Im a 63 year old great grandmother with lots of experience and belief in learning new things everyday. You have taught this old dog many new tricks. I just adore you and your family. ❤️🥰❤️
Yes! I always chuckle when Ruthann talks about her level of formal education! Her superb education in life and spirituality is evident in every video she makes!
I bet her background has given her higher level problem solving, critical thinking, and even basic understanding skills. I love using my hands and learning/knowing how to make things I need. Practical knowledge and having a connection with the earth are precious things. She definitely is very “educated” !
Ruthann you have spoken before about your lack of education. However, you have educated yourself on the things that are important to you. That is what matters. If you listen to many young adults in their early twenties, you will be amazed at how little they know and how lacking they are in simple common sense. A school education does not guarantee an abundance of knowledge. You are a smart person and more important you are kind and compassionate. Your kids are lucky to have a mother like you.
I think you are one of the most eloquent speakers ever. I love listening to you speak. You are also more intelligent than a lot of people I know who's first language is English! Lol
Education is anytime you are learning something you didn't know before. Your videos have educated so many people. I watch your videos and wish I could do what you do! I've taken a lot of your ideas and applied them to my small area of life and home as a single adult teacher of second language learners! I was amazed when you said that English was not your primary language. Is it Pennsylvania Dutch? You do not show any signs, except for when you say certain vocabulary words you're not sure of, that English isn't your primary language. Keep doing what you're doing. I love that you are not only making these videos for us englishers, but for the future of your own family so they can refer back to them. What an incredible legacy!
At 24 years old you have taught me so much knowledge. I constantly talk about you to others and tell them they need to subscribe to your channel because you are SO SMART!!!
All your kiddos are having the best childhood they could possibly have. I love watching them be kids and enjoy the simple things in life like fun and adventure.
I don't think you are uneducated. You have done a lot of research to know the underlying basics of what you teach in your videos. I love listening to you, and I've watched many of your videos just because you are so interesting, so knowledgeable, have such a soothing voice, and I see the love of God in you.
As an aging gardener I converted almost entirely to tall raised beds. My back and knees thank me! If not for these beds I would no longer be able to garden and I'm not willing to give it up! Not yet!
Think about the church she grew up in. Pennsylvania Dutch is a mennonite and ammish language. This would be her 1st language and American English would be her 2nd.
@@Ruthannzimmas a retired Biology teacher that got my degree after I had children some of the most ignorant not stupid people I know are teachers. Not well rounded. Don’t know about the world around them. Some of the smartest people I know are old time farmers. Workers. They read a lot. That’s the key. You are very intelligent. And a great teacher.
I thought the same thing! I have been gardening for YEARS and never really thought about that. It makes so much sense now! I now know a few things I need to fix!!!
Ruthann I love that you are not incumbered with a modern education, It leaves room for your strong traditional education, practical knowledge and understandings, that are much more valueable.. in the real world.. we have enough activists and politicians, We need more hands on, dirty nails, and messy aprons, firm foundation individuals to keep this earth turning, and not destroying its self in self-proclamed mainstream-cultivated superficial intellegence.
I have raised beds and they are great. If I had acreage in the Midwest I would in a heartbeat, not even think of a raised bed. You do what you can where you are.
I fall in the clay soil category 😢after 30+ years of fighting with, working with and ammending abundantly, I gave up. Began raised bed gardening last season and my joy of gardening is returning. I'm adding 4 more this season. All your pros and cons are right on!!❤❤❤
Ditto. Hard clay plus a gazillion rocks means I'm using raised beds, pots, cardboard boxes, old ice cream/Easter buckets, etc. Once we are somewhere more permanent (EDIT: we are renting while looking for land) we'll invest in digging/tilling up and amending the soil. Until then, we get creative. For what it's worth, the very few neighbors we have here in the rural South who also grow things don't grow directly in the ground, either. People can judge all they want but they have no idea what else we have on our plate nor what we need to prioritize.
I live in Oklahoma so raised garden beds really are a must for backyard food production. We also have two split seasons for gardening - Mar - end of June and Sept - Nov. We have to use well water because rain water is not dependable. I grow lots of annual flowers, sweet potatoes and watermelon in the summer
I always hear you mention not having as high an education as some. Let me tell you, you are much smarter than some I've known with degrees. You are highly intelligent about the things in life that really matter. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge with us, I found this video fascinating. 😊❤ Lots of love to you and your beautiful family
Enjoy your channel so very much. I am physically disabled and live alone. I find you and your family very uplifting. Thank you for explaining your processes so well. I never understood about sourdough discard, etc. God bless you and your family.
RuthAnn...As someone with a mobility disability, a raised bed is really my only option. I do so appreciate how you explain things in such an understandable manner. Have a beautiful and blessed day. LUCRETIA 🇺🇸
You are the first to explain about the root system in raised beds. I always was gardening in the ground but this year I can only use containers. I will do the best I can. God bless
I love your garden and seeing the kids in it participating in different aspects of it with you, along with playing! God’s beautiful rainbow was the perfect ending! Have a beautiful day, Ruth Ann! God bless!🩷
Iowan here also. My great grandfather and his two brothers were onion farmers. He died before I was born but I grew up near to where their land was. When the people who bought the land plowed it, the soil was pitch black. I had never and to this day (at age 58 years old) have not seen soil as dark. I still remember the smell. Sadly that land is all industrial now except for a small area that is a tree farm. What a waste of excellent farm land. You have such a beautiful garden, farm, and family. I have learned quite a bit from you and I thank you for sharing your wisdom. God bless!
I have mastered in ground gardening over 30 years. I agree with all your pros and cons about it. A very good friend asked me to mentor her, so we tilled up a large area for her to grow in next to my garden. (We have acreage to spare). It’s been a wonderful 9 years of gardening together. We have learned together, even with my years of experience. I’m not a spring chicken and It’s harder now to garden in ground (my garden is 50’x100’), so I’m starting to add some raised beds and do less in ground. I’ve always adapted to whatever comes my way. Looking forward to many more years of gardening. Thank you RuthAnn for your input and wise advice!
Good morning! Thank you for sharing your experiences and the "whys" behind your gardening techniques. I have been experimenting and learning to grow a garden for about 5 years now and it is refreshing to be reminded it's good to just dig in and not give up because something doesn't work for me! I'm blessed when my children ask me why we are trying to grow something again when it hasn't worked for us in the past and as I share with them the importance of perseverance it refreshes me and reminds me to be patient and allow God to keep stretching me personally, and us as a family! God bless you and your beautiful family!
Rather than pressing the like button on every comment I find myself agreeing with, let me just say (along with my husband’s hearty amen) that the intelligence and skill set you possess are so valuable and far superior to most, that it horrifies us that anyone would denigrate or pass judgement as to your lack of intelligence. Education Surely doesn’t equal wisdom, intellect nor common sense. You have our profound respect - especially for the humility you exhibit along with the REAL qualities you and your husband bring to the table. Be encouraged! Hope Elvin can work at home one day and share his insights with us. ❤ Appreciate your open hearts and learn so much from you all. Thank you!!!
Ruthann, you are doing an absolutely wonderful job! You are teaching many of us to homestead. My dad only had an 8th-grade education, and he became an airplane mechanic in both the Air Force and Boeing. We love your teaching, so don't stop! Just be you! You are incredible the way you are! God bless you and thank you!
I always take at least a minimum of two things from all of your videos!! I can’t wait to see what you will teach every week. What a well of knowledge. Thank you so much for sharing it every week.
Ruthann, you are a walking encyclopedia of knowledge and wisdom. I heard somewhere that the make up of rain water is actually different than using well water to water the garden. The rain comes down, the soil pulls out nutrients and so watering from the well is not as effective. I don't know if this is accurate. Beautiful rainbow - God's promise.
Good Morning, I appreciate your providing pros and cons for raised bed and in ground gardens. I’m 75 and was watering my raised bed garden at 7AM. I try to give it time before full sun evaporates some of the water. I love my raised beds and they produce so much good food which I preserve. My home is on hard pan clay and I have attempted in ground garden with pumpkins and they were great but I really can’t do all that bending required.😊 I love your beautiful garden and go back and watch your series on the garden. Have a wonderful weekend to you all.❤
Everything you said makes so much sense. Raised beds dry so much faster. And, I see a huge difference in my plants when we have a season when we get more rain. Something about rain water that nourishes the plants more than sprinkler water.
I agree with you about in-ground gardening, and I also grow in raised beds. I think it's most important just to put seeds in the soil and grow something, no matter where it is.
I love your knowledge, teaching with simplicity about a lot of complexity and transparency❤ Please don't get pulled in and lose this🙏 Thank you for teaching us the Ways of life through your experience.
Wouldn't it be nice if all kids could grow up like that? Your gardens are beautiful and one can tell all the love and thoughtfulness you put into it! Thank you for allowing us a peek into them! Wishing you a happy and bountiful gardening year!
I love what you have to share here… and all your cooking, baking and when your cow had two babies!! So informative and I LOVE your channel! Thank you Ruth Ann!
Hi RuthAnn! You are so awesome! I like the way you present pros and cons, then give the reasons why you prefer things a certain way. This always allows us to make our own decisions. You are so greatly appreciated. Thank you for sharing your life with all of us! Blessings and love to you and your family!
Ruth ann, your garden is amazing and beautiful. My heart goes pitter patter when ever I see it. I do a combo raised bed/ in ground garden here in zone 5a Wi. We have a lot of clay. My raised beds are 2 feet high, but are directly on the ground. Similar to your border garden. So the roots of my plants can and do go as deep as they need to grow. I agree that a lot of these raised beds that you see for sale I just shake my head at in amazement wondering what the roots are suppose to do in there. In the fall I often have to climb into the raised bed and dig out the roots with a shovel. I also mulch heavily with grass clipping to keep the garden cool, moist and weed free. This prevents moisture loss, and once my plants are established and mulched I rarely water them at all, both in my raised bed areas and my in ground areas. I filled my raised beds using the lasagna type method. over the years filling it higher and higher, and every fall add composted manure to each bed. raised beds are more difficult for vining plants like pumpkin or squash and also sweet corn. I love that so many different techniques are available and so many areas of the country have different needs. I agree with you 100% about just trying it!! My advice to everyone who has anxiety about starting a garden is Just Start! You are not laying concrete, everything you do can be dug up and redone if it doesn't work out. Most of the fun of gardening is trying new things and experimenting with new ideas. After 40 years of gardening I am still experimenting with new ideas and still having great successes and great failures and still learning new things. PS I love watching your boys be boys.
Good morning you're amazing and remind me of my young adulthood because I learned all of the canning and freezing of fruits and vegetables from my grandmother, mother and dad but learned most of my gardening and animal butchery from my dad! The one thing we never did was pressure cook/can anything which I would LOVE to learn! Thank you for your faith and thank you for being here, much appreciated ❤
I love your garden, My Dad always grew a in ground garden and yes I did have to help him plant and harvest lol, then help,can lol , but I love watching you and your and your children working in the garden , it brings back so many wonderful growing up memory’s . He always loved his garden, I remember how big it was and how hard we worked but it was a labor of love. I love watching the boys riding down the hill it also reminds me of my childhood and the farm is beautiful everything sprouting out green and the beautiful rainbow God gift to us to remind us that he will never destroy the earth again by water . God Bless you and your family.
Oh, thank you for reminding me. I've been meaning to compost my raised beds for a week, and haven't gotten to them. They are done now. In the fall, I collect leaves and grass clippings, and store them in two trash bins for use in the spring. The rest of the leaves are raked into two compost bins. Rain is in the forecast for this afternoon, so I got done just in time for it.
I’ve been binge watching your yeast and sourdough baking. Just found you today and I just want to say you are the perfect teacher. No rushing thru it and taking time to explain everything so we’ll and your pleasant personality is captivating. Thank you !
Hi Ruthann. Great topic. Right from the start, you hit all the reasons I grow in raised beds. The exception are my herbs which are grown in ground. The soil where I live in central Alabama is red clay. When dry, it is as hard as concrete, and the soil PH is alkaline 7.0-7.5. Blue berry bushes, blackberry bushes, and most vegetable crops will grow poorly, or die off. The soil has to be amended with organic material and acidifiers. I started raised bed gardening five years ago. For the last three years, it has done very well. Each year gets better. Voles are a big problem. Four of my raised beds aren't protected from them. Two of them will be moved in the fall, and lined with hardware cloth. The other two will be dug out as time permits, and the bottoms lined with rocks. Take that voles! Fertilizer is used sparingly in my garden. Compost is used to amend my raised beds, and they are covered with leaves in the fall, then in the winter, the leaves are turned into the soil. For mulch, the only things I use are leaves and grass clippings.
Even though I don’t garden anymore, I really enjoyed this video. You explain everything so well! I laughed out loud watching the boys ride the wagon through the arbor… thankfully!! I love their energy whether at work or at play! Yours too Ruthann!
Your garden and homestead is beautiful. It is so relaxing when you walk through the garden. I love it!! I used to live in Michigan and we gardened in ground but I tried for so many years to do in ground here in Florida and it just never worked out for me so I went to raised beds. They are a little more work because like you said they need more watering but at least we are getting some veggies in our stock! Also now that I am getting older I can not get down on my knees so that is another benefit. Thank you for all the information that you give us, it is really so helpful. God bless you and your family and your homestead.
My Daddy (born in early 1900's) always said, what you see above ground, you should below ground. Root system is everything. We have a few border gardens but we garden in the ground. I know it isn't for everyone, main thing is to GROW something. Love your channel.
I look forward to each new video and I learn so much from you! I now garden using straw bales. They are higher than normal raised beds and I didn't have to build anything. They are placed inside an old chain link dog run which acts as trellising for any plants that need it. It also helps keep the critters out. The advantage is that the conditioning process to get the bales fermenting warms the bales up, so plants that need warm soil can be planted earlier. Fewer weeds too! When I'm getting ready for new bales, the old bales have composted into a mulch I can use for edging my flower beds.
This was another beautiful video… I love watching all of the things you do and your baking and cooking is fascinating to me…you are a beautiful person…Thank you! ❤❤❤❤
Hi Ruthann I have been working on my no dig garden for about 4 years, it is healthier each year! There are two areas you touched on today that I had yet to consider! One was irrigation and the other was maintaining my edges with border gardens! I have recently used soaker hoses to water from our well when we had excessive days without rain! You have definitely given me food for thought about possibly mulching deeper or layering plants to avoid having to water! I had noticed that the hard water is not great for the garden but considered it was a necessity! Well maybe not! Thank you for sitting down and getting into the details of the way a garden really works! I can’t wait to see your garden this season! Peace and blessings! 🤗
Hello from Canada, I’ve only been vegetable gardening for a few years - when most around me are putting energy and funds into building and maintaining raised beds I’ve intuitively felt plants need to planted in-ground - now I know why. Thank you for your detailed explanation and also your take on watering. This year I’m more than ever determined not to water and do as you recommend with mulching.
It doesn’t matter if English isn’t your primary language your knowledge is so amazing! I can’t wait for each Saturdays post! I appreciate all you do to teach us! 😊Regina
After years of doing inground gardens, then no-till gardening, I went with "short height" raised beds, but no limit on the bottom.. it goes into the original ground. I found tilling/working the ground it is a swamp until mid June, to late to plant most, and/or floods what I did get planted. My beds work well for me, I do heavily mulch the beds also, so the soil keeps moist (and seldom have to water), and cool and/or warm depending on the season. I know it all depends on location and soil. Thanks for sharing your info!
Ruthann, you may only have a limited education, but girl, I have my masters and I just got "schooled!" Thank you for the education!! I LOVE seeing the boys playing! Their sweet little faces!
I always learn so much when I watch your videos. My husband is the gardener. I am the canner, freezer, dehydrator, baker, and food prepper person. I don’t know how you do it all. We have an in ground garden. We live in the Brazos Valley of Texas. We do have to water some but try not to. Our growing season is mostly over by the time yours is coming in. We have small tomatoes on our plants that we are anxiously waiting to pick. We have a few Early Girl tomatoes that will come in first for eating. My canning operation will start the end of May and finish in early July. It just gets too hot here in the late summer, although last year we extended it a little when my husband put shade cloth up over the tomatoes. Last year was very heat intensive. We are praying for a wetter year. My husband has no desire to do a raised bed garden, but my sister has good luck with hers in town. To each his own. Your kids crack me up. My brother and I used to take turns pushing each other in the wagon. We had a lot of fun growing up. We could always think of something to do and our pekingnese dogs were not far behind us.
Thank you for sharing this. You have given the absolute best comparison of raised beds vs inground gardening. Great explanation of why raised beds produce a bit less and why that happens. I have been gardening for our family for 43 years and as a child helping my parents. In east KY we never water inground gardens. Dad taught me to plant early enough to get the spring rains and plants get established and when drier summer days come the plants have a good deep root system to go kin search of that deep moisture. Thank you for this and God bless and keep you.
Thank you for another great video offering. I enjoy hearing your wisdom acknowledge when it comes to homesteading I must say that opening scene of the sunrise and the dew on that beautiful garden fills something up in my soul I can almost smell that fresh soil right after God has just kissed it with the morning dew. I could weep for missing that very thing. Thank you for your channel. God bless❤
Yes, GOD IS SO GOOD! Thank you for sharing your life and family with us! Every time I watch a video my mind goes to this scripture because I see it lived out in your family: ‘The fruit of the spirit is Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self Control”. God bless!
BORDER GARDEN!!! That's what I have but never knew what to call it! Thank you!!! For years and years I had an inground garden with all the rows hilled up just like my parents did. Now in my mid 60's, I can't keep up with all the weeding, so last year my husband put some 2x6 boards down on the ground and weed fabric on the walk ways. So much easier for me to keep it weeded BUT, I never knew what to say when people asked what kind of garden did I have. It's raised, but not really. lol
Raised gardens are challenging. I moved from North Carolina where I had pretty dirt and plenty of rain to eastern Tennessee where I have clay, rocks and hot dry summers. I’ve had to learn gardening all over using raised beds and purchased dirt. Covering the soil with compost and/or hay in a raised bed is essential to keep the soil moist. One nice thing is the availability of mushroom compost in the area I live.
You are such a gifted person. When you remark that English is not your first language what do you mean? You speak better than most people i encounter. Your vocabulary is unusually large. When I consider that you said you did not go to "high school" you are proof that the government schools that we have our tax money taken (stolen) for are ripping us off (as are the colleges and universities). Well God has certainly gifted you and you are using that gift to benefit your family and us, who learn from you by watching your videos. Would you consider advising us about other gardening matters such as when, where, how, spacing of, etc. regarding specific crops. I saw that your son, while planting potatoes, was using the length of his foot to gauge how far to plant the potatoes from each other. I would value your expertise much more than what "experts" say or write. Gardening facts are lost to the masses just as other important facts have been lost. Putting out your knowledge via your videos might help many people now and in the future as times get really bad (as i believe they are sure to do). I pray for you and your family to continue to be blessed by God.
RuthAnn, God has given you the gift of teaching and for sustaining the old way of life. Thank you I appreciate re-learning how to can. I have two masters, one doctorate, and one bachelor's degree. The degrees did not make me any smarter, only a better person to jump through hoops. I always thought that everyone else was better than me and smarter. Those thoughts are lies. You are amazing just the way 'God made you. You are a kind gentle and caring person with compassion. Those qualities with the fruits of the spirit are caught when taught. Thank you for what you are teaching.
Thank you, Ruth Ann, for all your wisdom. I do have raised beds, i have 18 inches of compost in my beds. They stand up 4 feet high. That being said, i meet a couple of your reasons to have a raised, i have a very bad back and hips and cant bend over to work the ground, i also live in Alaska, and we have a very short growing season. I use all organic soul, some is horse manure 1 to 2 years old, its turned regularly to keep it composting, some was 4 to 5 year old horse manure that looks like black gold dirt, some is from my chickens as i use shavings instead of straw, so its ready each spring. Lastly, through the growing months, i have a kiddy pool that my ducks swim and play in. I use that and some of its settlings to give my beds an extra boost. I have a greenhouse that has a 28th , 26-foot, 24-foot, raised beds, i also have 5 soon to be 6 8ft raised beds outside and a 50-foot hugelkultur. The hugelkultur does fabulous, as it, in a way, is in ground, i wish i could have all of them. But i couldn't get them planted or weeded or picked if i did everything in them. I only plant my broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage in the hugelkultur. I do have to water everything inside, and sometimes the outside, this year i will have soaker hoses on everything with timers, so all stays watered. I also plant my peas in 3 gallon buckets along a nylon fence to climb on. I also plant my potatoes in a 31:07 five gallon bags. I dont get the great big potatoes. Some get that's in the ground, but at least I get potatoes. I do have plastic i use like a greenhouse over my raised beds at time because our summers can be pretty chilli. This helps hold the heat of the day a little more in the soil. If you have any suggestions, please feel free to share them with me. Thank you again for explaining the differences.
I enjoy watching you so much. It makes me think of my younger years. What town do you live in? I grew up in Clarinda Iowa and just went m\back for a visit last year. The number 1 thing i will NEVER FORGET, is the soil back there. It was so rich, fine and I still remember the feel of the soil through my fingers. Im in Oregon now and Im doing grow bags, sitting on pallets on Basket ball court. I saved almost all your recipes and cant wait to try your canning recipes for several things. Keep up good work. Diane Burnham
Your explanation of the disadvantages of raised beds makes so much sense, and I'll bet the same logic could be applied to potted plants. (Patio tomatos, etc) I am learning so much from you!
Here in Colorado, we have to use raised beds because our mountain is rocky and we have more clay than dirt. We use all organic soil and seeds. We have only 90 days from planting to harvest due to the weather.
I’d love you to talk more about your mulch. I’ve heard you mention the hay/straw/animal poo from your barn but looking for more of your wonderful tips and tricks. ❤.
sGood to receive so much good input on gardening. We do fall into that category of more physical inconvenience as we are both seventy this year. We also plant less that we used to and supplement our produce by the generosity of Amish friends. We mainly are doing tomatoes, peppers and onions in our raised beds. As always you definitely give insight into both gardens, which is helpful to so many. Thanks for sharing such great knowledge on gardening. Have a great gardening season.
My grandmother was born in 1918 to Scottish/English farmers. She was oldest of 10 children and the first six were girls. She worked very hard learned how to home out a cylinder and drive tractor how to work in the fields. She also would come in after that hard day's work and help in the kitchen to feed the farm hands. My grandma taught me just like you're teaching and I'm still learning from you is the ways that are tried and true. By the way my grandmother was born in Sharpsburg Iowa. They went to Colorado for a few years due to the fact that my great-grandma had TB then on to Nebraska. My Grandpa always had a garden and shared not only his wonderful crops also his amazing ability to grow the best kohlrabi I've ever had. Oh Grandma knew how to put together a garden and she shared with me how to get one started. Her best kept secret was sprinkling a little bit of ammonia sulfate to get everyone started especially when she was transplanting. Thank you for sharing ❤❤❤
Wonderful information. Thank you Ruthanne! When I first started watching you, you spoke to the fact that someone had commented that you sound ‘uneducated’. You agreed that you are. That is the only thing I’ve ever heard you say that I vehemently disagree with. You have more knowledge, and have been taught by experts on such a wide range of important, useful subjects. Our Ivy League colleges should strive to turn out such knowledgeable students! There are many ‘worlds of learning’, and the ones you attended actually serve an amazing purpose! I deeply envy you your knowledge base!
Thank you for taking the time to share this wisdom & your gardening experiences! I gardened both ways for years but never knew half of what you shared! Now I understand why I've had some issues with production in the plants in the raised beds. Thank you! I always smile after watching one of your videos! You seem to anticipate what questions we might have as you explain how to do something and have a answer for them. I'm So grateful!
I have a new term to use, border garden. That’s what I have, but I always called it raised bed knowing that it didn’t look like most raised beds and it wasn’t even raised. We use 2x4s to keep out grass.
I'm in Kansas City and we have made our garden space both, raised beds and inground. I've considered going all inground, because I feel like I'd have more growing space, but it also would be a lot of work to create the conversion. I think hubs happy medium is to build me higher raised beds so I don't have to bend over so much, especially as I'm getting older. And we can possibly combine two beds together, adding in the walkway space to create garden space. So, instead of two 4x8' beds, I'd have one 4x18' bed. Doing that four times already would allow me an additional bed of space that I currently have. If I did that eight times, then I'd have one more full size 4x18' to work with. Fewer walking aisles, but with the way we installed our fence last year, we left a huge amount of space around the perimeter, so we'd have room to easily navigate our carts around. Always evolving and always learning what is working best. I definitely love my gardening ❤
You are not uneducated. You are self-educated. You have researched how things work and read to learn more. You are a good teacher.
Im a 63 year old great grandmother with lots of experience and belief in learning new things everyday. You have taught this old dog many new tricks. I just adore you and your family. ❤️🥰❤️
Ruthann, don’t take this as an insult because it is meant as a compliment. You may not be educated;, but, you are so intelligent. You amaze me!
Yes! I always chuckle when Ruthann talks about her level of formal education! Her superb education in life and spirituality is evident in every video she makes!
I bet her background has given her higher level problem solving, critical thinking, and even basic understanding skills. I love using my hands and learning/knowing how to make things I need. Practical knowledge and having a connection with the earth are precious things. She definitely is very “educated” !
AMEN TO ALL
She is the educator!
Her level of knowledge is far beyond a so-called educated horticulturalist. ❤
Ruthann you have spoken before about your lack of education. However, you have educated yourself on the things that are important to you. That is what matters. If you listen to many young adults in their early twenties, you will be amazed at how little they know and how lacking they are in simple common sense. A school education does not guarantee an abundance of knowledge. You are a smart person and more important you are kind and compassionate. Your kids are lucky to have a mother like you.
You have SO much knowledge, it's mind-boggling 🤯.
You're an amazing person.
I think you are one of the most eloquent speakers ever. I love listening to you speak. You are also more intelligent than a lot of people I know who's first language is English! Lol
No kidding!
Yes I love listening to her
Education is anytime you are learning something you didn't know before. Your videos have educated so many people. I watch your videos and wish I could do what you do! I've taken a lot of your ideas and applied them to my small area of life and home as a single adult teacher of second language learners! I was amazed when you said that English was not your primary language. Is it Pennsylvania Dutch? You do not show any signs, except for when you say certain vocabulary words you're not sure of, that English isn't your primary language. Keep doing what you're doing. I love that you are not only making these videos for us englishers, but for the future of your own family so they can refer back to them. What an incredible legacy!
For someone who English is their second language , you do an awesome job at it .
At 24 years old you have taught me so much knowledge. I constantly talk about you to others and tell them they need to subscribe to your channel because you are SO SMART!!!
All your kiddos are having the best childhood they could possibly have. I love watching them be kids and enjoy the simple things in life like fun and adventure.
I agree, I had that sort of childhood on our farm, it was amazing
Thank God you were not over watered with too much education, so you could get deep down into your own life and be bountiful ! God Bless
Life educated is as important as formal education. We need all. I am 76 and I’m here every day learning from you.
I don't think you are uneducated. You have done a lot of research to know the underlying basics of what you teach in your videos. I love listening to you, and I've watched many of your videos just because you are so interesting, so knowledgeable, have such a soothing voice, and I see the love of God in you.
As an aging gardener I converted almost entirely to tall raised beds. My back and knees thank me! If not for these beds I would no longer be able to garden and I'm not willing to give it up! Not yet!
So great we have options, right?!
I love that we can pivot in all stages of life.
I find my root crops do better in the loose soil. I even grew popcorn in my raised bed.
Good Morning! I had no idea English wasn’t your primary language, lol. I wait each week for your video patiently 😏. God Bless you and your family 🙏❤️
Good morning!
Same here!
Think about the church she grew up in. Pennsylvania Dutch is a mennonite and ammish language. This would be her 1st language and American English would be her 2nd.
Same! I never would’ve guessed she spoke two languages. So cool!
@@Ruthannzimmas a retired Biology teacher that got my degree after I had children some of the most ignorant not stupid people I know are teachers. Not well rounded. Don’t know about the world around them. Some of the smartest people I know are old time farmers. Workers. They read a lot. That’s the key. You are very intelligent. And a great teacher.
You are the first person Io speak about heating degree days. Thank you! Now it all makes sense!!!
You’re welcome!!
I learned that too!!🎉
I thought the same thing! I have been gardening for YEARS and never really thought about that. It makes so much sense now! I now know a few things I need to fix!!!
Ruthann I love that you are not incumbered with a modern education, It leaves room for your strong traditional education, practical knowledge and understandings, that are much more valueable.. in the real world.. we have enough activists and politicians, We need more hands on, dirty nails, and messy aprons, firm foundation individuals to keep this earth turning, and not destroying its self in self-proclamed mainstream-cultivated superficial intellegence.
I have raised beds and they are great. If I had acreage in the Midwest I would in a heartbeat, not even think of a raised bed. You do what you can where you are.
I fall in the clay soil category 😢after 30+ years of fighting with, working with and ammending abundantly, I gave up. Began raised bed gardening last season and my joy of gardening is returning. I'm adding 4 more this season. All your pros and cons are right on!!❤❤❤
Ditto. Hard clay plus a gazillion rocks means I'm using raised beds, pots, cardboard boxes, old ice cream/Easter buckets, etc. Once we are somewhere more permanent (EDIT: we are renting while looking for land) we'll invest in digging/tilling up and amending the soil. Until then, we get creative.
For what it's worth, the very few neighbors we have here in the rural South who also grow things don't grow directly in the ground, either.
People can judge all they want but they have no idea what else we have on our plate nor what we need to prioritize.
Yes we are in red clay, no good dirt! Do we ent raised bed!!
I’m totally with you. We live in Texas. I have amended, I can grow corn. Everything else is in raised beds.
I live in Oklahoma so raised garden beds really are a must for backyard food production. We also have two split seasons for gardening - Mar - end of June and Sept - Nov. We have to use well water because rain water is not dependable. I grow lots of annual flowers, sweet potatoes and watermelon in the summer
Now I understand why my container garden is not thriving. I learn so very much from you. Thanks so much.
I always hear you mention not having as high an education as some. Let me tell you, you are much smarter than some I've known with degrees. You are highly intelligent about the things in life that really matter. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge with us, I found this video fascinating. 😊❤ Lots of love to you and your beautiful family
Enjoy your channel so very much. I am physically disabled and live alone. I find you and your family very uplifting. Thank you for explaining your processes so well. I never understood about sourdough discard, etc. God bless you and your family.
RuthAnn...As someone with a mobility disability, a raised bed is really my only option. I do so appreciate how you explain things in such an understandable manner. Have a beautiful and blessed day. LUCRETIA 🇺🇸
You are the first to explain about the root system in raised beds. I always was gardening in the ground but this year I can only use containers. I will do the best I can. God bless
Absolutely love how you always find the right words for us that aren't Pennsylvania Dutch. Your always so great. Love and respect you and the family.
I love your garden and seeing the kids in it participating in different aspects of it with you, along with playing! God’s beautiful rainbow was the perfect ending! Have a beautiful day, Ruth Ann! God bless!🩷
Honestly Ruthann you are an amazing self taught well self educated and you are a inspiration to me ❤
Your garden is exquisite! 😮
I love gardening!!
Iowan here also. My great grandfather and his two brothers were onion farmers. He died before I was born but I grew up near to where their land was. When the people who bought the land plowed it, the soil was pitch black. I had never and to this day (at age 58 years old) have not seen soil as dark. I still remember the smell. Sadly that land is all industrial now except for a small area that is a tree farm. What a waste of excellent farm land. You have such a beautiful garden, farm, and family. I have learned quite a bit from you and I thank you for sharing your wisdom. God bless!
Such good, rich soil. I'm not from the Midwest, but I've heard about the soil there.
@@lilafeldman8630 It sure does grow nice bountiful gardens. Also, lots of corn. Lol
I have mastered in ground gardening over 30 years. I agree with all your pros and cons about it. A very good friend asked me to mentor her, so we tilled up a large area for her to grow in next to my garden. (We have acreage to spare). It’s been a wonderful 9 years of gardening together. We have learned together, even with my years of experience. I’m not a spring chicken and It’s harder now to garden in ground (my garden is 50’x100’), so I’m starting to add some raised beds and do less in ground. I’ve always adapted to whatever comes my way. Looking forward to many more years of gardening. Thank you RuthAnn for your input and wise advice!
Good morning! Thank you for sharing your experiences and the "whys" behind your gardening techniques. I have been experimenting and learning to grow a garden for about 5 years now and it is refreshing to be reminded it's good to just dig in and not give up because something doesn't work for me! I'm blessed when my children ask me why we are trying to grow something again when it hasn't worked for us in the past and as I share with them the importance of perseverance it refreshes me and reminds me to be patient and allow God to keep stretching me personally, and us as a family! God bless you and your beautiful family!
Rather than pressing the like button on every comment I find myself agreeing with, let me just say (along with my husband’s hearty amen) that the intelligence and skill set you possess are so valuable and far superior to most, that it horrifies us that anyone would denigrate or pass judgement as to your lack of intelligence. Education Surely doesn’t equal wisdom, intellect nor common sense. You have our profound respect - especially for the humility you exhibit along with the REAL qualities you and your husband bring to the table. Be encouraged! Hope Elvin can work at home one day and share his insights with us. ❤ Appreciate your open hearts and learn so much from you all. Thank you!!!
Ruthann, you are doing an absolutely wonderful job! You are teaching many of us to homestead. My dad only had an 8th-grade education, and he became an airplane mechanic in both the Air Force and Boeing. We love your teaching, so don't stop! Just be you! You are incredible the way you are! God bless you and thank you!
What a beautiful way to end a video --a promise from God!
I Love getting a good science lesson from Professor Ruth Ann ❤
So so happy to see you teaching us gardening!! Please please keep teaching !!! 😊
The intro of your garden is stunning! I learn something from every video. Thank You.
I always take at least a minimum of two things from all of your videos!! I can’t wait to see what you will teach every week. What a well of knowledge. Thank you so much for sharing it every week.
I look forward to all your videos. Can’t wait for that cookbook
Ruthann, you are a walking encyclopedia of knowledge and wisdom.
I heard somewhere that the make up of rain water is actually different than using well water to water the garden. The rain comes down, the soil pulls out nutrients and so watering from the well is not as effective. I don't know if this is accurate.
Beautiful rainbow - God's promise.
I love seeing your kids be kids!! I look forward to your video every week!
Good Morning, I appreciate your providing pros and cons for raised bed and in ground gardens. I’m 75 and was watering my raised bed garden at 7AM. I try to give it time before full sun evaporates some of the water. I love my raised beds and they produce so much good food which I preserve. My home is on hard pan clay and I have attempted in ground garden with pumpkins and they were great but I really can’t do all that bending required.😊 I love your beautiful garden and go back and watch your series on the garden. Have a wonderful weekend to you all.❤
Everything you said makes so much sense. Raised beds dry so much faster. And, I see a huge difference in my plants when we have a season when we get more rain. Something about rain water that nourishes the plants more than sprinkler water.
Yes, raised beds dry way too fast in my dry climate, that’s why I don’t like growing in them! 😊
I agree with you about in-ground gardening, and I also grow in raised beds. I think it's most important just to put seeds in the soil and grow something, no matter where it is.
I love your knowledge, teaching with simplicity about a lot of complexity and transparency❤ Please don't get pulled in and lose this🙏 Thank you for teaching us the Ways of life through your experience.
Wouldn't it be nice if all kids could grow up like that?
Your gardens are beautiful and one can tell all the love and thoughtfulness you put into it! Thank you for allowing us a peek into them!
Wishing you a happy and bountiful gardening year!
I love what you have to share here… and all your cooking, baking and when your cow had two babies!!
So informative and I LOVE your channel! Thank you Ruth Ann!
It is such a blessing to watch your boys playing and working together.
You are such a good teacher, blessed by God. It is very obvious that you have thoroughly researched and studied this topic.
Hi RuthAnn! You are so awesome! I like the way you present pros and cons, then give the reasons why you prefer things a certain way. This always allows us to make our own decisions. You are so greatly appreciated. Thank you for sharing your life with all of us! Blessings and love to you and your family!
Ruth ann, your garden is amazing and beautiful. My heart goes pitter patter when ever I see it.
I do a combo raised bed/ in ground garden here in zone 5a Wi.
We have a lot of clay. My raised beds are 2 feet high, but are directly on the ground. Similar to your border garden. So the roots of my plants can and do go as deep as they need to grow. I agree that a lot of these raised beds that you see for sale I just shake my head at in amazement wondering what the roots are suppose to do in there. In the fall I often have to climb into the raised bed and dig out the roots with a shovel.
I also mulch heavily with grass clipping to keep the garden cool, moist and weed free. This prevents moisture loss, and once my plants are established and mulched I rarely water them at all, both in my raised bed areas and my in ground areas.
I filled my raised beds using the lasagna type method. over the years filling it higher and higher, and every fall add composted manure to each bed.
raised beds are more difficult for vining plants like pumpkin or squash and also sweet corn.
I love that so many different techniques are available and so many areas of the country have different needs.
I agree with you 100% about just trying it!! My advice to everyone who has anxiety about starting a garden is Just Start! You are not laying concrete, everything you do can be dug up and redone if it doesn't work out. Most of the fun of gardening is trying new things and experimenting with new ideas. After 40 years of gardening I am still experimenting with new ideas and still having great successes and great failures and still learning new things.
PS I love watching your boys be boys.
Wow! That rainbow! I’d call that a God nod. Well done.
Thanks for clearing the pros and cons of raised beds. I've often thought I was the only one who wasn't growing in raised beds.
Good morning you're amazing and remind me of my young adulthood because I learned all of the canning and freezing of fruits and vegetables from my grandmother, mother and dad but learned most of my gardening and animal butchery from my dad! The one thing we never did was pressure cook/can anything which I would LOVE to learn! Thank you for your faith and thank you for being here, much appreciated ❤
I love your garden, My Dad always grew a in ground garden and yes I did have to help him plant and harvest lol, then help,can lol , but I love watching you and your and your children working in the garden , it brings back so many wonderful growing up memory’s . He always loved his garden, I remember how big it was and how hard we worked but it was a labor of love. I love watching the boys riding down the hill it also reminds me of my childhood and the farm is beautiful everything sprouting out green and the beautiful rainbow God gift to us to remind us that he will never destroy the earth again by water . God Bless you and your family.
Oh, thank you for reminding me. I've been meaning to compost my raised beds for a week, and haven't gotten to them. They are done now. In the fall, I collect leaves and grass clippings, and store them in two trash bins for use in the spring. The rest of the leaves are raked into two compost bins. Rain is in the forecast for this afternoon, so I got done just in time for it.
A new video from you all makes me smile! 💚
Hello RuthAnn and sweet family! Great advice and nothing like growing in the ground the way God intended for us. Have a blessed day everyone!
Yes!
I’ve been binge watching your yeast and sourdough baking. Just found you today and I just want to say you are the perfect teacher. No rushing thru it and taking time to explain everything so we’ll and your pleasant personality is captivating. Thank you !
You are such a wealth of knowledge. Thank you for sharing it with us!
Hi Ruthann. Great topic. Right from the start, you hit all the reasons I grow in raised beds. The exception are my herbs which are grown in ground. The soil where I live in central Alabama is red clay. When dry, it is as hard as concrete, and the soil PH is alkaline 7.0-7.5. Blue berry bushes, blackberry bushes, and most vegetable crops will grow poorly, or die off. The soil has to be amended with organic material and acidifiers. I started raised bed gardening five years ago. For the last three years, it has done very well. Each year gets better. Voles are a big problem. Four of my raised beds aren't protected from them. Two of them will be moved in the fall, and lined with hardware cloth. The other two will be dug out as time permits, and the bottoms lined with rocks. Take that voles! Fertilizer is used sparingly in my garden. Compost is used to amend my raised beds, and they are covered with leaves in the fall, then in the winter, the leaves are turned into the soil. For mulch, the only things I use are leaves and grass clippings.
WHEEEE!!!
Farm younguns have a lot of chores, but they also have a lot of good, clean fun!!!
Even though I don’t garden anymore, I really enjoyed this video. You explain everything so well! I laughed out loud watching the boys ride the wagon through the arbor… thankfully!! I love their energy whether at work or at play! Yours too Ruthann!
Absolutely love all the knowledge you share! Thank you so much for sharing it and blessing others!
Thank you for educating me on the differences. I'm fairly new to gardening and this was so helpful! God bless. ❤
Your garden and homestead is beautiful. It is so relaxing when you walk through the garden. I love it!! I used to live in Michigan and we gardened in ground but I tried for so many years to do in ground here in Florida and it just never worked out for me so I went to raised beds. They are a little more work because like you said they need more watering but at least we are getting some veggies in our stock! Also now that I am getting older I can not get down on my knees so that is another benefit. Thank you for all the information that you give us, it is really so helpful. God bless you and your family and your homestead.
My Daddy (born in early 1900's) always said, what you see above ground, you should below ground. Root system is everything. We have a few border gardens but we garden in the ground. I know it isn't for everyone, main thing is to GROW something. Love your channel.
My garden is my love.😊❤
Same
I look forward to each new video and I learn so much from you! I now garden using straw bales. They are higher than normal raised beds and I didn't have to build anything. They are placed inside an old chain link dog run which acts as trellising for any plants that need it. It also helps keep the critters out. The advantage is that the conditioning process to get the bales fermenting warms the bales up, so plants that need warm soil can be planted earlier. Fewer weeds too! When I'm getting ready for new bales, the old bales have composted into a mulch I can use for edging my flower beds.
This was another beautiful video… I love watching all of the things you do and your baking and cooking is fascinating to me…you are a beautiful person…Thank you! ❤❤❤❤
Hi Ruthann I have been working on my no dig garden for about 4 years, it is healthier each year! There are two areas you touched on today that I had yet to consider! One was irrigation and the other was maintaining my edges with border gardens! I have recently used soaker hoses to water from our well when we had excessive days without rain! You have definitely given me food for thought about possibly mulching deeper or layering plants to avoid having to water! I had noticed that the hard water is not great for the garden but considered it was a necessity! Well maybe not! Thank you for sitting down and getting into the details of the way a garden really works! I can’t wait to see your garden this season! Peace and blessings! 🤗
Hello from Canada, I’ve only been vegetable gardening for a few years - when most around me are putting energy and funds into building and maintaining raised beds I’ve intuitively felt plants need to planted in-ground - now I know why. Thank you for your detailed explanation and also your take on watering. This year I’m more than ever determined not to water and do as you recommend with mulching.
It doesn’t matter if English isn’t your primary language your knowledge is so amazing! I can’t wait for each Saturdays post! I appreciate all you do to teach us! 😊Regina
Thank you! 😃
After years of doing inground gardens, then no-till gardening, I went with "short height" raised beds, but no limit on the bottom.. it goes into the original ground. I found tilling/working the ground it is a swamp until mid June, to late to plant most, and/or floods what I did get planted. My beds work well for me, I do heavily mulch the beds also, so the soil keeps moist (and seldom have to water), and cool and/or warm depending on the season. I know it all depends on location and soil. Thanks for sharing your info!
Ruthann, you may only have a limited education, but girl, I have my masters and I just got "schooled!" Thank you for the education!! I LOVE seeing the boys playing! Their sweet little faces!
I always learn so much when I watch your videos. My husband is the gardener. I am the canner, freezer, dehydrator, baker, and food prepper person. I don’t know how you do it all. We have an in ground garden. We live in the Brazos Valley of Texas. We do have to water some but try not to. Our growing season is mostly over by the time yours is coming in. We have small tomatoes on our plants that we are anxiously waiting to pick. We have a few Early Girl tomatoes that will come in first for eating. My canning operation will start the end of May and finish in early July. It just gets too hot here in the late summer, although last year we extended it a little when my husband put shade cloth up over the tomatoes. Last year was very heat intensive. We are praying for a wetter year. My husband has no desire to do a raised bed garden, but my sister has good luck with hers in town. To each his own.
Your kids crack me up. My brother and I used to take turns pushing each other in the wagon. We had a lot of fun growing up. We could always think of something to do and our pekingnese dogs were not far behind us.
Thank you for sharing this. You have given the absolute best comparison of raised beds vs inground gardening. Great explanation of why raised beds produce a bit less and why that happens. I have been gardening for our family for 43 years and as a child helping my parents. In east KY we never water inground gardens. Dad taught me to plant early enough to get the spring rains and plants get established and when drier summer days come the plants have a good deep root system to go kin search of that deep moisture. Thank you for this and God bless and keep you.
Thank you for another great video offering. I enjoy hearing your wisdom acknowledge when it comes to homesteading I must say that opening scene of the sunrise and the dew on that beautiful garden fills something up in my soul I can almost smell that fresh soil right after God has just kissed it with the morning dew. I could weep for missing that very thing. Thank you for your channel. God bless❤
Yes, GOD IS SO GOOD! Thank you for sharing your life and family with us! Every time I watch a video my mind goes to this scripture because I see it lived out in your family: ‘The fruit of the spirit is Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self Control”. God bless!
we are blessed to have you doing these videos.. thank you.
BORDER GARDEN!!! That's what I have but never knew what to call it! Thank you!!! For years and years I had an inground garden with all the rows hilled up just like my parents did. Now in my mid 60's, I can't keep up with all the weeding, so last year my husband put some 2x6 boards down on the ground and weed fabric on the walk ways. So much easier for me to keep it weeded BUT, I never knew what to say when people asked what kind of garden did I have. It's raised, but not really. lol
Raised gardens are challenging. I moved from North Carolina where I had pretty dirt and plenty of rain to eastern Tennessee where I have clay, rocks and hot dry summers. I’ve had to learn gardening all over using raised beds and purchased dirt. Covering the soil with compost and/or hay in a raised bed is essential to keep the soil moist. One nice thing is the availability of mushroom compost in the area I live.
I remember the availability of mushroom
Compost in Pennsylvania too
Your garden is amazing!!
You are such a gifted person. When you remark that English is not your first language what do you mean? You speak better than most people i encounter. Your vocabulary is unusually large. When I consider that you said you did not go to "high school" you are proof that the government schools that we have our tax money taken (stolen) for are ripping us off (as are the colleges and universities). Well God has certainly gifted you and you are using that gift to benefit your family and us, who learn from you by watching your videos. Would you consider advising us about other gardening matters such as when, where, how, spacing of, etc. regarding specific crops. I saw that your son, while planting potatoes, was using the length of his foot to gauge how far to plant the potatoes from each other. I would value your expertise much more than what "experts" say or write. Gardening facts are lost to the masses just as other important facts have been lost. Putting out your knowledge via your videos might help many people now and in the future as times get really bad (as i believe they are sure to do). I pray for you and your family to continue to be blessed by God.
RuthAnn, God has given you the gift of teaching and for sustaining the old way of life. Thank you I appreciate re-learning how to can. I have two masters, one doctorate, and one bachelor's degree. The degrees did not make me any smarter, only a better person to jump through hoops. I always thought that everyone else was better than me and smarter. Those thoughts are lies. You are amazing just the way 'God made you. You are a kind gentle and caring person with compassion. Those qualities with the fruits of the spirit are caught when taught. Thank you for what you are teaching.
We so wish we could grow our vegetables in the ground! Our Bermuda grass/ rocks make it impossible! I learned so much from you today! You amaze me!
Same here in the Bahamas. It’s near impossible doing in ground
Thank you, Ruth Ann, for all your wisdom. I do have raised beds, i have 18 inches of compost in my beds. They stand up 4 feet high. That being said, i meet a couple of your reasons to have a raised, i have a very bad back and hips and cant bend over to work the ground, i also live in Alaska, and we have a very short growing season. I use all organic soul, some is horse manure 1 to 2 years old, its turned regularly to keep it composting, some was 4 to 5 year old horse manure that looks like black gold dirt, some is from my chickens as i use shavings instead of straw, so its ready each spring. Lastly, through the growing months, i have a kiddy pool that my ducks swim and play in. I use that and some of its settlings to give my beds an extra boost. I have a greenhouse that has a 28th , 26-foot, 24-foot, raised beds, i also have 5 soon to be 6 8ft raised beds outside and a 50-foot hugelkultur. The hugelkultur does fabulous, as it, in a way, is in ground, i wish i could have all of them. But i couldn't get them planted or weeded or picked if i did everything in them. I only plant my broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage in the hugelkultur. I do have to water everything inside, and sometimes the outside, this year i will have soaker hoses on everything with timers, so all stays watered. I also plant my peas in 3 gallon buckets along a nylon fence to climb on. I also plant my potatoes in a 31:07 five gallon bags. I dont get the great big potatoes. Some get that's in the ground, but at least I get potatoes. I do have plastic i use like a greenhouse over my raised beds at time because our summers can be pretty chilli. This helps hold the heat of the day a little more in the soil. If you have any suggestions, please feel free to share them with me.
Thank you again for explaining the differences.
Ruthann thank you so much for this video it’s very interesting and you are a very intelligent lady. I do love all your videos.❤❤❤
😊😊 Even those who are very well educated have problems remembering right words and phrases. I love your videos. There's no pretending. 😊😊😊
I enjoy watching you so much. It makes me think of my younger years. What town do you live in? I grew up in Clarinda Iowa and just went m\back for a visit last year. The number 1 thing i will NEVER FORGET, is the soil back there. It was so rich, fine and I still remember the feel of the soil through my fingers. Im in Oregon now and Im doing grow bags, sitting on pallets on Basket ball court. I saved almost all your recipes and cant wait to try your canning recipes for several things. Keep up good work. Diane Burnham
Your explanation of the disadvantages of raised beds makes so much sense, and I'll bet the same logic could be applied to potted plants. (Patio tomatos, etc) I am learning so much from you!
Good morning this is the nitty gritty of gardening 😊thanks for all the education
Here in Colorado, we have to use raised beds because our mountain is rocky and we have more clay than dirt. We use all organic soil and seeds. We have only 90 days from planting to harvest due to the weather.
I’d love you to talk more about your mulch. I’ve heard you mention the hay/straw/animal poo from your barn but looking for more of your wonderful tips and tricks. ❤.
sGood to receive so much good input on gardening. We do fall into that category of more physical inconvenience as we are both seventy this year. We also plant less that we used to and supplement our produce by the generosity of Amish friends. We mainly are doing tomatoes, peppers and onions in our raised beds. As always you definitely give insight into both gardens, which is helpful to so many. Thanks for sharing such great knowledge on gardening. Have a great gardening season.
My grandmother was born in 1918 to Scottish/English farmers. She was oldest of 10 children and the first six were girls. She worked very hard learned how to home out a cylinder and drive tractor how to work in the fields. She also would come in after that hard day's work and help in the kitchen to feed the farm hands. My grandma taught me just like you're teaching and I'm still learning from you is the ways that are tried and true. By the way my grandmother was born in Sharpsburg Iowa. They went to Colorado for a few years due to the fact that my great-grandma had TB then on to Nebraska. My Grandpa always had a garden and shared not only his wonderful crops also his amazing ability to grow the best kohlrabi I've ever had. Oh Grandma knew how to put together a garden and she shared with me how to get one started. Her best kept secret was sprinkling a little bit of ammonia sulfate to get everyone started especially when she was transplanting. Thank you for sharing ❤❤❤
Wonderful information. Thank you Ruthanne!
When I first started watching you, you spoke to the fact that someone had commented that you sound ‘uneducated’. You agreed that you are. That is the only thing I’ve ever heard you say that I vehemently disagree with. You have more knowledge, and have been taught by experts on such a wide range of important, useful subjects. Our Ivy League colleges should strive to turn out such knowledgeable students! There are many ‘worlds of learning’, and the ones you attended actually serve an amazing purpose! I deeply envy you your knowledge base!
Thank you!!!!
Thank you for taking the time to share this wisdom & your gardening experiences! I gardened both ways for years but never knew half of what you shared! Now I understand why I've had some issues with production in the plants in the raised beds. Thank you! I always smile after watching one of your videos! You seem to anticipate what questions we might have as you explain how to do something and have a answer for them. I'm So grateful!
I have a new term to use, border garden. That’s what I have, but I always called it raised bed knowing that it didn’t look like most raised beds and it wasn’t even raised. We use 2x4s to keep out grass.
I'm in Kansas City and we have made our garden space both, raised beds and inground. I've considered going all inground, because I feel like I'd have more growing space, but it also would be a lot of work to create the conversion. I think hubs happy medium is to build me higher raised beds so I don't have to bend over so much, especially as I'm getting older. And we can possibly combine two beds together, adding in the walkway space to create garden space. So, instead of two 4x8' beds, I'd have one 4x18' bed. Doing that four times already would allow me an additional bed of space that I currently have. If I did that eight times, then I'd have one more full size 4x18' to work with. Fewer walking aisles, but with the way we installed our fence last year, we left a huge amount of space around the perimeter, so we'd have room to easily navigate our carts around. Always evolving and always learning what is working best. I definitely love my gardening ❤