Thank you for this video. I might attempt the same. I searched but couldn't find your pepper tunnel that you mentioned.. I would love to see that video too! 😊
Cheap and effective! Love how between your and Kevin's videos we get to see both low and high cost approaches at a gardening endeavor. I'm sure we all dream of a glass house but this is how I'll be growing for the foreseeable future.
You should add a few rocks or bricks inside the cloth frame to act as “thermal batteries“. They would store heat during the day and release it during the night. With enough mass, that would help to even out the temperature swings. A concrete, gravel-, or sand-filled table top could potentially do that without taking up extra space.
I was about to comment something similar! Could do even better if you were willing to move something in and out at night so it can get direct sunlight all day.
I’m loving the ingenuity! It’s a pretty sweet setup. 10 degrees is a huge difference; it could be do or die for some plants. The white cover kinda makes me think what if Dexter was a gardener, what would Dexter do? 🤔The ‘Inspired by Dexter Seed Starting Table Collection’. I dig it.
Cool build. You mentioned having the structure lower. What if you drilled the holes in the corners all the way through so that the conduit could slide up or down? Then use some type of clamp to hold the structure at the specific height you want. Maybe get another 1x4 to test that out? Regardless, always fun to see the projects you have around the garden.
At some point I realized that the corner connectors can actually just slide down to any height. The trade off is that I would have to rip holes into the fabric to allow it to slide down as well. In theory that's fine but I couldn't think of the best way to stop those holes from falling apart. I have some ideas now but I foresee this being an evolving build and look at this as v1!
Don't look at the temp only. The advantage for plants to stay out of the wind and draft is enormous. I found that out over my years doing container gardening. Moving my plants out of the draft made a huge difference. :)
Totally! I can't recall now if I mentioned that but that was a huge reason for this. The cold gusts and drafts of winter are really good at stunting transplants
On my seedling table, I put down thick cotton throw rugs about two by three feet placed under the trays. They add warmth. I have even placed the plastic seedling tray dome on top of the seedlings and then the rug over that, to "blanket" them. Works great. The carpets make great knee protectors in the garden too. I just pop them in the washing machine and dryer and reuse them.
My man Jacques starting seeds outdoor & protecting them with a cloth so thin you can see through it, meanwhile we're still freezing our asses off in the top half of Europe. This table is a good idea, but we wont be able to use it before the end of april/early may and that's kinda too late for summer crops, we can use it for fall crops though.
An old trick in New England with our long winters is Cold Frames. On the South side of your house, use straw bales - lower in front, sloping higher toward the back & window frames slanted over bales. Fill the bottom with horse manure - which creates a small amount of heat as it breaks down. Look up Elliot Coleman's books if you are anywhere that gets a true winter ! He's in Maine and has lots of excellent advice. California is a whole different climate, and I would suggest the pink or blue insulation in place of the cardboard, but if I remember correctly, that is either not available in Ca., or crazy expensive?! We've had a weirdly mild winter here in Massachusetts, but it is still jarring to see all the green in CA. & seed starting outside ! Very enjoyable video, Jacque !
I have always wanted to try making a hot bed like that! Charles Dowding is also a big fan of them. I have also been considering making a cold frame just for germination of things like peppers and I might still do it 👀
@@jacquesinthegarden and horse poop is normally free ! (You might have to shovel it!) LOL. I love learning about old time low tech ways of addressing issues. Would definitely be interested if you do the peppers that way. I DID have a friend grow tremendous melons accidentally in her compost pile. The heat of the compost breaking down boosted the plant & it was green & growing way ahead of everything else. That is what I would call "NO TECH!" Versus low tech ! ;)
Jaques, having watched this video to the end, I feel you need to embrace sewing machines. You could make a glorious fabric sheath with the power of sewing.
Great video thanks Jacques! Really enjoyed seeing your set up. I’m reusing materials from around my home rather than buying so I got great ideas from this. Hi from Australia 👋🏻
I like your set up! I have a seedling table I got from a recycling center. We keep in the garage with grow lights and heat mats. I harden them off and place them in a greenhouse until they are ready for transplant or pot up.
Interesting Jacques! If I grew that many seedlings I definitely would want a set up like the one you just built. I just haul all my trays in at night. Thanks for the vlog!
2:22 I have that exact greenhouse! Perfectly sized for my gardening space (a balcony). I got it for Christmas, and if I recall correctly it was on my Amazon wish list.
I’m going to ask the dumbest question. Why was the humidity lower in seedling tent then outside I’m confused cause you’re still kind of trapping in moisture, correct
Hey Jacques great showcase of a build on a budget. If you wanted variable height you could drill the conduit holes all the way through the 2x4's and use your clips as stoppers. Would be an easy way to change the height to fit whatever you have inside.
Just the interesting differences from garden to garden. So many things you showed us kept me thinking that won’t work for me because of current temperatures or wind. I love to see what others do. Thanks for this content.
I was almost tempted to start some seeds with the new moon last weekend but I knew how cold it gets at night this time of year, today the weather included snow flurries here just four miles in from the mendo coast! Your structure wouldn’t,t have stood up to the wind gusts we,ve been getting either😢 HOWEVER if I made one not so tall it could possibly work here. I,m also going to use those bubble envelopes under my trays because my table top is made of hardware mesh. I will also try using water filled laundry soap jugs as thermal mass in with the seed trays under the tent. Thank you for showing how it can be done!
I tossed a plywood sheet on top weighed down with a paver to dampen the rain and the even with the wind there was no issue with the fabric and I didn't have any tearing or issue like that.
You can buy the little green houses online from Home Depot and I'm sure other places. They come in different sizes. I'm intrigued by those conduit connectors and building possibilities, What is the longest span these connectors will support? I looked on the website but it doesn't say since they are designed to go with the Birdies beds.
They are all designed around standard 10 ft conduit spans, the one I linked can easily support a 10 foot span without issue. We also sell the 8in1 Birdies kit (look under accessories) which comes with a t connector so that you can attach two 10 foot spans together making for something that is technically 10 x 20 feet. I am not sure how much that could realistically support though.
Aren't you the guy that did a video with Kevin from Epic Gardening where you said that we have to be careful about not having chunky things in the seed starting mix because the tiny little seedlings can't push up under the weight of that chunky thing? Stop and think about it....if that were true, we wouldn't have any forests. Don't you think God makes those little seedlings strong enough to push away a chunk of wood so it can grow up and see the light? Haven't you ever seen weeds growing out of asphalt? Think about it. That comment from you is so absurd...and where in the world did you even get that idea?
I am that guy, and It is because I am referring to things that aren't weeds. The seeds we sow aren't wild native plants that readily exist and thrive in nature. Most seeds would be fine to push through most soil but it isn't true for every seed. Smaller seeds like small herb seeds or flowers would struggle to germinate properly. Obviously a squash is going to plow through whatever is above it but there are other seeds that aren't as vigorous. There is also the fact that if you are growing in sees trays the bigger chunks of material won't keep the seeds hydrated leading to worse germination. Also, you are always welcome to ask why I said something instead of plowing in with conjecture that doesn't connect in the future. Most gardeners aren't seed starting with weeds so that is an important distinction.
@@jacquesinthegarden I have seen my own seedlings pushing up against a bit of chunky weed, so no, you're statement doesn't make sense. And I believe I did exactly what you asked me to do: I asked. I did not plow in with conjecture. I did not conjecture why you made that statement, I just said I thought it was absurd. I still think it is absurd because you seem to imply that herbs and small flowers don't grow in the wild. It just doesn't make sense.
Interesting. Thanks for sharing, Jacques! You mentioned the seeds might be even warmer inside if the structure was lower because heat rises but I wonder if the fact that there would be less surface for the sun to hit would cancel that out? I don't know...just a thought experiment. I'm shit at physics :-)
I just put the plastic on the low hooptunnel I'd been building. Seed starting and growing to transplant size/waiting for the weather to be ready is the single biggest reason why I built it. I also want to see if peppers and cukes will grow better for me (summers here don't get that hot), and get nicer overwintered greens. I'm tired now.
If you ever really want to up the heat with a long lasting device, you could pipe it in from a solar oven. Keep the oven locked open on hotter days to prevent fire hazard. And, it will last longer than the greenhouse you bought from aldi for seedling heating.
my seedling table is built out of a couple of old saw horses that the roofing crew left behind at my house 4 years ago along with some plywood i had left over from re doing my bathroom floor.
Something you might consider. Places like Lowes etc. have 4X8 foot sheets of foam insulation fron half inch to one inch thickness. Easy cut to fit material .
those 2x4 not 1x4. and from the end they look like 2x3. I envy you your climate. Missouri is a rough place to grow things. Too hot at time. Too cold at times...and highly variable weather..
where do you get the fabric hold down clips to hold fabric on conduit?. i found a maker kit not the 161.. i love the make it yourself idea but the greenhouse amaon has 29$. thank you. love your videos.
Would a tarp zipper work with that fabric? These are used in construction when blocking off work areas with tarps or plastic to keep dust and debris in the work zone. The plastic film is sliced like you did the fabric after you apply the strong self adhesive zipper (unzip it and slice a door in).
I did nothing but throw a sheet of plywood on top to stop the rain from flooding the seedlings. The wind didn't do any damage which I thick is due to the fact that I kept all the fabric really tight.
Can we get the epic cells and that tray in stores? I love Walter Andersons but all they sell is that flimsy crap plastic tray that flakes away after 6 months outside.
If you have a table or setup that is difficult to level, then one thing I do is to rotate the tray 180 degrees after a minute or two to help even things out
Amazon has that greenhouse secure referring to for $43.77. I’ve had one like that but the wind took care of it. I think that if I had had it up against the house that would’ve been a different story.
I have the exact same Aldi greenhouse 😂 what I don’t like about it is lack of airflow though. I decided this season (literally this morning) to set it up as my seedling shelves but just without the cover on it
I was wondering the same (especially concerning the use of cardboard). With a week of rain forecast for San Diego starting tonight, looks like he'll know very soon!
So I did just get some rain and discovered that the low point of the fabric collects all the water and drips it down in a stream. One of the cells of my tray got washed out. So now I am considering adding a clear polycarb roof sheet!
Only question I have about seeds vs seedlings is How much water do they really need at each stage? Do you water once a day? Botton water for germination or just seedlings once emerged? Also do you soak any of your seeds? For reference of how I am starting this year, I do have the EG 6 cell trays.
I have brought them out to full sun without any major issue, this cloth lets in 85% of light which is enough to not have to go through the hardening off process.
Thank you for this video. I might attempt the same. I searched but couldn't find your pepper tunnel that you mentioned.. I would love to see that video too! 😊
Can't recall if I can link in comments but this is the video:
ua-cam.com/video/vlQc41IWOl4/v-deo.html
@@jacquesinthegarden thank you so much!!
Cheap and effective! Love how between your and Kevin's videos we get to see both low and high cost approaches at a gardening endeavor. I'm sure we all dream of a glass house but this is how I'll be growing for the foreseeable future.
You should add a few rocks or bricks inside the cloth frame to act as “thermal batteries“. They would store heat during the day and release it during the night. With enough mass, that would help to even out the temperature swings. A concrete, gravel-, or sand-filled table top could potentially do that without taking up extra space.
I was about to comment something similar! Could do even better if you were willing to move something in and out at night so it can get direct sunlight all day.
I have thought of including some 1 gallon water bottles for this exact reason!
I’m loving the ingenuity! It’s a pretty sweet setup. 10 degrees is a huge difference; it could be do or die for some plants. The white cover kinda makes me think what if Dexter was a gardener, what would Dexter do? 🤔The ‘Inspired by Dexter Seed Starting Table Collection’. I dig it.
Is Jacques Harrison?
😂
It would also be good for keeping bugs 🐛 away from your brassicas.
Cool build. You mentioned having the structure lower. What if you drilled the holes in the corners all the way through so that the conduit could slide up or down? Then use some type of clamp to hold the structure at the specific height you want. Maybe get another 1x4 to test that out?
Regardless, always fun to see the projects you have around the garden.
At some point I realized that the corner connectors can actually just slide down to any height. The trade off is that I would have to rip holes into the fabric to allow it to slide down as well. In theory that's fine but I couldn't think of the best way to stop those holes from falling apart. I have some ideas now but I foresee this being an evolving build and look at this as v1!
Actually I see your point now, and that's another great idea!
@@jacquesinthegarden good luck and looking forward to the iterations ahead
@@jacquesinthegarden I am going to wait for the version 2.0 :D
Jacques, you have become my fvorite Epic gardener.
I garden like you: very eclectic.
I'm glad Kevin hired you.
Thank you both.
Thanks for the kind words!
Don't look at the temp only. The advantage for plants to stay out of the wind and draft is enormous. I found that out over my years doing container gardening. Moving my plants out of the draft made a huge difference. :)
Totally! I can't recall now if I mentioned that but that was a huge reason for this. The cold gusts and drafts of winter are really good at stunting transplants
@@jacquesinthegarden wind-driven rain on my poor tomato transplants, yes.
That is really cool and maybe adding Velcro instead if tape and clips would last longer, just a thought. Thanks for sharing your ideas with us.
On my seedling table, I put down thick cotton throw rugs about two by three feet placed under the trays. They add warmth. I have even placed the plastic seedling tray dome on top of the seedlings and then the rug over that, to "blanket" them. Works great. The carpets make great knee protectors in the garden too. I just pop them in the washing machine and dryer and reuse them.
That is a great low tech solution as well, I love hearing all these adaptations.
My man Jacques starting seeds outdoor & protecting them with a cloth so thin you can see through it, meanwhile we're still freezing our asses off in the top half of Europe. This table is a good idea, but we wont be able to use it before the end of april/early may and that's kinda too late for summer crops, we can use it for fall crops though.
At that point setting up a cold frame is probably more ideal but yeah haha I am very lucky to have this climate
Thank you for sharing these DIY projects! I'm just getting started and I'm trying not to spend a fortune. Your tips are greatly appreciated.
Very helpful and practical for "low budget" gardeners like me! Thanks.
An old trick in New England with our long winters is Cold Frames. On the South side of your house, use straw bales - lower in front, sloping higher toward the back & window frames slanted over bales. Fill the bottom with horse manure - which creates a small amount of heat as it breaks down.
Look up Elliot Coleman's books if you are anywhere that gets a true winter ! He's in Maine and has lots of excellent advice.
California is a whole different climate, and I would suggest the pink or blue insulation in place of the cardboard, but if I remember correctly, that is either not available in Ca., or crazy expensive?!
We've had a weirdly mild winter here in Massachusetts, but it is still jarring to see all the green in CA. & seed starting outside !
Very enjoyable video, Jacque !
I have always wanted to try making a hot bed like that! Charles Dowding is also a big fan of them. I have also been considering making a cold frame just for germination of things like peppers and I might still do it 👀
@@jacquesinthegarden and horse poop is normally free ! (You might have to shovel it!) LOL. I love learning about old time low tech ways of addressing issues.
Would definitely be interested if you do the peppers that way. I DID have a friend grow tremendous melons accidentally in her compost pile. The heat of the compost breaking down boosted the plant & it was green & growing way ahead of everything else. That is what I would call "NO TECH!" Versus low tech ! ;)
Jaques, having watched this video to the end, I feel you need to embrace sewing machines.
You could make a glorious fabric sheath with the power of sewing.
Adding another hobby sounds dangerous but maybe I can see that happening deep in the future.
Great video thanks Jacques! Really enjoyed seeing your set up. I’m reusing materials from around my home rather than buying so I got great ideas from this. Hi from Australia 👋🏻
Love this! And the way you explain things so simply. There goes my next project ^_^ thank you mucho!
I like your set up! I have a seedling table I got from a recycling center. We keep in the garage with grow lights and heat mats. I harden them off and place them in a greenhouse until they are ready for transplant or pot up.
Interesting Jacques! If I grew that many seedlings I definitely would want a set up like the one you just built. I just haul all my trays in at night. Thanks for the vlog!
How is it holding up to these insane winds we're getting in socal right now?
Universal Bottom? I think I met him in Berlin...
😂😂😂
2:22 I have that exact greenhouse! Perfectly sized for my gardening space (a balcony). I got it for Christmas, and if I recall correctly it was on my Amazon wish list.
I'm sure there is some structure/heated I could do but in kansas night/morning temps are pretty sketty pretty late with work...idk.
I’m going to ask the dumbest question. Why was the humidity lower in seedling tent then outside I’m confused cause you’re still kind of trapping in moisture, correct
So happy you did this I’ve been wondering how you guys do this for cold nights. Up here in Sacramento it can get under 30 at night in January!
love the repurposing of used materials for your builds - super green garden.
Wow that bicep😳
Cool setup dude. I'm probably going to do a greenhouse tour soon once spring cleaning and early gamble planting ends
You’re a great handyman!
Hey Jacques great showcase of a build on a budget. If you wanted variable height you could drill the conduit holes all the way through the 2x4's and use your clips as stoppers. Would be an easy way to change the height to fit whatever you have inside.
A very interesting set up. It gives me some ideas.
Just the interesting differences from garden to garden. So many things you showed us kept me thinking that won’t work for me because of current temperatures or wind. I love to see what others do. Thanks for this content.
15 seconds and no views? What is happening?!? 🤣🤣
I was almost tempted to start some seeds with the new moon last weekend but I knew how cold it gets at night this time of year, today the weather included snow flurries here just four miles in from the mendo coast! Your structure wouldn’t,t have stood up to the wind gusts we,ve been getting either😢 HOWEVER if I made one not so tall it could possibly work here. I,m also going to use those bubble envelopes under my trays because my table top is made of hardware mesh. I will also try using water filled laundry soap jugs as thermal mass in with the seed trays under the tent. Thank you for showing how it can be done!
😂😂😂 literally. Lol
@@mendynoma4272 weather patterns are changing all the time
What will you do during extreme winds and/or heavy rain (as we are going to have this week!)?
I tossed a plywood sheet on top weighed down with a paver to dampen the rain and the even with the wind there was no issue with the fabric and I didn't have any tearing or issue like that.
Thank you for sharing this idea with us. It’s good to have everything that you need in one place.🤗🍅🌺
That’s sick!!! Also, I have a little seed tent like your green one!!
A few of these will add more diversity to what I'll be starting in my greenhouse once its done. Great build!!
You can buy the little green houses online from Home Depot and I'm sure other places. They come in different sizes. I'm intrigued by those conduit connectors and building possibilities,
What is the longest span these connectors will support? I looked on the website but it doesn't say since they are designed to go with the Birdies beds.
They are all designed around standard 10 ft conduit spans, the one I linked can easily support a 10 foot span without issue. We also sell the 8in1 Birdies kit (look under accessories) which comes with a t connector so that you can attach two 10 foot spans together making for something that is technically 10 x 20 feet. I am not sure how much that could realistically support though.
Aren't you the guy that did a video with Kevin from Epic Gardening where you said that we have to be careful about not having chunky things in the seed starting mix because the tiny little seedlings can't push up under the weight of that chunky thing? Stop and think about it....if that were true, we wouldn't have any forests. Don't you think God makes those little seedlings strong enough to push away a chunk of wood so it can grow up and see the light? Haven't you ever seen weeds growing out of asphalt? Think about it. That comment from you is so absurd...and where in the world did you even get that idea?
I am that guy, and It is because I am referring to things that aren't weeds. The seeds we sow aren't wild native plants that readily exist and thrive in nature. Most seeds would be fine to push through most soil but it isn't true for every seed. Smaller seeds like small herb seeds or flowers would struggle to germinate properly. Obviously a squash is going to plow through whatever is above it but there are other seeds that aren't as vigorous. There is also the fact that if you are growing in sees trays the bigger chunks of material won't keep the seeds hydrated leading to worse germination.
Also, you are always welcome to ask why I said something instead of plowing in with conjecture that doesn't connect in the future. Most gardeners aren't seed starting with weeds so that is an important distinction.
@@jacquesinthegarden I have seen my own seedlings pushing up against a bit of chunky weed, so no, you're statement doesn't make sense. And I believe I did exactly what you asked me to do: I asked. I did not plow in with conjecture. I did not conjecture why you made that statement, I just said I thought it was absurd. I still think it is absurd because you seem to imply that herbs and small flowers don't grow in the wild. It just doesn't make sense.
Interesting. Thanks for sharing, Jacques! You mentioned the seeds might be even warmer inside if the structure was lower because heat rises but I wonder if the fact that there would be less surface for the sun to hit would cancel that out? I don't know...just a thought experiment. I'm shit at physics :-)
I just put the plastic on the low hooptunnel I'd been building. Seed starting and growing to transplant size/waiting for the weather to be ready is the single biggest reason why I built it. I also want to see if peppers and cukes will grow better for me (summers here don't get that hot), and get nicer overwintered greens. I'm tired now.
You could probably fill a milk jug with water to make a heat sink for overnight.
If you ever really want to up the heat with a long lasting device, you could pipe it in from a solar oven. Keep the oven locked open on hotter days to prevent fire hazard. And, it will last longer than the greenhouse you bought from aldi for seedling heating.
Love your creativity and your enthusiasm
my seedling table is built out of a couple of old saw horses that the roofing crew left behind at my house 4 years ago along with some plywood i had left over from re doing my bathroom floor.
At 11:50 you are repeating yourself. You just SAID all that.
That little greenhouse is called a "Martha tent" Martha Stewart used it as tent to grow mushrooms indoors.
Tractor Supply has something similar to the greenhouse.
To make it a lower ceiling you could move the wood holding the posts to the table lower.
You can also pick up the green house at Job Lot at the beginning of the season.
You can buy those greenhouses at tractor supply for $50
That's so stupid. You must be awesome at pillow forts.
Something you might consider. Places like Lowes etc. have 4X8 foot sheets of foam insulation fron half inch to one inch thickness. Easy cut to fit material .
or you could run an electric cord and install the heat mats
those 2x4 not 1x4. and from the end they look like 2x3.
I envy you your climate. Missouri is a rough place to grow things. Too hot at time. Too cold at times...and highly variable weather..
I kept getting my dimensional lumber messed up! Your are 100% right the short stubs are 2x3.
Nice video, thanks for sharing
where do you get the fabric hold down clips to hold fabric on conduit?. i found a maker kit not the 161.. i love the make it yourself idea but the greenhouse amaon has 29$. thank you. love your videos.
The proper clamps came with the kit but I also used supplemental binder clips to hold it all together.
Would a tarp zipper work with that fabric? These are used in construction when blocking off work areas with tarps or plastic to keep dust and debris in the work zone. The plastic film is sliced like you did the fabric after you apply the strong self adhesive zipper (unzip it and slice a door in).
Oh I totally know what you are talking about and I think that would work well!
no grow lights or heat mats? Interesting!
I use a clear refuse bag .... it works
Hi! Great structure. What you do during rain or high wind that's going on in SD now? Do you remove everything?
I did nothing but throw a sheet of plywood on top to stop the rain from flooding the seedlings. The wind didn't do any damage which I thick is due to the fact that I kept all the fabric really tight.
Can we get the epic cells and that tray in stores? I love Walter Andersons but all they sell is that flimsy crap plastic tray that flakes away after 6 months outside.
It is for sure something we are working towards.
Put a 2 liter bottle or gallon of water in there (or multiple)! It would absorb heat during the day and slowly release it at night keeping it warmer!
Great idea!
What thermometer did you use??
ALDI has the green house now
If you have a table or setup that is difficult to level, then one thing I do is to rotate the tray 180 degrees after a minute or two to help even things out
Good tip!
Haven't checked in on this channel in a while...is Jacque getting swole?
👀💪
Amazon has that greenhouse secure referring to for $43.77. I’ve had one like that but the wind took care of it. I think that if I had had it up against the house that would’ve been a different story.
I have the exact same Aldi greenhouse 😂 what I don’t like about it is lack of airflow though. I decided this season (literally this morning) to set it up as my seedling shelves but just without the cover on it
I do basically leave it with the front wide open!
You’re still planting cabbage in San Diego? I just planted mine and it’s my first time, I thought I was too late in the season I’m in Poway
I am on the coastal side of San Diego so I have that extra month of May gray that keeps my tomatoes sad but everything else happy.
@@jacquesinthegarden fingers crossed that Mimi get some kind of cabbage I can eat haha
excellent! again!
JACQUE YOU CAN PURCHASE A GREEN HOUSE LIKE YOU HAVE ON AMAZON AT A GOOD PRICE.
I knew that aldi greenhouse instantly. Got the same one years back
Nice setup. What happens when it rains?
I was wondering the same (especially concerning the use of cardboard). With a week of rain forecast for San Diego starting tonight, looks like he'll know very soon!
So I did just get some rain and discovered that the low point of the fabric collects all the water and drips it down in a stream. One of the cells of my tray got washed out. So now I am considering adding a clear polycarb roof sheet!
Only question I have about seeds vs seedlings is
How much water do they really need at each stage? Do you water once a day? Botton water for germination or just seedlings once emerged?
Also do you soak any of your seeds?
For reference of how I am starting this year, I do have the EG 6 cell trays.
I have a full vid on seed starting and a second one on seedling care!
I learn something every time! Thanks for the inspiration.
I love how you make things yourself.
So inspiring thanks Jacques
Nice job bro great idea I needed this
That’s such a cool idea! I love it!
All this crazy wind in San Diego I wonder if the frost blanket is still up
My weather station recorded a 42 mph gust last night and the fabric is still there!
Such genius idea!! Love it !
This is exactly what I needed
I love how you use what you got!
How does this effect hardening?! I’m sure you know, but 1 hour of normal unfiltered sun = ?
Thanks!
I have brought them out to full sun without any major issue, this cloth lets in 85% of light which is enough to not have to go through the hardening off process.
@@jacquesinthegarden sweet! I’ll have to do this! Thank you!
Do you have a video showing you build for your peppers?
Its titled "My Best Tips for ABUNDANT Pepper Harvests" ill link it here and see if that works:
ua-cam.com/video/vlQc41IWOl4/v-deo.html
Really cool idea!
8:26
Those are awesome!
That is a 2x4 not 1x4
It was actually a 2x3 which is why I got mixed up
@@jacquesinthegarden Looked like a 2x4 from here.
Super!
does anyone know where Jacques is located? or his zone ?
Jacques is in San Diego, CA. His zone should be 10a or 10b, I believe.
Like Pat Cox said I am in San Diego zone 10b in the more coastal region of San Diego
Yeah because we definitely need more people using more plastic in the world...
jacques are you girly pop