Also the pods when it's big enough you can harvest it, peal off the hard casing, gather the green pods, and cook them in a vegetable soup like mongo veggie soup. The pods taste awesome! better than green peas. Although much more harder to get the pods out due to its hard casing.
Zepth Qalev Xanders we make all types of food with moringa leaves. Stews, soups. stir fry, on omelets, etc it is a real kitchen in itself. The pods use like beans.
The Moringa leaves are actually great for lactating mothers. They will ensure that the mammary glands will produce copious amounts of milk for the baby. They are great in chicken soups or stews, also in clams, shrimps and shellfish recipes.
Now THAT'S the kind of useful information I look for in a vid! And you guys presented it in such a complete but concise way, not wasting my time. Plus watching you was fun; you and Jake are both very good at this!
Moringa tree . In the Philippines we called it Malunggay . this tree grows very well in a like salty soil...i have a lot at home...and yes, its very nutritious. .I loved it. .
I am in zone 8 , elderberries, mulberries, huckleberries, gooseberries, figs and grapes are my go to because I can dehydrate, can, make syrups, wines, jams, sauces, or fresh.and whatever we don't eat I can give to the chickens or song birds
There are a bunch of mulberry trees on the UTEP campus. I'd grab handfulls of berries and snack on them during class. Oh, and my ladyfriend's neighborhood in Houston had TONS of grapefruit for the picking, but the trees all died from the freeze of 2021. Such a shame because we'd have grapefruit from October through January.
Ha, love that you mentioned not to plant the mulberry tree anywhere near the foundation of your house; we have that problem right now. The previous owner/builder planted two way, way too close. One is ALSO in the septic leach field, thus has grown to monster size and interrupted septic function a time or two, now is taking its size out on the foundation. Having it removed this winter.
My favorite place for buying fruit trees, grape vines and flower bulbs is Ty Ty Nursery in Georgia. It is a great place to visit and pick out your trees or either they will ship your plants directly to your home at a reasonable price.
Agreed about the Mulberry trees. :) I planted a white mulberry about six or seven years ago from seed. It is huge now and I have shared some berries with the local birds which has worked to my benefit because I found another mulberry growing in my yard a few years ago. - Heidi
BlackCat2 where I used to live my neighbor had a mulberry tree and it stormed pretty bad and the next day it was broken and over his fence so me and my brother ate some he didnt care though because he was never home so its not like he was gonna eat them
Awesome, we love what you doing, walking your talks.....Setting sound examples...Lovely...You are blessed, you are recognized by your fruits indeed. Big cheers from us here in AoteaRoa-New Zealand (Godzone)......God bless you all.
It's fascinating to see what people grow in climates different to mine, I can only dream about having a date palm outside here in the cool, damp north west of England. Thanks guys, love it.
I am Barbadian, live in Barbados. I have about five cherry trees in my back yard, they can be very sweet and little sour. We also have alot of moringa and date palms trees.
We are working towards getting set up this way! Thank you! We are trying to get our local communities/churches to start community gardens and trees that will produce organic fruits to improve health.
I'm surprised the loquat tree is not more popular as the fruit is sweet, juicy and delicious. They're very easy to grow and the trees will germinate from seeds of fallen fruit. I've only seen the tree once in the States and it was in a park in Florida.
I have a loquat tree in my yard in Florida. There is one other that I know of in my community. Many people ask me what it is. It is so delicious. I had the last fruits off it about two weeks ago. The birds love them too. I also have two mango trees, one of which will have ripe fruit in May, the other in August.
I would also add pecan trees and jujube. Once they are dried or dehydrated, Jujubes can easily last a whole year. And they are precocious trees that make a ton of fruit. Pecans also last at least a year after you harvest them, but they take a while to get going.
I used to help my grandma to pick mulberry leaves for silkworm back in Cambodia in the 60s &70s. i used to eat the berries and I did not know you can eat it; because I was a kid and hungry and looked delicious and ate it; tasted sweet and sour, that was 45 years ago.
Story time: so as a kid I had to walk from school to a nearby park to be picked up because my mom hated lines, and between these two locations was a foresty type area we had to go through. And on our way there was this bush that made fruit that looked like the blackberries we grew at home. So I, being a smart child, decided to pick and eat them. I then encouraged my little brother and my friends to partake as well like some kind of modern day Eve and we all would eat these berries every time we saw them. I could have dropped dead along with several of my loved ones because of this genius idea. I guess it was lucky that they were, as I literally JUST discovered maybe six years after ingesting them constantly, mulberries. Thank you for educating me.
Having my own greenhouse , Expansive Gardens and many different mature fruit trees and my own UA-cam channel "Gardening With Vincenzo" and starting to proliferate grafted Honeycrisp and "Sweet Cheeks" apple trees, I am always on the lookout for fellow enthusiasts to learn from. (Zone 6A) Thanks for sharing!
oh my, you are both wonderful. I love anything you can grow. I have started a date plant from dates I got from store. I know it will be a few years before I would even (or if) get any dates but I will enjoy the plant itself. How would I be able to find out if it is a female or a male? I cannot put it outside all year. I live in New Hampshire, 45 minutes north of Boston, really cold and beautiful snowy winters. We are building a new home and when it is finished then I will have my own greenhouse (not a huge one but enough for me). I can expand a lot more with my growing seasons after that. Can't wait!! Wish I could have a Moringa tree. That sounds fabulous. I am so glad I found your channel. Thanks so much! Patty in New Hampshire
Patty Allen.Moringa is grown in tropical areas.Southern states of US bordering Mexico are ideal. Similarly date palms are grown in Arab countries. It tolerates very high temparatures. Growing date palm and morninga in green houses in New Hampshire area may not yield desired results, due to its cold weather
Greetings from 4b in western wisconsin. I have different plants (except mulberries,) but find your approach refreshing and encouraging. We have berries (ras, black ras, blue, goose, josta, aronia, gonji, straw, mul, and nanking bush cherry. Bushes tend to be better than trees because of high winds on our ridge. Allowed to grow 4-6 feet, they double as windbreaks to protect our garden.
I would ad carambola..star fruit..starts fruiting in a year of planting..super abundant fruit multiple times a year..sweet & very juicy & can b juiced & frozen & loves the heat..I'm in sw florida
Excellent information. Thank you so much for this vid. I will have to research my area to see if I can grow all of those here. We are in Central East Texas.
Thank you for this video! :) I live in Norway and are in to bonsai. Fruity mulberry tree was new to me, and now i can not rest until i got one and can try to make a bonsai tree out of it. Hope u have a great day when u read this! :)
Moringa leaf stir fry is great with steamed rice. Try it out. Wash lot of moringa leaves. Stir fry them in a bit of warm coconut oil with grated coconut, a couple of green chillies, a couple of garlic pods along with spoonful of cumin seeds (all grated coarsely) add a pinch of turmeric and salt. Cook them for 3 minutes. Bingo. You are in for a healthy meal. Watch on youtube "Muringa ila thoran". By the way, Ila=leaf and Thoran=stir fry.
In Guyana we eat that as well. You need to pluck the leaves, the tiny stems are bitter. We also eat the 'drumsticks' in potato, fish or chick peas curry.
@ 4:36 he gives 'bonus' tree tip. Moringa tree, as noted by many. Had no idea this will grow in USA. Now to see if I can find a mature one to root instead of wait two years for a seedling to mature. At two years it becomes drought tolerant is a great tip. Had no idea. Thx.
I live along the upper texas coast and have had a fruit orchard for almost 20 years now so I'll impart my knowledge pertaining to my area. The soil here is extremely poor and very acidic. That means lots of amendments to start with. Summers are very hot so most trees need mulch and frequent watering. I've about given up on stone fruit trees as the soil bacteria kills them after they get up to a good bearing size. Grapes do very well as long as they are pierce disease resistant. That lets out seedless grapes which will live long enough for one or two crops before the grape plants die. I chose muscadine hybrids that produce lots of grapes each year. Satsuma orange trees will produce baskets of oranges yearly with little care but require protecting the graft from hard freezes during the winter. Blue berries need to be planted shallowly, well mulched and watered frequently but will produce well. The mulberries set large crops but some trees may set fruit before late freezes and you'll loss the crop although it doesn't seem to affect the trees at all. Persimmons will do very well but tend to spread from the roots so don't place them anywhere where you can't mow. Loquats are my favorite and cold hardy but often bloom during cold weather so they don't set fruit then. Figs and pears do well here along with blackberries. Apples so so. Chestnut trees take a long time to reach maturity but will bear heavy crops each summer. Elderberries are also one of my favorites producing what I consider to be the best jelly possible. I've tried kiwis, pomegranates, cherries, assorted nut trees, apples, peaches, plums, and other fruit trees all with some to little success. I believe in planting what you like to eat but be aware many trees will only grow in certain areas of the country and may require more effort to keep them alive than they are worth.
I have the opposite problem here in the high desert Mohave, to Alkaline. To cold in the winter with Temps down to 20s or even teens, add clay soil and summer Temps that have been 125 or more degrees last summer broke the record 132. Very harsh climate. But my black mulberry flourished in this harsh environment. If it can grow and do well here in can grow anywhere lol I forgot to add in the high winds we get here like yesterday gust of over 60 mph, it's a challenge to garden here for sure, but many people can and do. Forget citrus unless you have a green house to over winter. I'm trying figs this year, I have about 18 I have got cuttings from an started, so far being my first attempt 12 have leafed but that's indoors. The real test is putting them outside this spring.
When my mom bought the house we live in, it came with two fruit trees, loquat tree (which is pretty much everywhere where I live) and guava tree. Two small guavas and one big loquat tree. I'm trying to a couple mango trees and more guava trees. I also want to try more fruit so I can grow more trees.
i have barbados cherry in container. and once it start fruiting it will never stop fruiting. always found new flower and fruit every day. i also have mulberry, moringa grow wild on back yard
Hi Jake and Green desert, do you have a star fruit tree ? It was one my favorite in Hawai. It's very water with a fresh light flavor. And another favorite of mine is the sugar plum shaped like an egg, purple with white clouds on the skin and yellow flesh. The flavor is amazing, you can't stop eating them.
Carambola (star fruit) can't stand extended cold/freezing, even once if becomes a large tree. But when established it will be a very profilic producer. Juice it, the star shape is makes it a challenge to eat. Color goes from green, to chartreuse to yellow to orange, best when eaten between yellow and orange. After that it is over-ripe.
moringa is a well known Caribbean, African, Mideast secret for centuries. I'm vegan for a little over two years now, I put it in everything. I also have leg edema so it helps.
Fatman33020...How does this help with edema? I got edema after surgery one year ago. I can't get it to go away. MD's have no idea what to suggest for it.
foxxybrown No problem, That fruit stink, but mixed with a little honey it is drinkable. I never have white mulberry but I did once planted the black ver.
This Awesome, thanks to all of you. In Africa almost every backyard has got a "MORINGA TREE" planted there, we pick some few leaves boil and drink as tea, you feel less hungry, and sort of give you a balance diet routine.
moringa trees are popular in country.. in our local term, we call it malungay.. we actually cook it with chicken and green papaya, which is actually unripened.. add more water, salt and black pepper and also add some onions and ginger and it becomes a soup.. hehe.. I'm surprised that malungay is also grown in your place..nice!
no rabbits as its fenced off. as for birds he has netting. pests not much as plants are healthy! healthy plants have less pests and if grown with other companion plants it attract the right kind of bugs you do want that gets the ones you don't want :)
number 5 Japanese plum tree that tree grow all over California, and Louisiana. that tree love cold and hot weather like as low as 45° the lowest to a upper 100°...
I love this video. I'm glad it popped up on my recommended queue. I was intrigued, since I live in the Tucson Arizona desert, 125 miles SE of Phoenix. I am anaphylactic allergic to cherries, dates, and mulberries :(. Actually, I thought the latter was banned? It is an invasive species and the pollens produce severe allergies. When I was in grad school and had moved to Tucson, I had to live in one of the massive apartment complexes here. They had old growth mulberries there. It was dramatic on how much improvement I had in symptoms, like asthma, when I moved away to another area of the metropolis. It is too bad that the city developed and they completely drained the rivers here, as well as the aquifers. The municipal water is piped in from other states, heavily mineralized, and chemical laden. A few places have wells, and the water tastes amazing. Thank you, and I'm now subbed.
wow im happy i have all these trees already, i just really hope my date palm is female!!! only got 1 and i got it for free from a lady on craigslist and she said her neighbor brough the seeds from pakistan
Instead of waiting to know why don't you get a female one anyway and start now and if the one you already have turns out to be female you end up with a win win situation.
Bartacomus kidd- yes moringa seeds in crushed form are used to clean muddy water.The seeds act as a cogulant, and dirt precipates at the bottom of the Vessals say after 12 hours.This is a techniques used in India specially in remote rural areas where piped water is not available. In India the mornings is very popular tree, Every house hold in southern India you can find this..Its pods are used in soups preparation
In India we also eat a lot of moringa !Yellow lentils and the moringa leaves make delicious curry and the pods are delicious when stir fried with potatoes and mustard paste and in also fish curries!
We can grow the tropicals, but in 10a I can't grow a decent apple or cherry! You guys get most of the good berries, too. Check out the native plants groups in your state or area, there are good plants for everybody.
Wow it reminds me of my childhood my dad had Mausambi ( citrus) loquat and mulberry trees and i always loved them until we moved to different house in city with not much land to grow them again Thanks and they are delicious
my uber hardy avacado is the one im super exited acout. could i substitute a tropical date palm withsay a jujube since im oregon state hardy zone 8? lowquat is awesome here yey
I have a couple of them, but unfortunately it gets cold here where I'm at in Texas.. Ok, let me rephrase that.. it gets cold enough to harm the citrus trees. Still working that out, but I have wild plums, peaches, mulberry,:blackberry as well as dewberry plants. I
Ya'll should try my fav fruit. I dont know it in english but here in Puerto rico it's called a Puma Rosa. It's a tree n starts to fruit in like 3-5yrs. Tho since i babied mine like crazy i got it to fruit in only 2 yrs. THEY TASTE SO GOOD!!!
Great video! I am glad to have found a channel with a regional focus, it is tough getting advice for south Texas when the person lives in Michigan or whatever. Thank you!
All men are guilty of sin. Repentance means to turn away from your sin. For example, if you are a liar you stop lying. Repenting is not just saying sorry, it is saying sorry and not continuing to do that sin. Sin is what separates us from God. God sent his son Jesus to die for our sins. Meaning Jesus took the punishment for our sins on the cross. If we believe on Jesus our sins can be washed away, and God will remember them no more. If we reject the son of God and continue in sin we will be under Gods wrath(hell fire). Repent today and believe on Jesus Christ, and recieve the free gift of eternal life.
We have a Mulberry tree out in our yard that has been producing berries for over 50 years.
LOVE Them
1.) Any kind of citris 1:19
2.) Date palm 1:49
3.) Barbados cheery 2:26
4.) Mulberry 3:05
5.) Loquat 3:49
plus moringa
Stolen Aboriginal land
@@mumbairay stolen original land
Ab-original is like saying not-original. What can be more original than original?
Thank you
Still worth watching vid for additional information and entertainment.
Hi Guys, here in the Philippines, we use the Moringa oleifera Tree to make soup along with other vegetables.
the
Tinola D
Also the pods when it's big enough you can harvest it, peal off the hard casing, gather the green pods, and cook them in a vegetable soup like mongo veggie soup. The pods taste awesome! better than green peas. Although much more harder to get the pods out due to its hard casing.
Zepth Qalev Xanders we make all types of food with moringa leaves. Stews, soups. stir fry, on omelets, etc it is a real kitchen in itself. The pods use like beans.
joj ovih auta we have lots of Moringa plants in our home in Lahore, Pakistan.
Only several yr.s ago I never would have imagined how USEFUL UA-cam would become--everything from maintaining my cars to this!
Bo McGillacutty isn't it awesome?!?
The Moringa leaves are actually great for lactating mothers. They will ensure that the mammary glands will produce copious amounts of milk for the baby. They are great in chicken soups or stews, also in clams, shrimps and shellfish recipes.
Awesome stuff
Where I'm from in NewZealand, loquats grow everywhere. they are a great snack , they propagate very easily.
I ADMIRE YOU FOR HAVING YOUR GARDEN, SUCH A GENEROUS PERSON.
Verna Fernandez thank you!
Now THAT'S the kind of useful information I look for in a vid! And you guys presented it in such a complete but concise way, not wasting my time. Plus watching you was fun; you and Jake are both very good at this!
thanks, awesome compliment!
LL Mcbee s
You're right, I like people who say factually and concise on YT. Leaves me more time to do other things and movies.
wow you are even more stupid
Moringa tree . In the Philippines we called it Malunggay . this tree grows very well in a like salty soil...i have a lot at home...and yes, its very nutritious. .I loved it. .
I am in zone 8 , elderberries, mulberries, huckleberries, gooseberries, figs and grapes are my go to because I can dehydrate, can, make syrups, wines, jams, sauces, or fresh.and whatever we don't eat I can give to the chickens or song birds
Are the gooseberries also called ground cherries??
@@mikeyherb1923 no. They are two different berries.
@@s.leemccauley7302 thank you
Rehydrated figs are nature's toffees...
Gooseberries are amazing
There are a bunch of mulberry trees on the UTEP campus. I'd grab handfulls of berries and snack on them during class. Oh, and my ladyfriend's neighborhood in Houston had TONS of grapefruit for the picking, but the trees all died from the freeze of 2021. Such a shame because we'd have grapefruit from October through January.
Ha, love that you mentioned not to plant the mulberry tree anywhere near the foundation of your house; we have that problem right now. The previous owner/builder planted two way, way too close. One is ALSO in the septic leach field, thus has grown to monster size and interrupted septic function a time or two, now is taking its size out on the foundation. Having it removed this winter.
Lol I didn't know septic leaches had that effect. It seems you're growing your own super fertilizer too :P
My favorite place for buying fruit trees, grape vines and flower bulbs is Ty Ty Nursery in Georgia. It is a great place to visit and pick out your trees or either they will ship your plants directly to your home at a reasonable price.
Agreed about the Mulberry trees. :) I planted a white mulberry about six or seven years ago from seed. It is huge now and I have shared some berries with the local birds which has worked to my benefit because I found another mulberry growing in my yard a few years ago. - Heidi
Never waste fruits like that! Turn them into alcohol :P I tried a palinka-like drink made of mulberries and it was soo good :D
Nice
BlackCat2 i love the purple mulberries! they are wonderful. Its easy to grow a mulberry tree in the northern states and grape vines as well
BlackCat2 where I used to live my neighbor had a mulberry tree and it stormed pretty bad and the next day it was broken and over his fence so me and my brother ate some he didnt care though because he was never home so its not like he was gonna eat them
@@nikipiulitzaable you piss head, any excuse to get drunk, slap your bot 😁😁
Thank you for the info…I’m excited…this means I can grow Moringa Trees in my climate!! 🤗
Barbados Cherries make a great wine as well. Cherry wine is popular in the Caribbean.
Awesome, we love what you doing, walking your talks.....Setting sound examples...Lovely...You are blessed, you are recognized by your fruits indeed. Big cheers from us here in AoteaRoa-New Zealand (Godzone)......God bless you all.
It's fascinating to see what people grow in climates different to mine, I can only dream about having a date palm outside here in the cool, damp north west of England. Thanks guys, love it.
Can I have some of all. I really love fruits and want a backyard of fruits like yours. You leave my mouth watering
Lol glad you like😃
Great energy from you both, thanks for sharing!
I am Barbadian, live in Barbados. I have about five cherry trees in my back yard, they can be very sweet and little sour. We also have alot of moringa and date palms trees.
We had a mulberry tree in a garden when I was a child. We snacked off it all summer.
Then you got distracted along the way and forgot to plant one for yourself. What's wrong with you? 🤨
The background nature noise is so soothing.
We are working towards getting set up this way! Thank you! We are trying to get our local communities/churches to start community gardens and trees that will produce organic fruits to improve health.
Thanks for sharing your garden 😊 beautiful and great information
Thanks for the support😀
I'm surprised the loquat tree is not more popular as the fruit is sweet, juicy and delicious. They're very easy to grow and the trees will germinate from seeds of fallen fruit. I've only seen the tree once in the States and it was in a park in Florida.
I've seen them only once as well, in California. The fruit is super tasty!
I have a loquat tree in my yard in Florida. There is one other that I know of in my community. Many people ask me what it is. It is so delicious. I had the last fruits off it about two weeks ago. The birds love them too. I also have two mango trees, one of which will have ripe fruit in May, the other in August.
Fruit number 5 is grown alot in the Mediterranean coast during April month.
*Great advice, thank you - superb fruit!! I will plant them all!!*
I would also add pecan trees and jujube. Once they are dried or dehydrated, Jujubes can easily last a whole year. And they are precocious trees that make a ton of fruit. Pecans also last at least a year after you harvest them, but they take a while to get going.
I used to help my grandma to pick mulberry leaves for silkworm back in Cambodia in the 60s &70s. i used to eat the berries and I did not know you can eat it; because I was a kid and hungry and looked delicious and ate it; tasted sweet and sour, that was 45 years ago.
Its amazing... Im proud with your garden. There so many kind of pets, fruits,vegetables..thanks to sharing ivideo information.. Good job.
tnk u hun! wat a wonderful video hope u get mush more plant for the Caribbean keep up yuh passion . n save the plant go green .
Story time: so as a kid I had to walk from school to a nearby park to be picked up because my mom hated lines, and between these two locations was a foresty type area we had to go through. And on our way there was this bush that made fruit that looked like the blackberries we grew at home. So I, being a smart child, decided to pick and eat them. I then encouraged my little brother and my friends to partake as well like some kind of modern day Eve and we all would eat these berries every time we saw them. I could have dropped dead along with several of my loved ones because of this genius idea. I guess it was lucky that they were, as I literally JUST discovered maybe six years after ingesting them constantly, mulberries. Thank you for educating me.
Love the garden! I bet the fruit are delicious!
Jake mate's project amused me a lot he is really brilliant ❤❤ watching from Bangladesh ❤
Having my own greenhouse , Expansive Gardens and many different mature fruit trees and my own UA-cam channel "Gardening With Vincenzo" and starting to proliferate grafted Honeycrisp and "Sweet Cheeks" apple trees, I am always on the lookout for fellow enthusiasts to learn from. (Zone 6A)
Thanks for sharing!
Awesome! Thanks for watching and GOOD LUCK!!!!!
I have all these trees in my north Florida property and all do well. I love the Surinam Cherries.
oh my, you are both wonderful. I love anything you can grow. I have started a date plant from dates I got from store. I know it will be a few years before I would even (or if) get any dates but I will enjoy the plant itself. How would I be able to find out if it is a female or a male? I cannot put it outside all year. I live in New Hampshire, 45 minutes north of Boston, really cold and beautiful snowy winters. We are building a new home and when it is finished then I will have my own greenhouse (not a huge one but enough for me). I can expand a lot more with my growing seasons after that. Can't wait!! Wish I could have a Moringa tree. That sounds fabulous. I am so glad I found your channel. Thanks so much! Patty in New Hampshire
Date Palm tree is my FAVORITE!
Patty Allen.Moringa is grown in tropical areas.Southern states of US bordering Mexico are ideal. Similarly date palms are grown in Arab countries. It tolerates very high temparatures. Growing date palm and morninga in green houses in New Hampshire area may not yield desired results, due to its cold weather
Greetings from 4b in western wisconsin. I have different plants (except mulberries,) but find your approach refreshing and encouraging. We have berries (ras, black ras, blue, goose, josta, aronia, gonji, straw, mul, and nanking bush cherry. Bushes tend to be better than trees because of high winds on our ridge. Allowed to grow 4-6 feet, they double as windbreaks to protect our garden.
Great video, great info, great chemistry. Loved it all. Thanks so much :D
I would ad carambola..star fruit..starts fruiting in a year of planting..super abundant fruit multiple times a year..sweet & very juicy & can b juiced & frozen & loves the heat..I'm in sw florida
Excellent information. Thank you so much for this vid. I will have to research my area to see if I can grow all of those here. We are in Central East Texas.
you can probably grow pecans then i have two pecan trees in my backyard
Yes
Thank you for this video! :)
I live in Norway and are in to bonsai.
Fruity mulberry tree was new to me, and now i can not rest until i got one and can try to make a bonsai tree out of it.
Hope u have a great day when u read this! :)
the host is just so adorable. this was my first video by her and I can't wait to watch more. and buy a moringa, loquat, and Barbados cherry tree.
The host was annoying with her irrelivant girl power nonsense
@@divinicus 32 others disagree 🤷♂️
I remember hopping off the school bus in country Georgia. Eating wild cherry's what a wonderful memory.
Moringa leaf stir fry is great with steamed rice. Try it out. Wash lot of moringa leaves. Stir fry them in a bit of warm coconut oil with grated coconut, a couple of green chillies, a couple of garlic pods along with spoonful of cumin seeds (all grated coarsely) add a pinch of turmeric and salt. Cook them for 3 minutes. Bingo. You are in for a healthy meal. Watch on youtube "Muringa ila thoran". By the way, Ila=leaf and Thoran=stir fry.
Jo C we are totally gonna try it! thanks!
@@GreenDesertTV I know Moringa is healthy and all, but doesn't it taste horrible?
In Guyana we eat that as well. You need to pluck the leaves, the tiny stems are bitter. We also eat the 'drumsticks' in potato, fish or chick peas curry.
Fun fact. Moringa leaves retain their original shape even after passing through your digestive system!
@@Sherirose1. It goes well with prawn curry.
@ 4:36 he gives 'bonus' tree tip. Moringa tree, as noted by many. Had no idea this will grow in USA. Now to see if I can find a mature one to root instead of wait two years for a seedling to mature. At two years it becomes drought tolerant is a great tip. Had no idea. Thx.
I live along the upper texas coast and have had a fruit orchard for almost 20 years now so I'll impart my knowledge pertaining to my area. The soil here is extremely poor and very acidic. That means lots of amendments to start with. Summers are very hot so most trees need mulch and frequent watering. I've about given up on stone fruit trees as the soil bacteria kills them after they get up to a good bearing size. Grapes do very well as long as they are pierce disease resistant. That lets out seedless grapes which will live long enough for one or two crops before the grape plants die. I chose muscadine hybrids that produce lots of grapes each year. Satsuma orange trees will produce baskets of oranges yearly with little care but require protecting the graft from hard freezes during the winter. Blue berries need to be planted shallowly, well mulched and watered frequently but will produce well. The mulberries set large crops but some trees may set fruit before late freezes and you'll loss the crop although it doesn't seem to affect the trees at all. Persimmons will do very well but tend to spread from the roots so don't place them anywhere where you can't mow. Loquats are my favorite and cold hardy but often bloom during cold weather so they don't set fruit then. Figs and pears do well here along with blackberries. Apples so so. Chestnut trees take a long time to reach maturity but will bear heavy crops each summer. Elderberries are also one of my favorites producing what I consider to be the best jelly possible. I've tried kiwis, pomegranates, cherries, assorted nut trees, apples, peaches, plums, and other fruit trees all with some to little success. I believe in planting what you like to eat but be aware many trees will only grow in certain areas of the country and may require more effort to keep them alive than they are worth.
What zone are you in? Just curious
I have the opposite problem here in the high desert Mohave, to Alkaline. To cold in the winter with Temps down to 20s or even teens, add clay soil and summer Temps that have been 125 or more degrees last summer broke the record 132. Very harsh climate. But my black mulberry flourished in this harsh environment. If it can grow and do well here in can grow anywhere lol I forgot to add in the high winds we get here like yesterday gust of over 60 mph, it's a challenge to garden here for sure, but many people can and do. Forget citrus unless you have a green house to over winter. I'm trying figs this year, I have about 18 I have got cuttings from an started, so far being my first attempt 12 have leafed but that's indoors. The real test is putting them outside this spring.
I purchased my first moringa tree and mulberry thanks to you!!
When my mom bought the house we live in, it came with two fruit trees, loquat tree (which is pretty much everywhere where I live) and guava tree. Two small guavas and one big loquat tree. I'm trying to a couple mango trees and more guava trees. I also want to try more fruit so I can grow more trees.
love it... that's the smart way to get your backyard oasis :)
Love the happiness is of these two !!
Moringa is a miracle plant we add the leaves to our soup .
i have barbados cherry in container. and once it start fruiting it will never stop fruiting. always found new flower and fruit every day. i also have mulberry, moringa grow wild on back yard
"Sounds familiar?" What kind of lady is this? Seems like a great sense of humor.
WOW I love this garden. Would love to visit it..
Hi Jake and Green desert, do you have a star fruit tree ? It was one my favorite in Hawai. It's very water with a fresh light flavor. And another favorite of mine is the sugar plum shaped like an egg, purple with white clouds on the skin and yellow flesh. The flavor is amazing, you can't stop eating them.
hi. I've never heard of it but it sounds delicious. I'll forward your message to Jake and see what he knows
I really like to try this fruit. Thanks for the tip
Carambola (star fruit) can't stand extended cold/freezing, even once if becomes a large tree. But when established it will be a very profilic producer. Juice it, the star shape is makes it a challenge to eat. Color goes from green, to chartreuse to yellow to orange, best when eaten between yellow and orange. After that it is over-ripe.
+Nathan Gant thanks!
Nathan Gant Thanks, Jake :)
Love you yard. Which mulberry tree most fruitful?
moringa is a well known Caribbean, African, Mideast secret for centuries. I'm vegan for a little over two years now, I put it in everything. I also have leg edema so it helps.
Fatman33020...How does this help with edema? I got edema after surgery one year ago. I can't get it to go away. MD's have no idea what to suggest for it.
I'm well into the video and I just can't stop thinking how huge that rabbit was!! lol so cute! What a cool home they've built!
@3:18 that is a noni fruit (Morinda citrifolia) , not a white mulberry
No, it is not.
foxxybrown try google noni fruits and white mulberry fruit; compare and come back here and I can assure you, that you will agree with me
you fruit experts are all full of yerselves!
Apologies! You are right. I was looking at the wrong timestamp in the video. My backyard is littered with the smelly stuff.
foxxybrown No problem, That fruit stink, but mixed with a little honey it is drinkable. I never have white mulberry but I did once planted the black ver.
Thank you for making this video and teaching people about green desert thank you girl
This Awesome, thanks to all of you. In Africa almost every backyard has got a "MORINGA TREE" planted there, we pick some few leaves boil and drink as tea, you feel less hungry, and sort of give you a balance diet routine.
Nice to see you Jake ,after a long time
moringa trees are popular in country.. in our local term, we call it malungay.. we actually cook it with chicken and green papaya, which is actually unripened.. add more water, salt and black pepper and also add some onions and ginger and it becomes a soup.. hehe.. I'm surprised that malungay is also grown in your place..nice!
May Flor Alvarez wow, great recipe idea! thanks for watching!
You can see videos of this garden 5 years later also on UA-cam quite amazing growth
Oh that moringa i think its Malunggay in the Philippines, truly its a super veggie, great video. Nice guys!
Greetings from Barbados. Yeh! Great garden. Blessings.
Great video! What about rabbits, birds, and pests? Do you have to deal with these with these trees?
Lawson One I'll send your question over to Jake! thanks for watching!
no rabbits as its fenced off. as for birds he has netting. pests not much as plants are healthy! healthy plants have less pests and if grown with other companion plants it attract the right kind of bugs you do want that gets the ones you don't want :)
Lawson One ĺuyhuuhhhhñ09ieheyeieui I think 1ia
I have a balcony garden. I have cherry trees, plums. Gooseberry and a few other plants. Definitely going to look for a loquat.
number 5 Japanese plum tree that tree grow all over California, and Louisiana. that tree love cold and hot weather like as low as 45° the lowest to a upper 100°...
Nice!
Eyez low 45degrees isnt cold
@@jeremiahphelps724 45 Fahrenheit yeah it's cold to me.
Thank you for show us how you grow your mango tree last year. My plants are doing well now. Thanks again.
I always find this video in my recomendations even years after I first watch this 😂
Lol it must be meant for you😂
I love trees
love this channel thank you for sharing!
APOKOLYPES thanks for watching!
A classic vid with Jake droppin knowledge!! Still relevant years later!!
I love this video. I'm glad it popped up on my recommended queue.
I was intrigued, since I live in the Tucson Arizona desert, 125 miles SE of Phoenix.
I am anaphylactic allergic to cherries, dates, and mulberries :(. Actually, I thought the latter was banned? It is an invasive species and the pollens produce severe allergies.
When I was in grad school and had moved to Tucson, I had to live in one of the massive apartment complexes here. They had old growth mulberries there. It was dramatic on how much improvement I had in symptoms, like asthma, when I moved away to another area of the metropolis.
It is too bad that the city developed and they completely drained the rivers here, as well as the aquifers. The municipal water is piped in from other states, heavily mineralized, and chemical laden. A few places have wells, and the water tastes amazing.
Thank you, and I'm now subbed.
Moringa is a plus in my diet! Im waiting for my seeds so i can grow my trees! Great video! Just subscribed to your channel. Thanks!
Pebbles Perry good luck, you won't regret it! Thanks for subscribing and please keep us posted on your success with that moringa!
I will keep you updated! Thanks for your videos!
wow im happy i have all these trees already, i just really hope my date palm is female!!! only got 1 and i got it for free from a lady on craigslist and she said her neighbor brough the seeds from pakistan
I hope so, too, for your sake
Instead of waiting to know why don't you get a female one anyway and start now and if the one you already have turns out to be female you end up with a win win situation.
Wow what a potent video! Thank you
Very nice video , very nice place and very nice people . thanks for sharing and uploading this nice video.
Harris S that's so kind of you, thanks! glad you liked!
moringa (malunggay) in philippines!! it can stop small cuts from bleeding just rub its leaves and put in affected part and tie with a small cloth
Alliyah nicole Bacus yup just one reason some call it a miracle tree. The benefits are amazing!
Very interesting, I have 2 out of 5 and the neighbour has a loquat overhanging our garden so we almost have 3 ;)
Nice interview, nice show. Thanks.
TheCompleteGuitarist thanks for watching!
Great tips and 3 of those I’d never ever thought of
moringa seeds purify water in 3rd world countrys
True
Good
please explain
Bartacomus kidd- yes moringa seeds in crushed form are used to clean muddy water.The seeds act as a cogulant, and dirt precipates at the bottom of the Vessals say after 12 hours.This is a techniques used in India specially in remote rural areas where piped water is not available. In India the mornings is very popular tree, Every house hold in southern India you can find this..Its pods are used in soups preparation
How do you purify water with moringa seed
In India we also eat a lot of moringa !Yellow lentils and the moringa leaves make delicious curry and the pods are delicious when stir fried with potatoes and mustard paste and in also fish curries!
wish this worked for me. i live in zone 4. haha. You guys down south have so many plants to choose from! im jealous! :)
How you know what zone you live in, and what fruit you can grow in the zone
@@PrankHouseClark click here: garden.org/nga/zipzone/
We can grow the tropicals, but in 10a I can't grow a decent apple or cherry! You guys get most of the good berries, too. Check out the native plants groups in your state or area, there are good plants for everybody.
Wow it reminds me of my childhood my dad had Mausambi ( citrus) loquat and mulberry trees and i always loved them until we moved to different house in city with not much land to grow them again
Thanks and they are delicious
my uber hardy avacado is the one im super exited acout. could i substitute a tropical date palm withsay a jujube since im oregon state hardy zone 8? lowquat is awesome here yey
Mimi B hey mimi! thanks for watching and commenting! I'm sending your question over to Jake now!
Can't wait to move to Florida to grow all this wonderful trees.
I have a couple of them, but unfortunately it gets cold here where I'm at in Texas.. Ok, let me rephrase that.. it gets cold enough to harm the citrus trees. Still working that out, but I have wild plums, peaches, mulberry,:blackberry as well as dewberry plants. I
texjames2000 that's awesome!
Where in Texas? I'm in central Texas and there are citrus trees all over town
Good for you, Jake. You are a bad-ass urban horticulturalist. Kudos.
Terrific video. Great info and pleasant people.
Ya'll should try my fav fruit. I dont know it in english but here in Puerto rico it's called a Puma Rosa. It's a tree n starts to fruit in like 3-5yrs. Tho since i babied mine like crazy i got it to fruit in only 2 yrs. THEY TASTE SO GOOD!!!
Wow that is so cool!
Great video! I am glad to have found a channel with a regional focus, it is tough getting advice for south Texas when the person lives in Michigan or whatever. Thank you!
thanks for that awesome compliment and for subscribing to our channel! feel free to recommend other videos he'd like to see us do.
OMG!!! Jake Mace! I watch you to learn Wing Chun and Tai Chi... Be water, my friend... be water!
All men are guilty of sin. Repentance means to turn away from your sin. For example, if you are a liar you stop lying. Repenting is not just saying sorry, it is saying sorry and not continuing to do that sin. Sin is what separates us from God. God sent his son Jesus to die for our sins. Meaning Jesus took the punishment for our sins on the cross. If we believe on Jesus our sins can be washed away, and God will remember them no more. If we reject the son of God and continue in sin we will be under Gods wrath(hell fire). Repent today and believe on Jesus Christ, and recieve the free gift of eternal life.
I love Jake his garden is amazing🌳
His kung fu is shit.
You could also use the mulberry tree leaves to feed silkworms
Muringa tree the best one. They also call them Drum sticks.
Beautiful garden. Thank you for sharing.
What a GREAT VIDEO!! Thank you sweetness! 🙏🏻👍🏻❤️🌱🐝I live in Sedona, totally want to grow some acerola (sp) and some purple mulberries now.
brandi foose thanks sooooo much! take pics when you start growing!
Do you have any ideas/recommendations for colder weather locations like North Dakota?
Dj Aho I've never had to deal with the cold. Have you spoken with local nurseries or garden groups?
GreenDesertTV no I haven’t. I plan to talk to local nursery’s this spring. I can’t /won’t do anything until the 2 feet of snow is off the ground.
Dj Aho lol I think that's a smart plan