Full Garden Tour | Self Sufficient Vegetable Garden - almost! (June 2022)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • Full Garden Tour | Self Sufficient Vegetable Garden - well, almost! (June 2022) Recommended video to watch next • How to Fill a Deep Rai... How to Fill a Deep Raised Bed | Hugelkultur style raised bed gardening.
    Order my first book, Grounded at bytherfarm.com... or on Amazon amzn.to/3dSE9Gn (affiliate link)
    Subscribe to our newsletter here bit.ly/2qbsdY5
    Find Byther Farm merch at byther-farm-me...
    You can support this channel on Patreon at / lizzorab
    or
    by using an affiliate link when you shop. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
    UK www.amazon.co....
    USA Amazon Storefront www.amazon.com...
    About Us.
    Byther Farm is a small organic homestead, being designed and managed using permaculture practices. We aim for self-sufficiency in fruit and vegetables for increased self reliance and better resilience to the modern world. I recognise that we are unlikely to be truly self sufficient, but do the best we can. I share our home with my loving husband, Mr J and our cat, Monty.
    We are a fifty-something couple who live on a smallholding in Carmarthenshire, Wales. We are going green and creating a gentler, cleaner and more healthy life for our family.
    Having had a highly successful smallholding in Monmouthshire, we hope to recreate the abundance at our new home. There will be a large organic kitchen garden with no dig gardening raised beds and young food forest in which to grown our fruit and vegetables.
    We keep a few sheep and Aylesbury ducks.
    Music
    'Breathe' by Kafkadiva. www.kafkadiva.com
    Other music by www.EpidemicSound.com
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 114

  • @LizZorab
    @LizZorab  2 роки тому +3

    Recommended video to watch next ua-cam.com/video/cJ6pufu9lsY/v-deo.html How to Fill a Deep Raised Bed | Hugelkultur style raised bed gardening.

    • @ShiningStarsOfficial77
      @ShiningStarsOfficial77 2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for sharing

    • @exeterbeekeeper
      @exeterbeekeeper 2 роки тому +1

      I have done my own version of this. It will great to compare notes. When starting with a lot of new raised beds this is a useful way on saving on soil and compost in the short term

  • @ShiningStarsOfficial77
    @ShiningStarsOfficial77 2 роки тому +5

    I really enjoyed and want to appreciate your effort. I am sure so many people will get benefits from it and will learn from you. It is very important to grow vegetables and eat fresh. It is also good for stress and mental health problems. My parents also very good in growing vegetables.
    Best wishes from Aberdeen

  • @karenw9996
    @karenw9996 2 роки тому +4

    Always a joy to watch your gardens progress. What's especially fun is that there seem to be a lot of plants grown in the UK that aren't popular in the US, so I'm always learning about new things I might try. I've learned skirret doesn't grow in my zone, and although I had heard hollyhocks are edible & medicinal, I have never heard HOW you eat them until you mentioned the small flower buds. Mine self-seed and are quite prolific - I would guess easily 75 plants (in a 2500 sq. ft. area), mostly edging my patio and on the dirt pile formed when scraping away topsoil before pouring the concrete for the patio. I'd never tried digging them up but they overran my strawberries this year, so I dug up and gave away nine plants. Most exciting, I have people waiting on seeds in a few months - some will go to the oldest continuously operated family farm (6 generations, I believe) in a neighboring state, and some will go to a woman in Alabama who has been unsuccessful growing them (I'm hoping the vigor of self-seeded-more-than-20-years plants will grow for her). It would be lovely to live in the UK and be able to visit your acreage, and attend classes that you offer, but at least I can see it virtually.

  • @tonymatthews445
    @tonymatthews445 2 роки тому +3

    Awesome
    FYI - my garlic also had rust. My first lot of early potatoes are on my plate, but my courgettes are tiny :(

  • @michelleadams2997
    @michelleadams2997 2 роки тому +2

    Not many cabbage whites in my garden either, I’m in the midlands, bit worrying really

  • @Peterharte73
    @Peterharte73 2 роки тому +2

    New garden coming along nicely Liz
    It's alot of hard work but worth it 👍

  • @King_of_carrot_flowers
    @King_of_carrot_flowers 2 роки тому +2

    The Cantebury bells will will be biennial. If you want a perennial campanula for cut flowers, go with the Campanula perscifolia or C. glomerata

    • @LianaHappens
      @LianaHappens 2 роки тому

      Brilliant name! Signed Neutral Milk Hotel.❤️

  • @izzywizzy2361
    @izzywizzy2361 2 роки тому +3

    You are amazingly organised and effective in carrying out your vision! I am in awe

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      Thank you so much for your kindness. I don't feel as organised as it looks 😂

  • @leatonveg
    @leatonveg 2 роки тому +2

    Looking great. Kind of garden I’m aiming for

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +2

      It doesn't take long to make - thankfully!

  • @carlyamandaart
    @carlyamandaart 2 роки тому +1

    It’s all looking amazing Liz. We had our first cabbage white butterflies this week, here in East Anglia, so they could be with you soon! X

  • @lynnpurfield9430
    @lynnpurfield9430 2 роки тому +1

    The garden is looking so good already Liz.
    We still haven't seen cabbage whites yet. June is usually a busy time for them and we have had lots of sunshine.

  • @LianaHappens
    @LianaHappens 2 роки тому +1

    Liz, I loved the memories of your dad and the socks-very much. I think it’s magic that you’re walking around in your own gardens, wearing dad’s socks. I wonder if it wouldn’t be a great gift for your children to write some of those pieces of your history somewhere.❤️

  • @jamellakhanworrell904
    @jamellakhanworrell904 2 роки тому +1

    Liz, no one would know that this is a new garden that you started. Everything looks so beautiful and healthy!

  • @emdorris3319
    @emdorris3319 2 роки тому +1

    Liz, it looks so great with the wood chips down in your paths. It is very pretty.

  • @barbarahimmelbauer-mayer340
    @barbarahimmelbauer-mayer340 2 роки тому +2

    Your garden comes along really beautifully! I especially like the mixture of vegetables and flowers!

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thank you so much 😊 The mix means we are already getting pollinators visiting the garden - yay!

  • @redsoilgardener
    @redsoilgardener 2 роки тому +1

    What an awesome garden Liz. Well organised too..

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thanks so much! 😊

  • @jaysea4916
    @jaysea4916 2 роки тому +1

    Best video ever! The garden looks amazing!

  • @ecocentrichomestead6783
    @ecocentrichomestead6783 2 роки тому +1

    Red Acre - That's the red cabbage I have. I like it!

  • @Mountainviewfarm2022
    @Mountainviewfarm2022 2 роки тому +1

    Everything looking great liz 😍 👌

  • @ninjabrown8560
    @ninjabrown8560 2 роки тому +2

    hi there! i've been loving your videos :) if i may ask, how many hours would you say you spend a week working on your vegetable garden for it to be truely productive? i know it's kinda how long is a piece of string question but im just curious because i would love to be 90% self sufficient from my vegetable garden one day but i dont know if its possible with a full time job. Thank you for any help :)

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +2

      The setting up phase, making the raised beds etc. has taken quite a bit of time. After it's ready, the planting, weeding and care etc. probably about 2-4 hours a week. The harvesting and preparing it for storage, on the other hand, can take quite a lot of time, depending on how you preserve it (bung in the freezer is fastest!). I work full-time creating videos and writing, so the garden has to work around those hours, but because I work for myself, I can choose those hours to fit in with my gardening. 😃🌼🌻

  • @lynmaunsell4062
    @lynmaunsell4062 2 роки тому +2

    Gosh, you’ve got so much growing after being there for only a short time. Lovely to see it all.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thanks so much! 😊

  • @judifarrington9461
    @judifarrington9461 2 роки тому +1

    Your garden is so beautiful!! I appreciate your sharing how you keep Monty out of your beds. We recently got two new kittens, and well, you know how it is. Lol. Thanks for the ideas!

  • @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho
    @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho 2 роки тому +1

    Quite nice!❤️

  • @gardenonthemoors
    @gardenonthemoors 2 роки тому +1

    Loads growing amazingly! I think a lot of people are noticing fewer butterflies this year, we also haven't had any cabbage whites and are further south than yourself.

  • @jennyjohnson9012
    @jennyjohnson9012 2 роки тому +1

    It all looks brilliant Liz. I always think its fun when you put something in and it comes up as something else!! My failures are always beetroot and radish. One just doesnt get a decent size and the other is always woody. Any tips? I mix flowers with my veg same as you, its so good for pollinators and looks wonderful. Another great video!

  • @nenemaria-cornfieldsgarden
    @nenemaria-cornfieldsgarden 2 роки тому +1

    Everything is filling in great! Love the mix of edibles and flowers, it looks so bright and cheerful. I've not seen any cabbage whites yet this year either, I don't know if they're late or not but I'm sure we'll all be overrun soon haha.

  • @annlewis7279
    @annlewis7279 2 роки тому +1

    I have only seen the occasional cabbage white in my garden in Georgia, USA. They seem to show up every 2 weeks for about two days.

  • @cadalot58
    @cadalot58 2 роки тому +1

    I love the way you mix up your beds, I tend to have beds of a particular plants and I rotate the layout year on year. This year I've made a couple of Square Foot Gardening Beds and I'm trying to do more of the type of planting up you are doing with mixing things up a bit. So wish I had made my Asparagus beds high and like yours to keep the weeds down to a minimum.

  • @anapaulacrawford5837
    @anapaulacrawford5837 2 роки тому +1

    Such a beautiful garden ypu have ! Everything looks so good . God bless.

  • @missourigirl4101
    @missourigirl4101 2 роки тому +1

    You are doing fantastic things in the garden. I’m amazed how fast you guys are doing all this. Wow!

  • @delphinium5555
    @delphinium5555 2 роки тому +1

    So enjoyed seeing so much accomplished in just a year. It's lovely to see in detail what is in each bed, thank you.

  • @sarah369.
    @sarah369. 2 роки тому +1

    💚Peace joy kindness to everyone listening and Liz 🕊🇬🇧

  • @JanesGrowingGarden
    @JanesGrowingGarden 2 роки тому +2

    I love the fact you have so much going on in each bed - now I know why Mr J finds it difficult to understand your planning! Looking forward to seeing next month's tour already - it's going to be glorious!

    • @ShiningStarsOfficial77
      @ShiningStarsOfficial77 2 роки тому +2

      Oh yes, I am very excited for the next month tour as well. Her garden is fantastic.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thanks Jane, I do love the look of a neat veg bed, but I like the chaos and jumbly mix of flowers and leaves too. I know which the wildlife prefers 🌻🍆🌼🍓

  • @rachalnocchi5600
    @rachalnocchi5600 2 роки тому +2

    Your beds look wonderful! I am rather new to gardening and one lesson I learned the hard way is that in my area (Georgia, USA) I need to plant brassicas in the fall for a winter crop. Our spring and summer are just way too hot! I have watermelons, zucchini, peppers and tomatoes going. My herb garden bed is doing wonderful this year! I have sweet mint, oregano, lemon thyme, basil, and bee balm. Not a ton going on, but things I can handle in our intense heat and humidity. ❤

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      I've heard that it gets incredibly hot in Georgia - not something that happens here very often!

    • @rachalnocchi5600
      @rachalnocchi5600 2 роки тому

      @@LizZorab Yes ma'am it sure does! Typical for this time of year is 34C (95F) with about 40 to 55% humidity. Ugh!

  • @ShiningStarsOfficial77
    @ShiningStarsOfficial77 2 роки тому +3

    Keep sharing your good work with us please

  • @josephinecronin1195
    @josephinecronin1195 2 роки тому +1

    We haven’t had any cabbage whites yet either

  • @theclumsyprepper
    @theclumsyprepper 2 роки тому +1

    Your garden looks amazing Liz. Mine is a disaster - it's so cold and wet most of the plants fail to grow. Seems like I will only have onions, garlic, cabbages, apples and some potatoes this year.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      It is cold and wet, see my video from two weeks ago in which I talk about this very thing 😃 Gardens usually catch up - usually!

  • @sandideak4125
    @sandideak4125 2 роки тому +1

    Lovely garden tour, Liz! You are such an inspiration! Thank you!💖

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thank you so much Sandi!

  • @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead
    @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead 2 роки тому +1

    A little tip on the swede (rutabaga)...because I was terrible at growing them as well. They just like being left alone, not fussed over, and when you think they're not going to get bigger, they do. I plant them less than the required depth and then thin them to where there's about 6 - 8 inches apart (not the required huge space it says) and they LOOOOOOOOVE water. The more water, the better. I add a little soil up around their root when they get about 6 inches tall and if they look leggy from time to time, I keep doing it, but not much. You don't want to cover where the leaves split off the root. I've figured out kohlrabi are about the same. I love your channel btw. If I had the chance, I'd jump pond in a heartbeat.

  • @bertibear1300
    @bertibear1300 2 роки тому +1

    My garlic is covered in rust too.

  • @gardentothekitchenwithtracy
    @gardentothekitchenwithtracy 2 роки тому +1

    Your garden looks lovely liz,I also have no luck growing swede but still keep trying.Thank you for all the tips I love watching thanks.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks Tracy, your plot looks fabulous too!

  • @andrewferguson7762
    @andrewferguson7762 2 роки тому +1

    thanks for the video I learned loads, never ever heard of Yacon, would like to know more, thoroughly intrigued

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      I have a video coming very soon with more details about yacon and other perennial veg.

  • @matthewphillips778
    @matthewphillips778 2 роки тому +1

    Have just planted asparagus as well and Swedes and turnips. Your garden is looking great.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thank you! Now we both have that long wait until we can harvest any asparagus 🌿

  • @pennythompson4790
    @pennythompson4790 2 роки тому +1

    It all looks greatxx

  • @casey2401
    @casey2401 2 роки тому +1

    Precious Liz, you are a treasure as always. You teach & lead with such value & strength. I must tell you that you’re also a soothing soul.
    I like to play your videos (as I was this one) as calming background sounds. Charles Dowding’s another gem I can do this with. Thank you for sharing & always wishing ya’ll much love & abundance in life. ✌🏻🖤✨

  • @adinanicolae9774
    @adinanicolae9774 2 роки тому +1

    Hi, this year I have a passion for beans, especially runner beans. I am curious If You found out in the meantime what kinds of runner beans can we overwinter. Watching your videos, I saw that You love greek Gigantes, and I went to a lot of trouble to get some seeds, I ordered from Ukraine (🙃) hoping The package will arrive and risking to lose money, because of the war, and then I went to the store ( Mega image) where they have also some greek products, and I found the greek Gigantes, by 500g for so much less money! (0,17 GBP în your money, I live in Romania) I tried with them, soaked them in water and planted them all around the yard! ( I can fool around as I want with 500g soaked beans!! 😀) They grow well, I have them on the fence, the soil is bad, but i am working on it. I am very anxious to see the results, the crop in the end. Thank You for the tip! And the question: do they overwinter? Do You know what sortiments do overwinter? Please let me know! Have a nice day!

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      Hi Adina, runner beans can overwinter depending on where you are in the world. Here in UK, cut them back at the end of the season and leave about 4-6 inches of stem above the soil. Then give them a nice mulch of compost or used animal bedding (about 4 inches). In early June, move the mulch away from the stems and they often, but not always, regrow. I quite often think that they won't regrow, but they are later to appear than you might think, so don't give up on them until late June or mid July.

    • @adinanicolae9774
      @adinanicolae9774 2 роки тому

      Do the greek Gigantes overwinter?

  • @jeannettedsouza1410
    @jeannettedsouza1410 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for this beautiful video dear Liz and for the valuable information that you always provide🤩💐. Please could you advise what is the best food for brassicas, beans and potatoes please, I am growing organic and although not in a rush to see them grow bigger yet I want them to grow tasty. Last year my broccoli and potato did not have much taste into them although they looked really very good. Besides mulch could you kindly advice what are the better ways to feed the plants. Thank you. 🙏🏼

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Homemade compost is the best food for almost everything!

    • @jeannettedsouza1410
      @jeannettedsouza1410 2 роки тому +1

      @@LizZorab thanks dear Liz🙏

  • @KH-nn6kh
    @KH-nn6kh 2 роки тому +1

    Perhaps there were videos about the raised beds, but I could not find them. I know a HUGE and basic topic. I am trying to repair/build garden beds that are neglected, rotting and falling apart, in my parents garden. I am now caring for my Mom who has Alzheimer. I don't have lots of tools. What to consider in building raised beds, including to your hoops and trellis, for climbing veg. Compost and soil a later topic. Perhaps too late this year. But again, a topic of maybe some crop not too late.. and How to prepare for next year.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      There are several videos showing how I made the various different raised beds and repaired others. I'll try to put them all in a playlist and then I'll share the link with you.

    • @KH-nn6kh
      @KH-nn6kh 2 роки тому

      Ahh, thank you so very much! Too kind!

  • @fivetopsfarm8061
    @fivetopsfarm8061 2 роки тому +1

    It's looking fabulous Liz!!

  • @chrisfiller465
    @chrisfiller465 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Liz, loving you garden and all of you vids. Tell me what you would use bergamot for please? Never grown it so don’t know much about it.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      I use it in flower arrangements, pot pourri and you can use it to add to infusions (it's the floral scent in Earl Grey tea). Above all, the leaves just smell amazing when you brush against them in the garden and the flowers are incredibly pretty.

    • @billiverschoore2466
      @billiverschoore2466 2 роки тому

      and Monarda fistulosa is the medicinal one, very easy to grow from seed 🍀

  • @yeschefeastmidlands5503
    @yeschefeastmidlands5503 2 роки тому

    Hi Liz I love your videos as always,your such an inspiration .I was wondering what Camera and mic you use for your videos?

  • @bristolveggiebeds5310
    @bristolveggiebeds5310 2 роки тому +1

    Lovely lupins

  • @grinnygroggs
    @grinnygroggs 2 роки тому +1

    Could you show a flower bed made up entirely of vegetables you’ve grown for their flowers instead of their produce? It would be so Interesting to see the flowers of different plants you usually perhaps pull out of the ground!

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +1

      Hi Ingrid, the closest that I have is a video I made in 2020 showing how I've mixed lots of vegetables and herbs into an ornamental bed. ua-cam.com/video/vrgXCNeRfPA/v-deo.html

    • @grinnygroggs
      @grinnygroggs 2 роки тому

      @@LizZorab that’s what inspired my question 💚 it was great, thank you

  • @carolinegray1711
    @carolinegray1711 2 роки тому +1

    lovely tour

  • @lamperdsfield
    @lamperdsfield 2 роки тому +1

    I’m growing chard for the first time, but I don’t like the taste. Any tips on how to use it in the kitchen?

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +2

      Use small leaves (up to 4 inches long) in salads. I remove the green leafy bit from the larger stems, chop the stems and then roast them in a tray of mixed vegetables - it has quite an earthy taste, but if you like beetroot, then you might like the roasted stems. The larger leaves I have to disguise in food - stir fry type meals - because I don't like the taste of it much either. I think it's much better as a baby leaf, but the plants are so fantastic when they go to seed that they are worth having in the garden.

    • @lamperdsfield
      @lamperdsfield 2 роки тому

      @@LizZorab thanks, will try as baby leaves with salads 😊

  • @suzannerobinson6086
    @suzannerobinson6086 2 роки тому +1

    Your garden is coming along beautifully.👍😊

  • @pnwgardenergal1325
    @pnwgardenergal1325 2 роки тому +1

    Question about your Yacon. Do your Yacon Winter over in the ground ?

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому +2

      No, I treat it as a tender perennial, lift the tubers once the foliage has blackened and store in a cool place, then start them off in pots in the spring to plant out when frost is past.

    • @pnwgardenergal1325
      @pnwgardenergal1325 2 роки тому

      @@LizZorab Thank you !

  • @stevendowden2579
    @stevendowden2579 2 роки тому +1

    all looking great liz

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thank you Steven. I'm so pleased that I filmed yesterday because it's been raining pretty much all day here today!

  • @julieanderson5184
    @julieanderson5184 2 роки тому +1

    Lovely!

  • @missourigirl4101
    @missourigirl4101 2 роки тому

    Liz- where did you get your little bed hoops and coverings? So cool and I need some

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      MDPE piping from a builders merchant and scaffold debris netting or soft butterfly netting (needs to be butterfly netting, not bird netting).

  • @Hhaahland4
    @Hhaahland4 2 роки тому +1

    Hi Liz what is the plant with the tall orange spires in bed #7?

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      It's an Eremurus, the variety is either Cleopatra or Pinokkio (I have both and I'm not sure which it is).

    • @Hhaahland4
      @Hhaahland4 2 роки тому

      That was a quick answer, thank you.

    • @Hhaahland4
      @Hhaahland4 2 роки тому

      Life is full of bizarre coincidences…. I’d just been looking for Foxtail Lily seeds online today and turns out their botanical name is Eremurus 😁 Didn’t know they came in orange.

    • @billiverschoore2466
      @billiverschoore2466 2 роки тому

      E. 'Cleopatra' grows to 2m...

  • @ceedee2570
    @ceedee2570 2 роки тому

    WOW, it is looking so tidy and lovely. You inspire me.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      Thanks so much 😊 It won't stay looking that tidy for long! I'll be pleased when the flowers start self-seeding all through the paths and the perennial veg are bursting out of the beds.

    • @ceedee2570
      @ceedee2570 2 роки тому

      @@LizZorab I think of that as gardening serendipity.

  • @ohmystarnes8199
    @ohmystarnes8199 2 роки тому +1

    Hello. With the leeks. Do you push in the soil around the plant after putting in the hole? Or is there a reason you didn’t mention that? Not being facetious I just transplanted my leeks and I’m wondering if I did something wrong.

    • @LizZorab
      @LizZorab  2 роки тому

      You can push the soil into the hole, but you don't need to because the water will push a little in and the loose soil makes it easier for the leek to grow wide as well as tall.