473
    @sagittariusviking8473 3 роки тому

    Awesome video! Thank you!

  • @Quike-1988
    @Quike-1988 4 роки тому +3

    you are great! you alwas makes me smile with your energy! thanks!

  • @Olliepottery-amyclark
    @Olliepottery-amyclark 2 роки тому

    Just the info I needed… thanks!

  • @brownielove4389
    @brownielove4389 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for making this winter food video.

  • @debragallardo5754
    @debragallardo5754 3 роки тому

    Very good suggestions, thank you!

  • @ramthian
    @ramthian 4 роки тому

    Thanks!.

  • @yirehmiyahmagsayo361
    @yirehmiyahmagsayo361 4 роки тому +2

    love your every video sir😍😃

  • @robertberman6275
    @robertberman6275 4 роки тому +2

    My man! Keep doing your thing brother. Much love from New York. 💗

  • @rosebw1077
    @rosebw1077 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you 🙏