Growing ALL our VEGGIES with Way Less Work

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  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
  • It's GO time! We plant tomatoes, watermelon, and peppers for our year's supply of food. Also taking the time to do some major weed prevention so we can maximize our food production with less time.
    Garden Supplies/Tools:
    Silage Tarps, Row Covers, Ground Cover, Shade Cloth, Irrigation Supplies- www.farmersfriend.com/c/the-s...
    Soil Knife- amzn.to/3pmm4L4
    Weed Torch amzn.to/3xm7Gpu
    Weed Barrier Paper www.arbico-organics.com/produ...
    Japanese Weeding Sickle- amzn.to/3Jy47jl
    Favorite Large Tools- www.theseasonalhomestead.com/...
    Soil Blocker 2 inch- amzn.to/3Icy5ZX
    Soil Blocker 4 inch- amzn.to/3VRvFp3
    Soil Testing- rxsoil.com/nutrients?source=s...
    Use code SEASONALHOMESTEAD for 10% off your order!
    Garden Plants:
    My favorite source for Organic SEED POTATOES, ginger, turmeric, comfrey, rhubarb, elderberry and more. shop.growingfarmers.com/?ref=... Use code BECKYPORTER for $5 off your order!
    Garden Infrastructure:
    Caterpillar Tunnel & High Tunnel www.farmersfriend.com/c/the-s...
    Garden Attire:
    My Favorite Garden Overalls- shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=206046...
    Favorite Knee Pads- amzn.to/3LUDKVh
    Garden/ Winter Boots: click.linksynergy.com/fs-bin/...
    Garden Hat: amzn.to/49RjKx9
    Green Garden Apron: can be found here amzn.to/43xtHha or here rstyle.me/+nENnhPD6cl7NTp-E_J...
    My blog: www.theseasonalhomestead.com/
    Shop My Favorite Things: www.theseasonalhomestead.com/...
    Music: www.epidemicsound.com/referra...
    Garden Planning & Preserving Journal:
    Seedtime garden planner: seedtime.us/jkmel4ukl4tonac09...
    Amy's (my sister) garden planner 2024 dated -printable pdf version: tidd.ly/3tGDkwv, for undated version click here tidd.ly/41CC5uZ
    Amy's garden planner -book version 2024! amzn.to/4aGThnl
    Canning and Preserving Supplies:
    Juicer: I have this one: amzn.to/47l5taa but you can find a similar one for cheap here: amzn.to/486YXoR
    Freeze Dryer: affiliates.harvestright.com/1...
    Dehydrator: amzn.to/3nV8JbW
    Pressure Canner: amzn.to/42Hk0Lw
    Waterbath Canner: amzn.to/3VYZgwD
    Sauce Maker: amzn.to/43EFycq
    Most links are affiliate links. Please know I will only recommend items I LOVE and use myself, at no extra cost to you, and it helps support the channel! You guys are the best! -Becky
    Chapters
    00:00 Compost hallelujah!
    02:19 Sweet Potato Slips
    3:15 Goodbye Cover Crops
    5:08 Covering the Ground
    8:43 Planting Watermelon & Peppers
    12:28 Planting Tomatoes, Flowers, and Basil
    #selfsufficiency #growingfood

КОМЕНТАРІ • 94

  • @teddyjacobs8412
    @teddyjacobs8412 27 днів тому +18

    It's such a joy to see a family working together, a lot of kids now don't know what it's like to work in a garden and grow your own food. They have their faces glued to the phone or TV, we need to get back to the old timey way

  • @ChristinaMoore79
    @ChristinaMoore79 27 днів тому +9

    Riggs playing in the dirt is too darn cute. And as others have said before, i love seeing the whole family getting involved in cultivating the garden.

  • @laurel2453
    @laurel2453 27 днів тому +10

    You have the most beautiful videos of gardening. I love your photography and music. They are a gorgeous work of art. Thank you.

  • @maheenkhan9887
    @maheenkhan9887 27 днів тому +8

    Love that the kids have their own gardens and can apply what they learn from you guys and experiment!

  • @CountieLt25
    @CountieLt25 8 днів тому

    Love watching your children working with you! The boys had a growth spurt!

  • @cherylpresleigh6403
    @cherylpresleigh6403 27 днів тому +7

    As always it’s such a joy to see the family working together to grow food. Your space is bursting with new life and color and overall looks amazing! Thanks for taking us along.

  • @meganlee1438
    @meganlee1438 27 днів тому +4

    I wish I could have an in depth conversation with you about what your days look like and how preserving is handled with you guys and your family. I'm a mom of 4. Oldest is 7 and youngest is 1 and a half. Every year the garden is like a train on rough tracks. I call it juggling the struggle and preserving has been... some what of a hot mess. UGHH!

  • @nicholasryan5401
    @nicholasryan5401 9 днів тому

    Greetings from Ireland, Beautiful set up, Its the bees knees. My veg garden is small, We have thirty containers of carrots, a glasshouse for tomatoes and peppers and a no dig veg bed for all the greens. We are both retired and have more than enough for the two of us and we give most of it away to our family, neighbours and friends.

  • @Beaguins
    @Beaguins 27 днів тому +3

    Spring is so hard, but so amazing!

  • @samanthafitch952
    @samanthafitch952 27 днів тому +3

    So excited to see a new video! I swear you and your family are awesome! You homestead is amazing, you seriously need to write a book on raising children and running a homestead, it would be a best seller hands down! Have a great Mother’s Day 🙏🏻✝️💜🦋

    • @ellevictory1339
      @ellevictory1339 26 днів тому

      I always have great days I'm god I choose to create it for myself but thx for the experience otherwise

    • @ellevictory1339
      @ellevictory1339 26 днів тому

      I build what I choose not what the programming in social media tells me to do god doesn't need friendly reminders to pretend to be a simple lower existence and then pretend I need family to help when I do everything this is just facts but I won't lower myself to ur unintelligent standards anymore my children husband are leveling up what I create is a surprise then children and my husband can say they want to feel as they belong which they always would why wouldn't they alwe don't think unevolved

  • @neppieb
    @neppieb 26 днів тому +1

    Your garden is beautiful. All your meticulous work pays off big time. My husband and I have a small garden which is just right for the 2 of us eating fresh. It also provides lots of produce for us to can and freeze. We are in our 70's so our work is not as meticulous as yours, but we still get lots of healthy food to eat. Thanks for sharing your family working together with us.

  • @andielliott7721
    @andielliott7721 21 день тому

    Yep...rained here to for a couple of weeks. Each time the rain "pauses" and run out to the garden and work.

  • @christinad132
    @christinad132 27 днів тому +2

    This is my favorite you tube channel💕 fyi pitch forks work so much better than shovels to move the compost.

  • @robertacleary5256
    @robertacleary5256 27 днів тому +3

    Your videos are beautiful. I really enjoy them.😊thank you 😊

  • @karend8575
    @karend8575 27 днів тому +3

    So glad you guys are safe from the storms! Love seeing your posts with the kids working too. Am excited to see what they do with their plots of garden space! 👍🏻

    • @valerieewing4023
      @valerieewing4023 27 днів тому

      I agree! A whole video dedicated to the kids gardens would be awesome!

  • @sgrvtl7183
    @sgrvtl7183 13 днів тому

    Second time watching this video, such a heart-warming video to see the family working together~~Thank You for Sharing! trkuly a gift for me~~💗💚

  • @kendallk3519
    @kendallk3519 25 днів тому +1

    So grateful for you and the family! Hope you have a beautiful and wonderful Mother’s Day Becky!🫶🏾💐💕

  • @karenzorn773
    @karenzorn773 27 днів тому +1

    So good to see you all, glad you all are ok from storms, your garden is looking great.

  • @mrs.broccoli4362
    @mrs.broccoli4362 26 днів тому +1

    As always, I love your videos. Greetings from Germany 🙂

  • @donnakearse2503
    @donnakearse2503 27 днів тому +1

    I watch to see when you post. I love how clean your gardens are. Love your sweet family. Stay safe from storms.

  • @joannak4640
    @joannak4640 27 днів тому +3

    Your whole family absolutely amazes me ❤️ Of all of the homesteaders I follow, I think yours probably has THE BEST nutritional and tasting food there could possibly be!!
    I love watching baby Riggs getting into stuff and " helping" out 😂
    Thank you so much!!!!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  27 днів тому +1

      Thanks Joanna!

    • @bgatlin5918
      @bgatlin5918 25 днів тому +1

      Agree! But makes me feel like a slug to be sitting watching the video! 😂

    • @joannak4640
      @joannak4640 25 днів тому

      @@bgatlin5918 me too 😂😂😂 I am elderly and disabled. Gosh, when I was raising my kids I wish homesteading was more common back then. It would've been a world of difference on how they were raised. I often wish I could go back in time but we know that can't happen so I get my fill of homesteading by watch them on UA-cam 😂🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @kellyhosler2678
    @kellyhosler2678 27 днів тому +1

    You are such an inspiration! All of you!

  • @Therease1
    @Therease1 27 днів тому +3

    It would be interesting to know the financial output for your veggie gardens.
    Thanks for the great content.

    • @BethBurrell
      @BethBurrell 26 днів тому

      Think about how much a family of 7 would spend at the grocery store buying food from God knows where and what chemicals are laced with in that “food”. There is no cost to good health of your children and your self. I also grow all of my 100% of our veggies, 40% of our fruit and we have our own meat chickens and layer and buy beef and pork from local small farmers. I do still have to go to the grocery store to fill in the fruit gaps for my husband and myself and spend well over $75 a week just for fruit in months that I can’t grow it. I can’t imagine what food from a grocery store would cost for a family this size.

  • @kdavis7525
    @kdavis7525 26 днів тому

    Love, love, love seeing that baby play in the dirt!

  • @patriciahogg5763
    @patriciahogg5763 27 днів тому +1

    Extreme Team Efforts!!
    👏👏👏

  • @iamirene
    @iamirene 27 днів тому +1

    Wooow, I'm so impressed and inspired!!! ❤❤❤ thank you so much for finding time to post your videos😊😊😊

  • @ChristianMomof2
    @ChristianMomof2 27 днів тому +1

    Lovely! Thank you for sharing. The weather messed up my seedling planting time as well. Plus I'm still working out what seedlings to start when 😅.
    I did the sweet potato water method twice and it didn't work out well. I did grow some but rather small sweet potatoes the second year I tried it. So I had given up on them. Everything has its learning curve. Thank you for the tip! I'll have to try that next year.
    Wishing you a wonderful growing season 🙂!

  • @doityourselflivinggardenin7986
    @doityourselflivinggardenin7986 27 днів тому +1

    Good to see the entire family pitching in with the work and learning about irrigation.
    I find it interesting watching other homesteaders. They start out gardening naturally and eventually get a giant greenhouse. I have mixed feelings about that, but it is a personal issue, not a judgement. Everyone needs to do what works for them. With climate craziness, we will all need to learn to adapt to new methods. I have one of my gardens that has been saturated for an entire year. The rain was unrelenting. Much of the nutrients have swashed out and the soil is anaerobic. I may not get it planted this year. I simply cannot get in there to work it. I got lucky to get the cereal rye grain planted in the fall, but by the looks of it, I have some serious issues there. That is the good thing about planting cereal rye grain; it tells you where you have nutrient issues. In this case, that area may be better suited for a greenhouse now. I just don't think I have it in me to start a project like that at this point. As we get older we don't plan log term/expensive projects like we used to. In-fact, our planning is how we can scale back. You will experience that a few years after your kids leave the nest. You will not be able to do the same amount of work you do now once you lose those helping hands. Enjoy them while you can.
    Happy gardening!

  • @gloriadavidson8599
    @gloriadavidson8599 27 днів тому +1

    ALWAYS enjoy your videos 😊 Thank you for sharing ❤❤ Love from the UK x 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @albertnett7864
    @albertnett7864 25 днів тому

    Gardening is never boring.

  • @sydneysmith6658
    @sydneysmith6658 9 днів тому

    Can you guys do a video of cam and how he takes care or your animals/ what goes into having animals?

  • @adamwulf5369
    @adamwulf5369 27 днів тому +1

    Looks very similar to the compost I get and when it’s wet it’s dang heavy for sure. Amazing fir the garden and plants for sure

  • @brandysears3546
    @brandysears3546 26 днів тому

    Sending support, love, and kindness from Lexington, MI, USA.

  • @maribelhilario2148
    @maribelhilario2148 12 днів тому

    You are amazing!! 🤩

  • @susanfreeman6350
    @susanfreeman6350 26 днів тому

    Riggs looked so happy, covered with dirt! Loved the video!

  • @teachwithwoolf
    @teachwithwoolf 22 дні тому

    Another great video ❤

  • @heatherpfeil2939
    @heatherpfeil2939 27 днів тому +1

    I love your videos! They are so beautiful and peaceful to watch even though I know it’s a ton of work. I never thought to plant y carrots under my tomatoes. I’ll have to try that.

  • @nancyseery2213
    @nancyseery2213 23 дні тому

    Great job in the garden. Now everyone lines up for a bath! God bless y'all and keep growing.

  • @DoctorSam-MD
    @DoctorSam-MD 24 дні тому

    You all are such inspirations! I love watching your garden come together and grow each season!

  • @jerrystout3032
    @jerrystout3032 27 днів тому +1

    Outstanding FAMILY!😇!😇!😇!😇!😇!😇!😇!

  • @garydenner6253
    @garydenner6253 19 днів тому +1

    I'm VERY surprised that you guys don't make your own compost!!!! Giving the amount of green waste you'll have left over, especially after harvest! The amount of time & $$$ you save would be epic!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  19 днів тому +2

      Thank you! We do make our own compost from plant waste but when all is said and done it’s about 3 yards of finished compost a year. For the size garden we have, we need 20-30 yards of compost over the course of a year. Eventually as we build up the soil organic matter, I hope that number will reduce. So that’s why we supplement. We also add back organic matter from chopped up cover crops which is really my preferred method. Hopefully at some point we will move over the that entirely.

  • @cathykillion6544
    @cathykillion6544 27 днів тому +1

    Enjoyed the video 😊

  • @alaneschultz1137
    @alaneschultz1137 22 дні тому

    Because I’m in your same growing zone, I’d love to know which variety of DETERMINATE paste tomato you like. The determinate tomatoes do quite well in the south.

  • @francismccullick2730
    @francismccullick2730 24 дні тому

    I love watching your channel! I want to wish your family a great growing season. We know it's a lot of hard work producing a garden.

  • @michaelniziolek6990
    @michaelniziolek6990 13 днів тому

    Try pickled beets with some cinnamon sticks added. Make em a little sweet !

  • @hunglikehorse4339
    @hunglikehorse4339 27 днів тому

    Love your videos

  • @zerowastehomestead2518
    @zerowastehomestead2518 26 днів тому

    Very well done videos :)

  • @louiseschmitzls7
    @louiseschmitzls7 21 день тому

    I love watching your videos. You inspire me so much.
    I have a small flowers and vegetables garden. But right now I'm having troubles with slugs. Don't you? How do you deal with them?
    Greetings from Europe - Belgium 😊

  • @tamararobinson2069
    @tamararobinson2069 25 днів тому

    The weather has been up & down crazy everywhere this year!! 🤪 The yams in water doesn’t work well for me either excited to see how the dirt method works.
    I’m very interested in little space cover crops.

  • @OhioJeremy
    @OhioJeremy 27 днів тому

    The weeds this year so far are no joke, every other day rain here also. Hard to keep up with and hard to get food in the ground.

  • @caroltomlinson9164
    @caroltomlinson9164 27 днів тому +1

    WOW, so much work, but the payoff is worth it !!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @charlottethebrunette4339
    @charlottethebrunette4339 27 днів тому

    First to comment! Wow that never happens to me, lovely video! I always enjoy watching your videos, they taught me so much on how to plant veggie plants.

  • @gmify1
    @gmify1 26 днів тому

    Could you please share where you got your irrigation system from? I enjoyed your videos. Thank you!

  • @Milottine
    @Milottine 27 днів тому

    Hi becky !! I always appreciate your video!this is my moment of relaxation 😊
    You're doing so well!!!
    I have a question, how do you regulate the slug ??
    In my garden with the rainy day it's big problems....
    Thank you 😊 🙏
    Sorry for my bad English. I'm French 😅

  • @rickthelian2215
    @rickthelian2215 27 днів тому

    Happy Growing season, lots of hard work as was prepping the seeds into soil blocks😊
    If the trailer was faulty in the sense of tipping properly then they should of given you a discount on the hire fee.
    How expensive was the compost per yard?
    The compost looks great, was still a bit steamy though. (fresh)😊

  • @Yours.truly.jhyothsna
    @Yours.truly.jhyothsna 8 днів тому

    hey! What is the brown paper that you used to cover the compost in the tunnel??? Is that compostable?

  • @karenarchambault2625
    @karenarchambault2625 8 днів тому

    Thank your for sharing! How many days of work does this take? Do you ever sleep?

  • @georgelowellohhdgg63nnd96
    @georgelowellohhdgg63nnd96 26 днів тому

    What is the cover crop mixture in what you called your children's garden? Many thanks for your great videos!

  • @allisonjay8631
    @allisonjay8631 27 днів тому

    This is my first year with a big garden and it's overwhelming. So good to watch you for inspiration! Do you recommend a specific brand of kelp and blood meal? And have you ever used wine cap mushroom spores?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  25 днів тому

      Down to earth brand is what I use for kelp and blood meal. I’ve never used wine cap mushroom spores before.

  • @JustTheTwoOfUsHomestead
    @JustTheTwoOfUsHomestead 24 дні тому

    Ohhh I wish I had your energy Becky….I’d settle for half 😂 What type of soil do you start your seedblocks in?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  23 дні тому

      I make my own. I have the recipe here: www.theseasonalhomestead.com/soil-block-recipe/

  • @taleshnature
    @taleshnature 26 днів тому

    ❤❤❤Beautiful

  • @DemonaLlama
    @DemonaLlama 20 днів тому

    Do you preserve the lettuce? :>

  • @jenniferstafford1514
    @jenniferstafford1514 27 днів тому

    Amazing...what state do you all live?

  • @normamccomas9272
    @normamccomas9272 27 днів тому

    ❤❤❤

  • @Misswhy156
    @Misswhy156 27 днів тому

    How do you preserve your lettuce Becky?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  27 днів тому +1

      I don't preserve it. With the tunnels we are able to eat it fresh year round. We do a lot of succession planting of lettuce so there is a constant supply.

  • @briannelton9153
    @briannelton9153 21 день тому

    Is that a F150 truck? If so, 5 yds is over the towing capacity then

  • @BethBurrell
    @BethBurrell 26 днів тому

    Becky- I am curious if you think that the polypropylene leaches into the soil from weed barrier?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  26 днів тому +2

      I’m not sure. I’ve read a few articles and studies on microplastics in soil but none of them used polypropylene. Of all the plastics polypropylene is the safest. It’s the same type used for food containers like yogurt. I think if leaching did occur, would be more prevalent with a long duration of use and heat. The polypropylene ground cover weed barriers are thick and do not break down and photo-degrade easily. Also- as far as I know Polypropylene ground cover is allowed in organic gardening but they can only be on the ground during summer and must be pulled up each year. Like all things, I think moderation is the key. I wouldn’t cover the entire garden in it. But for use as edging or in a few problem areas, I don’t think it would be an issue.

    • @RoostsRootsandHorseshoes
      @RoostsRootsandHorseshoes 24 дні тому

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead thank you for your response. I wondered why you didnt use it more in your garden instead of the paper which can be expensive to replace at the end of each season. Happy Mothers Day! You have a beautiful family and I love seeing the kids grow up learning where their food is coming and pitching in to grow it is even better!

  • @1cewe
    @1cewe 27 днів тому

    Which covercrops can you recommend?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  27 днів тому +1

      I have a guide to cover crops here www.theseasonalhomestead.com/how-to-use-cover-crops/

  • @ellevictory1339
    @ellevictory1339 26 днів тому

    God is beauty

  • @misty9419
    @misty9419 27 днів тому

    Please!!! Is there some secret to keeping ants out of the compost piles?

  • @ellevictory1339
    @ellevictory1339 26 днів тому

    God creates doesn't eait for husband to surprise

  • @LastChanceTinyHouse
    @LastChanceTinyHouse 27 днів тому

    The weight of the trailer, you said wasn't over the limit so that engine light and the truck getting too hot sounds more like a truck problem. maybe you water pump. You should put it on the computer and check it.

  • @victoriaspringle4873
    @victoriaspringle4873 27 днів тому

    *parted the green sea

  • @ellevictory1339
    @ellevictory1339 26 днів тому

    Tnese ate actual facts now ur welcome my husband is jn love with me bit he yried to hide it pretend to distract most high intelligence good job 😜👍 bit u can't oyt snart my highest existence

  • @knaupp
    @knaupp 27 днів тому

    Love the videos and the channel. But I am not convinced your method is less work than tillage to destroy weeds. It seems that your approach relies on bringing in new compost (that someone else worked to create) and hand-spreading it, which is extremely labor intensive. Using ground cover (either plastic or paper) is definitely labor-saving for weed suppression however. But it only works with single-plant crops, not row-crops. So weeding for those crops is still unavoidable.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  27 днів тому +2

      Thanks! Yeah, I’ve never done a side by side test with till vs no till so it very well could be more labor intensive. I have noticed as long as I’m not inverting soil layers than the number of weeds is less. So that’s where the time saving aspect would come into play. It would be interesting to do a side by side test at some point to measure health, yield, hours involved, etc. with both methods.

    • @doityourselflivinggardenin7986
      @doityourselflivinggardenin7986 27 днів тому

      @@ChristianMomof2 I have watched several of his videos. He relies heavily on compost (top dressing), otherwise it doesn't work. He cannot produce enough of his own compost so he runs around the neighborhood collecting grass, leaves, etc to compost. The thing with gardening, if you remove 100 pounds of vegetables (weeds included), you need to put back 125 pound of organics so the soil stays alive. Otherwise, you will need commercial fertilizer. To accomplish the pay-back, I naturally compost the weeds between the rows of vegetables (roots exposed to sun), I cut down the stalks of veggies when they are done and leave them in the garden, I put chopped leaves on the soil in the fall, an then I till that in and plant cereal rye grain to over-winter. It works for me. At the end of the day, if you like a method and you are happy, its all good. Anything beats buying veggies at the store.

  • @billiebruv
    @billiebruv 26 днів тому

    Make your own compost. Why waste so much time and money in buying?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  26 днів тому

      We don’t have the materials to make the 20-30 yards of compost we go through each year. It’s something I would eventually like to dabble in, but for now we’re leaving it to the experts.