I was wondering if you guys would ever do something that covers the food forest concept. FYI at the time of writing this I have not yet viewed this video. thanks and love!
Planting basil and toms next to each other are an absolute game changer, i planted both of those next to each and am happy to say i no longer have tomato horn worms 😁 although it doesn't prevent aphids 😅
I have learned so much over my 3 years of garden and much thanks to this channel! My garden is looking amazing this spring. I started gardening after my first child passed away, this has been great therapy for me ♥️.
I’m a nanny… Sent this to the family with whom I’m currently working… They’re doing a garden this year… 🥰 Thanks for the tips! And, for the memory of my Mama planting marigolds in the veggie garden… Now I remember why!
My Grandfather always had the companion plants together and garlic and buckwheat peppered the garden and roses. First thing I did when setting up our garden after buying the house was to get buckwheat to help with the soil in areas we wanted to help. I miss him so much. If only the people who bought their house knew how rich that soil is from the farm my Babci had and then my grandfather’s garden!!!!!!
Me! I got a flat of marigolds at the start of the season and planted everything else from seed (tons of veg). The marigolds came with spider mites 🎉 so they’re all gone now and I was able to quarantine them from my other things. It’s a battle but I had to tell my story 😂lol
10:50 Planting other plants on top of the potatoes will probably help with keeping the soil from drying out and will enrich it with organic material and mixroorganisms through the excreted exudates from the added root mass.
Great video. Would love to see the same for a container garden. Such as 5 gallon buckets, 20 gallon tubs and various size grow bags. I'm in south Florida and the bugs during the summer are bad. Especially aphids.
My neighbor asked me if they could spray for weeds and insects... I politely declined... But you can definitely tell where they sprayed... 😬 There was even some type of squash or gourd growing along this rock wall, and they sprayed that shit down.... Like what was it harming? Now there's just straw brown spots and lines everywhere. 😮💨 Glad I was home, my dad would have told them to spray away and every single thing would be dead. 😂
This is so helpful and encouraging. I have gardened for years, planting more each spring summer and sometimes Autumn into winter. I had a problem this season though- something was sucking the life out of the tomatoes. I have always had many tomatoes, into the autumn and last year even wintered over a few plants. However, like I said…the plants were green and growing and within a few days they turned a pale brown! I had to pick what tomatoes I could before they were destroyed too. For some reason I think it was spider mites. There were concentrations of web in the plants. I gently power sprayed them and it work for a bit but no use. I believe what ever it was got to a few other plant too. 😢 Watching this I realized that I have always had an abundance of nasturtium and lavender on the garden edge but the nasturtium didn’t grow well this year and I didn’t replant. My lavender as well struggled. I telling you all this because I have got to figure out what happened. The last thing different about this year was we primarily watered with a drip line + tiny soaker strips. (I’ve always hand watered or used a sprinkler). Anyway, lots of marigolds this year and the bell and chili peppers are still growing. Finally, one side of the garden is a chin link fence covered with ivy and trailing vine. We always cut it back and hasn’t been a problem in the past…but ? Any insight or help would be appreciated. I’m in SoCal, two hours north of San Diego so similar zone as you guys but hotter too. Thanks! 🐝
Horseradish in containers!! I really love em, but they're very hard to get rid of. Every 1-2cm of chopped root can develop into a new plant. Container gardening horseradish also makes it really easy to harvest/store.
I grow in raised beds and a couple weeks after planting my cabbage and romanesco, I had potato sprouts coming up among them. I obviously missed some of last year's potato harvest. 😃 It will be interesting to see how that combo does.
I was having a lot of issues with asparagus beetles so after consulting the internet I decided to plant parsley in my little asparagus patch, because apparently asparagus needs a lot of nutrients but parsley doesn't, so they wouldn't compete terribly. After that I kept seeing the beetles but didn't keep seeing the damage from the beetles. So it seems to have worked!
I’ve also heard if you plant Hubbard squash near your squash plants the Hubbard squash will be a trap crop for the squash beetle because squash beetles prefer Hubbard squash over any other squash. 💐💚🙃
Weird pick but we're experimenting with growing peas up our raspberry stalks this year!it took so long for the raspberries to get any leaves coming out of winter it was an easy trellis for the peas. The raspberries are growing in now and shading out the peas as it warms up.
I'm in Zone 4, and have been pairing potatoes with horseradish in the garden for four years, and it works quite well. Potato beetles always miss the crops hidden amongst the horseradish, and the two plants get along. A word of caution, though. Horseradish is an incredibly aggressive plant, and will re-establish from even the smallest piece of root. You have to cull it back every harvest when it's in an enclosed bed. Its far more challenging to REMOVE horseradish than it is to grow it. :)
I’ve been planting cilantro with my potatoes, it shades the cilantro and keeps it from bolting. Ill try adding some bush beans, and putting some cosmos nearby too! (I love cosmos already so it’s not a problem)
I have multiple scallions (from the grocery store), nasturtiums, marigolds, alyssum and dill in each bed. I’m here to win 🥇 😂😂😂😂 I will fight a pest this year!
I have been planting basil in my garden with the peppers and tomatoes along with marigolds every year. Also keep a ground full of romaine lettuce.slugs and tomato worms eat the leaves along with the rabbits. So I put some salt down along with diatomaceous earth. I try and trap the tomato worms and put them in my compost tumbler to eat all the stuff in there 😆. Dang squash Beatles always eating my zucchini leaves. So I go look for them and squash them into the ground.
One combination that worked for my garden is planting beans plant with my chilli plant. One of my chilli is now 5 foot tall and loaded with chilies. Beans provide lots of nitrogen to soil which in turn is absorbed by chilies. I only had to put Fertilizer for flowering and fruiting, I never had to add nitrogen for leaves.
I love it! I am working on planning out my warmer weather crops for the rest of the season up here in the PNW and this video is helpful for that process 😀
I only have space to grow in 4, 4 gallon buckets. Could you talk more about staggered planting. It sounds like in theory I could grow snowball turnips on top of my soon to be planted sweet potato slips or radishes with my squash. I would love other suggestions.
I eat a lot of beans, mostly pinto, every day, they stop giving you the farts if you eat them often enough that your body gets used to it (at least for me and most people)
Kevin, can you show us an aerial view of how you rotate your garden? I'm new and feel daunting about needing to do this in a small space. How do you handle rotation every year.
We do have a short season here in Maine and have to time planting seedlings precisely (something I'm still holding off on doing as we speak) because of deadly frost but WOW I'm so thankful we don't have all the insects you have! We do have an occasional potato and squash beetle but I know how to counter them now! Thank you. 🥰
My brassicas and potatoes have been decimated by caterpillars this year. At least, I *think* they’re caterpillars. We’ve had a lot more moths than butterflies this year. This is my first year gardening so I’m not entirely sure. At this point I’m just letting them clear out my beds for me as I get ready for summer 😅 I’ll definitely be working your companion plants into my garden this time around.
It's my first year growing tomatoes and chili peppers. So far, I've not had much fruit grow. But I'm taking all the advice and hoping for the best next season. I'm in 9b zone. And it's been so extremely hot, which i think is hindering. My peppers seem to struggle with aphids. They attack the flowers, which is probably why i have no serrano peppers.
I also tried peppers in 9B…and they can do well. We have a Serrano volunteer that grew from some shriveled grocery store peppers I composted, as well as Tabasco or Bird’s eye.
When I planted French Marigolds I did not pull out the dead head ones going to seed often enough and they consequently grew everywhere. I almost had to replace soil in between where I had the tomatoes.
This is such a great info video!! 👍👍 One thing I wish I could understand is how I have heard it here and elsewhere to plant horseradish in ur garden 🤷🤔 I have planted it in my garden in two areas and found out how invasive it is and I struggle to get rid of it
MILPA is traditional agriculture in Mexico, still in use. Based on the agronomy of the Maya and of other Mesoamerican peoples, the milpa system is used to produce crops of maize, beans, and squash without employing artificial pesticides and artificial fertilizers.
Great ideas and it's always fun to try out different combo's to see what works in your garden! For your three sisters cucumber, why not do bush beans with the buckwheat and radish combo to pack as much into that space as possible?
Watching as a European seeing a lot of those pests not existing here. Yay for cold winters I guess. Only one I knew was Colorado beetle but not seen em in my garden.
Regarding the Subterranean planting method - is there a video that further explains this and gives examples? I find these videos very informative and fun to watch. Thank you!
Ever give any thought to a companion garden app? I bet EG would make an epic (pun partially intended) resource for gardeners when they're out doing garden things... always so much good information on the channel but I always forget it!!
About 2 weeks ago, I planted corn and cucumbers together thinking they will be fine. The corn is up a few inches, so the cukes should be up soon? I had loads of cucumber seed, and planted them in multiple places.
Horseradish is invasive, it grows wild here and is hard to get rid of. You can dig it up, but if you miss the smallest root piece it's back! I haven't seen it repel any beetles. Otherwise, great video! I'll the corn, cucumber, radish inter-crop.
Have you guy's ever done a video on which trellis design is best for whatever edible vining crop? Like mesh size, height & width. Should we use string, metal, plastic, or wood? Because cattle panels are not good for all climbing crops, like peas for example the spacing is too far apart in my experience.
Further companion planting resources:
→ eorganic.org/node/5307
→ sandovalmastergardeners.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Companion-Planting-slides.pdf
→ piedmontmastergardeners.org/article/magical-repelling-powers-of-marigolds-myth-or-fact/
→ agrilifetoday.tamu.edu/2023/03/28/improving-tomato-plants-through-companion-planting/
→ tilthalliance.org/resources/how-legumes-fix-nitrogen-in-your-soil/
→ www.udel.edu/academics/colleges/canr/cooperative-extension/fact-sheets/adding-diversity-garden/
→ www.mofga.org/resources/companion-planting/companion-planting/
→ northerngardener.org/ladybugs-asian-lady-beetles-and-aphids/
→ cales.arizona.edu/cochise/mg/best-enemies-brief-guide-companion-planting-part-2
→ ucanr.edu/blogs/blogcore/postdetail.cfm?postnum=21085
→ extension.umn.edu/planting-and-growing-guides/companion-planting-home-gardens
→ u.osu.edu/extensionclermont/2023/06/23/potager-article-8/
→ extension.psu.edu/maximizing-your-vegetable-garden
I was wondering if you guys would ever do something that covers the food forest concept. FYI at the time of writing this I have not yet viewed this video. thanks and love!
I may grow much better next to U2🤩🤩😍
planted my first garden because of this channel, already producing a ton of food!
LOVE to hear this
@@epicgardening most the seeds came from @botanicalinterests
Awesome 😎 👍 just be warned it's really addicting 😅
@earthisflat agreed, highly addictive. I always sigh before going into plant nurseries because I know my wallet is going to feel the pain 😂
@@ifeyanishaminya never anticipated how much I could spend on DIRT 😂
Planting basil and toms next to each other are an absolute game changer, i planted both of those next to each and am happy to say i no longer have tomato horn worms 😁 although it doesn't prevent aphids 😅
You can plant some sacrificial nasturtium they work really well
Plant marigolds on one side of the tomato plant, aphids hate them.
Neem oil mix w 2 tablespoons of hydrogen peroxide works wonders, especially on cannabis
I have learned so much over my 3 years of garden and much thanks to this channel! My garden is looking amazing this spring. I started gardening after my first child passed away, this has been great therapy for me ♥️.
Breaks my heart to read this, sending you lots of love and healing 💜 so glad you found some therapy in your garden x
I always grow cucumbers vertically in tomato cages. (Small garden) I really love this video. I will use all the tips.
Wonderful!
Great tips! I have found Borage + Onions + Strawberries works really well in my garden😊
I’m a nanny… Sent this to the family with whom I’m currently working… They’re doing a garden this year… 🥰 Thanks for the tips! And, for the memory of my Mama planting marigolds in the veggie garden… Now I remember why!
My Grandfather always had the companion plants together and garlic and buckwheat peppered the garden and roses. First thing I did when setting up our garden after buying the house was to get buckwheat to help with the soil in areas we wanted to help. I miss him so much. If only the people who bought their house knew how rich that soil is from the farm my Babci had and then my grandfather’s garden!!!!!!
I can’t imagine a veggie garden without marigolds. Always had they in with the tomatoes and squash since I was real little.
Same!
Me! I got a flat of marigolds at the start of the season and planted everything else from seed (tons of veg). The marigolds came with spider mites 🎉 so they’re all gone now and I was able to quarantine them from my other things. It’s a battle but I had to tell my story 😂lol
We gonna need a flowchart for this 😂
We'll make something!
@@epicgardening would honestly be super useful 🤩
Perennial buckwheat is beautiful and pollinators love it - especially on the west coast!
Here in SW Missouri as well.
Have you tried PLOYES? BUCKWHEAT FLOUR BREAD SUBSTITUTE.
Buckwheat next to potatoes helps with potatoes bugs (hoverflies are amazing!)
I have been planting beans with the rest of my crops for a little over two years! They taste good, give shade, and add nitrogen back into soil
10:50 Planting other plants on top of the potatoes will probably help with keeping the soil from drying out and will enrich it with organic material and mixroorganisms through the excreted exudates from the added root mass.
Great video. Would love to see the same for a container garden. Such as 5 gallon buckets, 20 gallon tubs and various size grow bags. I'm in south Florida and the bugs during the summer are bad. Especially aphids.
Good alternatives to spraying
My neighbor asked me if they could spray for weeds and insects... I politely declined... But you can definitely tell where they sprayed... 😬 There was even some type of squash or gourd growing along this rock wall, and they sprayed that shit down.... Like what was it harming? Now there's just straw brown spots and lines everywhere. 😮💨 Glad I was home, my dad would have told them to spray away and every single thing would be dead. 😂
Khu vườn của bạn rất tốt ,cây trồng phát triển xanh mướt ,bạn rất có kinh nghiệm trồng cây làm vườn ,cảm ơn bạn đã chia sẻ video với mọi người .
This is so helpful and encouraging. I have gardened for years, planting more each spring summer and sometimes Autumn into winter.
I had a problem this season though- something was sucking the life out of the tomatoes. I have always had many tomatoes, into the autumn and last year even wintered over a few plants. However, like I said…the plants were green and growing and within a few days they turned a pale brown! I had to pick what tomatoes I could before they were destroyed too. For some reason I think it was spider mites. There were concentrations of web in the plants. I gently power sprayed them and it work for a bit but no use. I believe what ever it was got to a few other plant too. 😢
Watching this I realized that I have always had an abundance of nasturtium and lavender on the garden edge but the nasturtium didn’t grow well this year and I didn’t replant. My lavender as well struggled. I telling you all this because I have got to figure out what happened.
The last thing different about this year was we primarily watered with a drip line + tiny soaker strips. (I’ve always hand watered or used a sprinkler). Anyway, lots of marigolds this year and the bell and chili peppers are still growing.
Finally, one side of the garden is a chin link fence covered with ivy and trailing vine. We always cut it back and hasn’t been a problem in the past…but ?
Any insight or help would be appreciated. I’m in SoCal, two hours north of San Diego so similar zone as you guys but hotter too.
Thanks! 🐝
Horseradish in containers!!
I really love em, but they're very hard to get rid of. Every 1-2cm of chopped root can develop into a new plant. Container gardening horseradish also makes it really easy to harvest/store.
I grow in raised beds and a couple weeks after planting my cabbage and romanesco, I had potato sprouts coming up among them. I obviously missed some of last year's potato harvest. 😃 It will be interesting to see how that combo does.
Great breakdown of companion planting. Marigolds are a superb plant companion for many vegetables.
I've put marigolds next to my tomatoes for a couple of years now and they do great, and make a pretty color palette, too
I was having a lot of issues with asparagus beetles so after consulting the internet I decided to plant parsley in my little asparagus patch, because apparently asparagus needs a lot of nutrients but parsley doesn't, so they wouldn't compete terribly. After that I kept seeing the beetles but didn't keep seeing the damage from the beetles. So it seems to have worked!
Thanks Eric
I’ve also heard if you plant Hubbard squash near your squash plants the Hubbard squash will be a trap crop for the squash beetle because squash beetles prefer Hubbard squash over any other squash. 💐💚🙃
Watching this again in January when I need to be planting seed starts for Georgia spring crops!
Great video! I always love planting basil and marigolds with my tomatoes but I like these other ideas!
Weird pick but we're experimenting with growing peas up our raspberry stalks this year!it took so long for the raspberries to get any leaves coming out of winter it was an easy trellis for the peas. The raspberries are growing in now and shading out the peas as it warms up.
I'm in Zone 4, and have been pairing potatoes with horseradish in the garden for four years, and it works quite well. Potato beetles always miss the crops hidden amongst the horseradish, and the two plants get along.
A word of caution, though. Horseradish is an incredibly aggressive plant, and will re-establish from even the smallest piece of root. You have to cull it back every harvest when it's in an enclosed bed. Its far more challenging to REMOVE horseradish than it is to grow it. :)
Eric gives the best advice for companion planting!
You had 1 job ..... hilarious dual laughter intro ... 😂😂 ca'mon guys its the highlight of the video !!!
I’ve been planting cilantro with my potatoes, it shades the cilantro and keeps it from bolting. Ill try adding some bush beans, and putting some cosmos nearby too! (I love cosmos already so it’s not a problem)
Any man that can sing beans beans out-loud…. You’re good in my book! 😂👍🏻🇺🇸
I have multiple scallions (from the grocery store), nasturtiums, marigolds, alyssum and dill in each bed. I’m here to win 🥇 😂😂😂😂 I will fight a pest this year!
Great video, gentlemen! Very helpful. Thanks & happy growing!💚🌻
I found this channel maybe a month ago and I can’t stop watching and learning from both of you
I like planting native plants around the garden to attract beneficial insects that help control pests and they benefit the environment as well.
I have been planting basil in my garden with the peppers and tomatoes along with marigolds every year. Also keep a ground full of romaine lettuce.slugs and tomato worms eat the leaves along with the rabbits. So I put some salt down along with diatomaceous earth. I try and trap the tomato worms and put them in my compost tumbler to eat all the stuff in there 😆. Dang squash Beatles always eating my zucchini leaves. So I go look for them and squash them into the ground.
I’ll be trying some of these companion plantings soon 🌶🫑🧄🍆🧅🥔👵🏻👩🌾❣️
Super useful video!! Thank you-- will use immediately!! 😊
I like that you've gone in ground instead of containers.
One combination that worked for my garden is planting beans plant with my chilli plant. One of my chilli is now 5 foot tall and loaded with chilies. Beans provide lots of nitrogen to soil which in turn is absorbed by chilies. I only had to put Fertilizer for flowering and fruiting, I never had to add nitrogen for leaves.
I love it! I am working on planning out my warmer weather crops for the rest of the season up here in the PNW and this video is helpful for that process 😀
I only have space to grow in 4, 4 gallon buckets. Could you talk more about staggered planting. It sounds like in theory I could grow snowball turnips on top of my soon to be planted sweet potato slips or radishes with my squash. I would love other suggestions.
I eat a lot of beans, mostly pinto, every day, they stop giving you the farts if you eat them often enough that your body gets used to it (at least for me and most people)
Kevin, can you show us an aerial view of how you rotate your garden? I'm new and feel daunting about needing to do this in a small space. How do you handle rotation every year.
Jacques is a gem
LOVE the marigolds that we planted this year they're really starting to take off (7b)
Great video!!! Really have started planting beans around all of my garden thanks to y’all’s advice!:)
Yard long beans makes for an awesome spicy salad. 😋
Love yard longs!
It is called a symbiotic relationship between crops...👍
NEXT LEVEL INFORMATION GREAT CHANNEL🙏🏿
Thanks fellas, perfect timing.
We do have a short season here in Maine and have to time planting seedlings precisely (something I'm still holding off on doing as we speak) because of deadly frost but WOW I'm so thankful we don't have all the insects you have! We do have an occasional potato and squash beetle but I know how to counter them now! Thank you. 🥰
My brassicas and potatoes have been decimated by caterpillars this year. At least, I *think* they’re caterpillars. We’ve had a lot more moths than butterflies this year. This is my first year gardening so I’m not entirely sure.
At this point I’m just letting them clear out my beds for me as I get ready for summer 😅 I’ll definitely be working your companion plants into my garden this time around.
You can never go wrong with tomatoes and Basil together! 🙌🏻🙌🏻🍅
these guys have beautiful gardens
Thanks! Basil is a game changer for tomatoes!
Yes! the dill is always missing! growing it in every nook and cranny this season
better mount that greenhouse light on a solid pole @ 3:30 . Yes I have 1000 things like this to do in my garden too but I cant resist.
It's my first year growing tomatoes and chili peppers. So far, I've not had much fruit grow. But I'm taking all the advice and hoping for the best next season. I'm in 9b zone. And it's been so extremely hot, which i think is hindering. My peppers seem to struggle with aphids. They attack the flowers, which is probably why i have no serrano peppers.
I also tried peppers in 9B…and they can do well. We have a Serrano volunteer that grew from some shriveled grocery store peppers I composted, as well as Tabasco or Bird’s eye.
When I planted French Marigolds I did not pull out the dead head ones going to seed often enough and they consequently grew everywhere. I almost had to replace soil in between where I had the tomatoes.
This is such a great info video!! 👍👍
One thing I wish I could understand is how I have heard it here and elsewhere to plant horseradish in ur garden 🤷🤔 I have planted it in my garden in two areas and found out how invasive it is and I struggle to get rid of it
MILPA is traditional agriculture in Mexico, still in use.
Based on the agronomy of the Maya and of other Mesoamerican peoples, the milpa system is used to produce crops of maize, beans, and squash without employing artificial pesticides and artificial fertilizers.
Rose arch is looking beautiful ❤️
Superb knowledge shared. Thanks tons from Maharashtra, India.
Can yall do a video on what plants attract beneficial insects and animals to your garden (ala the lady bug and wasp examples were fascinating)
Great ideas and it's always fun to try out different combo's to see what works in your garden! For your three sisters cucumber, why not do bush beans with the buckwheat and radish combo to pack as much into that space as possible?
Awesome segment!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Pyrethrum Daisy and borage - 2 other great veggie companions!
Watching as a European seeing a lot of those pests not existing here. Yay for cold winters I guess. Only one I knew was Colorado beetle but not seen em in my garden.
Great information! Thank You!
that shamoleleeh had me dying from laughter @8:58
I honestly thought it was something I'd never heard of til I came to the comments 😂
Regarding the Subterranean planting method - is there a video that further explains this and gives examples? I find these videos very informative and fun to watch. Thank you!
Man, I HATE it when planes hit my brassicas. Like... you've got that whole open sky, why're you taking out my crops???
Great, great content -- more people should take this approach (I'm trying!)
Ever give any thought to a companion garden app? I bet EG would make an epic (pun partially intended) resource for gardeners when they're out doing garden things... always so much good information on the channel but I always forget it!!
I love your channel and information. I wrote notes to head to the nursery to purchase more.🤑
Good luck!
@@epicgardening the companion planting is effective so far in hot, humid North Florida. 👏🏽👏🏽💣💯🥳🥒🥕🫑😉
He hits us with the tchamomilé again
About 2 weeks ago, I planted corn and cucumbers together thinking they will be fine. The corn is up a few inches, so the cukes should be up soon? I had loads of cucumber seed, and planted them in multiple places.
Beans, beans, they're great for your heart,
The more you eat, the more you .... well, you know.
Horseradish is invasive, it grows wild here and is hard to get rid of. You can dig it up, but if you miss the smallest root piece it's back! I haven't seen it repel any beetles. Otherwise, great video! I'll the corn, cucumber, radish inter-crop.
what are the best companion plants for cannabis?
Borage works well to keep squash bugs away.
Suggestions for what I can plant with mammoth sunflowers to repel squirrels from eating the stalk as soon as the sunflower blossoms? 😂
Very informative, thank you.
Thank you. 😊
i like the california poppies in the background :)
This is awesome info!!
Have you guy's ever done a video on which trellis design is best for whatever edible vining crop? Like mesh size, height & width. Should we use string, metal, plastic, or wood? Because cattle panels are not good for all climbing crops, like peas for example the spacing is too far apart in my experience.
Another great video.. my go to channel live your work and chemistry - missed the signature laugh today tho
The edits are on fire xD Never laughed so hard at one of your videos, keep the memes coming!
Y’all are so lucky where you live, Wyoming is ridiculously unforgiving on my garden. Especially with such a short growing season 😔
Iv noticed peas like hangs around corn as well
FANTASTIC!
Nasturtium. Is it a pest defense? Great on salad but what could you plant them with? They can easily be a takeover plant like mint.
Great information!! How did you learn all of this?? Could you all write a book with all the amazing information please!?
very helpful this video, thank you! 💚
Cham om milly, you guys crack me up! 😂😂
man, I'm getting so zen watching your garden, I wish I had the posibility to grow my food like that even if it's a few square meters.
Dude you should see my lettuce right now 😮 this is amazing. I also have carrots and watermelon coming in 😅 I can't wait..
Cabbage white flyby @10:00 looking for some brassicas to crash into :)..