I used your code last time and was able to pick up a beautiful knife set for a wedding gift for this summer! I couldn't help myself and opened up the package and the knives are stunningly made. Cannot wait for my friends to use them. Thanks for partnering with such quality sponsors 💛
I've been binge watching your videos, and in my opinion, your channel is unique. It's like watching a lovely love story unfolding. It's so poetic, so beautifully videoed and so sweetly narrated, especially when it's both of you interacting. It's just so different from any other channel I have ever seen. It's just a lovely break from the ordinary. Thank you.
Pls pls pls show some more Seasonal cooking. I live in Michigan and it’s so hard to know what’s best sometimes, let alone what to do with it. I love this type of content
My grandparents had the most amazing garden ....I can close my eyes and see her go out and get all the produce her daily home made buns ..and cook a meal for 14 people we where all full...love that time. It was effortless for her..
You are a wonderful teacher. You speak so clearly and concise. Your Romain is mind blowing! And by the way, i just came home from the grocery store and bought the last 2 bunches of green onions available. Kudos to you for all you do!
I understand why you are doing less UA-cam but I miss you regular videos. You are beautiful, creative, your voice is soothing, you have style and you are inspiring. Please don’t give up on UA-cam. I listen to podcast too love your garden and cooking inspiration
I so love your channel! My wife and I identify as an old '50s couple (who aren't really from the '50s but I think you know what I mean) who are happy to stay home and cook our harvest most nights. Of course we get cabin fever occasionally and have to make a break for it, but largely I identify with Beth from Little Women (the good one with Wynona Ryder) who said, "Why does everyone want to move away. I like our home." or words to that effect. I have made a few recipes of yours and it just puts my roots down further in our little corner of Down Under. Cheers!
@Catania Momma Italia yes, a bit inartfully expressed, I thought so too. I think he probably meant something like "we feel like" or "this is the time that suits us the best / we wanted to have lived in / the 50s is the time we take a lot out for our life" etc.
50s is the time, I wished I had live in as well. But I guess it wasn't that shiny and perfect after all, but then again, my grandparents lived in that time and to me they had the perfect life, they had an awesome marriage, they were so happy in their traditional lifestyle and they raised good hearted, great kids - so yes, for them it was the perfect time and it would have been for me as well 🥰
I find your videos to be some of the most informative and practical of the homesteading videos on YT. I learned so much every time I watch. I just love your approach. Thank you so so much!
I agree with you, we need more homestead momma's on here too, build a homestead momma group aha. Share all these beautiful moments and all the hard times too !
Oh Shaye, I’m so glad to hear you have a family milk cow to stand in for CeCe for the next nine months! How wonderful. We love the family milk cow and lost our Jersey girl in March unexpectedly. We’re now waiting for our new Guernsey to calve and to be back in milk. I can feel your excitement so deeply - there is few things as special as having your own raw dairy out your back door! Here’s to CeCe being bred-back successfully this time! 🤍
This is wonderful! People are new to gardening because of being home with COVID and whatnot. It is helpful to learn what to do with the veggies we've grown. Thank you so much!
Tip for anyone else who enjoys these videos but likes to hear information a little bit faster, you can go to settings and change the playback speed to 1.25 and it's wonderful!
My sourdough starter and I had a conversation 2 days ago, I’m on try number 5 and honestly in the middle of a breakdown I decided that we had to have the “come to Jesus” talk.. Finally my sourdough starter is looking bubbly like it’s supposed to
Ugh, I'm going through it right now. But I know things are going to eventually work, and it's going to be so rewarding. I'm just not a good baker. I'm a great cook, but baking eludes me. I think my starter actually looks pretty good, but my ability to make a loaf isn't the best.
Shaye! That view is just to die for. What a blessing it must be to just walk outside, ground your toes in the dirt, press your nose against some basil, and look up to those beautiful mountains. Thank you for sharing this part of your life with us, it's builds my dream.
I would love to see a video about how you amend/condition your soil and tips for new gardeners on how to prepare a great soil that yields that kind of bounty! Your veggies always look huge and absolutely gorgeous!
I am a newby from a referal from Parisian Farm Girl. I am also a Washington State Native. I have lived full time offshore in Costa Rica now for 15 years! I love your vlog!
We eat our beet greens and use onion greens and garlic scapes to make pesto. Our extra lettuce gets made into a lovely soup that gets served cold with sour cream and freezes well. I'm definitely going to try the pickled garlic scapes ❤
Wow that cabbage looks amazing I’ve never seen one look like that in the grocery store and they take all the good part name is throw it away unless I use it for mulch but that’s the part that we should be eating
Yes we 100% agree on the importance of meat in our diet! We have meat chickens but have thought of getting sheep for meat, our current sheep are for wool and we gave them names so that's not in their future 🤪
We are zone 7b here in Georgia but it’s been so hot for so long already so cabbages and broccoli etc have been done since about early May. The summer garden has been struggling in the heat wave (95+ degree days for a couple of weeks and NO rain!) but it looks like the forecast is showing cooler days ahead (by cooler I mean high 80s) and chances of rain almost every day. So thankful! This video was so wholesome to watch, and I learned a lot! Not to mention beautiful!! Thanks ♥️
You have such a calm, soothing demeanor…I really enjoy watching your videos! In addition, you always share such valuable information! I’m curious if you do anything with radish and/or carrot tops? When I make beets I cook the greens as well and serve them with olive oil and a splash of vinegar (I’m Greek and this is the way Greeks typically eat beets and the greens). ❤️
@23:30 Garlic scapes, yum! I just harvested mine last week, many pounds of scapes, lol. I made a bunch of garlic scape pesto which I froze, but I also pickled quite a lot too, & the rest I've been eating fresh on salads or adding to stir fries or other veggies. They're seriously delicious grilled. 😋
I'm wondering what you use your picked scapes for? It looks appealing but I'm worried it would be one of those things that sit in my fridge... I'm not a very inventive cook :)
@@tcc9813 Use them for anything you might like "pickled stuff" on...salads, sandwiches, Bloody Mary or Caesar, just eat them out of the jar. It's all good.
Thank you for sharing! I love the quiet video, where you just talk and explain, and no background “noise”, also called music. It is okay while you are chopping and so on, but so nice with a video without the noise competing with the talking. Love from Johanne, Norway 🇳🇴
Such a homesteading encouragement ❤️ Our garden is doing poorly this year (our first year in Alabama) we're also ironically zone 7b but the temperatures are very different from Washington 😅😭 We don't know what we're doing but we're learning so that's just what I keep telling myself. 🤷🏼♀️❤️
I recommend the channels "whispering willow farm" with Jill and "Roots and Refuge" with jess. They are also in the south (Arkansas and South Carolina) so their weather is probably closer to yours as far as what you can grow.
Zones are only relevant to perennials, about the lowest average temperature your area reaches yearly in winter. I'm in Zone 4b: so, I can grow an apple tree just fine, but not an avocado or orange tree without a heated greenhouse.
Hi Shay, we can eat fresh here in central Texas most of the year. I remember harvesting lettuce under row cover on Christmas day. We do pickle, preserve and make our own vinegars and condiments. Some of our favorites are jalapeno ketchup, Dijon, German and spicy mustards. We enjoy your channel. Mike
@@stepstev611 Not that bad, most houses have a mud room. It's where you have your washer and dryer. The walls are 6" of concrete and the roof in that area is metal. That's what we have. We are 52 and only been close to two in our lifetime. The thunderstorm are very entertaining. We sit out back on the porch and enjoy.
I love south of Fort Worth. Spring was all wind so we missed out on enjoying the couple weeks of cooler weather. Now summer is way to hot way to early and my lettuce all went to seed and is a little bitter! But we did get into December last year with a few things still growing!
I’m so glad to have discovered your channel! I’m binging all the previous content, but wanted to take a minute to compliment you on how well and thoroughly you have recreated the English cottage feel in your beautiful home. I especially like that your style incorporates the man in your home: no blinding whites, fake greenery, or prop-looking “styling,” and not a diffuser, a chalkboard, or a cluster-f of white pitchers anywhere in sight! I’m looking forward to more content and following you through the seasons! 🙂
I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your videos, especially the instructional ones as this. I'd also love to be a premium subscriber, but it simply isn't in my limited senior budget, especially in these very unpredictable times. This video was so very informative, and tho I am unable to garden in my 8500' elevation with wonderful deer herds and horrific winds, I do have farmers' markets. Thanks so much!
Your garden is beautiful. I got mine in way too late. I spent the spring in my first trimester and fell behind. My peas are 6 inches tall and it’s 90+ degrees everyday in MN. Oh well, just the season of life I’m in. But I miss my peas, lol!
Love what you teach us from your farm .I iv in sunny California and am blessed to be able to grow food on my apartment balcony and have expanded to some sideyard space!
Gosh your garden is looking so lush. Where I live we had to plant late because there was frost into the end of May. Now severe heat and cold and everything not doing well like that as it has in previous years. Yellow gingham curtains are such a happy thing. :) The veggies all look beautiful that are in picking season.
I think the way you eat meat it is a healthy part of the diet - very different than buying grocery store meat. Can you give any tips on how to find/source good quality chicken and beef? And would you mind sharing where you buy your einkorn flour? Thanks!!
We’ve been making sourdough now for three plus years. It’s such an amazing feeling knowing I don’t have to buy bread from a store. I hope to one day have my own little homestead. Right now I have a small garden, that isn’t doing very well. So I’m think of starting over for some fall harvest. I’m fairly new to gardening… still so much to learn. We only have an acre of land at the moment, so no animals. Fingers crossed for more land soon.
I love this! I've never been much of a "package cooker" but trying to figure out how to grow what things for meal making has been so rough for me! I dont have a ton of space, my husband loves fresh tomatoes so I've always grown those, and squashes and cucumbers. But we've had vine borers the last few years, and tomato blight, so everything but 2 sugar rush pepper plants flopped. The peppers were heavy producers, but I had NO IDEA how to preserve them! It's been a mess. Getting away from grocery store dependence is a pretty big learning curve
This was a great video. Thank you. I'm in Southern Ontario, Canada. Not very long growing season at all. First year growing; loving all the help on utube. Learning to grow is great, but harvesting and learning what to to with these veggies is awesome. Loving this. Always love your videos.
Shaye!! I needed this video. We are perplexed by what the garden has done this year. We are in Eugene, Oregon so we are having similar summer. It's been a much different harvest this year.💋
Your garden is truly amazing! Can you please share more videos on how you plant, stake, fertilize, etc. to get your veggies looking so big and beautiful.
Beautiful my Turkeys keep getting in my garden and laying eggs but I don't grow as much as you do I'm wanting to fence my garden to keep my chickens and Turkeys out
Get indeterminate varieties of tomato plants and they will produce all summer long and into the fall. The determinate variety are primarily for canning since they all come to maturity at the same time.
I thoroughly enjoyed this Shaye! Breaking everything down the way you did gave “homesteading” a whole new meaning to me and I loved it!!! It’s a childhood dream of mine to one day have my own 🥰 Thank you for taking the time to share this with us ♥️
Lol. "Bread is our carb of choice," says the lady who only bakes two loaves a week for her large family! I would really love to know what else you eat for carbs because two loaves would not be enough for our family.
I wanted to do a no dig garden, because I absolutely hate weeding. I spent all winter long collecting good cardboard, my sister came to spend a few months with me, and bullied me into getting rid of the cardboard, by calling me a hoarder. Then my father-in-law and husband insisted on on tilling the garden, yet they don’t want to do the work it takes to weed it. So now once again I am faced with weeding, and it’s taking over the garden. I guess what I’m saying is I am so disheartened, because I so wanted to do a no till garden, yet I have no support.
I need more videos like this in my life! Love how you have so many great tips on little bite size pieces 😂 some of these things I knew about but just forgot! So it was so very helpful!
I like eating the fat and tougher green onions. We definitely enjoy the peak ones, but I leave a few in the multi-sowing to bulk up. I cut them in 1.5" lengths, marinate, skewer, and grill (or just roast).
Your videos are always inspiring, thank you for this one it’s exactly on point to information I needed right now. 😊 This is great content and I would love to see more on the seasonal gatherings from the garden.
How is your cabbage, and carrots ready? You live north of me here in Washington state. I'm southwestern about half an hour from Portland. This year has been colder, and wetter, and no ones gardens are producing yet without a green house or cold frames..You said your market rows are not cold framed...How then?
Hello, I also live in Washington state and would love to know what farm you source your chickens from as I’ve been having a hard time finding one near me. Thank you
Hi, Could you tell me how you use the garlic stems that you pickled? I've had those for many years in my garden but I just left them there to flower for the bees. Love your videos
Snag yours NOW to have your knives for your 4th of July BBQ! Get $50 OFF: kamikoto.com/elliotthome
looking for the freeze dryer link..... can someone point me to it?
@@christinamo7 Same!
Carrots leaves has more nutrition yet no one is using them
I used your code last time and was able to pick up a beautiful knife set for a wedding gift for this summer! I couldn't help myself and opened up the package and the knives are stunningly made. Cannot wait for my friends to use them. Thanks for partnering with such quality sponsors 💛
well i cannot just garden like i am now...... i need that dress!! where is is from??
I've been binge watching your videos, and in my opinion, your channel is unique. It's like watching a lovely love story unfolding. It's so poetic, so beautifully videoed and so sweetly narrated, especially when it's both of you interacting. It's just so different from any other channel I have ever seen. It's just a lovely break from the ordinary. Thank you.
Pls pls pls show some more Seasonal cooking. I live in Michigan and it’s so hard to know what’s best sometimes, let alone what to do with it. I love this type of content
I know what you mean, gardening is the "easy" part. Utilizing the produce and preserved stored food is the hard part!
My grandparents had the most amazing garden ....I can close my eyes and see her go out and get all the produce her daily home made buns ..and cook a meal for 14 people we where all full...love that time. It was effortless for her..
You are a wonderful teacher. You speak so clearly and concise.
Your Romain is mind blowing! And by the way, i just came home from the grocery store and bought the last 2 bunches of green onions available. Kudos to you for all you do!
I understand why you are doing less UA-cam but I miss you regular videos. You are beautiful, creative, your voice is soothing, you have style and you are inspiring. Please don’t give up on UA-cam. I listen to podcast too love your garden and cooking inspiration
I so love your channel! My wife and I identify as an old '50s couple (who aren't really from the '50s but I think you know what I mean) who are happy to stay home and cook our harvest most nights. Of course we get cabin fever occasionally and have to make a break for it, but largely I identify with Beth from Little Women (the good one with Wynona Ryder) who said, "Why does everyone want to move away. I like our home." or words to that effect. I have made a few recipes of yours and it just puts my roots down further in our little corner of Down Under. Cheers!
@Catania Momma Italia yes, a bit inartfully expressed, I thought so too.
I think he probably meant something like "we feel like" or "this is the time that suits us the best / we wanted to have lived in / the 50s is the time we take a lot out for our life" etc.
50s is the time, I wished I had live in as well. But I guess it wasn't that shiny and perfect after all, but then again, my grandparents lived in that time and to me they had the perfect life, they had an awesome marriage, they were so happy in their traditional lifestyle and they raised good hearted, great kids - so yes, for them it was the perfect time and it would have been for me as well 🥰
I find your videos to be some of the most informative and practical of the homesteading videos on YT. I learned so much every time I watch. I just love your approach. Thank you so so much!
I agree with you, we need more homestead momma's on here too, build a homestead momma group aha. Share all these beautiful moments and all the hard times too !
Oh Shaye, I’m so glad to hear you have a family milk cow to stand in for CeCe for the next nine months! How wonderful. We love the family milk cow and lost our Jersey girl in March unexpectedly. We’re now waiting for our new Guernsey to calve and to be back in milk. I can feel your excitement so deeply - there is few things as special as having your own raw dairy out your back door! Here’s to CeCe being bred-back successfully this time! 🤍
This is wonderful! People are new to gardening because of being home with COVID and whatnot. It is helpful to learn what to do with the veggies we've grown. Thank you so much!
Tip for anyone else who enjoys these videos but likes to hear information a little bit faster, you can go to settings and change the playback speed to 1.25 and it's wonderful!
This may have been one of Stu’s best capture to date!
Freeze drying onions, carrots, celery and mushrooms works amazingly well. I've done hundreds of pounds.
Our garlic scapes are going crazy right now. I love them whipped up as a dip with crackers.
My sourdough starter and I had a conversation 2 days ago, I’m on try number 5 and honestly in the middle of a breakdown I decided that we had to have the “come to Jesus” talk.. Finally my sourdough starter is looking bubbly like it’s supposed to
It’s weird… my sourdough was consistently good. This summer it’s completely different. The starter is much more finicky.
Keep grinding, you can do it! It's so rewarding when you get it down!
It took me a year to finally get a few good loaves. I empathize!
Ugh, I'm going through it right now. But I know things are going to eventually work, and it's going to be so rewarding. I'm just not a good baker. I'm a great cook, but baking eludes me. I think my starter actually looks pretty good, but my ability to make a loaf isn't the best.
We have a family member who must eat a low fodmap diet, and green onion tops (and garlic leaves and scapes) have been a lifesaver in our kitchen.
Shaye! That view is just to die for. What a blessing it must be to just walk outside, ground your toes in the dirt, press your nose against some basil, and look up to those beautiful mountains. Thank you for sharing this part of your life with us, it's builds my dream.
I would love to see a video about how you amend/condition your soil and tips for new gardeners on how to prepare a great soil that yields that kind of bounty! Your veggies always look huge and absolutely gorgeous!
I am a newby from a referal from Parisian Farm Girl. I am also a Washington State Native. I have lived full time offshore in Costa Rica now for 15 years! I love your vlog!
We are just beginning our homesteading journey; thanks for sharing your knowledge and encouragement.
We eat our beet greens and use onion greens and garlic scapes to make pesto. Our extra lettuce gets made into a lovely soup that gets served cold with sour cream and freezes well.
I'm definitely going to try the pickled garlic scapes ❤
Wow, can you share how you make the cold lettuce soup? I have never heard of that!
I´d also love a recipe, that sounds great!
Wow that cabbage looks amazing I’ve never seen one look like that in the grocery store and they take all the good part name is throw it away unless I use it for mulch but that’s the part that we should be eating
Yes we 100% agree on the importance of meat in our diet! We have meat chickens but have thought of getting sheep for meat, our current sheep are for wool and we gave them names so that's not in their future 🤪
We are zone 7b here in Georgia but it’s been so hot for so long already so cabbages and broccoli etc have been done since about early May. The summer garden has been struggling in the heat wave (95+ degree days for a couple of weeks and NO rain!) but it looks like the forecast is showing cooler days ahead (by cooler I mean high 80s) and chances of rain almost every day. So thankful! This video was so wholesome to watch, and I learned a lot! Not to mention beautiful!! Thanks ♥️
Stir-fried garlic scapes with scrambled eggs, yum! Was hoping to see the finished bread come out of the oven.
That cabbage is beautiful!
Thank you for this video! Love seeing what you're planting and how you're keeping your home stocked up!
God bless you!
I love this kind of video from you. We are expanding our garden bit by bit, and figuring out what we can grow well, and how to use it!
You have such a calm, soothing demeanor…I really enjoy watching your videos! In addition, you always share such valuable information! I’m curious if you do anything with radish and/or carrot tops? When I make beets I cook the greens as well and serve them with olive oil and a splash of vinegar (I’m Greek and this is the way Greeks typically eat beets and the greens). ❤️
@23:30 Garlic scapes, yum! I just harvested mine last week, many pounds of scapes, lol. I made a bunch of garlic scape pesto which I froze, but I also pickled quite a lot too, & the rest I've been eating fresh on salads or adding to stir fries or other veggies. They're seriously delicious grilled. 😋
I'm wondering what you use your picked scapes for? It looks appealing but I'm worried it would be one of those things that sit in my fridge... I'm not a very inventive cook :)
@@tcc9813 Use them for anything you might like "pickled stuff" on...salads, sandwiches, Bloody Mary or Caesar, just eat them out of the jar. It's all good.
I am so happy you’re discussing meat eating!
Loved this video! Will you do a hair tutorial on how you did that hairstyle. It looks beautiful on you.
That cabbage is STUNNING.
Thank you for sharing! I love the quiet video, where you just talk and explain, and no background “noise”, also called music. It is okay while you are chopping and so on, but so nice with a video without the noise competing with the talking.
Love from Johanne, Norway 🇳🇴
I'm in Ca 9b. We can grow year round. Right now I've got chives, cukes, okra, tomatoes, squash, melons, blackberries 😋
I love this. I really struggle with knowing what to grow, harvest, and use seasonally.
Looks like the hard work of building that market garden really paid off quickly! Nice work
Such a homesteading encouragement ❤️
Our garden is doing poorly this year (our first year in Alabama) we're also ironically zone 7b but the temperatures are very different from Washington 😅😭
We don't know what we're doing but we're learning so that's just what I keep telling myself. 🤷🏼♀️❤️
I recommend the channels "whispering willow farm" with Jill and "Roots and Refuge" with jess. They are also in the south (Arkansas and South Carolina) so their weather is probably closer to yours as far as what you can grow.
Zones are only relevant to perennials, about the lowest average temperature your area reaches yearly in winter. I'm in Zone 4b: so, I can grow an apple tree just fine, but not an avocado or orange tree without a heated greenhouse.
Abundance personified… thank you for sharing … I loved it.
Your kitchen is a visual treat! Love it!
Hi Shay, we can eat fresh here in central Texas most of the year. I remember harvesting lettuce under row cover on Christmas day. We do pickle, preserve and make our own vinegars and condiments. Some of our favorites are jalapeno ketchup, Dijon, German and spicy mustards. We enjoy your channel. Mike
I would love to live in central Texas but I’ve heard the tornados are terrible down there is this true ?
@@stepstev611 Not that bad, most houses have a mud room. It's where you have your washer and dryer. The walls are 6" of concrete and the roof in that area is metal. That's what we have. We are 52 and only been close to two in our lifetime. The thunderstorm are very entertaining. We sit out back on the porch and enjoy.
I love south of Fort Worth. Spring was all wind so we missed out on enjoying the couple weeks of cooler weather. Now summer is way to hot way to early and my lettuce all went to seed and is a little bitter! But we did get into December last year with a few things still growing!
I just pulled green onions, chives, and purslane out of the freeze dryer. I love this time of year!
I agree meats, sourdough breads,dairy,eggs,vegetables...all important.
I’m so glad to have discovered your channel! I’m binging all the previous content, but wanted to take a minute to compliment you on how well and thoroughly you have recreated the English cottage feel in your beautiful home. I especially like that your style incorporates the man in your home: no blinding whites, fake greenery, or prop-looking “styling,” and not a diffuser, a chalkboard, or a cluster-f of white pitchers anywhere in sight! I’m looking forward to more content and following you through the seasons! 🙂
I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your videos, especially the instructional ones as this. I'd also love to be a premium subscriber, but it simply isn't in my limited senior budget, especially in these very unpredictable times. This video was so very informative, and tho I am unable to garden in my 8500' elevation with wonderful deer herds and horrific winds, I do have farmers' markets. Thanks so much!
This was an informative, inspiring garden-to-kitchen video.
Your garden is beautiful. I got mine in way too late. I spent the spring in my first trimester and fell behind. My peas are 6 inches tall and it’s 90+ degrees everyday in MN. Oh well, just the season of life I’m in. But I miss my peas, lol!
Borscht with cream is amazing and I traveled in Poland and they put other veg in there too carrot onion sometimes potatoes chunky or purée
I’d love to have a garden but Texas heat and being gone 3 to 6 days, I gave up. Maybe I’ll try for fall.
U can put your garden on timers and drip system, When your gone .
I lose my words regularly. Mid sentence...I'll forget the word I'm looking for. It's reassuring to see others do it too.
Love what you teach us from your farm .I iv in sunny California and am blessed to be able to grow food on my apartment balcony and have expanded to some sideyard space!
Wow it seems so peaceful! Is it hard work? Can you eat the stalk of the carrot? Wow!
I have to admit, I struggle to get into a bread making rhythm. I love making it, I just think I need a Mon-Sun regular routine.
Gosh your garden is looking so lush. Where I live we had to plant late because there was frost into the end of May. Now severe heat and cold and everything not doing well like that as it has in previous years. Yellow gingham curtains are such a happy thing. :) The veggies all look beautiful that are in picking season.
I think the way you eat meat it is a healthy part of the diet - very different than buying grocery store meat. Can you give any tips on how to find/source good quality chicken and beef? And would you mind sharing where you buy your einkorn flour? Thanks!!
AWESOME!! Why didn't you use the top of the garlic scape? Only used the stalk.
We’ve been making sourdough now for three plus years. It’s such an amazing feeling knowing I don’t have to buy bread from a store. I hope to one day have my own little homestead. Right now I have a small garden, that isn’t doing very well. So I’m think of starting over for some fall harvest. I’m fairly new to gardening… still so much to learn. We only have an acre of land at the moment, so no animals. Fingers crossed for more land soon.
I love this! I've never been much of a "package cooker" but trying to figure out how to grow what things for meal making has been so rough for me! I dont have a ton of space, my husband loves fresh tomatoes so I've always grown those, and squashes and cucumbers. But we've had vine borers the last few years, and tomato blight, so everything but 2 sugar rush pepper plants flopped. The peppers were heavy producers, but I had NO IDEA how to preserve them! It's been a mess. Getting away from grocery store dependence is a pretty big learning curve
Love those yellow gingham curtains
I can’t wait to have a homestead and grow most of my vegetables
PLEASE tell us what you use to season/preserve your wood tabletops and how often you use it! Thanks ever so much!
I’m not Shaye, but I use flax seed oil.
I would love to see a video on how to make the best latte!
Your videos are always so soothing and beautiful. Thank you
This was a great video. Thank you. I'm in Southern Ontario, Canada. Not very long growing season at all. First year growing; loving all the help on utube. Learning to grow is great, but harvesting and learning what to to with these veggies is awesome. Loving this. Always love your videos.
Shaye!! I needed this video. We are perplexed by what the garden has done this year. We are in Eugene, Oregon so we are having similar summer. It's been a much different harvest this year.💋
Your garden is truly amazing! Can you please share more videos on how you plant, stake, fertilize, etc. to get your veggies looking so big and beautiful.
Yes please do show us Shay!
Beautiful my Turkeys keep getting in my garden and laying eggs but I don't grow as much as you do I'm wanting to fence my garden to keep my chickens and Turkeys out
Excellent and beautiful video. Thank you, Shaye. 💜
You are very interesting ‼️the way you explain everything u have a unique way different from others, 👍👍
Get indeterminate varieties of tomato plants and they will produce all summer long and into the fall. The determinate variety are primarily for canning since they all come to maturity at the same time.
I thoroughly enjoyed this Shaye! Breaking everything down the way you did gave “homesteading” a whole new meaning to me and I loved it!!! It’s a childhood dream of mine to one day have my own 🥰 Thank you for taking the time to share this with us ♥️
This the first time I grew scapes and now I am going to use your pickling recipe. Thank you
Starts at 5:45. Lovely photography precedes 🙂
Thank you so much for all this content and so local to me which is absolutely wonderful for a newer gardener learning our area.
Thank you for your incredible videos and authenticity
Thank you for addressing this topic. So true, “sometimes you harvest 5 apricots, some times it’s 50”.
What a great video....Thank you 🌱🥕🥬We are a month behind here in Vancouver....we had a month of rain....everything bolted including my garlic
What kind of cabbage was that? How do you keep the caterpillars away?
Lol. "Bread is our carb of choice," says the lady who only bakes two loaves a week for her large family! I would really love to know what else you eat for carbs because two loaves would not be enough for our family.
Ikr my kids go through 2 loaves a day easy 😅
Love love love the walk thru of this video!
I'm in North Western Massachusetts. Your Garden is way ahead of mine!
Mutual struggles in central NH!
Just found your channel, love it.
I wanted to do a no dig garden, because I absolutely hate weeding.
I spent all winter long collecting good cardboard, my sister came to spend a few months with me, and bullied me into getting rid of the cardboard, by calling me a hoarder. Then my father-in-law and husband insisted on on tilling the garden, yet they don’t want to do the work it takes to weed it. So now once again I am faced with weeding, and it’s taking over the garden. I guess what I’m saying is I am so disheartened, because I so wanted to do a no till garden, yet I have no support.
I need more videos like this in my life! Love how you have so many great tips on little bite size pieces 😂 some of these things I knew about but just forgot! So it was so very helpful!
I like eating the fat and tougher green onions. We definitely enjoy the peak ones, but I leave a few in the multi-sowing to bulk up. I cut them in 1.5" lengths, marinate, skewer, and grill (or just roast).
U know where ur food comes from 🙏❤️
Do you have en new camera? The colors are SO beautiful!!! LOVE your kitchen!
Your videos are always inspiring, thank you for this one it’s exactly on point to information I needed right now. 😊 This is great content and I would love to see more on the seasonal gatherings from the garden.
Great video!! Thank you for sharing.
Oh so beautiful. Very relaxing to watch xx
Love watching your amazing cooking ❤thank you so much
How is your cabbage, and carrots ready? You live north of me here in Washington state. I'm southwestern about half an hour from Portland. This year has been colder, and wetter, and no ones gardens are producing yet without a green house or cold frames..You said your market rows are not cold framed...How then?
Could you please make more videos like this explaining what foods can be staples for a homestead or farm family ?
Curious how do you keep the bugs from eating everything in your garden?
Loved this !!!
With the lettuce is the cloth that you roll damp or dry?
I do a spouted nut bread I need lots of grains and fermented foods in my diet I have GERD and other problems so I really eat farro and barley and such
Hello, I also live in Washington state and would love to know what farm you source your chickens from as I’ve been having a hard time finding one near me. Thank you
Head or root. Does that apply to the potatoes? Should we cut the flowers off when they flower?
I’ve never heard of anyone cutting the flowers off potatoes, or that the flowers take away from the potatoes.
Hi, Could you tell me how you use the garlic stems that you pickled? I've had those for many years in my garden but I just
left them there to flower for the bees. Love your videos