I start my day with a barefoot mooch and ‘hello’ to all the trees, fruits, veggies and flowers. Warm regards from Another wildly abundant garden in Australia
"Yes ok it's not as efficient as creating things in blocks and maing sure things don't spill into the pathways but it's so much more fun" YESYESYES, exactly. I LOVE my messy wild food garden. What an absolute pleasure it is to *not* be forcibly in control of this thing, to let it be free and big and messy. It is a joy like no other to me.
@@RebeccaHarrington-lf2kx maybe if you grew some flowers out your head and we covered you in a thick layer of nutritious compost you might compete, but no guarantees 🤔 Futher experimentation should confirm
now I feel totally justified in how I garden...wild and free, but with some structure too. But you have taken beyond into a positively magical force of nature....God is good to us. Well done!
I love my wild messy garden, and "foraging" my garden is my favourite thing. Using this method I don’t feel like I'm constantly fighting a losing battle with weeds either! I'm aiming to get as much of the ground covered as possible. I add in more perennials each year and sow annuals into the gaps.
The excitement and energy in this video is beautiful, Huw. The joy of the shifting you are doing is evident and incredibly inspiring! I'm loving your garden journal so far and can't wait to see what's to come! Beautiful garden, as always!
Your videos inspire me to continue trying to garden. I run a little public kitchen garden in my little town and sometimes it’s hard and I want to give up. Slugs, pests, lack of volunteers, and vandalism from bored teenagers all really bring my spirits down. But seeing what beautiful things you can accomplish in a small space makes me want to try again.
@@AloutkaKazawa it’s nothing that complex. It’s just a vegetable garden that is open to the public. Anyone who comes to help with the work is welcome to pick some fresh food to take home. Local school classes also enjoy visiting so the kids learn about gardening. It’s not big enough to be real food supplier.
Your enthusiasm is epic. I’m trying to adopt your method of veg, flower, and herb in one bed. One bed I got perfect. Cucumbers, yellow snap bush beans, onions, carrots, a lone tomatillo, and borage. It is stunning. I just want to hang around it and soak in the beauty. Next year all the beds are going to look that beautiful. Thanks for all the wonderful ideas. TeresaSue
Actually we did the same: thought what would be the most natural way - diversity! So i combined everything - all kind of vegetables, berries and flowers. I don't care who likes who, who was where before, where are the nutrients. I care more about what the plant needs/ likes: sun, water, soil, preferences. It is healthy, it is wild, it is colorful and full of surprises. Some stuff worked at one place and somewhere else not. I let them flower and seed themself and got surprised where they appeared by themself again. Even the paths changed from time to time. Some plants become friends, some challenged each other - it is fun to watch and to observe. In general my plants got pretty easy to handle and healthy. And we have so much insects and other wildlife here. I also use chop and drop - because time is short and plants and used soil need the nutrients they bring in as waste. Of course it is different, but I love to discover what is going on - a joyful garden that serves nature and humans. :)
This kind of growing is really great for boosting creativity in your cooking. Like you said you go out there wondering what you're going to have for dinner and it's like a treasure hunt. As you forage you can come up with great ideas on what to eat. This is one of my favorite ways to cook and eat from the garden 👏👏
I love the wild garden Huw I love your gardening I really do. The only thing is it looks lovely and productive for a while then stuff starts going over and it can get to a bit of a brown and untidy space but when it’s in it’s abundance it’s amazing.
The colorful flowers of the runner beans and sweat peas growing together are just stunning! I'm a very new gardener with a very small garden and I'm just learning to eat differently :)
I got free compost from my local skip to put on my flower bed and loads of tomatoes and squash plants grew from it, so I've just let them grow there, through the flowers, even though it wasn't the plan and now they are doing the best in the garden!
"Hello" with those dimples and that mischievous smile. Magnificently messy! I love the permaculture angle of gardening, companions planting, filling up those gaps! What sort of Dahlia was that? Love those peachy colours! Thank you Huw, for all of your knowledge and your sense of humour! I've learnt so much form watching your videos.
Your garden is so beautiful, I see many vegetables that I like. It is great to take care of your garden by yourself. Thank you for sharing your beautiful pictures with everyone.
I love how productive your garden is. I too love wandering around my garden collecting food for my dinner. It's incredible how much will grow in a small space
Love a wild, jungle-like garden! We garden in a small Wisconsin city and every year pumpkins grow on rheir own volition out of the compost. We let them wander. This year they grew up the chicken run and provided the chickens with shade! The jungle effect just FEELS abundant! Beans and carrots have been productive, and we have hundreds of bunches of grapes ripening. My only regret is rhat I cannot garden full time as I still work caring for children in my home, however they too love harvesting cucumbers and eating peaches off the trees and blueberries and blackberries.....so fun! Thank you for sharing knowledge and inspiration!!!!!
Just so wonderful to watch all the progress in your garden! I have followed you for a few years and got your book, "Grow Food for Free". This year has been so challenging to grow, but I find so much inspiration to keep going when I watch your videos, thank you Hew!❤
Your garden looks lovely - I really like the way you've got lots of things all growing together. It does look like fun going around and seeing what you can find.
Thank you for this - I really enjoyed this video! It's a bit like I garden at home - very chaotic but also great fun! Only you are much more successful than me! Such a beautiful garden! Love it! It's going on my playlist of inspirational videos!
Bravo Huh! I’ve given a portion of my garden area to just such a , “Wildness”! There is a certain joy in this area that is different from the rest of the garden. 😊
that garden is really thriving! how lovely to see all that colours popping up! such an inspiration for the ones like me that are waiting for the spring! greetings from Argentina
The bacteria in our tummy also preferre many different veggies over 5 handful of portions a day. The rule is around 30 different veggies and fibers a week.
This is such an exciting garden, Huw! I'd heard of permaculture before, but never understood what it meant until this year. This summer we visited Taperley Park (Nth. Devon) and walked around the food forest. Even my partner, who never gets excited about gardening, was raving about it. Your garden reminds me of the Taperley food forest and gives me hope that I can create the same on my small plot! Can't wait for the next growing season now!!
Looks amazing! Looking forward to read your book & follow your guidance to try and create my own “permaculture garden” and be as semi self sufficient as this. Creating new beds this year in prep for this next season. If my garden is half as productive as yours I’ll be happy 😊
Fabulous. I so enjoy your walkabouts. I did plant spring onions under my tomato plants even before I read your substack journal so I'm learning! Thank you so much. Each and every video extremely helpful.
I am embracing this approach! Your ‘Self Sufficiency Garden’ book has become my ‘bible’ and I am popping plants in as spaces open up. Definitely like foraging, which I love! Thank you so much for your passion and enthusiasm, and introducing me to the joy of polyculture 🌱💚🌱
Ienvy EVERYONE growing squash without the squash bug problems. I grow organically and it's a challenge for me. The only adverse issue in my otherwise clean happy healthy garden. No slugs but the squash bugs...ugh! Oh well taking the bad with the good. 😊 Love you, love your garden. ❤
I keep a jar of soapy water for the pests, and I'll spray some on the ones I can't quite scoop up. Also, I check for squash bugs multiple times per day 😅
@@HuwRichardsneat row gardens always made things seem impossible to me. Made friends with a fellow I call “Fig Tree Mike”(too many Mikes in my life so they all get nicknames!) He’d buy a pack of seeds and just throw them in his yard! Or scuff up some dirt with his shoe and sprinkle the seeds, then step on them. What came up, came up! Best, most wild, & doable garden I had ever seen! Thanks to him & folks like you, my family has been well fed for 4 or 5 years now! Aug 17th! Just ate my first ripe tomato of the year while watching this video! Thank you @Huw!
@@Asme1111-t8h one of the great things about gardens, they can fit any personality, any nature, & thrive with a little care! I love how straight rows look, there is a beauty to such order. But, Ha! I can’t even walk a straight line! Am a bit to swirly whirly & like a playful edge! Straight rows would leave me on my knees crying if I had to make neat rows like that? Would love to have a neat-row-person in my life to temper my chaos someday but could never have them on my own! ;)
Think of it this way. Nature would never 'build' neat beds where growth is organized. So its time to changer your mind, literally, and absorb the meaning of permaculture. If you had a pest infestation you see, and your plants were spread around, odds are some here and there would survive but if say, all your broccoli was in one bed and the cabbage moths came around well, it would take them long to find all the broccoli would it? All would be destroyed by them and their babies and their babies babies. This I believe, is what Huw is trying to say, that everything was planted with decision...for a reason.
I Absolutely love the poly culture jungle style garden. It's doing my mums head as she prefers raws and "clean" garden, but that's alright as it's not her garden 😂 I also left a lot of plants to go seeding and love seeing birds munching on and my mum is just mad as it makes the garden look untidy and i said it's natural 😂
Thank you, Huw your garden is beautiful as usual. We just had a major thunderstorm roll through in SW Oregon. Probably some more forest fires in the week. Here and Northern California. Live about 20 miles from the border and 30 miles from Mt Shasta. It is truly beautiful here. It is what it is have a blessed weekend.
This is how my allotment plot looks! I went away for a week and had a committee member water for me and they said when in between beds and looking up close everything is well organised and productive, but from the outside looking in over the hedge it looks like absolute chaos. I find this way of growing a lot less stressful when organising myself as well as it keeping the soil and plants healthy, you get into a flow of knowing where things make sense to go.
Matt's Wild Cherry currant-sized tomato plant is fun to let crawl on the ground. It is hell to trellis, pours off sucker shoots at an incredible rate. But it will easily crawl around and root in and form a sort of circular hedge. It sends shoots up vertically a few feet on its own, pretty cool. It's fun to see these cute little red sweet tomatoes ripen in expanding circles starting from the initial planting spot. I have let other chery tomato vines crawl around on the ground and they love it. Being able to root in as they crawl gives them more vigor. My crawling plants always outlive my wounded trellis plants. Makes sense, all that pruning is constantly opening them up to disease and they have far less root for the amount of foliage and fruit and that area of soil can only transfer nutrients at a rate, having access to more water and mineral sources gives them great strength. Harder to harvest, but still not hard. Definitely not as pretty as a hanging truss of glorious tomatoes, but pretty sure the plants like it better. Easy enough to put some sticks in strategic spots to encourage some of the vines to climb while letting the others crawl.
This is how I grow my garden🌱💚❤️ It gets a bit “wild “ at times but I ❤ it. What’s the difference between permaculture and polyculture? When someone asks me what I’m growing I say “ Everything “. 😂👩🌾🌱💚❤️
Dear Huw, thank you for your videos. They are very inspiring. I share your opinion about companion planting… it’s a bit too complicated. I tried it for a number of years to no real conclusion. Also I think a happy compromise between no dig, forest, organic and permaculture gardening is the best place to be No dogmatic stuff for me. Like you I prefer to make sure the soil is as fertile as possible and that is the most important. If there’s a space in the garden I fill it with something space under tomatoes for example. Happy companions are sometimes are sometimes unexpected like one of my tomatoes finding its way up a columnar pear! I have a general rule which serves me well. In my garden I only plant… Plants that give me food or are useful in cooking Plants that smell nice and plants that help the first two grow well. A rose with no scent will not be in my garden, a cherry that has no comestible fruit another no no etc I whole heatedly embrace your foraging idea in the garden too! A leaf or two here, a root there, some salad, some herbs etc marvellous ! Kindest regards
Same. I'm near the West Coast of the USA, and we've had no rain for months. The wells are starting to slow down, everything around me is brown except for the forest where the creek WAS, and the soil just bakes hard. I need to work on adding shade.
@@CWorgen5732 us too here , I'm in Malta ( Europe) - being a small island and now also very populated due to mass immigration - we are struggling. Weather is changing summer is more intense and winters are short . To add to the problems our nice politicians are chopping down trees and taking agricultural land to build more houses to accommodate more immigrants. Farmers are complaining but who cares !? We used to have rain in September but last year the first rain came in November. No easy at all -- I follow a channel , she's from USA with a mediterranean climate , Goldifarm , you might find it useful --- ua-cam.com/video/hrKonLcpQk0/v-deo.html
I always grow french beans up my tomatoes to double up on cops, but also once my tomatoes are at 6 truss i let any sideshoots from half way up the plant just grow, this gives me extra food and an even bigger frame for the beans , its a win win
6:15 reminds me that I once heard a well known medical specialist say that in order for us to have a healthy gut microbe capable of targeting pathogens and strengthening the immunity, we should be eating @20-30 different types of produce daily.
I love it Soooooo much!!!! I bought The Self Sufficiency Handbook but I’m so so so in love with this new wild permaculture garden! I wish I had your eye for design and I can’t wait until I have the knowledge to just intuitively know how to handle things. I would at some point love to know how you handle controlling plants like mints, yarrow, bergamot etc that have a tendency to take over?? I’m adding a border in my space and I’d love to put these things in but I’m scared. ♥️♥️♥️ love your channel and all of the crew!
Want a garden like this? Pre-order a copy of The Permaculture Garden: geni.us/ThePermacultureGarden 🌿
Good job on removing the wind sound. It goes unnoticed for most people, but I know it takes time to do properly.
Thank you! Sam edited this so I've passed it on ☺️
Haha I came on to say it was really odd how the wind noise kept coming and going with the B-roll.
I was going to comment on the same thing! Yes, it’s a great job.
How do you water this enclosed garden?
And how do you manage pests?
@@susanthomas7566 I don't know about watering, but Huw did a whole video on pests about a month ago.
ua-cam.com/video/xcSUyWXueAk/v-deo.html
I bet the energy you feel when you walk in this garden feels amazing.
@@amyhinson1587 Oh it really does
I start my day with a barefoot mooch and ‘hello’ to all the trees, fruits, veggies and flowers.
Warm regards from
Another wildly abundant garden in Australia
"Yes ok it's not as efficient as creating things in blocks and maing sure things don't spill into the pathways but it's so much more fun" YESYESYES, exactly. I LOVE my messy wild food garden. What an absolute pleasure it is to *not* be forcibly in control of this thing, to let it be free and big and messy. It is a joy like no other to me.
I'm somewhere between the two; I'm fine with spilling near the perimeter of the garden, but keep my main pathways clear! 😂
SO TRUE!!!!!!
In what way is it less efficient? It seems to me that you're using every inch of available land. But then I haven't had such a garden, so I'm curious.
@MrTapierwithmustache That was his quote, you'd have to ask him 😊
Looks better that 90% of the ornamental gardens you see , and yet SO productive . You should be proud
Yes I think so too! 😁
@@RebeccaHarrington-lf2kx you're almost as beautiful as huws garden😍
@@samgriffiths1017 Almost… 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@RebeccaHarrington-lf2kx maybe if you grew some flowers out your head and we covered you in a thick layer of nutritious compost you might compete, but no guarantees 🤔 Futher experimentation should confirm
@@samgriffiths1017 I should also have replied thank you ☺️
I love how my garden looks orderly in spring and now it’s all spilling happily and messily. It is so much fun and the plants seem happy.
now I feel totally justified in how I garden...wild and free, but with some structure too. But you have taken beyond into a positively magical force of nature....God is good to us. Well done!
I love my wild messy garden, and "foraging" my garden is my favourite thing. Using this method I don’t feel like I'm constantly fighting a losing battle with weeds either! I'm aiming to get as much of the ground covered as possible. I add in more perennials each year and sow annuals into the gaps.
I totally get it when you say it’s foraging and it’s fun! So cool!
It's so so fun!!
The excitement and energy in this video is beautiful, Huw. The joy of the shifting you are doing is evident and incredibly inspiring! I'm loving your garden journal so far and can't wait to see what's to come! Beautiful garden, as always!
Ahh thank you so so much! Really appreciate your support
You are a man who takes true joy from his garden and I'm here for it.
Your videos inspire me to continue trying to garden. I run a little public kitchen garden in my little town and sometimes it’s hard and I want to give up. Slugs, pests, lack of volunteers, and vandalism from bored teenagers all really bring my spirits down. But seeing what beautiful things you can accomplish in a small space makes me want to try again.
I feel you. Public kitchen garden sounds like a social enterprise - do you have a food cooperative there?
@@AloutkaKazawa it’s nothing that complex. It’s just a vegetable garden that is open to the public. Anyone who comes to help with the work is welcome to pick some fresh food to take home. Local school classes also enjoy visiting so the kids learn about gardening. It’s not big enough to be real food supplier.
The way you showcase life on the farm is so inspiring. Keep it up 0:25
I love the look of the garden, the wildness just brings so much character to it!
Your enthusiasm is epic. I’m trying to adopt your method of veg, flower, and herb in one bed. One bed I got perfect. Cucumbers, yellow snap bush beans, onions, carrots, a lone tomatillo, and borage. It is stunning. I just want to hang around it and soak in the beauty. Next year all the beds are going to look that beautiful. Thanks for all the wonderful ideas. TeresaSue
Actually we did the same: thought what would be the most natural way - diversity!
So i combined everything - all kind of vegetables, berries and flowers. I don't care who likes who, who was where before, where are the nutrients. I care more about what the plant needs/ likes: sun, water, soil, preferences.
It is healthy, it is wild, it is colorful and full of surprises. Some stuff worked at one place and somewhere else not. I let them flower and seed themself and got surprised where they appeared by themself again. Even the paths changed from time to time. Some plants become friends, some challenged each other - it is fun to watch and to observe. In general my plants got pretty easy to handle and healthy. And we have so much insects and other wildlife here. I also use chop and drop - because time is short and plants and used soil need the nutrients they bring in as waste.
Of course it is different, but I love to discover what is going on - a joyful garden that serves nature and humans. :)
This kind of growing is really great for boosting creativity in your cooking. Like you said you go out there wondering what you're going to have for dinner and it's like a treasure hunt. As you forage you can come up with great ideas on what to eat. This is one of my favorite ways to cook and eat from the garden 👏👏
I love the wild garden Huw I love your gardening I really do. The only thing is it looks lovely and productive for a while then stuff starts going over and it can get to a bit of a brown and untidy space but when it’s in it’s abundance it’s amazing.
The colorful flowers of the runner beans and sweat peas growing together are just stunning! I'm a very new gardener with a very small garden and I'm just learning to eat differently :)
Yeah I really enjoy the combination!! Thank you so much for watching☺️
O.M.G.!!!!!!! Another great video and what a BEAUTIFUL garden! Love it, Love it, Love IT!😃
Thank you Huw!❤❤❤❤❤
You have been so inspiring this year. Your passion is infectious. You're a natural teacher too! Well done.
I got free compost from my local skip to put on my flower bed and loads of tomatoes and squash plants grew from it, so I've just let them grow there, through the flowers, even though it wasn't the plan and now they are doing the best in the garden!
As an Asturian myself...I am very proud you've got an Asturian tree cabbage. Keep up this great work!
Following you from...Asturias, Spain.
Cheers!
"Hello" with those dimples and that mischievous smile.
Magnificently messy! I love the permaculture angle of gardening, companions planting, filling up those gaps! What sort of Dahlia was that? Love those peachy colours!
Thank you Huw, for all of your knowledge and your sense of humour! I've learnt so much form watching your videos.
Your garden is so beautiful, I see many vegetables that I like. It is great to take care of your garden by yourself. Thank you for sharing your beautiful pictures with everyone.
It looks so beautiful amazingly productive, really a pleasure to watch thank you 😊 for sharing
So nice of you☺️
I love how productive your garden is. I too love wandering around my garden collecting food for my dinner. It's incredible how much will grow in a small space
Love a wild, jungle-like garden! We garden in a small Wisconsin city and every year pumpkins grow on rheir own volition out of the compost. We let them wander. This year they grew up the chicken run and provided the chickens with shade! The jungle effect just FEELS abundant! Beans and carrots have been productive, and we have hundreds of bunches of grapes ripening. My only regret is rhat I cannot garden full time as I still work caring for children in my home, however they too love harvesting cucumbers and eating peaches off the trees and blueberries and blackberries.....so fun! Thank you for sharing knowledge and inspiration!!!!!
This is just wonderful. I do exactly the same, just let the plants thrive and enjoy all the foods.
Just so wonderful to watch all the progress in your garden! I have followed you for a few years and got your book, "Grow Food for Free". This year has been so challenging to grow, but I find so much inspiration to keep going when I watch your videos, thank you Hew!❤
Your garden looks lovely - I really like the way you've got lots of things all growing together. It does look like fun going around and seeing what you can find.
I love the chaos too! I can’t seem to keep things in the lines!
Your vegetable garden is beautiful.Thank you.🙂
Ahh thank you so much🌿
Thanks Huw for yet another inspiring walk around your garden, I loved it.
Happy Gardening!!! blessings Susie 🙏🇬🇧
Thank you for sharing your fun and excitement in the garden! It's contagious! Blessings Kiddo! 🌻🐛🌿💚🙏💕
Thank you for this - I really enjoyed this video! It's a bit like I garden at home - very chaotic but also great fun! Only you are much more successful than me! Such a beautiful garden! Love it! It's going on my playlist of inspirational videos!
Bravo Huh!
I’ve given a portion of my garden area to just such a , “Wildness”!
There is a certain joy in this area that is different from the rest of the garden. 😊
that garden is really thriving! how lovely to see all that colours popping up! such an inspiration for the ones like me that are waiting for the spring! greetings from Argentina
those green colors are just heaven for eyes
The bacteria in our tummy also preferre many different veggies over 5 handful of portions a day. The rule is around 30 different veggies and fibers a week.
This is such an exciting garden, Huw! I'd heard of permaculture before, but never understood what it meant until this year. This summer we visited Taperley Park (Nth. Devon) and walked around the food forest. Even my partner, who never gets excited about gardening, was raving about it. Your garden reminds me of the Taperley food forest and gives me hope that I can create the same on my small plot! Can't wait for the next growing season now!!
Small-scale permaculture garden is so delightful.
Lovely garden walk...Great information.
i love your garden , mine is the same i just pack it in , and you lift a leaf and find all sorts of treasures x
Mine too
Companion Planting. Its like PLANNING A FRIPPIN' WEDDING. ( Nobody wants to sit with fennel!)😅
Really enjoyed your video! I’ll be starting a new garden soon and will use many of your ideas.
Love patchwork quilt of flavor and color!
Blackberries wrapped in a nasturtium leaf. You got to try it.
Deal! I'll try it later!
Looks amazing! Looking forward to read your book & follow your guidance to try and create my own “permaculture garden” and be as semi self sufficient as this. Creating new beds this year in prep for this next season. If my garden is half as productive as yours I’ll be happy 😊
Fabulous. I so enjoy your walkabouts.
I did plant spring onions under my tomato plants even before I read your substack journal so I'm learning! Thank you so much. Each and every video extremely helpful.
we really want a garden like yours . congratulations
Love to see a thriving garden! Beauty, food and a lovely atmosphere :)
I am embracing this approach! Your ‘Self Sufficiency Garden’ book has become my ‘bible’ and I am popping plants in as spaces open up. Definitely like foraging, which I love! Thank you so much for your passion and enthusiasm, and introducing me to the joy of polyculture 🌱💚🌱
@@heatherkirkup6391 ahh thank you so so much what a lovely comment to read☺️
Love this .I wanting to grow my own food and this is a wonderful way to do it.😅
I also love the surprise of plants growing which i forgot I've seeded as i don't do raws but mix poly culture 😂
Wildlife! #1 Pea shoots and chervil sprig of joy lemon olive oil salt: allstar salad. Your food garden looks delicious. Enjoy your riches!
The most perfect type of garden. 😊
I love that the garden is about flavour, but we've never seen you cook! Please show us how you use the food sometime.
Your garden is very beautiful. I also dream of having a garden like you.
Love your videos 😊 Thanks for educating us.
Ienvy EVERYONE growing squash without the squash bug problems. I grow organically and it's a challenge for me. The only adverse issue in my otherwise clean happy healthy garden. No slugs but the squash bugs...ugh!
Oh well taking the bad with the good. 😊
Love you, love your garden. ❤
I feel your pain. I have borers and squash bugs. I refuse to use chemicals.
I keep a jar of soapy water for the pests, and I'll spray some on the ones I can't quite scoop up.
Also, I check for squash bugs multiple times per day 😅
Absolutely stunning ❤
Thank you! 😊
Honestly, the chaos would fry my head. Neat beds where I can see where everything works for me. Thanks for the video.
No problem at all, it may seem chaos but it's all planted with careful decision making 🌿
@@HuwRichardsneat row gardens always made things seem impossible to me. Made friends with a fellow I call “Fig Tree Mike”(too many Mikes in my life so they all get nicknames!) He’d buy a pack of seeds and just throw them in his yard! Or scuff up some dirt with his shoe and sprinkle the seeds, then step on them. What came up, came up! Best, most wild, & doable garden I had ever seen! Thanks to him & folks like you, my family has been well fed for 4 or 5 years now! Aug 17th! Just ate my first ripe tomato of the year while watching this video! Thank you @Huw!
@@sarahbehler5437 i hate straight rows with a passion.
@@Asme1111-t8h one of the great things about gardens, they can fit any personality, any nature, & thrive with a little care! I love how straight rows look, there is a beauty to such order. But, Ha! I can’t even walk a straight line! Am a bit to swirly whirly & like a playful edge! Straight rows would leave me on my knees crying if I had to make neat rows like that? Would love to have a neat-row-person in my life to temper my chaos someday but could never have them on my own! ;)
Think of it this way. Nature would never 'build' neat beds where growth is organized. So its time to changer your mind, literally, and absorb the meaning of permaculture.
If you had a pest infestation you see, and your plants were spread around, odds are some here and there would survive but if say, all your broccoli was in one bed and the cabbage moths came around well, it would take them long to find all the broccoli would it? All would be destroyed by them and their babies and their babies babies.
This I believe, is what Huw is trying to say, that everything was planted with decision...for a reason.
I am looking into doing more of this... I have such a issue with weeds tho
I appreciate seeing the bug damage on some of the plants. It makes me feel less alone. Lol
I Absolutely love the poly culture jungle style garden. It's doing my mums head as she prefers raws and "clean" garden, but that's alright as it's not her garden 😂
I also left a lot of plants to go seeding and love seeing birds munching on and my mum is just mad as it makes the garden look untidy and i said it's natural 😂
İ have 150 square meter garden i always think its not enough but now i think i have to start beforehand
I think I would call this paradise 😊, dankeschön Huw!
When I feel uninspired, I like to listen to you. You are such a greate inspiring farmer. Thank You ❤
That's so kind, thank you
This is awesome id love to have a garden like this too but isnt efficient in keeping a family fed every day seems like
Ive had no rain to speak of for weeks (Essex) so the water butts are empty and I cant water everything. . Im doing my best
Thank you, Huw your garden is beautiful as usual. We just had a major thunderstorm roll through in SW Oregon. Probably some more forest fires in the week. Here and Northern California. Live about 20 miles from the border and 30 miles from Mt Shasta. It is truly beautiful here. It is what it is have a blessed weekend.
The rain was lovely while it lasted.
This is how my allotment plot looks! I went away for a week and had a committee member water for me and they said when in between beds and looking up close everything is well organised and productive, but from the outside looking in over the hedge it looks like absolute chaos. I find this way of growing a lot less stressful when organising myself as well as it keeping the soil and plants healthy, you get into a flow of knowing where things make sense to go.
Great permaculture ideas. I may try doing more of that next year.
Inspiring vegetable garden ❤
Thanks Huw.
It's so wonderful that I think you are a giant in that forest. ☺️
Ahhh thank you!!:)
Matt's Wild Cherry currant-sized tomato plant is fun to let crawl on the ground. It is hell to trellis, pours off sucker shoots at an incredible rate. But it will easily crawl around and root in and form a sort of circular hedge. It sends shoots up vertically a few feet on its own, pretty cool. It's fun to see these cute little red sweet tomatoes ripen in expanding circles starting from the initial planting spot. I have let other chery tomato vines crawl around on the ground and they love it. Being able to root in as they crawl gives them more vigor. My crawling plants always outlive my wounded trellis plants. Makes sense, all that pruning is constantly opening them up to disease and they have far less root for the amount of foliage and fruit and that area of soil can only transfer nutrients at a rate, having access to more water and mineral sources gives them great strength. Harder to harvest, but still not hard. Definitely not as pretty as a hanging truss of glorious tomatoes, but pretty sure the plants like it better. Easy enough to put some sticks in strategic spots to encourage some of the vines to climb while letting the others crawl.
Amazing variety very inspiring ❤
Your garden is beautiful!
Yes, the wild jungle look! It's so delightful.
So lovely looking a jungle garden...
Love your chaotic garden Huw. I have artichoke growing for the first time so hoping it goes as well as yours.
This is how I grow my garden🌱💚❤️ It gets a bit “wild “ at times but I ❤ it. What’s the difference between permaculture and polyculture? When someone asks me what I’m growing I say “ Everything “. 😂👩🌾🌱💚❤️
now this is REAL gardening!
Such a marvelous garden. Thanks for walking through and showing it to us. =)
Thank you I am glad you enjoyed the video!
My agastache grew to about 6 foot tall, it's crazy large and took up way more space than I expected. 😲
The vegetables and plants in your garden look so lush and not damaged by insects. Do you have any tips? ❤
Very inspiring! Thank you.
Garden looks amazing
Dear Huw, thank you for your videos. They are very inspiring. I share your opinion about companion planting… it’s a bit too complicated. I tried it for a number of years to no real conclusion. Also I think a happy compromise between no dig, forest, organic and permaculture gardening is the best place to be No dogmatic stuff for me. Like you I prefer to make sure the soil is as fertile as possible and that is the most important. If there’s a space in the garden I fill it with something space under tomatoes for example. Happy companions are sometimes are sometimes unexpected like one of my tomatoes finding its way up a columnar pear!
I have a general rule which serves me well.
In my garden I only plant…
Plants that give me food or are useful in cooking
Plants that smell nice
and plants that help the first two grow well.
A rose with no scent will not be in my garden, a cherry that has no comestible fruit another no no etc
I whole heatedly embrace your foraging idea in the garden too! A leaf or two here, a root there, some salad, some herbs etc marvellous ! Kindest regards
you are lucky with the weather :)I enjoy watching your videos so much, lovely garden . I struggle with our Mediterranean climate , not easy ! :(
Same. I'm near the West Coast of the USA, and we've had no rain for months. The wells are starting to slow down, everything around me is brown except for the forest where the creek WAS, and the soil just bakes hard. I need to work on adding shade.
@@CWorgen5732 us too here , I'm in Malta ( Europe) - being a small island and now also very populated due to mass immigration - we are struggling. Weather is changing summer is more intense and winters are short . To add to the problems our nice politicians are chopping down trees and taking agricultural land to build more houses to accommodate more immigrants. Farmers are complaining but who cares !? We used to have rain in September but last year the first rain came in November. No easy at all -- I follow a channel , she's from USA with a mediterranean climate , Goldifarm , you might find it useful --- ua-cam.com/video/hrKonLcpQk0/v-deo.html
Sounds like the real seed catalogue!
I always grow french beans up my tomatoes to double up on cops, but also once my tomatoes are at 6 truss i let any sideshoots from half way up the plant just grow, this gives me extra food and an even bigger frame for the beans , its a win win
Love your organised mess style!! Totally relate to it 🌿🌿
6:15 reminds me that I once heard a well known medical specialist say that in order for us to have a healthy gut microbe capable of targeting pathogens and strengthening the immunity, we should be eating @20-30 different types of produce daily.
Amazing video, crammed packed with veg
Love it All!!!!🌿🕊️
Thank you!! ☺️
That's my kind of garden! Beautiful ❤ and YUM 😋
Thanks Linda!:)
I love it Soooooo much!!!! I bought The Self Sufficiency Handbook but I’m so so so in love with this new wild permaculture garden! I wish I had your eye for design and I can’t wait until I have the knowledge to just intuitively know how to handle things. I would at some point love to know how you handle controlling plants like mints, yarrow, bergamot etc that have a tendency to take over?? I’m adding a border in my space and I’d love to put these things in but I’m scared. ♥️♥️♥️ love your channel and all of the crew!
Those look great, beautiful and delicious. I also harvest my cucumbers, tomatoes and peppers 😊
Yummy!!