What to Grow if You Can Grow Anything + Undersowing Cover Crops with Tomatoes?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 18 жов 2024
  • Welcome to episode 14 of Growers Daily!
    We cover: Microplastics and are farmers to blame, the importance of neighbors, what to undersow with tomatoes, and what you should grow if you can grow anything.
    Support our work (👊) at www.notillgrowers.com/support or www.Patreon.com/notillgrowers
    Citations:
    Wirecutter article: www.nytimes.co...
    Nature Editorial: www.nature.com...
    Biosolids info: www.epa.gov/bi...
    Microplastics on farm fields: www.nrdc.org/s...
    Microplastics on farm fields in China: www.sciencedir....
    Tuna and Plastics: pubmed.ncbi.nl....
    Tires and microplastics:: pmc.ncbi.nlm.n...
    BOOK!
    The Living Soil Handbook 📕 👉 www.notillgrow...
    French copy of The Living Soil Handbook: amzn.to/4h2bYot
    Italian Copy www.terranuova...
    German Copy: www.oekom.de/b...
    Evansville Event: www.events.hum...
    networking-workshop
    Kentucky Composting Conference: www.eventbrite...
    Show Sponsor: Rimol Greenhouses: rimol.com
    RESOURCES TO SUPPORT HURRICANE VICTIMSCarolina Farm Stewardship Association CSFA (numerous resources) www.carolinafa...
    Organic Growers School OGS ( list of farmers in need ) docs.google.co...
    Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project (ASAP) donate: asapconnection...
    Other stuff and ways to support stuff like this 👇
    5% off Neptune's Harvest Fish Fertilizers and More (offer Code: NOTILL)
    👀: store.turbify....
    Preorder Dan's Brisebois' Seed Book! 👉www.notillgrow...
    The Living Soil Handbook 📕 👉 www.notillgrow...
    Hats 🧢 👉 www.notillgrow...
    Forum 💬 👉 notillgrowers....
    Music 🎵 👉 via empidemicsound.com
    👕 MERCH 👉 www.notillgrow...
    Support our work (👊) at www.notillgrowers.com/support or www.Patreon.com/notillgrowers

КОМЕНТАРІ • 63

  • @Salomaeful
    @Salomaeful День тому +10

    Omg my neighbours are probably the most valuable aspect of my property - during the 2019 bushfires one of my neighbours plowed up all of his precious pastures around us to ensure everyone had safer places to evacuate pets/livestock/people to and ensured everyone had a vehicle with a tank of water and a pump to keep them safe in the middle of the cleared area. His neighbour handed out radios to everyone as other communications down. We were lucky and the winds changed direction just in time to save our wondrous little community

  • @josee.cisnerosjr.7706
    @josee.cisnerosjr.7706 18 годин тому

    Totally agree with you on the micro plastics. Really like this series and these daily videos.

  • @devinsullivan7233
    @devinsullivan7233 День тому +2

    Okra grows great here in Northern California, today is October 17th and my late crop of okra is producing great right now. Despite being at 1835’ elevation in the Sierra Nevada foothills. I direct seeded the first week of August.

  • @rickthelian2215
    @rickthelian2215 День тому +2

    Enjoy the conference Jessie, I hope you can get some simple footage on Friday 😊

  • @gweg27
    @gweg27 День тому

    Love the attention you all give to the many details of farming. Thanks for helping me improve our cover crops, interplanting and more. Farming 1.5 acres here in Detroit, MI and need to maximize our small space. Peas with spinach are my favorite example. They do so many things for us: beat out the weeds, build soil and are grown on the outside of the rows protecting the fall/winter spinach from frost (along with straw mulch). When March arrives, the spinach from the field is almost as large as the hoophouse spinach. Peas also get harvested as pea tips for salad. In Mid May we pull the spinach and allow the peas to flower and sell these tips as edible flowers. BTW, your team should visit Detroit!

  • @lambsquartersfarm
    @lambsquartersfarm День тому +2

    Appreciate the elaborated discussion. Specific to small farming, I suspect a big contributor is greenhouse plastic. You can find on Google scholar 'accumulation of microplastics in greenhouse soil' . We can't control other industries or what washes up in our rivers, we can only affect what we do on our farms. I'm not perfect, but I see a lot of the larger grower channels normalizing plastics as part of the necessary toolkit. I don't include this Chanel in that category.

  • @ximono
    @ximono День тому

    Love the field note at the end. It's good to hear that there are still places like that.

  • @lauraservey495
    @lauraservey495 18 годин тому

    For the last year, we have had to clean out the filter on our washing machine every 2-3 months. We have our own well and thought the problem came from getting a new hot water heater put in. There was a ton of plastic shavings that plugged up a drainage pipe from the attic. The problem was not getting better after I flushed the pipes. I convinced my mom to get a filter put on the well pump. That thing collects so much plastic that it fills almost immediately. There are lots of plastics in the ground water.

  • @outliergardener
    @outliergardener День тому +1

    Haha, thanks so much for the shoutout ❤ ~ Outlier Garden….er 😂

  • @tonibaloney269
    @tonibaloney269 День тому +1

    Farmer Jessie, you can grow avocados, citrus, cherries and other tropical fruits in a geothermal greenhouse. They do this in places where it snows with great results. Get a hold of me if you want more details.

    • @williamcurry185
      @williamcurry185 20 годин тому

      Hey I want the details too! Go on, spill it! :D

  • @williamcurry185
    @williamcurry185 18 годин тому

    Thanks for answering my question, Jesse! I’m right there with you man, Oranges for me too however, it would be for the orange blossom honey as well as the fruit. If you haven’t tried it, add it to the bucket list. Good stuff. I hadn’t considered avocado, but now I feel like I have to figure out a way to make that possible…then cheap, then easy :D Keep on going bub, love your content and information.

  • @omermann
    @omermann День тому

    Love your videos keep the inspiration coming ❤

  • @pault.juckniess7265
    @pault.juckniess7265 16 годин тому

    Just keep thinking or what you can use instead of plastic's!! I remember planting annuals in my mother's flower garden. She would go to the local feed store where she bought flats of plants. Those flats were made of wood!!! Use soil blocks or fashion your own bottom less paper pot. In many areas broken pallets are usually found that can be a source of wood.

  • @josee.cisnerosjr.7706
    @josee.cisnerosjr.7706 18 годин тому

    Great story.

  • @johndoh5182
    @johndoh5182 19 годин тому +1

    Just a note on the plastics thing. Food ending up with microplastics that comes from GROWING the food specifically is IMO most likely going to happen from homesteaders/backyard gardeners who may use plastic containers a bit more often for various use cases, but including growing food in plastic pots. I don't think many FARMERS are growing plants to maturity in a plastic pot, because you know, labor?
    I'm not going to get into the good/bad thing because humans are living longer now so.......... Yes, it's a problem, but unless you're growing food from the beginning to end process in plastic containers it's probably not worth thinking about. I see some videos from Asia that look neat, where people grow food on balconies with excellent results and good on them. But they're often growing it in what looks like old plastic containers and I don't think I would do that. To me that looks like microplastics getting into the soil.

  • @sheelaghomalley5459
    @sheelaghomalley5459 День тому

    Love your Friday field notes. It's the same in the west of Ireland.

  • @robertcotrell9810
    @robertcotrell9810 День тому

    I'm in OH. I'd grow kumquats. Love those things...
    Do an episode on your research process That's one aspect of your videos that I really appreciate time and again.

  • @franksinatra1070
    @franksinatra1070 16 годин тому

    I eat a lot of avacodos so that would be top on my list also. I'm in zone 7a and tried globe artichokes this year and actually got a small harvest from two plants. I put them outside my fence thinking the deer would not like them but they are so desperate due to the drought they chewed them to the ground. I'm borderline on them overwintering here so we'll see what comes next spring.

  • @KenB351
    @KenB351 22 години тому

    Last year, here in Missouri (zone 7), I picked up a handful of citrus plants on clearance at Wal-Mart for $3 each. They had some frost damage, but I put them in a southern facing window for the winter. Today I pulled in 2 orange plants, 2 lime plants, and a lemon. I don't know if they're going to ever produce good fruit, but they make nice house-plants in their little pots. When they bloom the whole room smells fresh and fruity.

    • @rich63113
      @rich63113 19 годин тому

      Citrus are really easy (and great) house plants. You'll absolutely get fruit if you take care of them.
      I really miss my citrus - but I've got a dog who loves the taste and likes to eat the trunks of the trees. Yeah.

  • @timhammond4522
    @timhammond4522 День тому

    My first thought to the question of what would you grow was "a second crop." I'm in zone 2a and our growing season is essentially 100 days (though it seems to have grown longer by a week or so in the past 30 years). There aren't many vegetables you can't grow here (especially with plastic row covers ;) ). People even grow some varieties of apples and pears here, but not really in commercial quantities. But getting a second crop of anything other than pok choi or radishes is a challenge.

  • @DionKlitke
    @DionKlitke День тому

    Hello, what were the hoops inside the greenhouse for? Appears to be a greenhouse within a greenhouse?

  • @willbass2869
    @willbass2869 День тому

    Cover crop choice.....plant a fast growing warm season annual cereal like millet 60-70 days before frost date & before seed set.
    Sow heavily, get a thick stand. Let the frost kill it in place.
    You'll have a nice DEAD blanket that smothers most of the cool season weeds. It will also "armor" the soil against erosion from winter rains.
    Just push aside to plant in spring.
    Might be better to totally remove for some crops suspectable to slugs/snails, like lettuce, as they hide in the dead cover

  • @sheelaghomalley5459
    @sheelaghomalley5459 День тому

    My Buckwheat was killed by a frost in the 1st week of September in Ireland. The earliest frost in history. Normally end of October for 1st frost. Has been a crazy growing season 😢

  • @stuckinthemudgarden7726
    @stuckinthemudgarden7726 День тому

    You can grow peaches in your zone. They are really cold hardy. I have peach trees in upstate NY zone 5b/ 6a . A little elemental sulfur and kaolin clay is all I use on them for pest and disease prevention . Back yard northern peaches are surprisingly sweet and juicy.

  • @will-by-the-bay4890
    @will-by-the-bay4890 День тому

    I’m less than a half mile from SF Bay. Cannot grow most heirloom tomatoes well due to rampant mildew. Also most apples and stone fruit are difficult due to lack of chill hours. I want so much to grow sour cherries.

  • @sightline4004
    @sightline4004 7 годин тому

    18:31 I'd grow Cocoa, Avacado and Coffee. Note: Yaupon Holly leaves contain caffeine, just don't eat the berries.

  • @kdbolson
    @kdbolson День тому

    I agree that Avocado is my number one thing I would grow if I could (zone 4b, so it ain't happening).
    I'd also love to have a few herbs like Rosemary and Lavender grow as perennials.

  • @jangsy33
    @jangsy33 День тому

    I wish I could grow passion fruit...and while not a fruit, I would love love love to grow moringa!

  • @chipper6729
    @chipper6729 День тому

    1 finger wave is standard operation procedure in rural ;) common in eastern WA state as well

  • @hoosierpioneer
    @hoosierpioneer День тому

    You don't gotta go deep in Northern Indiana. Lots of small communities, mine included, still do the little wave. Just stand out by my mailbox and you'll see.

  • @craigdawson7632
    @craigdawson7632 День тому

    What are people thoughts on effective food packaging for things that need to retain moisture?

  • @MayhemLucinate
    @MayhemLucinate День тому

    I am in Raleigh NC and I would say I want to grow coffee or cocoa

  • @davidpenfold
    @davidpenfold День тому

    We can grow cherries here 700m up the Massif Central in France. What I'd really like is to be able to grow lemons. I've got this one sad specimen in a big pot that has to be put in the garage to over-winter and it's yet to even attempt to produce anything in three years.

  • @mckennahicks5259
    @mckennahicks5259 8 годин тому

    So septic leach from laundry can contaminate microplastics and possibly pfas

  • @glyncaemawr6957
    @glyncaemawr6957 День тому

    Lemons would be my choice for a I wish I could grow fruit. We keep trying to grow them, get a couple of fruit and then get heavy frosts (once every 6 or 7 years) and have to start again…..

  • @ahabthecrab
    @ahabthecrab День тому

    Zone 9b here. Very few fruit trees grow here. I can grow citrus but the Asian thrip and citrus greening eventually kills the trees. I have been trying for 10 years unsuccessfully. If I was further south I could grow avocados and mangoes. If I was further north, I could grow apples, pears or peaches. 9b is not so good for fruit trees😒. I can grow papayas and bananas however.

  • @mattgreen3780
    @mattgreen3780 День тому

    I grow passion fruit in giant pots, that must winter indoors. Way outside my growth zone!

  • @spaceantelope1
    @spaceantelope1 20 годин тому

    I’m in south Alabama. Used to be able to grow oranges. Harder in recent years. I’ve always wanted to grow apples, can’t do it here really that I know of. Is there a variety of apple that would grow well in Kentucky?!

  • @HivesToHome
    @HivesToHome День тому

    Mangoes and avocado!

  • @gcc2313
    @gcc2313 День тому

    Id grow melons. Or really any crop that appreciates long hot dry seasons.
    Im still struggling but i think next season ill get better success

  • @rich63113
    @rich63113 19 годин тому

    The big issue with microplastics is that they're so damn small that and so damn pervasive that you can not use any plastic on your property, and its still going to be in anything you grow because it's in your water and in your rain, and like Jesse says - in the air.
    So its really about quantity at this point. We need to stop subsidizing (both directly and indirectly) petroleum so that single use plastic stops being a thing. The indirect costs at this point are way too high. Single use plastic needs to only be a thing where its absolutely necessary (some medical parts/tools, silicon fabs, etc).
    This all comes down to us ignoring the fact that there are secondary costs to oil.

  • @pier-annelachance4960
    @pier-annelachance4960 День тому

    I am with you with growing cherries. I tried and it just does not work.

  • @rochrich1223
    @rochrich1223 17 годин тому

    Lichens, particularly big lichens, look so wierd and other worldly, an ornamental rock garden covered with them would be great! However, if the weather isn't fatal for unprepared humans, weeds would take over. Pity.

  • @danphillips4590
    @danphillips4590 День тому +2

    Microplastics coming from our drip tape? Crap. Can microplastics be seen with strong enough microscope?

    • @jamesgribben7024
      @jamesgribben7024 День тому

      Yes but they would also be on a smaller scale than resolveable. Like fractial patterns 😊

  • @davidstick9207
    @davidstick9207 19 годин тому

    Neighbor story: I was 14. My grandpa...who raised me knew he was going to die. So he did the unthinkable...planted every acre into winter wheat. 1700 acres. All eggs in one basket. He died in February before the harvest. I was 14...what was I going to do? So I greased up the combine...pulled the trucks into the field...and as I was opening up the field...down the road came combine after combine...truck after truck. The entire community showed up. Food was brought. Everything. And in a day and a half...harvest was completed. Northwest Ohio at its finest.
    I moved on...worked a large cotton ranch in California. You have until December 1st to have your cotton roots pulled to keep the boll weavil out of the Central Valley. Our neighbor had his son commit suicide. The father was devastated. We were done with our 3000 acres. I asked the guy I worked for why we don't just pick his 35 acres...he was going to lose it. His reply was who will pay me if something breaks down? The difference between the Midwest and California. I left the next year.

  • @rachellemazar7374
    @rachellemazar7374 День тому

    I live in Northern California and I wish I could grow mangoes and papaya

  • @djmeser
    @djmeser День тому

    Limes, I would grow limes in Pennsylvania.

  • @KamiJ-xx6qm
    @KamiJ-xx6qm Годину тому

    If I coul grow just one thing that I cannot in my climate, it would be mangoes. If I could grow 3, it would be mangoes, coffee and cocoa.

  • @andreacardinal2481
    @andreacardinal2481 День тому

    Satsuma mandarin is more cold tolerant than oranges

  • @FarmerPro-w4k
    @FarmerPro-w4k День тому

    I don't know how to grow passion fruit, can anyone help me?

  • @daedricprincess8615
    @daedricprincess8615 День тому +1

    You should talk more about microplastics in synthetic fertilizers and other ways that industrial agriculture knowingly and purposefully dumps microplastics into our soils.

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 День тому +1

      We need more practical stuff not borderline polemics & the latest "doom" story, imo

  • @DongusKong
    @DongusKong 15 годин тому

    Id grow acerola

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead День тому

    Micro plastic is scary it's in the air man

  • @jamesgribben7024
    @jamesgribben7024 День тому

    Taking scuffle hoes. Ever see a wire brush head on a strimmer used to scuffle moss off concrete? Just an idea. Would it make a power hoe

  • @johannakuhlin4787
    @johannakuhlin4787 День тому

    Do you drive a car? Name 3 materials in your car...

  • @ThinkLittleFarm
    @ThinkLittleFarm День тому +1

    love the neighbor-outdoes-neighbor currency. farming, after all, is largely (I think) done by people who want stronger, healthier, and more intimate communities.