Planning & Starting Our 16 Bed Vegetable Garden! HELP!

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  • Опубліковано 11 січ 2025
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  • @jenniferreads6536
    @jenniferreads6536 3 роки тому +141

    If you are overwhelmed by the amount of beds, putting a wildflowermix in some of them will make your garden more beautiful and are amazing for the bees. Adding some compost will help as well! Carrots, radish, lettuce and onion are easy to start with.

    • @eboleen
      @eboleen 3 роки тому +1

      oh my gosh yes! I wildflower mix would look so beautiful and be amazing for the bees!

  • @Shelbizleee
    @Shelbizleee 3 роки тому +66

    100% the best way to learn how to garden (successfully) is by trial and error (A LOT of error if you're anything like me LOL). Good luck Maddie, your garden is going to be spectacular once you get it figured out!

    • @MadeleineOlivia
      @MadeleineOlivia  3 роки тому +9

      Haha thank you so much! I think I have to throw away the perfectionist in me for this garden! It's going to be a lot of fun but I know I'll make a lot of mistakes. But that's how I'll learn! Excited to look back on it when I get the hang of it!

  • @erinnormandeau4162
    @erinnormandeau4162 3 роки тому +87

    For strawberries: they spread like crazy over the years! Which is great because more strawbs but they can take over a veg bed. I recommend dedicating a bed to just strawberries, so they can just take over! Each year you get more and better tasting fruit with minimal effort

    • @ShroomAndMoss
      @ShroomAndMoss 3 роки тому +2

      I agree !! They replant themselves, the ultimate lazy fruit :)

  • @javabeanstudio
    @javabeanstudio 3 роки тому +188

    That opening clip straight up looked like you were going to run into Mr. Darcy at any moment.

    • @MadeleineOlivia
      @MadeleineOlivia  3 роки тому +28

      Oh I wish 😅

    • @chee60
      @chee60 3 роки тому +1

      Oh my gosh yes!!!

    • @HighLadyoftheSpiteCourt
      @HighLadyoftheSpiteCourt 3 роки тому

      Literally my husband walked in and was like “are you watching pride and prejudice rn?”

  • @mickilicyes5399
    @mickilicyes5399 3 роки тому +101

    I have been an organic gardener for many years and I think you are right on the mark. My main thing I recommend to new gardeners is to start small and don't be afraid to make mistakes for two reasons. 1 because you will make mistakes so you might as well reconcile yourself to that and 2 I believe you learn the best by doing and mistakes help you learn what doesn't work. Invaluable! Most of all have fun and something I learned from UK allotment gardeners the motto 'do little and often'. You might try the channel Emma Bailey she is a new allotment gardener who is just going for it. Good luck and happy gardening!

    • @MadeleineOlivia
      @MadeleineOlivia  3 роки тому +10

      Thank you so much for the advice and vote of confidence! I think doing little and often will be the best approach for us! Very excited to get started!

    • @Wheezywatches
      @Wheezywatches 3 роки тому +4

      Love this! Also remember some mistakes are going to be determined by Mother Earth. There’s not much you can do about random frost days or too much rain or a pack of hungry squirrels. You’ll learn about your plot with time for those sorts of things.

    • @carnamilinga
      @carnamilinga 3 роки тому +1

      @@MadeleineOlivia It's the best advice, because others don't live in your exact place with all the same conditions. Even if a lot of us or books or podcasts give you a lot of good advice you'll still have to figure out what really works for your garden and you.

    • @sugarbomb26
      @sugarbomb26 3 роки тому +1

      I LOVE Emma's channel!

  • @anacristina_40fit
    @anacristina_40fit 3 роки тому +101

    The nets might be to protect the plants from birds. I have a vegetable garden in Germany and usually I need to protect, at least on the first two weeks, the lettuces, brocolis, cauliflower, kale and cabbage from doves. They literally eat all the little plants. Also, just two overall suggestion, always plant some flowers on the beds to attract bees for polinization, and always check on package of the seeds the right time to plant each veggie.

  • @Nettietwixt
    @Nettietwixt 3 роки тому +35

    Theres a UA-camr called Huw Richards who has a veg garden planning short course. Might be really useful since you're starting out from the beginning.
    The other thing is that it's quite normal to leave a new garden for the first year so you get to know it. You'll figure out the path of the sun, any parts that sit wet or dry out, what plants you already have where etc.

  • @debbieg1621
    @debbieg1621 3 роки тому +57

    The best way to learn is to get your hands into the soil. If you like salads plant lettuce and kale those go directly into the garden and they like cooler weather. Don't worry about doing everything right now. If nothing else you could have garden fresh salads this year and worry about the bigger stuff later.

    • @MadeleineOlivia
      @MadeleineOlivia  3 роки тому +6

      Great idea! Start small!

    • @MC-ko2mx
      @MC-ko2mx 3 роки тому

      This is such great advice.
      Lettuce is so beginner-friendly, and fresh greens are always welcome.

  • @thehappymezzo3985
    @thehappymezzo3985 3 роки тому +2

    So excited to see your garden grow! Just pop over to your local garden center, grab what excites you, and start putting 'em in the ground. Ooo! Such fun!

  • @beatricemarsilius5585
    @beatricemarsilius5585 3 роки тому +37

    If you have the house at your back, in the sixth bed on the right side there is a quite big rhubarb plant :)
    This can be moved if you want to, just make sure not to cut off too many of the roots. If some of the roots come off it should still be fine! Just give it lots and lots of water if you move it :)

  • @Bloome_
    @Bloome_ 3 роки тому +20

    With the gardening, instead of saying you need to do everything all at once and plant 16 beds and feeling overwhelmed you could simply say to yourself “I’m just going to go into my garden today” for 5 minutes. Just stand in it and observe. Something might spark your interest and you’ll be there for an hour... or three. But it’s just getting out there that can be the hardest part! You got this! 💛

  • @crunchchrissy
    @crunchchrissy 3 роки тому +43

    Check out Charles Dowding, also, one of those beds had strawberries coming up. Don’t yank those!

  • @dutches8384
    @dutches8384 3 роки тому

    I think my advice is, enjoy it! Enjoy the process, enjoy the learning and the growing of the everything. Just start. Some things will go amazing, other things will fail, that’s gardening. And it’s fine. Enjoy! That’s the most important thing and you will learn while doing it. ❤️

  • @thefarmerswifecanada
    @thefarmerswifecanada 3 роки тому

    I am so excited for your journey in gardening! I am on my fifth year, and every year you learn new things. It is one of the most rewarding things you can do. I like your idea of going slow. Things that you need to start early, you would need to buy already started plants for, but there are things that you can direct seed into your garden now (I’m in Canada, so your timing might be different). I highly recommend that you use one of your beds for winter squash (if you like squash), because you can easily direct seed a few plants and with very little effort you will have squash to keep over the winter months. As long as you keep them watered every once in awhile, they pretty much take care of themselves. Beans is another thing you can direct seed, and will give you a really good harvest. Best of luck! Oh, and something I’ve learned along the way, only grow what you love to eat, but experiment with new things!

  • @LeapBeforeLooking
    @LeapBeforeLooking 3 роки тому +1

    I'm so excited that you're doing this! I'm 28 and my partner and I just moved into our first home and I'm doing my first year of gardening this year too! I have two large raised beds and my started seedlings are almost ready to be transplanted into the beds in my zone (zone 5a in Canada!) and I'm so nervous that I'm going to kill them!
    I'm very much like you in that I feel like in order for me to do anything, I must do it well, and it has been a pressure that I've been trying to manage. From what I've seen, gardening isn't a task, it's a lifelong journey of becoming harmonious with the space that you occupy. My biggest tip for new gardeners: please garden with the knowledge that you are an ambassador for the land, gardening safely means being responsible for your native wildlife too! If you are planting anything, please make sure you aren't planting anything considered invasive to your area, Plant native whenever you can!

  • @hederahelix4600
    @hederahelix4600 3 роки тому

    This has been so fascinating. I recognize so many traits of yours in myself. Trying to plan everything, wanting it to be perfect immediately, not being able to just get started and go with the flow, always finding a very good reason why you can't just get started. I truly hope you can get out of this "perfectionist headspace" as you called it so aptly. It takes the fun out of things and leads to this feeling of being overwhelmed that you felt as well. Good luck with the garden. You have enough space to experiment without doing everything perfect. 🌳🍀🌻🌼🌷

  • @myrtew6432
    @myrtew6432 3 роки тому

    Wow, it's great that you're starting your garden! I think you'll love it. I've had my veg garden for the second season now, and I've found Charles Dowding's youtube series on his small 25m2 garden very helpful! Also, I recommend buying his Vegetable Garden Diary, because it tells you exactly which plants to sow indoors or in the ground for each week of the year and just contains a lot of additional information on types of plants and no dig etc etc. He's also in the same climate zone, which makes his recommended dates very accurate.
    There's still plenty you can sow, you're definitely not too late to start your garden. May and June are perfect for direct sowing of lettuce, beets, carrots, and beans, which are all quite beginner friendly. They don't need much in terms of soil improvement, and the only additional effort is that the beans may need support if they are a climbing variety and protection from birds until they've sprouted. You can also still start courgettes and pumpkins or squashes (I prefer sowing them indoors because they need heat to develop). They'll need a good layer of compost, but will give a lot of harvest. Plant what you like to eat, that's the only rule in gardening really :)
    As you said, you'll learn most by just doing something. Some things will work out and some won't, and that's all okay. When you've started your own seeds you'll learn to recognize the plants in your garden much easier too. There are still some soon-to-be-flowering vegetables in there that you could save seeds from (I think I saw parsnips in the third bed on the right), but don't worry about that too much. If you want to start over or sow flowers in there, that's all fine, it's your garden. The nettles you can use as a vegan manure for your garden, google it!
    Oh, and last things, better remove the netting for now before it gets ruined by the weeds and save it in the shed, you'll learn to use it in your own time. And keep your tomato (and basil) plant indoors till June; tomatoes don't do well in wet and cold weather. ;)

  • @mellymeepmeep
    @mellymeepmeep 3 роки тому +1

    Courgettes, kale, onions and potatoes are the best new starter plants, just stick them in the ground and away you go! Really easy.

  • @annamartin3824
    @annamartin3824 3 роки тому +2

    There is a wonderful man on UA-cam called Charles Dowding. He is an amazing organic and no dig gardener. His channel is fabulous.

    • @MC-ko2mx
      @MC-ko2mx 3 роки тому +1

      I'm a Charles Dowding fan too!
      So happy to see so many viewers recommending his channel!

  • @carolineholland4178
    @carolineholland4178 3 роки тому

    Charles Dowding, Lovely Greens and Huw Richards all have really good advice on UA-cam. You are right, you really have struck gold. Can't wait to see some gardening vlogs.

  • @patriziadelorenzis378
    @patriziadelorenzis378 3 роки тому

    You have One of the world's most famous gardener's in England. That dear man Monty Don! I'm sure he may inspire you. Remember there Is a right moment for everything in Nature. Please don't go cutting Roses in the wrong period. Your garden Is beautful. Your wisteria reminds me of Jack and the Beanstalk. All the best to ... you , your garden and the awesome house Ciaoooo from Italy.

  • @by6011
    @by6011 3 роки тому +23

    Hey Madeleine! I've been gardening with my dad and grandpa's for years but I still feel like I'm learning. This year, I finally convinced my dad to try a no-till garden so I'll be learning right there with ya :) I've got a couple tips for you though, if I may:
    1) It seems you've already discovered this but if you feel overwhelmed, take a step back and decide what you can salvage and what needs to wait till next year. I'm a perfectionist like you and I know I've brought myself a lot of undue stress over the years trying to grow a huge garden and getting upset when I don't have the time and know-how to take care of it.
    2) The compost bins *do* look a bit worse for wear... You may be able to use the existing bins for a bit longer but the compost is much too dry like you observed. I would recommend mixing in some new "green" organic matter (like the food scraps you have in the barrel) and -- it sounds silly but -- water the compost and turning it with a pitch fork every few days. It should look (and if you are so adventurous, FEEL) moist but not sopping and after a week or so, when turning it you should feel some heat in the middle of the pile.
    3) Definitely find ONE or two resources to reference for most of your gardening, at least when starting out. When I was a teenager and had an interest in gardening, I looked at every gardening book I could find and would get overwhelmed with TONS of ideas for the same 100 square feet of garden space. Keeping with one resource at least for your first few years will help stem the information overload that can happen. I use Carla Emery's "The Encyclopedia of Country Living" because it has information about every type of plant I could ever wish to grow. She even has a good number of vegetarian/vegan recipes (not too necessary for you but I'm not a recipe developer so it was a helpful surprise for me).
    I'm from the US so I'm not sure if that particular title will be helpful for you, but something similar would suffice. That said, you're going to learn as you "grow" (HA get it?) and you'll never stop learning. There's only so much you can read about in one volume, and once gardening becomes as much a part of your lifestyle as cooking, you'll welcome all the information you can get. Just baby steps, okay? :)
    Finally, I remember you mentioning using Trello in another video about the new home. I personally use Trello as an online journal and I have a few cards on my main board for gardening projects and planning. That might be a helpful idea since you're already familiar with the platform. I'm excited to watch and follow along with you and Alex as you explore the world of growing your own food :)

  • @jolienwinters2610
    @jolienwinters2610 3 роки тому +1

    Starting an effective compost ASAP is always advised, so you have material ready by next year. Nettles are great to feed nutrients to the garden, cut them before they flower and rot, ferment or dry them to put back into the soil. I also seem to spot some flowering brassica-family plants, you could try saving seeds, either from the garden or from store bought vegetables.

  • @theamyabeja
    @theamyabeja 3 роки тому

    Just plant anything! Let go any idea that it's hard. Ultimately plants want to be alive and grow, even if it's not perfect just enjoy seeing it all grow. 😊 You can always dig something out at any time and replace it. Nothing is permanent. Good luck, excited for you/jealous of all those beds

  • @jodyderuiter
    @jodyderuiter 3 роки тому

    your planting intuition is spot on. everything you said I was thinking. start small but just jump in. plant what You want to eat and then throw some wild flower seeds and seedlings in the other beds. :)

  • @jacquiadamson1349
    @jacquiadamson1349 3 роки тому

    Your garden is so lovely, it's like your own allotment at home. I've had an allotment and grown edibles at home for a year or so and am very much a beginner still. It's such a therapeutic and rewarding hobby. Can't wait to see your garden develop over the coming years. Lovely greens is a good UA-cam channel. Good luck, embrace the mistakes and the whole journey.xxx

  • @hannahc4641
    @hannahc4641 3 роки тому

    So excited to follow your gardening journey! I’ve grown up with a mum who’s a keen gardener and I’ve definitely inherited it. In recent years we’ve switched to No Dig and it’s been fantastic. Definitely collect horse poo if you can like your mum said, it’s fantastic for the garden, I’ve got two rescue ponies so I’m lucky to have a ready supply.
    For No Dig gardening I really recommend looking at Charles Dowding, he’s got a fab UA-cam channel and lots of books. We also have his calendar which tells you the dates to plant things on according to the seasons and the moon, we’ve had a lot of success following it. There’s another book called Veg in One Bed which is quite good but I can’t remember the author, Hugh someone.
    I also learn a lot watching Gardener’s World and it’s a nice relaxing programme for a Friday evening.
    Getting a polytunnel/greenhouse would be really useful, there’s a kind of polytunnel/greenhouse hybrid you can get called a polycrub that’s like made out of a solid plastic tunnel instead of a frame covered in plastic sheet, it’s more expensive but lasts longer and is better for the environment because I think the tunnel they use is reclaimed/recycled.
    One last thing - the cheapest way to get herbs to grow in your garden is getting those pots of growing herbs from the supermarket. I bought parsley from Tesco, divided it up (there’s always loads of plants in one pot) and plant it out, I put mine in the polytunnel and it thrived. You can let it grow, cut it back and let it regrow, let it go to seed and self-seed, then you’ve basically got unlimited parsley (as long as you don’t mind letting it grow wherever it sends its seeds!) We did the same with a thyme plant from the supermarket, planted it out (the whole thing, didn’t divide it into multiples) and it’s still growing several years on. It’s a perennial so it flowers and we cut it back, then it grows. It’s fantastic and so happy in the polytunnel.
    If you like fresh mint tea I really recommend getting a Moroccan tea mint plant, but keep it in a big pot because mint is invasive. It’s the BEST mint for tea and delicious in salads.

  • @fridai5594
    @fridai5594 3 роки тому

    I started my garden from scratch last year and have expanded quite a bit this year. My best advice is to find a few people to follow, UA-cam is a treasure cove! My favourite gardening channel is Roots and Refuge, she's amazing and have so many videos for beginners!

  • @isabelleer7501
    @isabelleer7501 3 роки тому

    I see celery, carrots, potatoes, and chard mixed in with the weeds. Since you're a beginner my recommendation is to pick maybe four of five beds that you want to do vegetables in this year and the rest maybe sow with annual cut flower seed mixes. So things like zinnias, marigolds, cosmos, and sun flowers. This will make it look pretty and you'll have free flowers to decorate your home with, while also supporting the bees and taking up space while you're learning. Things like watermelon, cantaloupe, and pumpkin also do take up a lot of space so if you wanted to just put two of those things in one bed that would fill them really easily. Cantaloupe is super easy to grow from seed!

  • @LindseyMaeWhite
    @LindseyMaeWhite 3 роки тому

    I started gardening last year, and started with a bunch of herbs and tomato plants. I was also overwhelmed! It was really lovely to learn by trial and error. I killed 2 basil plants (but finally figured it out and had a HUGE plant) and could not keep any cilantro/corriander plants alive! This year I did herbs, tomatoes, bell peppers, jalapenos, strawberries, and flowers. Next year I plan on doing more as I learn :)

  • @aaronmoon150
    @aaronmoon150 3 роки тому

    Hello - love your garden can see so much potential! Lots of great recommendations here already but wanted to add a few more:
    - Don't be overwhelmed by the beds and I think its a good idea to start with the beds you've cleared and grow over time. As others have said I'd sow the rest with wildflowers (I recommend a good quality mix that isn't bulked out too much with grasses and is all definitely native!). Another option is 'green manure' such as clover, which you can plant now and chop in the winter to break-down and provide nutrients.
    - One bed would be great for strawberries, the best time to plant these is over winter. You can buy bundles of varieties as bare-root. These are much cheaper and you can get a mix which will spread out the harvest (early and late varieties). For example I got a bunch of 36 plants very affordably on ebay. The netting could be for strawberries as sometimes birds love them, another trick which I haven't needed to try is painting stones red so they get confused and stop bothering! On the whole fruit is my favourite thing to grow as its almost always perennial (less effort) and fruit is so expensive but delicious straight off the plant!!
    - I'd also use a bed for climbing beans and runner beans. Hugely productive, fun to grow and you can store them in various ways for the rest of the year to cook with.
    - Don't be afraid to experiment - it's all the fun! You can find crazy coloured veg and other varieties that you wouldn't even find at a market. These make it even more fun to grow. Also I like to interplant with flowers, as its more of a hobby I don't obsess over harvests / maximising the space for production. This can also help with beneficial insects or repel some 'pests'. Over time I'd recommend reading more about permaculture and food forests for your wider garden if you want to plant beyond the raised beds.
    - When planning I randomly like to use powerpoint, you can draw out your beds (I also have raised beds) with basic shapes to make a template. Then you can print this to do planning on or do it all on powerpoint with clip art ahah
    I've been gardening for around 7yrs and learnt from scratch so feel free to message if you'd like any more advice :)

  • @Janeoffools
    @Janeoffools 3 роки тому +44

    The plant you’re wondering if you can eat looks like carrots to me. Pull them up and see if there’s gold at the bottom 😉

    • @elizabethpeters423
      @elizabethpeters423 3 роки тому +1

      I thought the same

    • @CharlotteRawles
      @CharlotteRawles 3 роки тому

      Yeah I thought carrots too!

    • @hesta72
      @hesta72 3 роки тому +2

      and you can eat the carrot tops, I think there are some recipes for making pesto with it

    • @FadeWinter
      @FadeWinter 3 роки тому

      Just be so careful with identification as other wild plants in the carrot family are deadly poisonous.

  • @granolagirl795
    @granolagirl795 3 роки тому +1

    Potatoes are super easy and you can plant them and just water them now and then. When they have wilted down, you pull them up!
    Also, plant a row a mixed lettuce next to a row of carrots. The lettuce has shallow roots and the carrots are deep rooted so they complement each other. Lastly, in the autumn plant a whole bed of garlic. It will winter underground and grow up come spring. You can harvest it late June/early July.

  • @theshrimptons6574
    @theshrimptons6574 3 роки тому

    Hello from South East Cornwall! I love watching Jessie at Plot 37 - find her style very reassuring and relaxing. Good luck with your growing.

  • @568vh8
    @568vh8 3 роки тому +9

    Perennials and self seeding annuals will mean less work in the long run. Potager gardens are pretty. A tea garden, a cocktail garden, a smoothie garden, a foragers garden, a herbal first aid kit, ingredients for beauty products and a cut flower garden are fun ideas to try. Don't wait until you feel you know enough. The Weedy Garden is a beautiful UA-cam channel. He's a photographer doing permaculture.

  • @meganhamlyn1694
    @meganhamlyn1694 3 роки тому

    Very wise to start small- weeding and maintaining can be overwhelming when you’re getting to know the garden. Good luck!!

  • @flamingoliz
    @flamingoliz 3 роки тому

    Your garden beds are amazing! How wonderful to have those. Don't get too overwhelmed trying to do stuff this growing season. I'd fertilize and plant a variety of things in a couple of beds and start small with those and then spend this summer and fall to research and prepare for next year. It's ok that you aren't an expert or doing everything in the garden right this second. You have a lot on your plate with getting settled.

  • @22daisymae
    @22daisymae 3 роки тому +1

    You will absolutely love having a garden! It is my personal form of therapy during the warmer months in Iowa, USA. Also, Skillshare has a whole bunch of videos aimed towards the new gardener. You should totally check them out...I've learned so much from them!

  • @wendyp4135
    @wendyp4135 3 роки тому +1

    Lovely Greens and Homegrown Garden are fantastic channels, especially for help with growing veg! I also adore Garden Answer for inspiration and motivation.

  • @lucilesegalen3883
    @lucilesegalen3883 3 роки тому

    I come from an agricultural region in France and each year you see farmer Spreading horse / other herbivore poo on their field. Those fertilizers accelerate crop growth and are therefore widely used in agriculture. These materials mainly come from livestock effluents, sludge from wastewater treatment, and green manure from plants. It also prevent some pest such as mosquitoes. Hope that helps ☺️

  • @gemma4005
    @gemma4005 3 роки тому +6

    You should have a look into the three sisters planting method! Its a way to lay out beans, corn and some kind of squash in the same bed and they help each other grow and work really well to enrich the soil and naturally deter pests/weeds.

  • @shaygonsalves3933
    @shaygonsalves3933 3 роки тому +1

    You can use the extra beds to put wildflowers and such for pollinators! It helps your local honeybees and whatever veggies you plant in your intentional beds!

    • @MC-ko2mx
      @MC-ko2mx 3 роки тому +1

      I've suggested the same!
      Even if they did pollinator-friendly plants for the rest of the beds, it would be awesome.
      Or better yet, pollinator-friendly *and* nitrogen-fixing plants like clover.

  • @RillaofPlumHill
    @RillaofPlumHill 3 роки тому

    I find gardening super overwhelming too. I recommend the book Lasagna Gardening. It's great in that it kills all the weeds (with cardboard/paper) and uses all your kitchen scraps, yard leaves, etc to build beautiful organic soil and it is very much a low maintenance, low weed technique. It's also super easy in that you plant starts right into the mulch and the produce is just so incredible. I have potatoes that come up on their own every year from layering in my kitchen scraps. Each year I add a few lovely plants like tulip bulbs, a rose plant, a rhubarb (perennial), and I love it!
    Another idea, if you have the budget for it, see if there's a local gardener who could come give you a consult and help you identify what to keep or pull.

  • @tracygavigan5217
    @tracygavigan5217 3 роки тому

    Plant tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage, cucumbers ,flowers, herbs, jalapeno's, carrots,
    Its so much fun...have fun with all those beds!!!

  • @helenyoung8012
    @helenyoung8012 3 роки тому +1

    Look at Charles Downing no dig gardening here on UA-cam. Start small, cover the twelve beds in black plastic to keep the weeds down until you are ready to use them. I think one bed had rhubarb in it. I would not worry too much about the rest. I could not see anything else worth keeping, a lot had gone to seed and are therefore not good to eat. Plant your own wild garlic!! Good luck and enjoy. Don’t expect perfection, it is all trowel and error!!!

  • @aliciacato9331
    @aliciacato9331 3 роки тому

    What you can add is a simple glasshouse for more plants to grow in for example cucumbers, chilli, tomatoes... and then plant your own seeds since it’s much more beneficial and less expensive

  • @Valereaads
    @Valereaads 3 роки тому +11

    I recommend watching Roots & Refuge Farm on UA-cam. I’ve always wanted to own my own farm & watching their videos has taught me SO much! Plus, Jess is an amazing human being and is such a great teacher.
    She’s also really encouraged me to, “use my waiting room as a classroom” and I bought two greenstalk planters! So, I’ll be right along with you gardening for the first time 😊

    • @michellelarbus2733
      @michellelarbus2733 3 роки тому +1

      Her book is also an amazing source of knowledge, especially if you're relatively new to gardening. It answered all my questions and more.

    • @Valereaads
      @Valereaads 3 роки тому

      @@michellelarbus2733 yes! I’ve had it in my amazon cart for a while. Need to make the leap and just purchase it 😂 just feels like I’m forever adding more books to that cart though lol.

    • @Valereaads
      @Valereaads 3 роки тому

      @foliageandforensics Yes! Love Whispering Willows ❤️

    • @michellelarbus2733
      @michellelarbus2733 3 роки тому

      @@Valereaads I totally know what you mean. I pre-ordered mine shortly after she announced it and I'm so glad I did because I could see myself going back and forth. Now, I wouldn't wanna miss it, it has so much useful info and it's written beautifully, filled with all of Jess' love for the garden.

  • @Cerrydwenn
    @Cerrydwenn 3 роки тому

    I started last year with one courgette plant and one butternut squash plant :D Then i got 2 beds and planted bought leeks and garlic starts :D Now a year later we expanded to 8 beds with various self started seedlings. I recommend binge watching Mr Charles Dowdings videos, wealth of knowledge there.

  • @preciouspiggie
    @preciouspiggie 3 роки тому

    The one that's overgrown, I believe some of them are celery and some beets. I recognize the red spine on the leaves on some of them (time: 10:54), and the box before that, I recognize the spine of a celery! Looks like a great start! :)

  • @katecook576
    @katecook576 3 роки тому +7

    Lettuce, rocket, spinach, radish can all be sown from seed straight into the beds, not too late to plant. Stagger sowing rows by a few weeks so you don’t get a glut. Really easy to grow.

  • @annaargento2360
    @annaargento2360 3 роки тому +12

    I love this! We have a vegetable garden plot in our yard and have been really debating whether to do raised beds instead of just planting in the ground. Raised beds just look so beautiful and definitely limit the amount of weeds. So excited to see how yours turns out!

  • @eboleen
    @eboleen 3 роки тому

    I love that you're taking the time to grow your own veg! your plots remind me of my grandad's alotment at the bottom of his garden! He was super green-fingered! Maybe you could dedicate a bed for just herbs, maybe the closest one? It might save having to buy new herbs in pots every time you need them! I recently bought my dad some garlic and he's so grateful for it as he's always using it! (we have a lot of pasta dinners so essential really, ahaha!) I don't think there's any harm in planning the veggies you use the most and splitting the beds into summer and winter veg!! I'm so excited to see how you guys get on

  • @Duffetrut
    @Duffetrut 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Madeleine! Wow, what a lovely garden!! My advice is to invest in learning about PERMACULTURE to have lots of produce with little effort and to be as sustainable as you can be!! Gooooood Luck!

  • @sandrar4981
    @sandrar4981 3 роки тому

    this is a great project, have fun! We have a small garden but last year I started to plant 3 tomato plants, 1 cucumber, 1 pumpkin, strawberries and different herbs. It is great, when you can buy less from the supermarket 😀

  • @christinel5793
    @christinel5793 3 роки тому

    My family has gardening for generations. I hope I can help you on your journey! So exciting! I think gardening is a great way to let go. Some times things don't work out but it is ok. This is how you learn and grow as a gardener. Start small. Marigolds are really great natural pest repellant. Plant them in your veg beds with your veg plants. I imagine some of those beds as cut flower beds. They are so easy, plant seeds, water and wait 🌻🌸 Salad greens are also really easy from seed. Garden Answer UA-cam channel is an amazing resource and fun. She has taught me a lot about food planting and cut flower gardens.
    What growing zone are you? Sending you great gardening vibes! 🙂

  • @birdsong62
    @birdsong62 3 роки тому

    A strawberry 🍓 bed would be amazing, they will spread well in their own garden bed. You can buy cold stored runners and plant late spring and early summer and will fruit 60 days after planting. Organic would be amazing.

  • @luciep09
    @luciep09 3 роки тому

    Hi Madeleine, perhaps for this year, you could not focus on all 16 beds and just decide what you’d like to plant for a winter crop, like potatoes and perhaps some cabbages/kale etc and other root veggies. Then look at RHS website or similar for planting times and crop type (main crop etc).
    Then you could always choose some of the veggie beds and convert them to cut flower beds so you get them ready for bulbs and seeds for next flowering season and you can have a couple of beds of beautiful cut flowers for the house....whilst encouraging loads of bees and insects to those flowers xx

  • @Retro-love-
    @Retro-love- 3 роки тому

    Your food scraps can be dug straight into your unused beds. Dig a hole start filling and cover completely with a sprinkle of some soil each lot you empty in. When the hole is full dig another next to it. This is such a fast and efficient way to compost. It rots really quickly and goes straight into the soil. By the time the bed is full the first ones will be rotting down and the beds will be incredibly nutrient dense ready for planting later💖 also one way to not be quite so overwhelmed with all the beds is maybe gradually as you use more of them have just one veg in the whole bed. Veg thats takes up lots of room like one whole bed for courgette one whole bed for pumpkin etc one whole bed for strawberries and one for blueberries etc. that way you’re not overwhelmed with so many types of plants but you’re also using a few more beds 💖

  • @coline6880
    @coline6880 3 роки тому

    A few things that are quite low maintenance but tends to give a good harvest that we always do in our garden are zucchinis (the plants just keeps on growing more flowers and then vegetables during the entire summer), potatoes and sweet potatoes (it just does its thing under the ground and can give quite a lot), green beans (I recommend the one that grows on a structure so you don't have to bend down to harvest them. In french we call them climbing beans) and pumpinks. Good luck Madeleine 😘

  • @carlottadix
    @carlottadix 3 роки тому

    My best flower advice invest in perrenial plants you will be so much more happy and productive. Also some vegetables come again yearly like asparagus and horseradish once you get started. I think onions are fun to grow and easy to store. You are so kind to share your garden with all of us. I ate only raw veg and fruit for years. I love pesto on sandwiches. Yea did you say you were planting bok choy. I love it.

  • @chiaramancin3288
    @chiaramancin3288 3 роки тому +9

    In our vegetable garden, we hang up old CDs or DVDs to keep the birds from eating the little plants (the light reflecting on them does the job) so that we don't need to resort to pesticides :)

    • @emilyclarke8222
      @emilyclarke8222 3 роки тому

      We used to do this at my school too! Always did the trick

  • @caporalemamandine643
    @caporalemamandine643 3 роки тому

    Bock Choy are so easy and cheap to grow, when you cut the base don’t throw it away. Put it in water and wait, when it has grow some roots put it in the soil with a thin layer of soil on it. And maybe you can turn Alex’s desk so your two desk make an angle and he’s facing the door so he can see outside.

  • @jenniferkessener1111
    @jenniferkessener1111 3 роки тому

    Many vegetables are so easy to direct sow from seed right in your beds. Salad greens of all kinds, peas, chard, Kale, green beans, bok choy, arugula, radishes, spinach. Squashes. I do start tomato and pepper plants inside or buy starts.
    If you keep the plants inside, then you have to acclimate them outside again. If they were outside at the nursery, they will do well outside. You may want to do the herbs in one bed. Some are perrenials, and will come back every year. Tomatoes need some support, and do like companion planting with basil which is an annual plant, and seasonal. Good for you buying some things to get going. You will fall in love with gardening.

  • @nicolastrachan9194
    @nicolastrachan9194 3 роки тому

    lovely video your garden is amazing. Don't be scared everyone needs to start somewhere. My advice is to see what comes up. Pull out any weeds you can identify and just fill the gaps with some plug plants and good quality compost. The first year is just getting to know your space and soil and have fun seeing what works and what won't work. Good luck and thank you for the lovely content.

  • @jmarie1647
    @jmarie1647 3 роки тому

    Gardening is such a rewarding hobby! I started small with some tomatoes last year and this year I have a whole assortment of plants on the go. Starting seeds seems intimidating but it's super easy if you have a sunny area to keep them. My biggest bit of advice is to give plants enough space, most seeds or seedlings come with the amount of space the fully grown plant will need and it's one of the things that is actually really important for getting a good yield. Staggering your seed start will also make for a longer harvest time 😊

  • @leamontegut4992
    @leamontegut4992 3 роки тому

    You have a beautiful rhubarb in one of your beds on the right side ! Those are so low maintenance. For gardening ressources there are so many great youtube channels out there to document yourself, learn and watch at the same time. To name a few : roots and refuge farm, No dig by Charles Dowding, Modern Homesteading and Huw Richards. Gardening is a wonderful experience, where you constantly learn and do better, and fruit and veg from the garden always taste better.

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire 3 роки тому

    The thing in the bed with the rubbish is a rhubarb plant. They’re perennial so don’t touch it except to harvest. (Harvest the stalks a few at a time by pulling them off at the base like you would pull apart celery. Never cut them as it causes rot and bacteria to get into the plant.) And the one you touched and said “maybe this is something you can eat” that had frilly foliage is carrots. The carrots are probably old and woody now. It’s best to just pull them up before they flower.

  • @orangutan539
    @orangutan539 3 роки тому

    Me and my partner are sitting with two desks together back-to-back and we are both having a window on our sides, you can try this with your wooden ones and your window-doors. And then that additional desk put under the side-window :) Love your vlogs, hope to see more! Cheers

  • @isabelleer7501
    @isabelleer7501 3 роки тому

    Being in England you are so lucky that you have access to Gardeners World. I have to watch episodes on UA-cam but have learned so much from them. I also love the Gardening Australia channel here on UA-cam. They are awesome!

  • @susanrybak7192
    @susanrybak7192 3 роки тому

    From my experience of creating many gardens over the years, raised beds with enough room between the beds for your mower and plenty of mulch between the plants to discourage weeds is the best way to start. Get lots of compost in those beds before you start planting. You will need to dig the beds and dig the compost in. Use companion planting to help your garden compat pests. eg nasturiums for attract the aphids away from the veggies.

  • @jenniferbooks214
    @jenniferbooks214 3 роки тому

    We’re new to gardening and beg growing as well. Love Gardeners World but also Charles Dowding here on You Tube is amazing

  • @CharlotteRawles
    @CharlotteRawles 3 роки тому

    I'm sure I saw Rhubarb in one of the back end beds? Look well established! I think you're doing it the right way! We only started last year and I learnt SO much in just one season!

  • @ginnyjanisse1220
    @ginnyjanisse1220 3 роки тому

    Plant a few in season items that you know you love to eat and work from there. Some cottage annuals like calendula and herbs make nice looking filling for the other beds. Good luck!🍀

  • @alexhazydreams
    @alexhazydreams 3 роки тому

    If you want to do an organic method I really recommend you get informed about permaculture, companion planting, intercropping and find a companion planting chart (check the one from the idep foundation for an exemple) because it is a great way to both maximize yields and keep pests off your garden without using chemicals. Some plants will naturally protect their neighbors from pests for an exemple i get a lot of aphids on my balcony because we have big trees in the appartement complex's backyard and those are overrun by the little critters. This year I put some chives next to my strawberries and it really helps me to keep aphids in check. Some plants are also very needy when it comes to soil nutrients: for an exemple tomatoes and zucchinis tend to eat up a lot of the soil's nitrogen so it's a good idea to plant leguminous plants (peas, beans, etc...) next to them, as those will release nitrogen in the soil. Wild flowers such as phacelia, or edible flowers such as cosmos or marigold are also interesting so you can attract bees for polinization. Some plants such as nettle and others can also be used as natural mulch or in a fermented juice that can then be used as a natural fertilizer (check out huw Richards video on nettle juice :) ). I guess there's a lot more to say but these are some of the advice i find the most useful.

  • @AnuschkavanDijke
    @AnuschkavanDijke 3 роки тому

    Also keep in mind the amount of work it will be to preserve the harvest you'll have. I love gardening as do most in my family. Except my mom cos she is the one having to be on her feet evening after evening after the housework is done, to boil, cook, seal etc. It's so much work, on top of gardening itself. Start really small. Smaller than you want to. And take it from there. Things like root veg are easier to keep in cold storage and soil containers. There's less work on those. And they still keep all winter.

  • @DerrynEHahn-ir2jv
    @DerrynEHahn-ir2jv 3 роки тому +1

    For each bed, grab 2 bags of compost, a 1/4 bale of sugar cane mulch or lucerne for mulch & a bottle of seaweed solution (helps with beneficial bacteria and root shock). Spread the compost on top & mulch to 10cm deep then make little pockets in the mulch to plant seedlings. Water in with seaweed solution (1 capful in 9 litres of water).
    Turn compost pile with a garden fork to aerate. Make easy compost mix 1/3 nitrogen - green (nitrogen, kitchen scraps, weeds, green leaves, grass clippings), 1/3 carbon - brown (dried leaves, shredded cardboard, paper,hay) 1/3 manure. Turn every second day for 18 days, done.
    Check out Huw Richards YT channel for English organic gardening.

  • @Leglag724
    @Leglag724 3 роки тому

    My hubby plants marigolds along the edges of our boxes. We plant tomatoes, peas, cucumber, onions, lettuce, bell pepper and hot peppers. we have separate small beds for each type of plant.

  • @shannonj5606
    @shannonj5606 3 роки тому

    Oooh stinging nettle is an incredible herb! Harvest it with gloves and hang to dry. Then crumble in an airtight container. Makes a beautiful tea that supports healthy hair growth and reproductive system ❤

  • @sadiemiller1780
    @sadiemiller1780 3 роки тому

    Swiss Chard is a great introductory green to grow! Start with a few greens, some tomato plants, and herbs. Study up over next winter, order some seed catalogs from Baker Creek Seeds, etc.
    Look up Will Bonsall's Book of Radical, Self-Reliant Gardening. He's a vegan homesteader and seed saver from Maine. He's amazing!!!
    You are so lucky to have a huge head start with those beds!

  • @patriciahawkes386
    @patriciahawkes386 3 роки тому

    U can do a nice dig garden by covering the area with cardboard and layering with manure and peat. Once plants r planted in the beds cover with netting to protect the plants.

  • @cansukurt8879
    @cansukurt8879 3 роки тому

    new to urban gardening, thought i could utilize my front garden and put some raised beds and couple of lessons i learned so far 1) dont do it all at once, take your time 2)you really dont need to put in all the seeds lol i have way too many carrots at the moment 3) some plants grow well big! need to be mindful of your space 4) it all takes time so dont be upset, may has been cold and nothing germinated in their usual timeframe, but even if they take double the time they do in the end, so dont rush and do more seeds 5) invest in various size seed trays 6) dont dump all the seeds in a pot lol, seperating them takes ages. Have fun x

  • @racquelle87
    @racquelle87 3 роки тому

    I recently got an allotment but am still very much a gardening novice. It’s so rewarding to see little seedlings developing and the allotment community have been so helpful. I’ve learned so much already. Don’t overthink it and just have a go 🙂 Potatoes, leeks, carrots etc are great to grow as a beginner. One goal I have is to be able to make a soup with the vegetables I’ve grown. Good luck with it and look forward to seeing it.

  • @kerrybakes
    @kerrybakes 3 роки тому

    I’m a pandemic gardener and I think my favorite thing to do is weed because you get a satisfying “before and after”

  • @Boudi-ca
    @Boudi-ca 3 роки тому

    I’m a perfectionist too lol. It’s my first year of container veg/fruit garden and I’ve been researching everyday since the beginning of March. I even wrote down little tips on how to sow/look after every seed before I started lol. I wish I wasn’t like it but I’ve learned ALOT 🙂

  • @scminor99
    @scminor99 3 роки тому +2

    If the number of beds is overwhelming, you could also share with your neighbors and have a sort of community garden set up! That might be really nice!

  • @emilymae8416
    @emilymae8416 3 роки тому

    If you wanted to dedicate a planter to them, potatoes are a really good one to start with! My mum chucked a few off potatoes onto her tiny flower patch and when she went to weed a while later, found about 4 kilos worth of potatoes, they never stopped either, we had to give them away! I'm not sure what time of year is best for them (I know nothing about gardening) but they sprout seemingly really easily, might be worth looking into x

  • @VickersCreations
    @VickersCreations 3 роки тому

    Put a few of the beds into field beans, its a ground cover that grows easily, they out compete weeds and you can eat them, a bit like a broad bean. Put another couple of beds completely into strawberries. Plant densely to keep weeds out. Corgette will take up a lots of space too, or pumpkin. Don't throw the compost out! Its brown gold.

  • @gill2292
    @gill2292 3 роки тому

    Looking forward to seeing all the healthy food you will grow in your beautiful garden. Yes lots of great vlogs/magazines on gardening to help you on your way with planting. Also, perhaps check out horticulture students at local colleges/uni's who could help you with cleaning out/identifying plants/planting and designing your garden beds. A great, cheap and very knowledgeble source of help. Have you visited The stunning Isles of Scilly off the coast of Cornwall? One of the 145 islands, Tresco Gardens, is an amazing haven of plants/flowers that survive beautifully in the southern British regions. Would love to see a vlog from you guys from Scilly !! Thank you

  • @hattiea
    @hattiea 3 роки тому

    11.52: the plant looks like fennel. If it is you can eat it in salads and it gives a licorice type taste. Nettles can be used in soups or as part of compost! Hope Alex feels better soon!

  • @kitchentablecrafting7111
    @kitchentablecrafting7111 3 роки тому +12

    Only grow what you like to eat. Just go for it one bed at a time and enjoy!

  • @julesa245
    @julesa245 3 роки тому

    Also homegrown garden on you tube and Emma’s allotment are good. The latter for beginners. Charles Dowding and Carol Klein are great too.
    I learnt most from Alys Fowler’s, edible garden series, that used to be on you tube. She had a Potager style garden. Flowers and veg together in harmony. I could see you with chickens too.

  • @lindapoynton9420
    @lindapoynton9420 3 роки тому

    The full bed looks very much like parsnips. Probably left in till they were needed. Did them up and try them. Good luck with the garden, it's going to be great xx

  • @juliannamunoz8883
    @juliannamunoz8883 3 роки тому

    WOW. I just started a 16 bed garden in February! This is great timing. So far it's a lot of trial by error for us. Quite a bit of error but reading has really helped. I've been reading up on Ruth Stouts methods and Mel's square foot gardening. I also took the smiling Gardner's (Phil Nauta's) online academy. His course was honestly this best thing I could recommend AND it's free.

  • @moodySnoopy
    @moodySnoopy 3 роки тому

    Beetroot is easy, carrots, little gem lettuce is great, courgettes are very easy and prolific also. Strawberries will just grow like crazy. Any seedlings you buy, when planting them add some fresh compost to help them. Then after planting, water seedlings for the first few weeks often till they establish themselves. You can also add mulch on the surface of your beds to hold onto moisture- less watering. Mulch could be grass clippings or straw for example. I got a monthly allotment book from amazon, found it really helpful. Enjoy planting! :D

  • @luililli361
    @luililli361 3 роки тому

    Wow your garden has great potential! 😍 I would say at 10:39 and 10:49 could be lovage, you could definitely tell by its smell. At 10:54 there is a beetroot on the right, probably an older one which will flower soon. The turnip flowers at 11:01 are wonderful for insects 🐝 you can let them stay if you don't need the space and even harvest seeds later. At 11:16 there is a beautiful rhubarb plant which comes back every spring. At 11:28 I see mostly weeds but the netting can be used against birds for example to protect berries. And at 11:54 looks like carrots, you should pull one! 😁 this is what I think I recognized on first sight, I hope this is helping you a little 💚 happy gardening!
    P.S. I am studying horticultural production, if you need help with garden planning and layout, just let me know, I'd love to design your garden.

  • @cindymarie2475
    @cindymarie2475 3 роки тому

    I've been doing yoga for six months and I love it!! I agree meditation is difficult!!! Lol

  • @rosiedillon23
    @rosiedillon23 3 роки тому +7

    We have an outdoor garden that was overgrown when we moved in recently. It’s our first home and it’s overwhelming. I’m not a gardener either and I really want to learn so I can grow our own veg too. Thanks for posting! This has inspired me to get started! 🙂

  • @s30123
    @s30123 3 роки тому +2

    My garden advice is absolutely plant all the perennial plants right away, herbs, berry plants, asparagus, flower shrubs etc.... And don't stress over the time of year too much, planting today is better than waiting a whole next season to " do it right" cos plants want to grow... Lastly the channel "Roots and Refuge" is amazing! 😊

  • @TheHaru87
    @TheHaru87 3 роки тому

    Horse poo and pee is what makes your plants grow better. I had horses when I was younger and our plants and vegetables always grow beautifully when we used that combo as fertilizer. :)

  • @SeventiesGirl1961
    @SeventiesGirl1961 3 роки тому

    For the desks arrangement, how would placing the white desk in the centre of a T shape with the two wood desks coming out. That way it could be a flexible shared desk space you both could use. So it would come perpendicular from the wall and your two desks either side in a T. Also, basil enjoys lots of sun and will be most flavoursome grown outside. 💚✌