I am glad I finally found a gardener from OHIO. I followed many gardeners in the south and all their tips are not working for me. Thanks for all your expertise and I will be here from now on:)
"Fool's Spring" - Accurate description! I'm in southeast Michigan and yesterday my husband tilled our garden for the first time ever in March. I asked him to bring out some of our lawn chairs and he said absolutely not. We will most likely get snow every day in April. 😆 Thank you for your videos! I appreciate being able to get gardening advice from someone who's in the same grow zone. You've been very helpful.
Florida here. We began planting for Spring in December. And we've given up on the native soil. Everyone has turned to raised beds! But you know what? It's working! We're getting more food out of a smaller space, with less effort. Anyway, let's keep it green!:)
Jenna. This video was a wonderful asset to my garden prep work. I've been growing vegetables in the same area for 50 years and I needed to rethink some things. You're clear, concise and informative message gave me direction. Your work benefits people. Thank you
I am so thrilled to find your channel as a zone 6a gardener in Massachusetts. All of your content has been amazingly helpful so far and getting me so excited for spring!!! Thank you so much! 🌱🪻💜
This will be my first year growing vegetables in my clay soil. I've been following your advice on starting a new bed. Yesterday I cleaned up the fall cover crop and raked the soil into a bed. The soil already looks 100x better! Can't wait to plant it up!
I've gotten so much accomplished the last couple of weeks with all this warm weather. Laying out new garden beds, amending soil in existing garden beds, mulching all the areas that grass and weeds were taking over last year, and setting up drip irrigation while planting cool season plants and setting up more wintersowing containers for the summer garden. Anything that was a problem before, I'm trying hard to get it all done now so after my LFD all I have to do is plant and harvest.
You just read my mind! I JUST said I wonder if you had a video on how to prep the garden for Spring and BAM! this was posted only a few minutes ago. ☺️🙌🏾
I'm so glad! And, if you want something that delves into prepping the soil more specifically, I do have this video as well: ua-cam.com/video/WHWSA1QiRm8/v-deo.htmlsi=3HlwS_TxHLc3nVwy 😀
Your garden door that your daughter either painted or designed or just helped was beautiful, and perhaps her or your young son that seems to help own your garden might have art talent also. I watch The Urban Gardener, and you are invited for next Saturday. I'm planning to join in.I told him you are my favorite gardener. Radishes I'll plant and, as mentioned, a few others Thanks
I've always thought Jenna should be a daily/weekly please? reality channel. Can't get enough! Plus, she's already done it. Watch her older ones. She might motivate me to clean/reorganize my garage which is like her shed. We have so many common issues.
Love this! I was feeling kind of silly for wanting to rearrange my raised beds but the layout was rushed and really isn’t functional. So I’m putting in the work now and hopefully this year’s garden season will be more enjoyable & productive. 😊
Thanks for all the advice! I'm resurrecting a zone 6b garden after years and years away from it - and I've been super overwhelmed with how to even get started. I really appreciate your clarity and inspiration!
Here in southern Ohio we’re expanding our garden a lot. I’m also going to be adding a couple cattle panel archways over a couple of my beds. I’ll be using them for baby butternut squash & the other for a few varieties of pole beans. I’m going to get out there in the beds & start sewing a few things to get a jumpstart. I’m so excited for this time of year!
I actually planted peas, carrots, and radishes. I have started kale and even started hardening off onions. Weather looks warm in Virginia through March but I know that can change. I have planted poppies, snap dragons, cilantro and sweet peas too. The garden is all ready - layer of topsoil and compost and new archway. It is always hard oscillating between planting crops outside and still taking care of seedlings inside. So exhausting. I did transplant and split my sedum too. I was so glad to get that done before things got fully underway.
I'm lucky that I can do it here at home-- we're in a protected spot, surrounded on 3 sides by woods/tree line. Not the case at my parents'- where I get exactly what you're saying!!
Dear Jenna. So happy to hear from you. A few thoughts. I'm growing several varieties of gooseberries, but so far they are a pain. Honey berries are intriguing, but little fruit after 4 years. Interesting enough, one of the objects brought back from the Titanic wreckage was a container of goose berries. If your blackberries are of the Darrow variety, forget it . Their thorns are miserable and so consider other varieties. I have been trying to grow grapes for 30 years and the dirty little secret is that "seedless" varieties like Himrod, Mars, St. Teresa , and seedless Concord are not truly seedless at least in their early propagations. I continue to fight the deer, and despite a 7 foot plastic deer fencing and electric fencing I'm go to poultry (chicken wire) and electric fencing. Thank God for my 2 German Shepherds who are doing the best that they can to keep the critters at bey. Kind Regards, as always. Craig
My favorite gooseberry of all time is 'Jeanne'- more disease resistant, fewer thorns and hands-down best flavor. If I had to do it all over again, it's the only variety I'd plant. The others just aren't worth it for me. And that Titanic tidbit is really interesting! Sorry to hear about the deer-- I'm curious, is your fence just around the garden, or is it encompassing a bigger perimeter?
My deer fencing surrounds my vegetable garden and orchard (30 fruit trees, grapes, gooseberries (Pixwell), Honeyberries, currents, elder berries and mulberries and bee hives. Even though its a combination of electric fencing and strongest plastic from Home Depot (7 feet high), the sun degrades it and the raccoons claws cut thru it. Back to metal fencing and electric fencing, despite the cost (about 400 feet perimeter) Thank you. Craig@@GrowfullywithJenna
Thanks! I’m trying to convince my Father-in-law that we don’t need to till- (he was using a tractor 😳-turning the soil to slate) I have gotten about 1/2 of my rows established- so this video gives me so much ammunition information!
Hello Jenna! I’m in zone 6b south of Pittsburgh! With this nice weather we’ve been having I will clean up my 12 by 16 garden of weeds and put a layer of compost in it. I also have 2 nice size raised garden beds to clean out and get ready for planting when time comes! I started my seeds of herbs(dill, thyme,parsley,rosemary, ) in my basement near a window filled with light!
God bless you I’m a newbie gardener from Northeast Ohio And what a blessing to have found your UA-cam channel ❤ Can’t wait to see your Harvest and everything you plan on putting into the ground .. I don’t have acres but I have a back yard where I can put pots and a couple of raised beds.. what do you recommend me to start seedling ? Thanks so much GBU 😇
Last week I started kale, spinach, bok choy, variety of lettuce, green onions, dill, and snow peas in my outdoor greenhouse. First attempt at this🤞🏻… and today I started my beets, carrots, and radish in my beds. I don’t have any coverings for my outdoor bed except for frost covers. Trial and error 🙏 your videos have been so helpful for me because I live in zone 6b. Thank you so much!
I am eager to get back in the garden but i am still worried about disturbing our sleeping pollinators, especially since we had that nice weather and now we are back to snow.. Clevelander here. lol I do want to raise our one straight trellis as the peas and beans always outgrow it. So that is on the list to do before next weekend when I plan to plant the peas on St. Patrick's day. I have just got a at home soil test kit and have confirmed my soil in my raised beds is pretty depleted. So I have started accumulating my soil amendments so once its safe to disturb the garden I can amend away and retest the soil before planting.
Hello, Jenna. Don’t know if you’ve already moved your cattle panel trellis, but something to make it easier is to unclip it from the T posts, then get a rope or tie-down strap and run it from one side to the other and give it a snug pull so it’s off of the posts. Now it should hold in its arch and you can allow it to lay down, or simply scoot it out of the way. I’m betting you already know the rest. My garden is in the process of being rearranged, like some of yours. Black Jewel raspberries are being transplanted to a sunnier spot, and rhubarb is already in its new spot. Thanks for the video. Always excited to see what you’ve got cookin in the garden.
Wish I could claim credit for the idea; I saw the trick on another channel when I was originally looking for trellis ideas. Oh, don’t bend too much or you’ll get a more angled crimp in the apex. Found that out the hard way. 😜
Yesterday I transplanted some broccoli seedlings inside of some wall of waters (after warming the soil with some clear plastic for about a week) and sowed some carrot seeds. Goofy weather in WI, going to take advantage of it. You have a gorgeous garden, even in March. Stay Well!!!
Hi Jenna! Looks like you've been working hard! I am currently working on a garden expansion and planting several dormant bare root shrubs and a couple fruit trees here in SOMO before real spring hits here! Lots to do! Happy preparations! 😅 💪
Thanks for the tips. I've stopped using plastic row covers since learning more about microplastics in our food. I'm doing everything I can to avoid using plastic in my garden these days.
This was a very timely video! I spent some time today doing some of these same things, including moving some T-posts and sowing my first ever cover crop (the Johnny's Spring cover crop blend). I also started eggplant and peppers, including Gurney's Triple Delight and Perfect Rings. Thanks for those suggestions.
We had 74* Sunday. It’s unheard of in upper Midwest. We are warmer most days than west coast. Still staying with normal transplant dates. I’m not running around covering everything in May. Need to wait. Not sure if I can even do more winter sow. The few I did may have sprouted already. Things are so messed up. I prepped most beds last fall. Cleaned out coop and threw that on as I won’t be planting for a while. Did little pruning. Need to spray ag oil and copper on fruit trees before they bud, which could be soon with these temps. Threw some lettuce and spinach in under a tote-we will see. Have a few paths to cover in arborist chips. Cleared a bit of vegetation mainly asparagus beds. Expecting rain, but when aren’t we in this drought. It will not be a downpour I’m sure-.75-1” again, we will see. 😅 just as I said that it’s sprinkling 😂 Just checked and no sprouts in WS -good. Have on east side of house. Inside I was lazy in setting up heat pads and didn’t daisy chain them to regulator. Note to self to Not do that again. Hope I didn’t cook the seeds now. 😣 Under high fire warnings and I live in gasoline ally. Just seen they contained a fire in S. MN. And the heavy rain is north and SE of us.
Thanks Jenna! I can relate to the way you began your video. It's exactly what I'm doing. Fixing my fencing, building my infrastructure, getting the soil and beds ready, and chasing the mice away. I actually planted some arugula, lettuce and radishes last week under plastic and some of the seeds are popping already. Garlic is coming up nicely also. And you're so right about the false spring. I keep telling myself what the date is and not to get too far ahead of myself but can't help trying a few things since its warm right now.
I'm near the lake. I've been tidying up plant matter. I planted peas, carrots, and parsnips today. A lot of my brassicas have popped up in my winter sowing containers. Once they're bigger, I'll plant them out. I'm waiting a bit longer on potatoes. I also ordered a raspberry and a grape, which will arrive in a coiple weeks. Very excited for gardening to shift into gear fully!
I need to drop 2 trees and turn my tomato trellis into an arch trellis as I am returning to large cages for tomatoes. Add hoops for netting my spring veg bed. Add organic material. Lots to do… but love this time of year! Good to see you!
Northeast Ohio here! We started cleaning out our raised beds last week. I may have left some parsnips in there all winter 😅 But I’ve got some lovely broccoli and cabbage babies started that I can’t wait to transplant soonish.
Shared some of your beautiful weather…! I put down weed barrier over cardboard in preparation for a wood mulch shipment I’ll be receiving in a few weeks. That’s going to be for walkways and for an area I plan to grow wine cap mushrooms. I also put up a new raised bed since most of my beds now have garlic in them. (I have no place for my onions) I have 2 more raised beds I can put up and more walkways to prep. One bed will be strictly brassicas and will be covered with netting. That’s the plan for now… When I saw you sitting by the winter sowing jugs I was hoping for a peek!
Here in the east Texas 8b, I’ve cleared some raised beds and spread shrimp meal to fight root knot nematodes. The onions and potatoes are planted and lots of companion seedlings are ready to pop in everywhere in a few days. Cool weather crops are still in my greenhouse waiting for a cleared raised bed to go in. So much chick weed to pull!
As always, awesome video. Thanks for sharing. Growing in DE zone 7. Having my morning coffee, then heading out to the garden!!! See you there. Oh my, just noticed...I have the same brown overalls!
Central Ohio here - mostly just trying to get a bit ahead of weeds, and planning to trim some of the dead branches from the bottom of our pine trees while it's fairly easy to get to them. After many years of many ways to support tomatoes and vining veggies, this year I will be going back to the vertical trellises made with electrical conduit and netting that I used at my first house over 30 years ago. Also, planning the veggies to grow this year, getting the seeds, and deciding what will go in pots, and what I'll grow in the garden. Front garden needs a complete redo, but still undecided about what I'll do there. Gardens are always changing, aren't they? 🙂
Nice warm late “winter” this year. Luckily Its been dry. I’m getting out this week to do my wood chip mulch, cut out wild raspberries, ground Ivy, and trim hedges. And throw down some grass seed. Give my gooseberries, blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries, the usual once a year love and attention and haircut.
Great video! I live in southeast Ohio and find your content to be particularly helpful. This year I've sown spinach, mesclun greens. carrot, and radish. But the big project this winter is carving a stream throughout the garden. Maybe this year the plants will get watered! (haha) Thanks So Much!
I love hearing you say "need fixed" and "need repaired". 😂 People are always trying to correct my grammar when I say things like that and I know they aren't from Ohio/Indiana when they do.
@@GrowfullywithJenna I once did a poll on Instagram and most people from Ohio don't even notice it. It's so normal to us. I only started paying attention to it when people pointed it out to me so many times. I love regional differences like that. Do you call a vacuum a sweeper, too?
I'm very seriously getting that itch to get out and plant stuff even though it's still to early. Like you, I'm working on a fairly large sized trellis that will be for growing melons vertically. Right before I start planting I'll probably put in another trellis in the back part of my gardens for gourds and squashes. I'm also debating getting a few trees before dormancy breaks. Other than that, it's seeds in my basement seed starting room and greenhouse.
Yes that seasonal chart works for us in Michigan too! I got out to the garden last week though and did some clean up as well and think I’m gonna plant some seeds too soon
Im in N.Y and today was beautiful. I to am thinking of atleast one or 2 more snow storms. Hope were wrong Jenna. My broccoli, cabbage are under my grow lights. Cauliflower seeds i decided to try to this year. Last year i just planted from seed broccoli and it was amazing. I beat the cabbage moths . Hoping to do the same again this year. Forecast shows alot of rain for the next week.
Honestly- as long as it's just snow and the temps stay in the upper 20's/low 30's, I'll be happy. Those cool season crops can take it. I just hope we don't dip back down to the really frigid temps! I'm so glad to hear that your broccoli did amazing last year. I hope this year goes great for you!
Just moved to 23 acres in Zanesville Ohio. Setting up 10 rows that will be 60ft long! Planted shelling peas, lettuce, and cilantro today. Still need to dig in the row for carrots.
Hi Jenna. This year, I put my high tunnels up early I started my pepper and tomato seeds earlier this year in hopes of an earlier harvest. The tunnels are going to warm up the soil sooner. I really enjoyed your video. Happy gardening.
We used the same 4' Rabbit Fencing. I also buried aluminum flashing around the perimeter to provide a rhizome barrier and keep rodents from burrowing under the fence.
@@GrowfullywithJenna It can be done afterwards. If the flashing is folded in half (I work at a print shop and use lithoplate) wet ground can be cut upen w/a flat shovel, and the shovel can be used to insert the piece into the opening. I did this when I needed to divert water away from the upper chicken run.
This is definitely "fools spring" in midcoast Maine. I'm going to Jamaica in 10 days and can't wait to get back and start some cool crops going indoors. Also going to make a pretty large growbag area.
Hi Jenna! Love your videos!! Well i amended garden rows and did some cleaning up but i also went ahead and planted beets, kale, spinach, carrots and lettuce. This is the earliest i have ever planted anything out in the garden so im really excited to see what happens! Next week im thinking about planting peas and turnips. Im Central Ohio area, out in the country.
3rd year serious food gardening 1st year for garlic and onions planted in fall coming up great. Prepping to get the gardens ready just like you and this vid is PERFECT for dealing w/some of the same issues as you here in PA, including some of the "weeds" herbs popping up that I want to save and the moving of perennials blackberries etc - your digging the gooseberry takes some of the fear out of my raspberry patch which isn't working where it is. THANKS FOR ALL YOUR GREAT INFORMATION!
I have been taking advantage of the same weather in Southern Ontario (in 6B as well), dug up some invasive plants, fixing a raised garden bed, and hoping to be able to plant out my brassica seedlings in the next couple of weeks. Keeping my fingers crossed that this really isn't a Fool's Spring 😂 (doubt it)
Love this video! I need to be doing all of the above, but alas I am nursing an injury that prevents me from doing any heavy work. I have beds to create and reshape, log borders to install, paths to mulch, arches and trellises to build. Even bending is risky, so hopefully I can get this treated soon. In the meantime, at least my indoor starts are all going well.
I'm ready to garden! But, alas, I've another month to go before I can start. My soil looks good but is still frozen a few inches down ...and I'm sure we'll get that one last snow dump that nobody ever wants. The "John Deere green" paint might sun-fade, but even if it doesn't, it will still be less noticeable than the white tops. 🌷
Looks like your decision to let the garden just die down on its own last fall saved you some time and effort on clean up. Ah, the Mint planter. AND..., right in the way! Looks like you finally had the scratch the head, “WT# was I thinking?” moment. Yeah, I kept planting more and more tomatoes last year, where I was then stuck squeezing around the tomato cages in order to just get in and out of my garden. 🤯 Dill gets out of control too. Gardening is addicting! What can you say?
I will be pruning my raspberries and blackberries this week, then prepping new beds for them and will transplant them. They are spreading and threatening to take over the entire garden. Last week was the earliest 70 degree day I have experienced in Wisconsin since moving here in 2008. I have lots of other garden infrastructure work to do, so I don't mind if the unusually mild weather continues, provided we don't get a hard freeze in early May when my fruit trees should be blossoming.
I went out to start planning my garden and discovered my fall planted kale overwintered here in Kentucky. Didn’t know kale could do that. I literally just threw expired seeds on the ground around September and forgot about them. It looks great and tastes sweet. I was pleasantly surprised.
Amazing isn't it. I'm in Lexington and I had celery! make it through the winter not to mention 2 types of parsley that are begging me to eat them. Happy gardening!
SW Okla. 7B, Have to re-build two raised beds (I built too short) for an arch and moving strawberries. Lining and filling four long raised beds for vegys. I have to through and clean up the rest of the beds for a cut flower garden this year. Lots and lots of weeding.
Ive been waiting on a Jenna spring prep video ❤ and LOL at the season.. same here in 5b/6a southern coastal maine… the 10 day forecast is way above average.. and I can get down at least 2 inches in my raised beds.. I may test some things cool.. cool things because Mother Nature 😂
Hi Jenna I m in Ohio also so it’s ok to plant broccoli n cabbage now I’ve started them inside and now there in green house now but there getting huge in there it’s just a small green house hubby just out it up for me a month ago it’s awesome having it, we’ve been redoing all our raised beds mother time got them lol but wasn’t sure about these brassicas I’ve never grown them before everything else I think lol but this is new to me there looking great so far
That is a great question! Typically I don't transplant out until early to mid-April. But it's been so warm, I'm wondering if we could get away with an earlier transplant time. My fear is that it's going to get really cold again. Most brassicas can handle dips into the low 20's (even teens), once they're established. But I would definitely have the frost cloth on hand if you do decide to plant them out. That way you can easily cover them if the weather takes a turn.
I am glad I finally found a gardener from OHIO. I followed many gardeners in the south and all their tips are not working for me. Thanks for all your expertise and I will be here from now on:)
I hope you can find some useful tidbits here!
What am I doing to plan for my spring planting?
Watching Growfully with Jenna on UA-cam and drinking hot tea on a rainy day. ☕️
😊
"Fool's Spring" - Accurate description! I'm in southeast Michigan and yesterday my husband tilled our garden for the first time ever in March. I asked him to bring out some of our lawn chairs and he said absolutely not. We will most likely get snow every day in April. 😆
Thank you for your videos! I appreciate being able to get gardening advice from someone who's in the same grow zone. You've been very helpful.
It's just crazy isn't it?! But I do agree- I think snow in April is highly likely 😆
Last year we had snow on April 29th 2023, I never seen so late snow coming down in Ohio.
You’re a blessing to the Ohio garden community. Thank you for your work!
Thank you so much!
Florida here. We began planting for Spring in December.
And we've given up on the native soil. Everyone has turned to raised beds!
But you know what? It's working! We're getting more food out of a smaller space, with less effort.
Anyway, let's keep it green!:)
More food with less effort sounds like a win to me!
Yes expect more snow. Thanks for this as spring fever is certainly here.
Jenna. This video was a wonderful asset to my garden prep work. I've been growing vegetables in the same area for 50 years and I needed to rethink some things. You're clear, concise and informative message gave me direction. Your work benefits people. Thank you
This is so nice to hear!
Thanks Jenna!
I am in zone 6b(Halifax, Nova Scotia), I started some indoor seeds and planted milkweeds, lupins in my pollinator’s garden 🪴
Thank you Jenna 🍏🍅👵🏻👩🌾
You're welcome!
I am so thrilled to find your channel as a zone 6a gardener in Massachusetts. All of your content has been amazingly helpful so far and getting me so excited for spring!!! Thank you so much! 🌱🪻💜
I'm so glad to hear this- thank you!
This will be my first year growing vegetables in my clay soil. I've been following your advice on starting a new bed. Yesterday I cleaned up the fall cover crop and raked the soil into a bed. The soil already looks 100x better! Can't wait to plant it up!
I've gotten so much accomplished the last couple of weeks with all this warm weather. Laying out new garden beds, amending soil in existing garden beds, mulching all the areas that grass and weeds were taking over last year, and setting up drip irrigation while planting cool season plants and setting up more wintersowing containers for the summer garden. Anything that was a problem before, I'm trying hard to get it all done now so after my LFD all I have to do is plant and harvest.
Watching you work is inspiring. I can't wait to put up a cattle panel this year
You just read my mind! I JUST said I wonder if you had a video on how to prep the garden for Spring and BAM! this was posted only a few minutes ago. ☺️🙌🏾
I'm so glad! And, if you want something that delves into prepping the soil more specifically, I do have this video as well: ua-cam.com/video/WHWSA1QiRm8/v-deo.htmlsi=3HlwS_TxHLc3nVwy 😀
@@GrowfullywithJenna thank you! I’ll go check it out!
Your garden door that your daughter either painted or designed or just helped was beautiful, and perhaps her or your young son that seems to help own your garden might have art talent also.
I watch The Urban Gardener, and you are invited for next Saturday. I'm planning to join in.I told him you are my favorite gardener.
Radishes I'll plant and, as mentioned, a few others
Thanks
Feeling refreshed ❤🏞️🏡
You go girl !
0:12 Love your sense of humour, in Kansas it's basically windy summer and windy winter.
I love that your cattle panels are holders for your landscape staples just like mine are 😆
It's the perfect place to keep them so I don't lose track of them!
Needed a video to watch during lunch... this pops up 32 seconds ago... LETS GOO
She's welcome any time and any day is my thoughts 😅
😄
I've always thought Jenna should be a daily/weekly please? reality channel. Can't get enough! Plus, she's already done it. Watch her older ones. She might motivate me to clean/reorganize my garage which is like her shed. We have so many common issues.
Love this! I was feeling kind of silly for wanting to rearrange my raised beds but the layout was rushed and really isn’t functional. So I’m putting in the work now and hopefully this year’s garden season will be more enjoyable & productive. 😊
I suspect you'll be so much happier with your new layout!
Thanks for all the advice! I'm resurrecting a zone 6b garden after years and years away from it - and I've been super overwhelmed with how to even get started. I really appreciate your clarity and inspiration!
Do one small thing at a time. Before you know it, you're well on your way.
I'm so glad to hear you're coming back to the garden!! And I agree with @honeydew4576-- one small thing at a time!
Here in southern Ohio we’re expanding our garden a lot. I’m also going to be adding a couple cattle panel archways over a couple of my beds. I’ll be using them for baby butternut squash & the other for a few varieties of pole beans.
I’m going to get out there in the beds & start sewing a few things to get a jumpstart. I’m so excited for this time of year!
Sounds lovely!
I spray painted my t posts, cattle panels, and wire fencing black! Loving the way they disappear.
I considered hitting the fencing too... I'll probably not get to it this year, but it's encouraging to hear that you're happy with your results!
What type of paint brand, matt, glossy, etc did you use? I love how black disappears
@@sn232 I used flat black. The exterior cheapest spray at Lowe's. This was three years ago still looks good enough.😊
This is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks for the tips!
Glad it was helpful!
I actually planted peas, carrots, and radishes. I have started kale and even started hardening off onions. Weather looks warm in Virginia through March but I know that can change. I have planted poppies, snap dragons, cilantro and sweet peas too. The garden is all ready - layer of topsoil and compost and new archway. It is always hard oscillating between planting crops outside and still taking care of seedlings inside. So exhausting. I did transplant and split my sedum too. I was so glad to get that done before things got fully underway.
You've been busy! That's awesome!
I'm so in love with it!! your willingness to try is the first step towards making a positive difference, great idea !! 😀😇🤗
Thanks so much! 😊
I'm very jealous of the fact you can lay down plastics and fabrics without it looking like a comedy show as the wind decides to torture you.
Lol
I'm lucky that I can do it here at home-- we're in a protected spot, surrounded on 3 sides by woods/tree line. Not the case at my parents'- where I get exactly what you're saying!!
Dear Jenna. So happy to hear from you. A few thoughts. I'm growing several varieties of gooseberries, but so far they are a pain. Honey berries are intriguing, but little fruit after 4 years. Interesting enough, one of the objects brought back from the Titanic wreckage was a container of goose berries. If your blackberries are of the Darrow variety, forget it . Their thorns are miserable and so consider other varieties. I have been trying to grow grapes for 30 years and the dirty little secret is that "seedless" varieties like Himrod, Mars, St. Teresa , and seedless Concord are not truly seedless at least in their early propagations. I continue to fight the deer, and despite a 7 foot plastic deer fencing and electric fencing I'm go to poultry (chicken wire) and electric fencing. Thank God for my 2 German Shepherds who are doing the best that they can to keep the critters at bey. Kind Regards, as always. Craig
My 20 year old son wants to start a tiny vineyard in our backyard. In southern Ohio, in the country (occasionally see a deer or two). Any suggestions?
We can’t garden without fencing. Totally agree about seedless grapes. I was surprised.
My favorite gooseberry of all time is 'Jeanne'- more disease resistant, fewer thorns and hands-down best flavor. If I had to do it all over again, it's the only variety I'd plant. The others just aren't worth it for me. And that Titanic tidbit is really interesting!
Sorry to hear about the deer-- I'm curious, is your fence just around the garden, or is it encompassing a bigger perimeter?
My deer fencing surrounds my vegetable garden and orchard (30 fruit trees, grapes, gooseberries (Pixwell), Honeyberries, currents, elder berries and mulberries and bee hives. Even though its a combination of electric fencing and strongest plastic from Home Depot (7 feet high), the sun degrades it and the raccoons claws cut thru it. Back to metal fencing and electric fencing, despite the cost (about 400 feet perimeter) Thank you. Craig@@GrowfullywithJenna
Thanks! I’m trying to convince my Father-in-law that we don’t need to till- (he was using a tractor 😳-turning the soil to slate) I have gotten about 1/2 of my rows established- so this video gives me so much ammunition information!
I'm so glad this helps! My dad was a tillage addict too... but I think we've finally turned a corner with him!! Thank you!
Thank you for sharing this post 😊 I subscribed to your channel 🥇
Thank you too!
@@GrowfullywithJenna of course 😁
I just followed your example and made an arched trellis over a path with some old fencing. Hoping to grow cukes on it!
Hello Jenna! I’m in zone 6b south of Pittsburgh! With this nice weather we’ve been having I will clean up my 12 by 16 garden of weeds and put a layer of compost in it. I also have 2 nice size raised garden beds to clean out and get ready for planting when time comes! I started my seeds of herbs(dill, thyme,parsley,rosemary, ) in my basement near a window filled with light!
God bless you I’m a newbie gardener from
Northeast Ohio
And what a blessing to have found your UA-cam channel ❤
Can’t wait to see your Harvest and everything you plan on putting into the ground ..
I don’t have acres but I have a back yard where I can put pots and a couple of raised beds.. what do you recommend me to start seedling ? Thanks so much GBU 😇
So nice of you!
Thanks
You're welcome!
Last week I started kale, spinach, bok choy, variety of lettuce, green onions, dill, and snow peas in my outdoor greenhouse. First attempt at this🤞🏻… and today I started my beets, carrots, and radish in my beds. I don’t have any coverings for my outdoor bed except for frost covers. Trial and error 🙏 your videos have been so helpful for me because I live in zone 6b. Thank you so much!
I am eager to get back in the garden but i am still worried about disturbing our sleeping pollinators, especially since we had that nice weather and now we are back to snow.. Clevelander here. lol I do want to raise our one straight trellis as the peas and beans always outgrow it. So that is on the list to do before next weekend when I plan to plant the peas on St. Patrick's day. I have just got a at home soil test kit and have confirmed my soil in my raised beds is pretty depleted. So I have started accumulating my soil amendments so once its safe to disturb the garden I can amend away and retest the soil before planting.
Hello, Jenna. Don’t know if you’ve already moved your cattle panel trellis, but something to make it easier is to unclip it from the T posts, then get a rope or tie-down strap and run it from one side to the other and give it a snug pull so it’s off of the posts. Now it should hold in its arch and you can allow it to lay down, or simply scoot it out of the way. I’m betting you already know the rest.
My garden is in the process of being rearranged, like some of yours. Black Jewel raspberries are being transplanted to a sunnier spot, and rhubarb is already in its new spot.
Thanks for the video. Always excited to see what you’ve got cookin in the garden.
Oh that is so smart-- I'm so glad you shared this with me!!
Definitely going to be easier than what I probably would have ended up doing 😆
Wish I could claim credit for the idea; I saw the trick on another channel when I was originally looking for trellis ideas. Oh, don’t bend too much or you’ll get a more angled crimp in the apex. Found that out the hard way. 😜
Yesterday I transplanted some broccoli seedlings inside of some wall of waters (after warming the soil with some clear plastic for about a week) and sowed some carrot seeds.
Goofy weather in WI, going to take advantage of it.
You have a gorgeous garden, even in March.
Stay Well!!!
Glad to hear you're taking advantage of the weather!
Hi Jenna! Looks like you've been working hard! I am currently working on a garden expansion and planting several dormant bare root shrubs and a couple fruit trees here in SOMO before real spring hits here! Lots to do! Happy preparations! 😅 💪
Thanks for the tips. I've stopped using plastic row covers since learning more about microplastics in our food. I'm doing everything I can to avoid using plastic in my garden these days.
This was a very timely video! I spent some time today doing some of these same things, including moving some T-posts and sowing my first ever cover crop (the Johnny's Spring cover crop blend). I also started eggplant and peppers, including Gurney's Triple Delight and Perfect Rings. Thanks for those suggestions.
I found some metal zip ties. So far so good after 2 years zone 5 Illinois.
Oh- I need some of those! Where did you find them?
@@GrowfullywithJenna Amazon. Twice the price of plastic but totally worth it.
Golly was it a beautiful day here in southern Ohio!
Yes it was!
We had 74* Sunday. It’s unheard of in upper Midwest. We are warmer most days than west coast.
Still staying with normal transplant dates. I’m not running around covering everything in May. Need to wait. Not sure if I can even do more winter sow. The few I did may have sprouted already. Things are so messed up.
I prepped most beds last fall. Cleaned out coop and threw that on as I won’t be planting for a while. Did little pruning. Need to spray ag oil and copper on fruit trees before they bud, which could be soon with these temps. Threw some lettuce and spinach in under a tote-we will see. Have a few paths to cover in arborist chips. Cleared a bit of vegetation mainly asparagus beds.
Expecting rain, but when aren’t we in this drought. It will not be a downpour I’m sure-.75-1” again, we will see.
😅 just as I said that it’s sprinkling 😂
Just checked and no sprouts in WS -good. Have on east side of house.
Inside I was lazy in setting up heat pads and didn’t daisy chain them to regulator. Note to self to Not do that again. Hope I didn’t cook the seeds now. 😣
Under high fire warnings and I live in gasoline ally. Just seen they contained a fire in S. MN. And the heavy rain is north and SE of us.
I had to move my winter sowings to the shade... they were getting too hot & drying out to quickly!
Thanks Jenna! I can relate to the way you began your video. It's exactly what I'm doing. Fixing my fencing, building my infrastructure, getting the soil and beds ready, and chasing the mice away. I actually planted some arugula, lettuce and radishes last week under plastic and some of the seeds are popping already. Garlic is coming up nicely also. And you're so right about the false spring. I keep telling myself what the date is and not to get too far ahead of myself but can't help trying a few things since its warm right now.
You are keeping busy!!
And I'm with you-- I've had to remind myself every day that it's the only the beginning of March!
I'm near the lake.
I've been tidying up plant matter. I planted peas, carrots, and parsnips today.
A lot of my brassicas have popped up in my winter sowing containers. Once they're bigger, I'll plant them out. I'm waiting a bit longer on potatoes.
I also ordered a raspberry and a grape, which will arrive in a coiple weeks. Very excited for gardening to shift into gear fully!
Sounds like you've got the gardening bug!!
I need to drop 2 trees and turn my tomato trellis into an arch trellis as I am returning to large cages for tomatoes. Add hoops for netting my spring veg bed. Add organic material. Lots to do… but love this time of year! Good to see you!
Sounds like you're keeping busy!
Just what I needed to hear! I’m always afraid to change something thinking it’s so much work, but you have inspired me to try it. Thank you.
Northeast Ohio here! We started cleaning out our raised beds last week. I may have left some parsnips in there all winter 😅 But I’ve got some lovely broccoli and cabbage babies started that I can’t wait to transplant soonish.
Just getting started with a garden this year. I have learned a great deal from your videos in the last few months. Thank you very much for your help
I'm so glad to hear this! Hope your garden does great this year!
Shared some of your beautiful weather…! I put down weed barrier over cardboard in preparation for a wood mulch shipment I’ll be receiving in a few weeks. That’s going to be for walkways and for an area I plan to grow wine cap mushrooms. I also put up a new raised bed since most of my beds now have garlic in them. (I have no place for my onions)
I have 2 more raised beds I can put up and more walkways to prep. One bed will be strictly brassicas and will be covered with netting. That’s the plan for now…
When I saw you sitting by the winter sowing jugs I was hoping for a peek!
Glad to hear you took advantage of the weather too!
And not too much happening in the winter sown jugs yet-- just a few yarrow and thyme sprouts!
Here in the east Texas 8b, I’ve cleared some raised beds and spread shrimp meal to fight root knot nematodes. The onions and potatoes are planted and lots of companion seedlings are ready to pop in everywhere in a few days.
Cool weather crops are still in my greenhouse waiting for a cleared raised bed to go in. So much chick weed to pull!
As always, awesome video. Thanks for sharing. Growing in DE zone 7. Having my morning coffee, then heading out to the garden!!! See you there. Oh my, just noticed...I have the same brown overalls!
Nice-- you have great taste 😄
Nice job! I love the arch and will try it this year!!
Hi Jenna! You gave me a great idea. I have blackberry and raspberry bushes in my garden beds that I need to relocate. Thanks for all you do😊
Central Ohio here - mostly just trying to get a bit ahead of weeds, and planning to trim some of the dead branches from the bottom of our pine trees while it's fairly easy to get to them. After many years of many ways to support tomatoes and vining veggies, this year I will be going back to the vertical trellises made with electrical conduit and netting that I used at my first house over 30 years ago. Also, planning the veggies to grow this year, getting the seeds, and deciding what will go in pots, and what I'll grow in the garden. Front garden needs a complete redo, but still undecided about what I'll do there. Gardens are always changing, aren't they? 🙂
They are always changing! It's one of the best things about gardens 🙂
I like your season list, it’s so true.
Nice warm late “winter” this year. Luckily Its been dry. I’m getting out this week to do my wood chip mulch, cut out wild raspberries, ground Ivy, and trim hedges. And throw down some grass seed. Give my gooseberries, blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries, the usual once a year love and attention and haircut.
Sounds great!
love the video Jenna! May your harvest be blessed!
Thank you!
Great video! I live in southeast Ohio and find your content to be particularly helpful. This year I've sown spinach, mesclun greens. carrot, and radish. But the big project this winter is carving a stream throughout the garden. Maybe this year the plants will get watered! (haha) Thanks So Much!
That is awesome! I'd love to hear how it goes!
I love hearing you say "need fixed" and "need repaired". 😂 People are always trying to correct my grammar when I say things like that and I know they aren't from Ohio/Indiana when they do.
Haha-- gotta love our midwestern 'grammar' 😆. I try to speak properly, but things like that tend to sneak in!
@@GrowfullywithJenna I once did a poll on Instagram and most people from Ohio don't even notice it. It's so normal to us. I only started paying attention to it when people pointed it out to me so many times.
I love regional differences like that.
Do you call a vacuum a sweeper, too?
@threerivershomestead oh that is interesting! And I do call it a sweeper 😆
I'm very seriously getting that itch to get out and plant stuff even though it's still to early. Like you, I'm working on a fairly large sized trellis that will be for growing melons vertically. Right before I start planting I'll probably put in another trellis in the back part of my gardens for gourds and squashes. I'm also debating getting a few trees before dormancy breaks. Other than that, it's seeds in my basement seed starting room and greenhouse.
min 3:25 you spray paint the t post tops and I yell out "YOU ARE MY PEOPLE!!!!!!!!!" YASSSSSS
Appreciated the information.
Happy to share!
Yes that seasonal chart works for us in Michigan too! I got out to the garden last week though and did some clean up as well and think I’m gonna plant some seeds too soon
Last year I trained a young thornless blackberry over a trellis tunnel and it worked great. So much easier to pick and maintain 😊
Ooh- I may have to borrow this idea-- thanks!
so glad you mentioned moving perennials, i need to move a blackberry and some echinacea, thank you, I learned a lot again!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
I was just thinking about your videos today! Thank you so much for posting. I can't wait for spring here in OH.
Happy to share- and best wishes for a great season!
@GrowfullywithJenna do you have any books? If not you should!
Thank you for the great tips! You’re always my go-to when I have questions about gardening!
I'm so glad!
Im in N.Y and today was beautiful. I to am thinking of atleast one or 2 more snow storms. Hope were wrong Jenna. My broccoli, cabbage are under my grow lights. Cauliflower seeds i decided to try to this year. Last year i just planted from seed broccoli and it was amazing. I beat the cabbage moths . Hoping to do the same again this year. Forecast shows alot of rain for the next week.
Honestly- as long as it's just snow and the temps stay in the upper 20's/low 30's, I'll be happy. Those cool season crops can take it. I just hope we don't dip back down to the really frigid temps!
I'm so glad to hear that your broccoli did amazing last year. I hope this year goes great for you!
Missouri too!
Just moved to 23 acres in Zanesville Ohio. Setting up 10 rows that will be 60ft long!
Planted shelling peas, lettuce, and cilantro today. Still need to dig in the row for carrots.
That sounds wonderful!
This is ny first year using spring covercrops! Im also starting onions from seed!
I'm glad to hear that! I hope your onions do great!
Hi Jenna. This year, I put my high tunnels up early
I started my pepper and tomato seeds earlier this year in hopes of an earlier harvest. The tunnels are going to warm up the soil sooner. I really enjoyed your video. Happy gardening.
I keep saying I'm going to do this every year!! I hope you get a great harvest!
So much work! BUT! Oh - the exercise and fresh air and sunshine - and you actually get to watch your work grow and then eat it!
Exactly!
We used the same 4' Rabbit Fencing. I also buried aluminum flashing around the perimeter to provide a rhizome barrier and keep rodents from burrowing under the fence.
Smart idea burying that flashing- in hindsight I wish I would have done something similar.
@@GrowfullywithJenna It can be done afterwards. If the flashing is folded in half (I work at a print shop and use lithoplate) wet ground can be cut upen w/a flat shovel, and the shovel can be used to insert the piece into the opening. I did this when I needed to divert water away from the upper chicken run.
Really like this channel!
I appreciate that!
Jenna i was waiting for u to say what u are planting. So i can get busy doing the same.
Thanking u for a great video..
Central Ohio.
This is definitely "fools spring" in midcoast Maine. I'm going to Jamaica in 10 days and can't wait to get back and start some cool crops going indoors. Also going to make a pretty large growbag area.
Oh wow!! Have fun in Jamaica!
I heard that intro music and was like 'Wait...is this a Ripe Tomato Farm collab?!?'😂
That music is used in lots of the farming/gardening channels I watch. It's probably one of the few available without lots of trouble and expense.
Hi Jenna! Love your videos!! Well i amended garden rows and did some cleaning up but i also went ahead and planted beets, kale, spinach, carrots and lettuce. This is the earliest i have ever planted anything out in the garden so im really excited to see what happens! Next week im thinking about planting peas and turnips. Im Central Ohio area, out in the country.
I hope they do great for you!
3rd year serious food gardening 1st year for garlic and onions planted in fall coming up great. Prepping to get the gardens ready just like you and this vid is PERFECT for dealing w/some of the same issues as you here in PA, including some of the "weeds" herbs popping up that I want to save and the moving of perennials blackberries etc - your digging the gooseberry takes some of the fear out of my raspberry patch which isn't working where it is. THANKS FOR ALL YOUR GREAT INFORMATION!
I'm so happy to hear that your garlic & onions are doing well! And I'm glad you found some useful info here. Best wishes for a great season!
I have been taking advantage of the same weather in Southern Ontario (in 6B as well), dug up some invasive plants, fixing a raised garden bed, and hoping to be able to plant out my brassica seedlings in the next couple of weeks. Keeping my fingers crossed that this really isn't a Fool's Spring 😂 (doubt it)
I started preparing for spring a week ago. In MA we didn't have much of a normal winter this year, but we are not out of the zone until late May
I know what you mean- my last frost date is in mid-May!
Love this video! I need to be doing all of the above, but alas I am nursing an injury that prevents me from doing any heavy work. I have beds to create and reshape, log borders to install, paths to mulch, arches and trellises to build. Even bending is risky, so hopefully I can get this treated soon. In the meantime, at least my indoor starts are all going well.
I hope your injury heals- take care of yourself!
I'm ready to garden! But, alas, I've another month to go before I can start. My soil looks good but is still frozen a few inches down ...and I'm sure we'll get that one last snow dump that nobody ever wants. The "John Deere green" paint might sun-fade, but even if it doesn't, it will still be less noticeable than the white tops. 🌷
I'm sure you're right about that snow! But I hope you are able to get out and play in the dirt soon!
Very informative video! Garden layout is something I definitely wish I would focused on a little more during the beginning stage of my garden
Glad you found it informative!
Looks like your decision to let the garden just die down on its own last fall saved you some time and effort on clean up.
Ah, the Mint planter. AND..., right in the way! Looks like you finally had the scratch the head, “WT# was I thinking?” moment. Yeah, I kept planting more and more tomatoes last year, where I was then stuck squeezing around the tomato cages in order to just get in and out of my garden. 🤯
Dill gets out of control too.
Gardening is addicting! What can you say?
It has! I'm going to do this every year!
I will be pruning my raspberries and blackberries this week, then prepping new beds for them and will transplant them. They are spreading and threatening to take over the entire garden. Last week was the earliest 70 degree day I have experienced in Wisconsin since moving here in 2008. I have lots of other garden infrastructure work to do, so I don't mind if the unusually mild weather continues, provided we don't get a hard freeze in early May when my fruit trees should be blossoming.
Great video, as always. I need to consider that cattle gate at some point in the future for beans.
Great points!
You will have to have 9’ wide paths between your raspberries like Laura 😂😂.
😆
I went out to start planning my garden and discovered my fall planted kale overwintered here in Kentucky. Didn’t know kale could do that. I literally just threw expired seeds on the ground around September and forgot about them. It looks great and tastes sweet. I was pleasantly surprised.
Amazing isn't it. I'm in Lexington and I had celery! make it through the winter not to mention 2 types of parsley that are begging me to eat them. Happy gardening!
What a lovely surprise!
SW Okla. 7B, Have to re-build two raised beds (I built too short) for an arch and moving strawberries. Lining and filling four long raised beds for vegys. I have to through and clean up the rest of the beds for a cut flower garden this year. Lots and lots of weeding.
Sounds like you are keeping busy!
Ive been waiting on a Jenna spring prep video ❤ and LOL at the season.. same here in 5b/6a southern coastal maine… the 10 day forecast is way above average.. and I can get down at least 2 inches in my raised beds.. I may test some things cool.. cool things because Mother Nature 😂
Because Mother Nature... 😂 Exactly!
Great vid nice garden!!!!
Thanks!
Love your vids !! Thank you 😊 ..... I love my zone 6a gardening, northeast ohio !!!! 😊
Hooray for Ohio gardening!!
Hi Jenna I m in Ohio also so it’s ok to plant broccoli n cabbage now I’ve started them inside and now there in green house now but there getting huge in there it’s just a small green house hubby just out it up for me a month ago it’s awesome having it, we’ve been redoing all our raised beds mother time got them lol but wasn’t sure about these brassicas I’ve never grown them before everything else I think lol but this is new to me there looking great so far
That is a great question! Typically I don't transplant out until early to mid-April. But it's been so warm, I'm wondering if we could get away with an earlier transplant time. My fear is that it's going to get really cold again. Most brassicas can handle dips into the low 20's (even teens), once they're established. But I would definitely have the frost cloth on hand if you do decide to plant them out. That way you can easily cover them if the weather takes a turn.
It’s so nice to have found you!I’m from Illinois and am loving this weather but know we’ll get ajmother snow 😅. Love your tip with the cilantro! 😊
Let's enjoy it while we can!!