7 Perennial Crops You Can Harvest for Years!
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- Опубліковано 12 лип 2024
- #vegetablegarden #permaculture #gardening
Perennial Tree Collards Video: • These Tree Collards Ca...
Kaleidoscopic Kale: onegreenworld.com/product/hom...
Kosmic Kale: territorialseed.com/products/...
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Thanks, Sis! Your videos are always informative and right on point! I can’t wait to get your book 💚
Glad you enjoyed sis! Thank you 😍
We grow sunchokes on the regular. We ferment them to decrease the bloated it gives us. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you! I need to try fermenting them. ☺️
@@LearnToGrow1 taste so much better 😋
@@TheNakidGardeners I bet! 😋
I have never tried to ferment them. Great idea. Thank you.
I really loved your picks I need to start growing these more! Thank you also for showing wonderful tips on them and harvest was so beautiful. Nice owl 🦉 so beautiful.
Glad you enjoyed it! You’re welcome and thank you for watching. The owl is absolutely stunning! Love it!
Thank you! Really helpful, simple and fun!
You’re welcome, Marcia! Thanks for watching!
Tree collards and kale's all well and good. Thing is, I can't picture a weasel raiding your farm. Any chickens in back? I'm kidding you, LTG. We love you!
Lol 😂 Thank you for the love! Love you all too 😍
Thank you for sharing, I enjoyed the video.
You’re welcome! Glad to hear and thanks for watching!
Thank you it’s a wonderful video!! 🤗🦋👏🏻
You’re welcome and glad you enjoyed! Thanks for watching!
Excellent. ..thank you
You’re welcome and thanks for watching!
Very informative thanks
You’re welcome! Thanks for watching!
Great video! I have all of these but perennial kale which I need now thanks lol. I got another few for you asparagus, turkish rocket, and good king henry.
Thank you! We have asparagus, but have had bad luck with animals digging up the roots and I sowed Good King Henry a few weeks ago. I was reading about Turkish rocket last month! Wish me luck, thanks again!
I live in Texas. When people talk about hardiness, I wish they'd give the high temp as well as the low temp. I ask "can it live in 105 degrees?" much more often than "will it die in 32 degrees?"
Hi Christopher, Some cool crops can tolerate warm temperatures as well such as collards, kale and some lettuce varieties. Jerusalem artichoke can be grown in your climate as an annual. Walking onion is native to India and Pakistan so it is heat-tolerant. Oca is native to the Andes, South America and can tolerate some heat like potato, but grows best during cool months. Scarlet runner bean is heat-tolerant, but plant it late winter or early spring before the heat so the flowers don't fall.
nice video friend 👍👍👍
Thank you!
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I liked and Subbed. I plan on having a few Secret Gardens in the Mountainous Desert.
Thank you! Just saw your response on the thread. It must be beautiful and peaceful out there. Have you assessed the soil for fertility?
@@LearnToGrow1 No. I plan to make it Fertile.
@@theworldwelivein482 Nice!
Nice
Thank you 😊
@@LearnToGrow1 anytime. Got some good news I got some brand-new molds in the mail
Sunchokes also grow perfectly in zones 9 and 10
Hi, I have a question about perennial kale, I just got some seeds and have a few Perennial Cottage Kale plants. Do they ever die back and grow again or they keep their leaves the whole year? In addition, I have forming roots in my pot, 3 cuttings of tree kale and wondering how far apart I should plant them.
I have an orchard and I am considering transplanting them there this fall.
Thanks
I'm curious, do you give away a lot of your harvest, or does your family consume all of it? Really informational, I've always been confused on what perennial meant, now I know they are just plants that come back every year.
Hi we share with friends and family. ☺️
Thank you for showing us your plantation. Cuold you tell us in what zone are your perennials?
Hi Cecilia, You're welcome! I'm in zone 8b. Thanks for watching!
I have tried sunchokes and the kale and tree collards , the onions and the sorrel and also Oca and beans and many others , I think pest are my problem gophers are the worst . I did not have much luck I’m going to try again but they are all hard to find to purchase .I live in Central California . Any help please let me know .
I liked it. Are these 2 Kale varieties the only perennial plants in PNW? What about Russian purple kale? It is quite tender than other ones.
Hi Angela, Love Russian kale, but it’s a biennial. I sometimes let one plant self-sow in a raised bed. We love volunteer kale especially the baby leaves. I’ve had a curly variety live for five years awhile ago and a dino kale lived for over two years.
As far I know these kale hybrids are the only perennial ones besides seakale which is a different genus or group within the cabbage family.
@@LearnToGrow1 thank you. I would try to find these 2 kales.
@@angelaa7616 Project Tree Collard sells the Kosmic one I believe or similar. One Green World Nursery sells the Kale Grex seeds. :)
@@angelaa7616 Hi Angela, Here are some links: store.experimentalfarmnetwork.org/products/kaleidescope-perennial-kale-grex
Kaleidoscopic kale: onegreenworld.com/product/homesteaders-kaleidoscopic-perennial-kale-grex/
Kosmic Kale: territorialseed.com/products/kale-kosmic
Interesting video. My kale plants were torn out of the ground by the storm last week. they were beautiful but top heavy. I wish I'd seen this video before i tore everything out of my bed. My favorite of everything are the scarlet runner beans.. I just pulled those up too. LOL All of my kale had white bugs all over them. How do you take care of that and how do you decide whether to eat them or not? Planning for next year with your help. Thanks.
Gordon, what you're describing sounds to me like white flies. Brassicas unfortunately attract pretty much every insect pest, and the first line of defense would be fabric row covers.
Another option is organic insecticidal spray, which is what I do. The recipe I use is this:
1 quart filtered water
1/8 cup Dr. Woods Peppermint Castille Soap
1/8 cup Dr. Woods Tea Tree Castille Soap
1/2 cup 70% isopropyl alcohol
1.5 tsp 1% hydrogen peroxide
@@Jeff-rd6hb Cool. I actually have all that stuff in my house except for the tea tree soap. Thanks so much. Next year I'm going to arrange my garden a little differently so I can keep on top of the brassicas more easily.
Did your runner beans have tubers? I use Neem oil solution or insecticidal soap as a last resort. We have minimal insect pest issues…build the soil and it will help plants develop, become healthy and build immunity. Insects are typically not attracted to healthy plants. Stressed plants exude plant juices (proteins, sugars) which attract pests. We generally use compost and worm castings.
@@Jeff-rd6hb Thank you, Jeff. Is it a preventive spray or a treatment?
@@angelaa7616 I'd call it a treatment as I don't use it unless I have to. I prefer to not spray anything.
I can’t grow kale outside of my covered house because the brassica moths will Swiss cheese them...how do you manage to keep these alive out in the open?
Hi, I usually inspect the plants for eggs in spring and summer on the underside of the leaves as well as for any larvae. Works well as a preventative measure. Growing brassica with flatter leaves instead of the very curly types are much easier to inspect for pests.
Im from the philippines, where can I get the seeds?