I’ve noticed lately that my mindset has changed around this. I’ve shifted from thinking that I’m building a food forest to more of a forest with benefits. It’s become less about me and more about the creatures. I’ve turned from a farmer to a caretaker. And that’s the true worth of permaculture.
I stopped worrying about watering my plants and instead worry about the bird baths and water bowls being full for the critters. Semi arid environment means they have a hard time finding water but permaculture is making my yard into an oasis for them
I eat rose petals, especially, I throw them into smoothies. Apparently, their vitamin C levels and nutrient profiles are quite high. And once, I made candied dehydrated rose petals (with maple syrup), and it made for a unique yummy treat! But way too much work for me to bother getting that fancy with them again :-D
Hey man, just wanted to say I appreciate your videos. They got me to start gardening this year, with some blueberries, raspberry canes, service berries and herbs. Starting slow but it's been very satisfying!
Always thank you for your videos! I prefer to listen to you talk, im still learning and it helps me identify or get familiar with all the greens. Amazing job you’ve done!
Rose petal jelly, with the petals in, is fan-freakin'-tastic!!! It's usually made from "rose otto", but rogosa is nummy too. It's very aromatic and as fragrant as can be, when you open a jar, you instantly know it's rose.
Amazing creation of life-giving areas! I love it & it is so enchanting! My little wild gardens give me joy, too! Goji berry didn’t survive the lawn turned to gardens but I shall try again! Thanks & blessings to all 🤗🇨🇦
Great choice for the new raised beds location. This is the first year that I’ve got pawpaws on one of my nine pawpaw trees. It was really loaded and I, like you, wondered if I needed to thin or if nature would take care of it. There was a decent amount of “June drop” but still seems to be quite a lot left for the first year of fruiting. I’m not going to mess with it because I want to see if nature knows best. I will use the results from this year to gauge my thinning activities in the future. Thanks for another amazing video!
Nothing quite like chewing a sorrel leaf! Thank you for the tour - exciting times as everything starts fruiting - even if old pupster pinches the strawberries!
Lovely tour. Walking my garden and forest is something I too enjoy. I walk in there probably 3 or 4 times each day. Average. Watching everything going about the business of living is always a pleasure. You have taught me so much too. I now have named guilds. Love the guild concept.
Thanks a lot for your once again brilliant and beautiful video !!! Do this every 2..3 weeks, I love it ! All the best to you, to your family and the food forest, Thank you.
I have been obsessed with paw paw ever since I first tasted them. Lots of babies on my trees this year. Can't wait to start the harvest. I'm a little jelly about your lovely pond 😉. You have created a wonderful place 👍👏
Taquito looks amazing. And everything eaten while grazing seems to taste that much better. Also, here, here! to Sorrel. I don't get why in the world Sorrel is not a staple in grocery stores and plant stores along with lettuce and spinach. Why/how has this amazing green been so largely ignored in North America? .....The forest looks great!👏👏👏
I didn't know you could eat the sweet potato greens ! Beautiful food forest!! And cute bench hidden in with the plants 😊 i want to try making sumac lemondade i need to try that
In Japanese garden design, there are concepts around having straight vs. curved paths. There is work being done on integrating food forests with time tested aesthetic principles.
Rose petal tea - loaded with several vitamins (lower than hips in C, but still a good source) and other nutrients (quercetin). Good for skin (moisturizing, but also helps with acne) and women's health (cramping & flow), hair (growth & condition). Can also use the tea as a wash to sooth sunburn.
Also, dried petals can be mascerated in honey then filtered out after a few weeks. Or you can make rose petal syrop like you would make a elderflower syrop
I heard that unwashed greens is also a supply of trace amounts of Vitamin B12 (I think I remember correctly that it is contained in those little microscopic creatures found in raindrops). However, yes. Do check over your leaves before eating - to ensure no bird poop, no slugs (Rat Plague), and no Seed Ticks (I don't know about anywhere else, but in my part of Britain, we call the baby ticks Seed Ticks). Despite all that, I do eat the occasional unwashed green leaves - now that I don't have a dog marking his territory all over the place. I love Coltsfoot, just as a plant in itself. I don't eat it, but I have eaten Coltsfoot rock (a sort of sweet/candy made in the UK, which is now incredibly hard to find). I had to give it a couple of attempts to get it growing in my garden, but once I established it in one patch, it popped up elsewhere. I freeze the petals from my Scotch Briar roses (being biased, I think Scotch Briar is the best of scented wild roses), and I add them to rose hip jams (chuck them into the boiling jam mixture 15 minutes before it's finished). When you open the jar of jam, you get a hit from the scent of the petals, and the jam has the taste of the heps. I was going to get a dog, but I'm now trying to hatch some ducks. So I won't get a dog. My old dog would have had them in a heartbeat, and I need to ensure my husband learns to 'shut the gate!' (Grrrrr!) after himself to stop the neighbour's dog from getting in, as she killed all her owner's poultry and chickens belonging to another neighbour. I've secured all fencing around the property perimeter, putting in baffles up to 6 feet high, but just have to make it plain to my husband that simply 'saying' that neighbours dogs won't bother walking through the open front gate is purely 'wishful thinking,' it doesn't make it a reality.
😂 It’s ok you talked all the way through our peaceful walk through. Just ate our first peach today. It’s the only one as something sneakily ate the rest. Like some evil magician lurking. 😱 😢 🦌
Great work!! Would love to see pictures from before, during and after the work on the pond. It looks like it was already there.. or at least part of it🤔
My dog is the reason I didn't get chickens after my move. In the old house, his highest goal in life was to catch the chickens. I invested in good fencing, of course, but he'd still run around the perimeter and scare the crap out of them just for fun! But the difference between my chicken-obsessed dog and yours is that mine is enormous (>50 kg), so killing a chicken is easy for him.
It's quite an invasive weed here in Southern Ontario, so if you're lucky you might already have it. It grows absolutely everywhere in the local forests and conservation areas. Just make sure to do your research before planting it on purpose. 👍
@@KimblesTheBrave Garlic mustard keeps other plants from growing in the soil where it has been. No need to plant it - very invasive! Garlic is so easy to grow - just grow garlic.
Yeah, I got that thing off facebook marketplace and didn't notice it had a huge crack in it. I tried to fix it a few times, but then after one winter the cracked off part basically disintegrated, so now it's almost impossible to keep that thing standing. I should really throw it out, but I hate throwing stuff out.
I have creeping Buttercup invading my asparagus and strawberry patch. Do you think it will be OK to leave to its own devices? The asparagus is only 2 years old, and I don't want to disturb it
It's okay to have a groundcover yes. You could try to sow some clover into it. I.e. pick it as low as possible and sow into it, and try to make a polyculture. If it bothers you a lot, you could also try to sheet mulch around the asparagus, then sow some clover into that. Just make sure to give it plenty of water so the asparagus don't get killed also.
as always, thanks for your videos. one feedback though. I like this raised bed configuration, but i'm worried because they are on the concrete surface. isn't that gonna to make the beds dry out fast, with the heat from the concrete. if so, slightly moving them on to the lawn, right next to the concrete may make sense. just my thoughts.
I'm tossing on this myself. I put them on the grass, I would need to dig a bit to make it level, so I'd need to get a survey because I have a feeling there is an electrical conduit there going out to the artesian well pump.
How long is the season for Pawpaws? From flower to ripe fruit? Wondering if I have a long enough season here to try and source some. Forest looks amazing. I am just starting my 3rd season of planting so everything is still small, but it is starting to take shape!
How do you deal with wasp and bees. I don't want to mess with them great for ecosystem. But don't want to get kids and pets stung. Do you have the homes farther out in property so not as many at one time per plants? Thank you for video beautiful
I find they don't bother us. It's definitely harder with kids, but I do feel that wasps and Bees can sense intent. However that is, stress, pheromones, pulse and heartbeat, but when I'm calm around them they don't bother me one bit.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I found this as well mostly with bees if I leave them alone I can be sitting and watching they don't bother me. Kids aren't wanting to just sit still 🐝. I really like bees allot. Wasps sorta do this but seem more aggressive and make nests in my benches and hate when I am close by.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I also have a question pertaining to mint. I've got apple mint and chocolate mint that has been growing in a pot for over a year and want to add it to a guild i am putting together, but am nervous that the mint will spread like crazy and be very difficult to keep contained in a single area. What is your experience with growing mint in your guilds?
Yes, it spreads absolutely. Whether it takes over an area depends on what is competing with it. In annual beds it can dominate an area, as many perennials will be able to do. However, against bushes, or even taller herbaceous plants, it will not be able to outcompete them, and it will only occupy the groundcover.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy i just planted raspberries as my main bush right now with some kale and german camomile and rhubarb. this fall i will be planting a paw paw tree within it all. sounds like the mint should be controlled by the raspberries then for the most part.
Create habitat for mosquito predators! It takes a few years for an ecosystem to balance out, but if you create a habitat designed for a balanced ecosystem, it will get there eventually.
Probably helpful to folks if you would expound on oxalates in a future video. At 62, I've spent the better part of my life reading up on nutrition, trying to eat well, tweaking my diet, and my health is generally excellent to show for it. I'm absolutely recoiling at the oxalates you are consuming here...I simply can't eat those without paying for it (for me, joint pain), and I can't be the only one. Rhubarb, Good King Henry, sorrel, beet greens, lamb's quarters, purslane, spinach, chard... Some I can consume in tiny amounts; some I simply don't eat anymore and feed to the chickens. Please emphasize consuming these "healthy greens" with caution.
As much as you have. I have seen people do something in a 40 foot by 10 foot backyard. It just depends on your goals. Edible acre on UA-cam is on 1/10th of an acre for example. I have about 2 acres planted out.
@CanadianPermacultureLegacy thanks for the quick reply . I read a comment you wrote on another video related to permaculture , where you tell the story about your grandmother ,it has to be one of the most beautiful stories I have ever heard . That is why I came to your channel, take care and May God continue to bless you 🙏
Yes. They are the worst part of my area. I check myself every day for them. We are just leaving tick season now thankfully, so we should get a few months reprieve.
I have noticed for about the past year that food from the grocery store and even the farmer's markets don't taste as good. And, sometimes, the texture of fruits and vegetables seem pretty strange? Anyone else notice this, or is it just me? BTW, I only buh organic produce. The food from my veggie garden tastes so much better!
Thank you,Thankyou,
For getting out of bed and doing what you do.
Much appreciated
I’ve noticed lately that my mindset has changed around this. I’ve shifted from thinking that I’m building a food forest to more of a forest with benefits. It’s become less about me and more about the creatures. I’ve turned from a farmer to a caretaker. And that’s the true worth of permaculture.
This is 100% my mentality now. Probably why I love all your comments so much LOL
I stopped worrying about watering my plants and instead worry about the bird baths and water bowls being full for the critters. Semi arid environment means they have a hard time finding water but permaculture is making my yard into an oasis for them
It’s amazing that the kid that wouldn’t eat salad because you “don’t eat leaves” is eating everything in your garden. So proud of you.
Canadian Permaculture Legacy, you're the reason I love UA-cam
FR
so kind!! ❤️ 😍
Talking ☑️ amazing plants☑️ loving your videos ☑️
Keep up the great work brother!
Dried rose petals make a wonderful tea ❤
I am one year in now, with a baby food forest that looks very much like a plants on display style garden. 😂 Thank you for being such an inspiration.
💯
Only 7 years?! It grew and developed so fast! Can't wait to see the next years will bring!
You have created a paradise. Enjoy! It’s absolutely beautiful.
I eat rose petals, especially, I throw them into smoothies. Apparently, their vitamin C levels and nutrient profiles are quite high. And once, I made candied dehydrated rose petals (with maple syrup), and it made for a unique yummy treat! But way too much work for me to bother getting that fancy with them again :-D
Your Forrest is blowing up. Looks amazing. Thx for sharing.
Hey man, just wanted to say I appreciate your videos. They got me to start gardening this year, with some blueberries, raspberry canes, service berries and herbs. Starting slow but it's been very satisfying!
YES! I LOVE posts like this. This stuff keeps me motivated ❤️
You have such a lovely piece of property, and I recognize the amount of thought and work you have put in to make it so.
Raised beds are a perfect spot for winter vegetables if you get them sown...
Such an incredible permaculture world you have created Keith! Thank you for the tour and best wishes.
By the way, your content is so good. I consume a vast amount of permaculture and syntropic agriculture content and yours is among the best
Thanks!
Always thank you for your videos! I prefer to listen to you talk, im still learning and it helps me identify or get familiar with all the greens. Amazing job you’ve done!
Rose petal jelly, with the petals in, is fan-freakin'-tastic!!! It's usually made from "rose otto", but rogosa is nummy too. It's very aromatic and as fragrant as can be, when you open a jar, you instantly know it's rose.
Amazing creation of life-giving areas! I love it & it is so enchanting! My little wild gardens give me joy, too! Goji berry didn’t survive the lawn turned to gardens but I shall try again! Thanks & blessings to all 🤗🇨🇦
My mouth was watering at all the flavors you’re growing!
Great choice for the new raised beds location.
This is the first year that I’ve got pawpaws on one of my nine pawpaw trees. It was really loaded and I, like you, wondered if I needed to thin or if nature would take care of it. There was a decent amount of “June drop” but still seems to be quite a lot left for the first year of fruiting. I’m not going to mess with it because I want to see if nature knows best. I will use the results from this year to gauge my thinning activities in the future.
Thanks for another amazing video!
Nothing quite like chewing a sorrel leaf! Thank you for the tour - exciting times as everything starts fruiting - even if old pupster pinches the strawberries!
Lovely tour.
Walking my garden and forest is something I too enjoy. I walk in there probably 3 or 4 times each day. Average. Watching everything going about the business of living is always a pleasure. You have taught me so much too. I now have named guilds. Love the guild concept.
Very cool ❤️
There are lots of things you can make with rose petals- tea, ice cream, candied petals, salads, add to lemonade, soaps, moisturizer……
Thanks a lot for your once again brilliant and beautiful video !!!
Do this every 2..3 weeks, I love it !
All the best to you, to your family and the food forest,
Thank you.
I dry them for tea missed with other herbs nice and aromatic.
Another use for rose petals is giving them to your chickens. They will eat some and what’s left helps the coop smell better.
I have been obsessed with paw paw ever since I first tasted them. Lots of babies on my trees this year. Can't wait to start the harvest.
I'm a little jelly about your lovely pond 😉. You have created a wonderful place 👍👏
Looking wonderful! Well done!
Your channel and others like you have inspired me to go down a similar path. Hopefully in 7 years I'll have a food forest half as good as yours 😊
For sure you will
Taquito looks amazing. And everything eaten while grazing seems to taste that much better. Also, here, here! to Sorrel. I don't get why in the world Sorrel is not a staple in grocery stores and plant stores along with lettuce and spinach. Why/how has this amazing green been so largely ignored in North America? .....The forest looks great!👏👏👏
Beautiful
I put fresh rose petals in my water to drink or in a bath. I dry the rest and use them in tea or as part of a rinse for my hair.
I didn't know you could eat the sweet potato greens ! Beautiful food forest!! And cute bench hidden in with the plants 😊 i want to try making sumac lemondade i need to try that
beautiful
I like to make those but I use elk and venison😉
The food forest looks great sir.
Beautiful. Thank you for posting. I learned a lot.
In Japanese garden design, there are concepts around having straight vs. curved paths. There is work being done on integrating food forests with time tested aesthetic principles.
Rose petal tea - loaded with several vitamins (lower than hips in C, but still a good source) and other nutrients (quercetin). Good for skin (moisturizing, but also helps with acne) and women's health (cramping & flow), hair (growth & condition). Can also use the tea as a wash to sooth sunburn.
Rose petals can be eaten in salads or dried for herbal tea mixes. Adds beautiful collors and aroma. Also, can be distilled into rose water
Also, dried petals can be mascerated in honey then filtered out after a few weeks. Or you can make rose petal syrop like you would make a elderflower syrop
I heard that unwashed greens is also a supply of trace amounts of Vitamin B12 (I think I remember correctly that it is contained in those little microscopic creatures found in raindrops).
However, yes. Do check over your leaves before eating - to ensure no bird poop, no slugs (Rat Plague), and no Seed Ticks (I don't know about anywhere else, but in my part of Britain, we call the baby ticks Seed Ticks).
Despite all that, I do eat the occasional unwashed green leaves - now that I don't have a dog marking his territory all over the place.
I love Coltsfoot, just as a plant in itself. I don't eat it, but I have eaten Coltsfoot rock (a sort of sweet/candy made in the UK, which is now incredibly hard to find).
I had to give it a couple of attempts to get it growing in my garden, but once I established it in one patch, it popped up elsewhere.
I freeze the petals from my Scotch Briar roses (being biased, I think Scotch Briar is the best of scented wild roses), and I add them to rose hip jams (chuck them into the boiling jam mixture 15 minutes before it's finished).
When you open the jar of jam, you get a hit from the scent of the petals, and the jam has the taste of the heps.
I was going to get a dog, but I'm now trying to hatch some ducks. So I won't get a dog.
My old dog would have had them in a heartbeat, and I need to ensure my husband learns to 'shut the gate!' (Grrrrr!) after himself to stop the neighbour's dog from getting in, as she killed all her owner's poultry and chickens belonging to another neighbour.
I've secured all fencing around the property perimeter, putting in baffles up to 6 feet high, but just have to make it plain to my husband that simply 'saying' that neighbours dogs won't bother walking through the open front gate is purely 'wishful thinking,' it doesn't make it a reality.
Thanks for all this. Funny!
Local Native cultures used to char the coltsfoot and use it as a peppery seasoning
i have a lot of those red admiral butterflies @11:30
Thanks! I called it a monarch through the camera, but when I saw it in editing I knew it wasn't. Thanks for letting me know the real name of it ❤️
Rose jam and culinary rose water! Middle Eastern recipes.
😂 It’s ok you talked all the way through our peaceful walk through.
Just ate our first peach today. It’s the only one as something sneakily ate the rest. Like some evil magician lurking. 😱 😢 🦌
I had the video going in the background and I said, "nooooo" when he said he wasn't going to talk! So glad he did. I love his positivity!
Great work!! Would love to see pictures from before, during and after the work on the pond. It looks like it was already there.. or at least part of it🤔
I have a video on exactly that! ua-cam.com/video/1-y_yWr5AGE/v-deo.html
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacyYou have done an incredible work on this pond.. WOW, soo amazing 👏🏻🏆 🤩
Try rose petal jam, it is delicious!
My dog is the reason I didn't get chickens after my move. In the old house, his highest goal in life was to catch the chickens. I invested in good fencing, of course, but he'd still run around the perimeter and scare the crap out of them just for fun! But the difference between my chicken-obsessed dog and yours is that mine is enormous (>50 kg), so killing a chicken is easy for him.
1:47 - also very high in iron and calcium. :)
I've never heard of garlic mustard, something new to try next year!
It's quite an invasive weed here in Southern Ontario, so if you're lucky you might already have it. It grows absolutely everywhere in the local forests and conservation areas. Just make sure to do your research before planting it on purpose. 👍
@@KimblesTheBrave Just checked the Minnesota DNR, it's a restricted noxious weed, illegal to import, sell, or transport. Guess I won't be growing it!
Try eating it if you can ID it safely, but don't plant it. It's on many invasive lists.
@@KimblesTheBrave Garlic mustard keeps other plants from growing in the soil where it has been. No need to plant it - very invasive! Garlic is so easy to grow - just grow garlic.
7:30 fallen down birdbath in the background.
Yeah, I got that thing off facebook marketplace and didn't notice it had a huge crack in it. I tried to fix it a few times, but then after one winter the cracked off part basically disintegrated, so now it's almost impossible to keep that thing standing. I should really throw it out, but I hate throwing stuff out.
The monarch butterfly you saw lookedmore like a moth to me. Also dragon flies keep their wings open flat. The ones you saw were damsel flies.
I have creeping Buttercup invading my asparagus and strawberry patch. Do you think it will be OK to leave to its own devices? The asparagus is only 2 years old, and I don't want to disturb it
It's okay to have a groundcover yes. You could try to sow some clover into it. I.e. pick it as low as possible and sow into it, and try to make a polyculture.
If it bothers you a lot, you could also try to sheet mulch around the asparagus, then sow some clover into that. Just make sure to give it plenty of water so the asparagus don't get killed also.
as always, thanks for your videos. one feedback though. I like this raised bed configuration, but i'm worried because they are on the concrete surface. isn't that gonna to make the beds dry out fast, with the heat from the concrete. if so, slightly moving them on to the lawn, right next to the concrete may make sense. just my thoughts.
I'm tossing on this myself. I put them on the grass, I would need to dig a bit to make it level, so I'd need to get a survey because I have a feeling there is an electrical conduit there going out to the artesian well pump.
How long is the season for Pawpaws? From flower to ripe fruit? Wondering if I have a long enough season here to try and source some. Forest looks amazing. I am just starting my 3rd season of planting so everything is still small, but it is starting to take shape!
So these were in flower about 3 weeks ago. The paw paw taste test video last year was at Halloween, so roughly 5 months.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy Thanks, probably too long for here then. We do good to get 4 months frost free.
Hi Keith, do you know where to get permaculture design examples? Looking for a .4 acre pasture in temperate 6b with 12” annual rainfall.
❤
🌞
Take those petals off the roses, put them in water and distill "rose water" for cooking, baking.
It's commonly used in the Middle East, Asia.
Do you know if it’s possible to grow peaches (Reliance variety) in southern Manitoba (zone 4)?
Zone 4 is pushing it for sure. I would give 1-2 a try though.
Hi,
May I ask why horsetail may be a concern?
Thanks!
It can really take over and cover the whole ground
@@mazieways thanks for your reply!
It's on many invasive lists. However it's interestingly one of the oldest plants on earth.
How do you deal with wasp and bees. I don't want to mess with them great for ecosystem. But don't want to get kids and pets stung. Do you have the homes farther out in property so not as many at one time per plants? Thank you for video beautiful
I find they don't bother us. It's definitely harder with kids, but I do feel that wasps and Bees can sense intent. However that is, stress, pheromones, pulse and heartbeat, but when I'm calm around them they don't bother me one bit.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I found this as well mostly with bees if I leave them alone I can be sitting and watching they don't bother me. Kids aren't wanting to just sit still 🐝. I really like bees allot. Wasps sorta do this but seem more aggressive and make nests in my benches and hate when I am close by.
Thank you
do you have a couple suggestions for top reads on permaculture?
There should a link in every video description to my favorite books.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I also have a question pertaining to mint. I've got apple mint and chocolate mint that has been growing in a pot for over a year and want to add it to a guild i am putting together, but am nervous that the mint will spread like crazy and be very difficult to keep contained in a single area. What is your experience with growing mint in your guilds?
Yes, it spreads absolutely. Whether it takes over an area depends on what is competing with it. In annual beds it can dominate an area, as many perennials will be able to do. However, against bushes, or even taller herbaceous plants, it will not be able to outcompete them, and it will only occupy the groundcover.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy i just planted raspberries as my main bush right now with some kale and german camomile and rhubarb. this fall i will be planting a paw paw tree within it all. sounds like the mint should be controlled by the raspberries then for the most part.
Rugosa rose petals are edible and are used to flavour desserts and herbal teas.
What is the plant at the very beginning, between tomato and kale??
Without a time stamp, I don't know for sure which you are referring to, but I believe you are talking about Orache. Atriplex hortensis.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy yesss! that's the one, thank you!!!
What do you all do for mosquitoes moving into swails en masse? It feels like they are extra intense since I dug it.
Create habitat for mosquito predators! It takes a few years for an ecosystem to balance out, but if you create a habitat designed for a balanced ecosystem, it will get there eventually.
How does one get in contact with you to talk garden and permaculture? Im near Beaverton and would be very interested in your opinion of our setup.
I used to do consulting, but I'm just so overwhelmingly busy now as the channel grows. I may try to do a tour this year.
@@CanadianPermacultureLegacy well if you're looking for a new garden to video just holler! 😉
When did you get new chickens?
take out bottom and usw some tapproots in the new beds
🦁 😺
Probably helpful to folks if you would expound on oxalates in a future video. At 62, I've spent the better part of my life reading up on nutrition, trying to eat well, tweaking my diet, and my health is generally excellent to show for it. I'm absolutely recoiling at the oxalates you are consuming here...I simply can't eat those without paying for it (for me, joint pain), and I can't be the only one. Rhubarb, Good King Henry, sorrel, beet greens, lamb's quarters, purslane, spinach, chard... Some I can consume in tiny amounts; some I simply don't eat anymore and feed to the chickens. Please emphasize consuming these "healthy greens" with caution.
I balance that out with a bunch of red meat. Eggs also. But I am younger
Iove to star my own permaculture ,how much land would I need ?
As much as you have. I have seen people do something in a 40 foot by 10 foot backyard. It just depends on your goals.
Edible acre on UA-cam is on 1/10th of an acre for example. I have about 2 acres planted out.
@CanadianPermacultureLegacy thanks for the quick reply .
I read a comment you wrote on another video related to permaculture , where you tell the story about your grandmother ,it has to be one of the most beautiful stories I have ever heard .
That is why I came to your channel, take care and May God continue to bless you 🙏
@MrBigotes503 thank you, so kind of you to tell me ❤️
What camera do you use?
It's just my phone, Samsung S23.
Do you have ticks?
Yes. They are the worst part of my area. I check myself every day for them. We are just leaving tick season now thankfully, so we should get a few months reprieve.
I have noticed for about the past year that food from the grocery store and even the farmer's markets don't taste as good. And, sometimes, the texture of fruits and vegetables seem pretty strange? Anyone else notice this, or is it just me? BTW, I only buh organic produce. The food from my veggie garden tastes so much better!
100%. My wife bought some peaches in June and they were disgustingly bland
"Lots of beneficial bacteria on them"
AKA probiotics.
You can harvest that horsetail and eat it or tincture it for medicine! ❤
Ok dude great, but rinse the salad ,please😒