The Ultimate Desert Plant: Mesquite Tree Uses and Benefits

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  • Опубліковано 29 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 144

  • @ambdubs
    @ambdubs Рік тому +28

    Hello from Southern AZ and thanks for all your wonderful videos! What a great topic😊 I live very close to the Mexican border in Cochise County AZ and our 8 acres is basically part of huge a mesquite forest. Oddly enough our beans don't come till' after monsoon season around here and we harvest and mill sometime around October. The mill I think you're talking about is in Tucson AZ and they even hold a yearly mesquite pancake breakfast after the harvest! Great work on all your content and thanks for being one of very few creators who has content about the southern high deserts!

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +8

      Thanks so much! It means a lot to me that someone in the same climate benefits from my content 😁 that was the goal when I began this journey! I so wish we had a mill here!

    • @wendyr435
      @wendyr435 9 місяців тому +1

      Hey neighbor! We are also in Cochise County in Hereford! Are you harvesting your Mesquite beans? I seem to miss the window before the monsoon rains to harvest them.

    • @Gggg4G48
      @Gggg4G48 3 місяці тому

      @@thefiresidefarm I’m surprised do you need a dehydrator in the desert?

    • @nicholaslogan5185
      @nicholaslogan5185 17 днів тому

      Just moving to Cochise County myself lol. Gunna be looking to plant these around my 4.3 acres for shade

  • @HitTheDirt
    @HitTheDirt Рік тому +13

    I’m a little bit of a research obsessed person. I love to learn. After watching hours of videos and reading even more material. I think this may be the best video with very useful information. The hair dye sap was surprising and I don’t recall it being anywhere I have watched or read until now. I added this video to my playlist of interesting by other channels! Subscribed just to watch out for other plant videos !

  • @rmjr9451
    @rmjr9451 Рік тому +8

    Mesquite is the best and very useful and rewarding

  • @Ben-o4x
    @Ben-o4x Місяць тому +1

    Hello from from cold fall Milwaukee Wisconsin! We don't have mesquite trees here but I was born in Laredo Texas right on the Texas/Mexico border where Mesquite trees are forests along with cactus and 2 other brushes and wildflowers all over for as far as the eye can see. Its actually so easy to get lost on a 50 acre plot if you've never been there before! Migrants crossing the border often get separated and lost and seek help instead of trying to get to their destination. Some sadly even perish in the hot Texas sun and their skeletons are discovered by Ranchers or hunters every single year.
    Mesquite trees are so abundant that its the wood used for cooking, firewood and furniture! Some very beautiful furniture can be made and last for hundreds of years indoors!
    My 75 yr old father prefers using mesquite trees with a lot of red color for grilling.
    I've heard that Mesquite trees have more grains per square in than The Mighty Oak Tree and that Mesquite trees wear chain saws out faster than most other trees when sawing.
    Mesquite trees can cover gardens enough to let them grow without letting tomatoes get their skin sun scorched by the Texas sun along with other plants while adding nitrogen fertilizer to the ground!
    The often say Smell is our #1 sense for our memory to remember and I have to say that there is something sexy of a bbq pit starting when the Mesquite wood is starting to burn and the smell gets on your clothes. Its like smelling like a real Cowboy if you ask me! It always reminds me when of when I was a child and grandpa or grandma/mom/dad would start the grill and the very beautiful fragrant aroma of the mesquite would remind me that it's gonna be time to eat carne asada with flour and corn tortillas with guacamole and salsa beans and rice and Coke lol honestly! lol
    mesquite trees are so very beautiful when trimmed accordingly and very ornamental and look like giant bonzai trees kinda too!
    Thank you for the Video and I look forward to seeing your other videos!
    God Bless!!

  • @sydohbaby
    @sydohbaby Рік тому +10

    Cool video! I have a huge one in my backyard here in Arizona. ❤

  • @pamelamercado6902
    @pamelamercado6902 3 місяці тому +1

    I was taught as young child How to harvest the mesquite tree we would make flour tea coffee and we would also use the tare . We would use the leaves when cooking fish also we would put some in a open fire. You can also use the seeds to make necklaces and earrings You pick the pods just before the seeds turn hard you can then put holes in the seeds easily Then you would let them dry. You did a real good job telling about the Mesquite tree

  • @jimrobert1465
    @jimrobert1465 12 днів тому

    Thank you for the valuable video. I’ve learned a lot from you. I had no idea about the mosquito tree before, but now I know a lot. I’ll follow your videos to enjoy and learn more. I appreciate all the information you provide. Thank you. Have a wonderful day.

  • @vee5032
    @vee5032 11 місяців тому +7

    Wow I have a mesquite tree I didn’t know all this information about it, thank you 😊

  • @Constellasian
    @Constellasian 5 місяців тому +4

    I live in the Joshua Tree area and had one of these planted in my backyard last year. The contractor told me it was a Palo Verde, but I noticed it looked very different from the wild Palo Verde trees around. It's definitely growing slowly and is too young to flower. I can't wait for it to become a strong large tree. Pesky rabbits have been eating the leaves though because the tree is still small and some branches hang low.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  5 місяців тому

      Oh nice yah we have a lot of Palo verde here as well. The main difference is in the stems and trunk. The Palo verde is completely green and has beautiful yellow flowers bloom in the spring.

  • @AHomesteadingHustle
    @AHomesteadingHustle Рік тому +4

    This is fascinating!!! I didn't know any of this except that legumes add nitrogen to soil. I've learned so much today!!

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @AHomesteadingHustle
      @AHomesteadingHustle Рік тому +2

      Love the authentic way you said Tomales and tortillas 😅

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      @@AHomesteadingHustle hahahaha. Grew up round here. Seems wrong for me not to say them the right way 🤣 I also speak Spanish.

    • @AHomesteadingHustle
      @AHomesteadingHustle Рік тому +1

      @@thefiresidefarm makes sense! Haha! That's awesome!

  • @c.h.4814
    @c.h.4814 10 місяців тому +1

    Very well done! Great job.

  • @Ckawauchi35
    @Ckawauchi35 4 місяці тому +1

    I planted two mesquite trees in my yard here in Scottsdale, AZ 7 years ago. They first started flowering this Spring and I have seen some pods on the ground now but my trees don't seem to be anywhere like your mesquite. Mine don't have spikes! I don't think there are any places where I could have my pods processed/ground anywhere near my area but I would love to use them for tea. Makes me wonder if I could make tea from young mesquite leaves!?!
    Thank you for all the info you shared. I am looking forward to learning more about how I could use my mesquite for food and a source of nutrients.

  • @callieward8362
    @callieward8362 3 місяці тому +1

    Well done, I learned alot! I love in Arizona and will look gor that mill program ! Thanks for a great video ❤

  • @marcie5525
    @marcie5525 2 місяці тому

    Picked one up out of a nursery in Brawley. Didn’t know the benefits of this tree until your video. I’m glad I bought one and will continue to buy more for my yard

  • @markg454
    @markg454 Місяць тому

    Great content and presentation. Cheers.

  • @user-bi4hc8ib4z
    @user-bi4hc8ib4z 4 місяці тому +1

    Moving to the Joshua Tree area; learning about the flora and fauna - your video was terrific, very helpful.

  • @javiermarquez3188
    @javiermarquez3188 9 місяців тому +3

    Just saw your video and the urban farm has a mesquite mill to process the mesquite pods into flour.

  • @wbishop1330
    @wbishop1330 6 місяців тому +1

    Very cool information. I never seen or known of the screw bean mesquite. I been around mesquite trees all my life over here on the Rez in AZ. We do have a yearly mesquite pancake doings which was i think a couple of weeks back, i didnt attend but my Grandma did. I actually trimmed mesquite trees here on our land over the weekend, they grew crazee wild branches that were hanging to the ground.
    👍✌

  • @JoshJennings-w5k
    @JoshJennings-w5k 4 місяці тому +1

    You are beautiful and smart. I pick up the bean pods and boil them for an hour or so, and make tea-like drink,I put ground cinnamon in mine. It's sweet and I drink it alot in the summertime.

  • @alonzoacosta4263
    @alonzoacosta4263 2 місяці тому +1

    Great info

  • @cheryltompkins3090
    @cheryltompkins3090 6 місяців тому +2

    Super jealous you have screw being mesquites, have been looking all over to find them. The Urban Farm does helps with mesquite harvesting and does walk around mesquite classes in the Phoenix area. Look them up online, they also have a hammer Mill and will process your mesquite seed seed pods into flour for a price.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  6 місяців тому

      Oh no allllll I have here on my property is screwbean. I wish I had more texas honey mesquite haha

  • @jimb3353
    @jimb3353 7 місяців тому +1

    really great info and presentation, superb.

  • @teaceremony2460
    @teaceremony2460 Рік тому +3

    I planted Two on the coast, about 5 miles from the ocean, will they do ok? Your Spanish is spot on. 👍

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +2

      Thanks! I've never lived on the coast but they are pretty hardy trees so I'm sure they'll be fine. 😊

    • @UBGood
      @UBGood 11 місяців тому

      They are great off the coast ❤

  • @jlfoodforest
    @jlfoodforest 6 місяців тому

    I had no idea that there are still mesquite mills in Arizona, that is AWESOME! My mom's family is from Arizona, now I want to take a truck full of mesquite pods to get processed for flour LOL

  • @desertmoonlightcottage3387
    @desertmoonlightcottage3387 Рік тому +1

    Great video, very informative. I have a question. I'm just know finishing a small irrigation system in the Hueco Tanks area of west Texas and need some advise with how to plant and water about 6 to 9 Texas honey mesquite trees.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +2

      From my experience, mesquite is a native desert plant that thrives well on just rainwater.

    • @Everjams-Farms
      @Everjams-Farms 4 місяці тому +1

      Around your trees dig some basins that can soak additional water during rains. the extra water will help them grow with little watering on your part.

  • @TheBonsaiZone
    @TheBonsaiZone 6 місяців тому

    Thanks, a really good video!!!

  • @Elementaldomain
    @Elementaldomain 8 місяців тому +2

    Would like to also mention that Mesquite flour does not get weevils. I live in the desert and my Mesquite flour was outside all summer this year and it never got any weevils…so that was pretty cool. Most people say Mesquite tastes more like caramel with subtle chocolate undertones. Adding just 2 TBS to your bread mix will be more than enough to fully taste the Mesquite.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  8 місяців тому

      Wow I wasn't aware of the weevil information! Thanks for sharing!

    • @Elementaldomain
      @Elementaldomain 8 місяців тому +1

      @@thefiresidefarm surprised the heck out of me too. Although I grow a lot of my own food, it's not cost productive in the desert to grow grain. But recently I've noticed that sometimes even freezing flour doesn't kill all the weevils so I am looking to buy a lot of Mesquite flour for long term storage.

  • @PseudoAccurate
    @PseudoAccurate Рік тому

    Great video, good information. I'm thinking of buying some velvet mesquite seeds to plant out on my property. Seems like an extremely useful tree for a productive polyculture.

  • @riarereitimon4410
    @riarereitimon4410 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for sharing

  • @billyt-v7u
    @billyt-v7u 6 місяців тому

    thank you i just watched this video
    i live in Buckeye az the road is lined with mesqute trees full of golden pods i will be trying to collect pods in the next few days and give then a try

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  6 місяців тому

      Awesome! Yah once they start drying and turning brown they are good to go. If they're still moIst you should have no problem air drying them in AZ 🤣. Lemme know how it goes!

    • @billyt-v7u
      @billyt-v7u 6 місяців тому

      not at 110

  • @davidg.johnson7208
    @davidg.johnson7208 5 місяців тому

    I wonder if anyone made a bean pod picker, like the apple pickers. to get the pods higher up in the tree?

  • @WoodbeeIslandTalesandBeyond...
    @WoodbeeIslandTalesandBeyond... 6 місяців тому

    great video and information

  • @hippo-potamus
    @hippo-potamus 7 місяців тому +2

    Mesquite is king. Cherry is queen. But Pecan is the choice of professionals!

  • @frednuse7814
    @frednuse7814 8 днів тому

    i m in yucca valley planted some from seeds in just 7 months they are 5 ft .(moringa ones well make it here to ? )

    • @azsunburns
      @azsunburns 6 днів тому

      Moringa should do fine

  • @yolipedraza5556
    @yolipedraza5556 Рік тому

    I loves your video. Did you ever make the mesquite tea.? Ive been waiting for it.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      No I ended up never making it because after that first flush of pods we had some monsoon rains🥲 both a blessing and a curse. But I missed that first window to harvest a bunch

  • @joyceread7053
    @joyceread7053 4 місяці тому +1

    I made mesquite bean coffee by roasting the pods and pouring hot water over. No caffeine or acid.

  • @anikac8380
    @anikac8380 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for such an informative and concise video! You have deepened my knowledge of Mesquite and how to use it. Lucky thing that you have a neighbor with more honey mesquite, and you can root cuttings or spread seed from the best of her specimens! I was wondering about aflatoxin and livestock. Are livestock unaffected by aflatoxin when they eat mesquite pods from the ground? Would the toxin pass into the milk of a dairy animal?

  • @BinoH
    @BinoH 6 місяців тому

    Thank you that was very interesting. The mesquite seems very stable over there. Here in So Cal the mesquite that I've interacted with always tends to fall over. Do most of the mesquite stay upright or fall over in your area.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  6 місяців тому +1

      I've seen both...in the wild of the desert they tend to be shrubs more than trees.

    • @BinoH
      @BinoH 6 місяців тому

      @@thefiresidefarm Cool thank you!

  • @azsunburns
    @azsunburns 6 днів тому

    We too are in S AZ, we have over 100 mesquite on our property. During the timid seasons we harvest the branches for the goats, which keep the trees in nice shape. We also have the thornless variety, which we greatly prefer. Those thorns can go right up through a shoe. My neighbor almost lost his entire foot from a mesquite thorn infection in his toe. They had to remove the toe. We've never bothered harvesting the pods because the countless variety of ants always seem to get to them first

  • @gardenstatesowandsew
    @gardenstatesowandsew Рік тому

    That’s so interesting ❤ thank you for sharing.

  • @nuka4614
    @nuka4614 Рік тому

    Very interesting!

  • @kenhunt5153
    @kenhunt5153 8 місяців тому

    Well done.

  • @DebiLynn
    @DebiLynn Рік тому

    Wow! I never knew mesquite came from a tree. I don’t think we have those up here in SE PA. Very cool video

  • @guy4698
    @guy4698 10 місяців тому

    great info, thx you

  • @young-bolts
    @young-bolts Рік тому

    This video was great; thank you!
    I'm converting my Phoenix area yard from grass to xeriscape and will be planting two Velvet Mesquite trees.
    My wife and I have differing opinions of how a yard should look. 🤣
    I'm wanting to go for a native/natural look, she's more interested in everything looking neat and clean (sterile). 😢
    I am not putting down gravel (don't want to contribute to the heat island effect). Instead, my yard is covered with wood chips.
    Here's my questions:
    1. If I let the seed pods stay on the ground, will I have a ton of baby Mesquites popping up?
    2. How long does it take for the pods to decompose and become part of the soil?
    3. Any recommendations on how to win my wife over?!? 🤣🙄
    Thanks so much! 😊

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      Hahahaha I can't answer that last question for you...
      But yah all of the mesquite trees in my yard came from seeds that had blown in the wind. Granted...I do have ideal soil for them to germinate, but they still come up fine with little rain. The pods take quite a while to decompose...ive seen them last for years under the tree. Mostly because there's not much rain to help break them down...
      But they may be taken up by birds and other animals that love to nibble om them!

    • @Gggg4G48
      @Gggg4G48 3 місяці тому

      Absolutely a good food source for lots of critters carrying pods away and underground. Other mesquites spring from the roots as suckers. Rabbits dig for the roots and bite off fresh shoots. Coyote’s poop piles often are full of them… 😊
      Thanks for a nice informative video!
      Gardening under a mesquite tree sounds like a good idea, but put cage around it.

  • @Gaet649
    @Gaet649 Рік тому

    We have plenty Mesquite wood readily available in the San Antonio, RGV region. They give off an amazing pungent flavor when grilling for burgers or poultry.
    But because Mesquite has the strongest flavor out of other other common BBQ hardwoods
    It's not really the main wood for low n' slow BBQ cooks such as brisket.
    Sometimes it's blended with Post Oak with a low ratio of Mesquite so that the meat can still have that nice Mesquite flavor without it being too strong.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому

      I've been needing to harvest some mesquite wood for open fire cooking!

  • @perfectlycromulent6258
    @perfectlycromulent6258 8 місяців тому

    We have a mesquite tree on our property that we've become attached to. When we first moved onto the land (in a trailer) the tree was small and looked sickly but over the passed few years my partner has helped it to flourish. Now we are finally entering into the stage of planning for a house to be built and it's looking like there is no way the tree will be able to stay because it is in the center of the property. 😭 We are so sad and trying to come up with ideas. Any suggestions would be appreciated. It's maybe 10 feet tall, would it be possible to have to professionally transplanted? If all else fails I've thought about propagating from it so that it can live on in that way but we usually have bad luck with plants so I don't know if we'd be able to do that successfully. 😟

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  8 місяців тому +1

      Ooo that I'm not sure of! I would definitely call a professional arborist in your area. I'm not familiar eith transplanting established trees...especially ones with deep root systems

  • @DiegoLooez-p1o
    @DiegoLooez-p1o 8 місяців тому

    Wow I love your channel I do landscaping❤

  • @TheRB3tv
    @TheRB3tv 7 місяців тому

    Thumbs up for “Nitrogenous.”
    Informative, nice presentation.

  • @tabitablea8935
    @tabitablea8935 5 місяців тому

    Does the honey mesquite grow chucata?

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  5 місяців тому +1

      I had to Google "chucata" haha. But yes the mesquite tree does produce sap, especially at its injury points or at a split in the trunk. The sap can be used for salves, directly on a wound, or as a "gum" to chew on....though I have never tried it.

    • @tabitablea8935
      @tabitablea8935 5 місяців тому

      @@thefiresidefarm there are different kinds of mesquite. Some have a different color chucata that isn’t edible but it can be used for other things. The mesquite gives and gives💞.

  • @sobanosilva8585
    @sobanosilva8585 4 місяці тому

    Tea from the leaves??

  • @danielgelfenstein8799
    @danielgelfenstein8799 7 місяців тому

    Mesquite tree wich is called in the desert of Atacama, Chile; Tamarugo, grows naturarly theres forrest of it. The tree has super long roots and feed himself from very low water table level. So no directly from rain.

  • @HitTheDirt
    @HitTheDirt Рік тому

    Found another use in a video by June Garza interviewing Benito Trevino eye drops from the leaves soaked overnight.

  • @Darth_SurgeYo
    @Darth_SurgeYo 10 місяців тому

    I grew up eating the pods as a kid. My family would harvest the downed branches for fire wood as they had a wood stove. You can use the thorns as emergency sewing needles. Livestock will eat the leaves if they dont have grass available. I used to feed them to my meat rabbits when i had some. I have a big mesquite on my property that i would stick potted trees under it to provide shade until i planted them. Unfortunately it grew out of control and ill have to cut it down. People should really prune them as itll help them grow taller and look like a tree and not a bush.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  10 місяців тому +1

      Yah I try to prune the extra branches each winter so it will grow straighter. They actually come out single stemmed initially, but it's when the crown or main branches get cut/damaged that the shrub will create multiple branches and grow like that. They are beautiful as single trunk trees!....and a pain in my butt when they bush out haha

  • @DeLaMangaShoes
    @DeLaMangaShoes Рік тому +1

    Are you aware of the use of green pods for food?
    Also, are you aware of anyone making tofu with the legumes?
    I will be growing several varieties here in arizona for food and am interested in recipes.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      No I have not heard of either of those! But tofu would be extremely interesting!

  • @Troy-McClure81
    @Troy-McClure81 Рік тому

    I live in Las Vegas and my Chilian Mesquite was not growing leaves on one of the main trunks it's 30years old,I cut the trunk down and found all these little holes turns out it was Mesquite Borers,I used a systematic insecticide hope I caught it soon enough, until this I never knew they had a specific insect that kills them.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому

      Wow I was unaware of that as wrll. I have never seen them have damage around here

    • @Troy-McClure81
      @Troy-McClure81 Рік тому

      @@thefiresidefarm I missed the early signs,I hope it comes back in spring,so far it still has its leaves,one of the top canopies looks like it might not, pretty much I have half a tree now,but between the systemic insecticide and super fertilizer I use every year it might survive.

  • @LinK-zr7yb
    @LinK-zr7yb 10 місяців тому

    I want to plant one in my backyard but i was told the roots are invasive and they would mess up water lines. 😫

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  10 місяців тому +1

      That is definitely a concern!

    • @Elementaldomain
      @Elementaldomain 8 місяців тому

      You can keep them cut to a shrub and grow them in air pruning pots. I live in the desert and grow my own food, going on 30 years now. Water bills were horrendous so about five years ago I converted all my growing to air pots….fruit and nut trees, grapes, seasonals, everything can be converted to a shrub because in reality they were mostly all shrubs to begin with and mankind thought they knew better and started breeding everything into tree shape.
      Shrubs are easier to harvest, easier to protect from drying winds and rodents, and more importantly, use a small percentage of water compared to a tree.
      They seem to be more disease resistant as they have more efficient root systems when grown in air pots compared to the roots having to search for water everywhere; so they put their effort into producing fruit, etc.
      It just depends what your purpose is. As I use the JADAM method of fertilizing, everything growing here is used to make fertilizer, even pesticides, so I don’t need the nitrogen fixing qualities….

  • @roguetzo
    @roguetzo 3 місяці тому

    Are the flowers edible?

  • @megalon73
    @megalon73 8 місяців тому +4

    I live in Blythe California. Man are home did not have a lot she trees them brothers, so I got Mesquite trees in our house me and my dad grew out 5,6 of them at our house is starting to get more more shade and the better the backyard gets covered the more relax we have for our spots to sit down

  • @UBGood
    @UBGood 11 місяців тому

    We got your monsoon rain 🌧️ in Texas as requested 😅

  • @davidschmidt270
    @davidschmidt270 Рік тому

    Are all of the seeds/pods edible?

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      Yes 😁 as long as they are pulled off the tree. You don't want to eat ones that have fallen to the ground.

    • @davidschmidt270
      @davidschmidt270 Рік тому +1

      @@thefiresidefarm I have been finding different things on the internet that say otherwise?
      Well.....one guy said he spent time in the hospital because he misidentified a seed pod.....and acacia seed pods look very much alike....errrrrrr....I just wanna pick/ eat some seed pods, why does this feel so technical..

  • @SupaSk1llz
    @SupaSk1llz Рік тому

    There is a South African company called MannaBrew that sell a roasted and ground Mesquite powder specifically for making "coffee", if anyone is interested.

  • @geriannroth449
    @geriannroth449 6 місяців тому

    Aren't some of these Mesquite trees thornless?

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  6 місяців тому +1

      Once they get they grow large and get their bark, the trunk and main branches are thornless. But any new or small branches have thorns. There is only one thornless mesquite and it is a hybrid. I don't know much about it but it doesn't grow naturally in my area.

    • @geriannroth449
      @geriannroth449 6 місяців тому

      ​@@thefiresidefarmok thanks

  • @gardenersgraziers7261
    @gardenersgraziers7261 4 місяці тому

    surely you would soak the beans first ?

  • @jamesrogers2780
    @jamesrogers2780 4 місяці тому

    A coffee grinder works fairly well

  • @terryrogers7899
    @terryrogers7899 Рік тому

    thank you. I remember as a kid that we ate mesquite beans.

  • @ManuelPantoja-u9j
    @ManuelPantoja-u9j Рік тому

    Wow ok , I don't like the dry ones... I usually eat the ones reddish green

  • @LG-gw6xw
    @LG-gw6xw Рік тому

    I’ve never noticed the pods on the mesquite tree. Of course we don’t have many in my area. Is love to try some mesquite tea.

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  Рік тому +1

      I wish we had a local mill here! Otherwise I'd make some flour. But I think out would break my blender if I tried to use that

  • @tyroneshoelace4872
    @tyroneshoelace4872 8 місяців тому

    Is a "Maverick" Mesquite the same as a Honey Mesquite?

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  8 місяців тому

      I'm not sure! They grow naturally here so I never have to purchase them. The name sounds like a created variety.

  • @danielgelfenstein8799
    @danielgelfenstein8799 7 місяців тому

    TAMARUGO PROSOPIS BTW

  • @ChristianPrince1
    @ChristianPrince1 7 місяців тому

    Nice tree but I feel bad for what you did to your body so care for trees but you damage your arm with these ugly cancer inviters Tato!

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  7 місяців тому

      Cancer inviters is my new way of describing tattoos🤣. Thank you 🙏

  • @reavisfranklin7727
    @reavisfranklin7727 3 місяці тому

    Please don't use the word "monsoon" here in Arizona. We have late summer thunderstorms. Monsoons happen in India and Southeast Asia and they are totally different than what we have here. The same goes for "haboobs". Summer dust storms are all they are.

  • @weepeeteeee
    @weepeeteeee 9 місяців тому

    "I came here because of the Gomer Pyle episode about tomatoes and mesquite."

    • @thefiresidefarm
      @thefiresidefarm  9 місяців тому

      Bahahahahaha! You're the first! Congrats 👏

  • @spha99
    @spha99 Місяць тому +1

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosopis_cineraria

    • @spha99
      @spha99 Місяць тому

      Prosopis cineraria is deeply valued in India, but Prosopis Juliflora is largely disfavored. Both are Mesquite…🙂

  • @spha99
    @spha99 Місяць тому +1

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neltuma_juliflora

    • @spha99
      @spha99 Місяць тому

      Neltuma Juliflora and Prosopis Multiflora are same?