What Happens When You REGROW Vegetables From Kitchen SCRAPS in the Garden?

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2020
  • In this video, I show you what happens when you regrow vegetables from kitchen scraps in the garden. I plant out scrap onion, lettuce, potato, celery, cabbage, tomato, and carrots and we see how they grow over 3 months.
    Go here to get Birdies Raised Garden beds (featured in the video) in the USA: shop.epicgardening.com/ and use SSME2020 for a 5% discount.
    In Australia, go to birdiesgardenproducts.com.au/ and use Code SSMEbird for a 5% discount. In New Zealand, go to birdiesgardenproducts.co.nz/ and use Code ssmebird22 for 5% off your first purchase.
    Plant Doctor Fertiliser: Go to www.plantdoctor.com.au/ and use SSME10 = 10% off products (not shipping).
    Ocean2earth Fish Compost: Enter the discount code SSME5 at checkout on their Website here ocean2earth.com.au/ and get a 5% discount on the 1.5L and 3L bags plus free shipping Australia wide!
    Harvest Right freeze dryer website: affiliates.harvestright.com/1...
    For Australian freeze dryer purchase info use the same link above and then contact Harvest Right directly.
    Support me on Patreon: / selfsufficientme (the top tier $25 AU enables mentoring from yours truly via an exclusive VIP email where I will answer your questions etc ASAP).
    Hoselink Garden Products such as hose reels go here l.linklyhq.com/l/5uZu and you will automatically get a 10% discount on checkout!
    My second channel Self Sufficient Me 2: bit.ly/331edDu
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    Self Sufficient Me is based on our small 3-acre property/homestead in SE Queensland Australia about 45kms north of Brisbane - the climate is subtropical (similar to Florida). I started Self Sufficient Me in 2011 as a blog website project where I document and write about backyard food growing, self-sufficiency, and urban farming in general. I love sharing my foodie and DIY adventures online so come along with me and let's get into it! Cheers, Mark :)
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @putiyip6649
    @putiyip6649 3 роки тому +14016

    I just re-planted my wine bottle, wish me luck!!

    • @Chookie2629
      @Chookie2629 3 роки тому +606

      Got a bloody good laugh from this, thanks 👍🤣🙏🏻🥰

    • @jic7843
      @jic7843 3 роки тому +251

      How did it go? 🍷🤣

    • @nicholasromano8669
      @nicholasromano8669 3 роки тому +300

      HAHHAHAHA...I need some help with my empty vodka bottles!

    • @KanishQQuotes
      @KanishQQuotes 3 роки тому +91

      You stole my comment

    • @amug3536
      @amug3536 3 роки тому +92

      AAA membership will come out - don't worry!!!!

  • @davealmighty9638
    @davealmighty9638 2 роки тому +2190

    10 years ago I took one bulb of garlic, with about a dozen cloves, and planted it. By the 2 year mark, I had more garlic than anyone would need in a lifetime. It still grows to this day.

    • @SundaysChild1966
      @SundaysChild1966 2 роки тому +63

      Oh wow, that is amazing! Do you eat the green tops, the garlic scapes? They are popular with the foodies .. Bless

    • @kenpca
      @kenpca 2 роки тому +161

      No vampires will come within 10 miles of your house lol

    • @bddollen7384
      @bddollen7384 2 роки тому +36

      - DOES THE GARLIC EFFECT THE OTHER CROPS BESIDE IT ? DOES IT HELP KEEP THE BUGS , ETC., AWAY ?

    • @bddollen7384
      @bddollen7384 2 роки тому +12

      WHAT WOULD USE TO FEED YOUR PRODUCE , OR, PROTECT THEM??

    • @pierre2898
      @pierre2898 2 роки тому +163

      @@bddollen7384 WHY ARE YOU SHOUTING?

  • @janetsadeghi1501
    @janetsadeghi1501 Рік тому +454

    I remember being so depressed and anxious when the pandemic started. Also, lots of personal problems were just snowballing. I started watching this man's videos thank God, and they just brought a smile to my face. He is just heart-warming.

    • @loriethacker8691
      @loriethacker8691 Рік тому +12

      He's very comforting isn't he? 😊

    • @janetsadeghi1501
      @janetsadeghi1501 Рік тому +9

      @@loriethacker8691 He is! He is just so confident and happy - it's contagious 😊.

    • @Enthusiasmisgood
      @Enthusiasmisgood Рік тому +9

      You okay now, Janet?

    • @janetsadeghi1501
      @janetsadeghi1501 Рік тому +12

      @@Enthusiasmisgood thanks for asking :-) I'm ok now - thank God.

    • @bunnyclick2110
      @bunnyclick2110 Рік тому +2

      Keep you r hand
      on the Mother i say

  • @beccanertia619
    @beccanertia619 Рік тому +140

    Finally! A gardening channel that helps people start from zero and you dig with your bare hands, I just I love it! You got me, I'm hooked.

    • @sheekaq841
      @sheekaq841 Рік тому +2

      Yes, He is a BLAST?!!!!!

  • @skd
    @skd 3 роки тому +1479

    Watching your videos makes me realize that, if any catastrophic event happens and we are back to hunter-gatherers, I will probably die first.

    • @tttm99
      @tttm99 3 роки тому +107

      To be fair you'll probably have some stiff competition 👍😆

    • @ucann777
      @ucann777 3 роки тому +34

      Oh that is just TOO funny 🤣

    • @shefas
      @shefas 3 роки тому +43

      our heads will be used for tomato growing

    • @dharristhadon1608
      @dharristhadon1608 3 роки тому +7

      😂😂😂😂 facts dawg

    • @Frank183847572828
      @Frank183847572828 3 роки тому +4

      Unless we screw real bad which we're ahead of schedule right now so ... keep your hopes up. ^.^

  • @wtfnessi
    @wtfnessi 3 роки тому +748

    It's 4 am, perfect time to improve my gardening skills.

    • @abroamg
      @abroamg 3 роки тому +11

      Same idea, it's 5 am now

    • @depthshade837
      @depthshade837 3 роки тому +1

      u wake up early

    • @klausosho
      @klausosho 3 роки тому +4

      Indeed, 4:12 here.

    • @moix5799
      @moix5799 3 роки тому +1

      Lol I'm watching this at 5.55 am ha

    • @starduck8014
      @starduck8014 3 роки тому

      it'll sink in

  • @michellelovesstmichael3835
    @michellelovesstmichael3835 Рік тому +68

    When you plant a slice of tomato, make sure it has seeds in it! I planted a slice out of the middle of a tomato - it grew about 6 plants!

    • @susichristianson3395
      @susichristianson3395 Рік тому +4

      Make perfect sense.

    • @poopsifter9022
      @poopsifter9022 Рік тому +7

      He may get volunteer tomato plants next year. I planted Roma tomatos 10 years ago and I have been getting volunteer plants each year. I just have to transplant to other desired locations.

  • @lisanjohnny1
    @lisanjohnny1 2 роки тому +272

    I live in Hawaii and fruits and vegetables are just so expensive these days. I had bought containers and soil so I could start planting my own garden and I wanted some tips and tricks on how to start my garden and you’ve given me some good ideas. Love your teaching techniques.

    • @rositaalonzo6909
      @rositaalonzo6909 Рік тому +10

      you need to watch Teo's garden DIY Urban Gardener, he does not have land, only floors, patio, terrace and plant EVERYTHING and in adapted containers, even car tires!

    • @caridadrevilla2439
      @caridadrevilla2439 Рік тому +13

      I just planted a pineapple from cutting off the top. It's growing beautifully inside my apt. I have it by my window.

    • @Dreamhelmet
      @Dreamhelmet Рік тому +3

      I always wondered why supermarket prices for fruits and veggies were so outrageous in Hawaii. I guess most is imported?

    • @intelligenceart6
      @intelligenceart6 Рік тому +1

      i use to live on oahu and i’m just wondering how your garden is coming along. Think it’d be hard to grow some of the vegetables he mentioned in the weather since it’s either sunny and humid or aggressively raining . Plus the boars and chickens running all over the place might get into the garden if it’s ground level.

    • @sheekaq841
      @sheekaq841 Рік тому +1

      Very BLESSED YOU ARE💗🌺💗🌺💗🌺

  • @roses1162
    @roses1162 3 роки тому +437

    "its not just the money, its the health, the regrowth, the less waste, its the rejuvenation..."
    This is exactly why my family has been forgoing grocery shopping for seed shopping more and more these days. Its hard to put into words how rewarding working with the land and time to help make something wonderful grow.

    • @majoriebell3198
      @majoriebell3198 2 роки тому +1

      I like that video

    • @deplorablewarrior7690
      @deplorablewarrior7690 2 роки тому +16

      Make sure to get "heritage," non-GMO, seeds.

    • @InnaVitamina777
      @InnaVitamina777 2 роки тому +1

      ✿✿✿♥

    • @saferabies
      @saferabies 2 роки тому +6

      I think its better to grocery shop and regrow the bits. Because other people won't.

    • @josepablo011986
      @josepablo011986 2 роки тому +2

      Yeah, i know the feeling. Recently i start planting 4 cherry tomatoes from seeds, i transplant them from the seedbed to 1 of my plantpots 1 week ago and they are growing strong.

  • @anoddviewcreative505
    @anoddviewcreative505 3 роки тому +400

    I tossed an old rotting onion in the garden, realized it was sprouting and covered it more. Ended up with two massive onions as big as a large hand. Enough for a French onion soup.

    • @fan9775
      @fan9775 3 роки тому +18

      Oui.

    • @kitabootforever
      @kitabootforever 3 роки тому +5

      Thats so cool!

    • @brokeneggshell5041
      @brokeneggshell5041 2 роки тому

      Ooh cool, did you make onion soup?

    • @brianjones3191
      @brianjones3191 2 роки тому +1

      I've planted several, and the resulting onions were all pathetic.

    • @benishborogove2692
      @benishborogove2692 2 роки тому +1

      You got lucky. It could have just gone to seed, depending on whether it was a long-day or short-day variety.

  • @madams.5976
    @madams.5976 10 місяців тому +11

    My dad was a farmer so when he came to the U.S., he always had a garden. Potatoes were always a veggie that he had a separate space for because they take up a lot of room. Tomatoes he grew from seeds and they need sun and also need their own bed. Those round cylinders maybe should be dedicated to one crop if you don’t have a large bed. Great work though!

  • @SusanAlexy
    @SusanAlexy Рік тому +35

    I just planted 3 celery bases and my friend, a lettuce base. I remarked yesterday, "Hmm...wouldn't it be a great video to demonstrate what you could grow from Kitchen Scraps?" and here, today, I see this episode! Great job!!! and I'm really looking forward to my Scrap Garden! Thank you for all you do. You're really an inspiration!

  • @BaskingInObscurity
    @BaskingInObscurity 2 роки тому +838

    Just out of curiosity I started planting odd food scraps here and there rather than throw everything in the compost. Leeks blew my mind; they're freaking huge. I didn't think any of the carrots or radishes did much, but apparently they seeded the whole immediate area and now I even have a carrot growing up through a crack in the sidewalk. >.< These things are growing better than the plants I deliberately started!
    I'm a terrible gardener for the same reason I'm terrible at a lot of things, moody procrastination. Working on it, though. Getting better each year. :)

    • @peggyhall843
      @peggyhall843 2 роки тому +29

      Hi ! I didn't know that about leeks- thank you for that. I had one little tomato plant a "sweet William 100. That plant grew huge and reseeded itself for years. I guess It was just the right place? I'm going to try herbs in my window. If my cats will behave. 🌼

    • @Wykesidefruitmachine
      @Wykesidefruitmachine 2 роки тому +25

      The gardening should help with the other things, speaking from experience. Good luck, and have fun! 😊

    • @kiki29073
      @kiki29073 2 роки тому +21

      Volunteer plants usually do grow crazy like that. They are healthy and sturdier for some reason.

    • @shelleysmith4017
      @shelleysmith4017 2 роки тому +26

      @@peggyhall843 Grow a little catnip or catmint in a pot as a sacrificial plant for the cats to leave your other herbs alone, if your guys like catnip. It really helps keep your cats away from the others if you are growing windowsill herbs. For our cat it was spearmint though as she has never liked catnip (she is an odd girl lol). I eventually had to take pity on the spearmint plant And take it away to recover for awhile, as it looked like it had stuck its roots in an electric socket, it was all frizzy from Apachee rolling and loving on it. But it meant all my other kitchen herbs were left to grow in peace. This year I think I will grow a couple pots so I can swap them around to give each some rest from the kitty love and adoration lol. Good luck with your herbs!

    • @SeniorMoostacho
      @SeniorMoostacho 2 роки тому +16

      always, always grow from seed. It will produce the best product ever. And the best part is, you need to do nothing but provide it water. Plants know best. 8D

  • @crism4932
    @crism4932 3 роки тому +727

    Hi Mark, wanted to let you know that I actually cut the celery leaves off and air dry them on cookie sheet. Then crunch them up, put in jar and add to soups, stews, and chowders. The celery flavor from the dried leaves is very concentrated and strong but it's my secret ingredient when someone tries to guess the ingredients in my cooking. Love your videos. Take care

    • @roxannahartless6846
      @roxannahartless6846 3 роки тому +45

      Now we all know your Secret. 😊 L.O.L. 😄

    • @ricebeansrockroll882
      @ricebeansrockroll882 3 роки тому +15

      Oh, brilliant!

    • @rachelm7525
      @rachelm7525 3 роки тому +19

      I do that, too! Why waste, eh? 🙂

    • @ppainterco
      @ppainterco 3 роки тому +37

      I add celery leaves to food, too, and it does spike the flavor a good bit. Besides, Celery and beets are high in nitrates which naturally lower blood pressure, so keep adding it to your food.

    • @daughterofTheLion
      @daughterofTheLion 3 роки тому +43

      Old School! My grandmother did the same and everything she cooked was amazing! She was a young woman during the Great Depression and she never wasted anything!

  • @luvcatscatscatsCATS
    @luvcatscatscatsCATS Рік тому +19

    I have put carrot tops in a shallow dish of water for years just to enjoy the lovely greenery in the windowsill area during the cold dark winter months. Twice now a carrot has actually shot up and given me a lovely flower!! Just from a half inch of rotting root!! What a gift.

  • @RamDragon32
    @RamDragon32 Рік тому +28

    I loved watching your potato hunt. I did that with a 2-inch cut-off of a purple sweet potato about 7 years ago and that thing took over the 4x8 foot growing bed choking out everything else I planted. It also came back every year because I can never find all the potatos! (It's a good thing they are my new favorite food!)

    • @GenericSpace
      @GenericSpace Рік тому

      Skip a season.
      Don't water it or anything and it'll die-out.

  • @joelitakala5552
    @joelitakala5552 2 роки тому +213

    This COVID 19 pandemic just made me remember that I can be out of a job anytime and that knowing how to farm is important and is the way to go to be self sufficient.

    • @mattlewandowski73
      @mattlewandowski73 2 роки тому +31

      I do not know about where you live, but here in the states it used to be "your patriotic duty" to garden and do for yourself... now it is bad for business, thus "unamerican" for one to produce for themselves instead of being blind consumers. Ever wonder why those videos showing you how to replant an avocado seed always present it like "isn't this cute... I can replant a seed in a mayo jar"??? We have been conditioned to think of such things as a novelty.

    • @tonyhogg9839
      @tonyhogg9839 2 роки тому +9

      The problem is, to produce enough food to last you a whole year, you need a giant garden for a family of four. For one person alone, you need a garden of 4000 square feet to produce enough food for one year. My parents had a huge garden growing up. Canning and freezing so many vegetables, and I don't think that food alone would've gotten us all to six months. I don't think people realize just how little food a typical backyard garden produces.

    • @BadWolfSilence
      @BadWolfSilence 2 роки тому +13

      @@tonyhogg9839 We need to be doing as much as we can do, however much that is, because it will make a difference when everything goes to crap. And it is going to crap very quickly.

    • @Me-th3gj
      @Me-th3gj 2 роки тому +3

      Gotta get back to our roots, just incase.

    • @susanphillips1777
      @susanphillips1777 2 роки тому +4

      @@Me-th3gj Haha. Roots! 😁😂🤣🤣🤣

  • @blacksorrento4719
    @blacksorrento4719 3 роки тому +72

    My grandmother told me how the minute WWII was declared in England, the following week my grandfather turned all his flower beds into a vegetable garden, then as the war went on, the small amount of lawn got turned as well. In these Covid times, we may as well busy ourselves, be organic and have some produce to show for it. Good on you, love and appreciate your easy down to earth manner 👍👍😁

    • @youtoo2072
      @youtoo2072 2 роки тому +2

      especially as the - artificially produced inflation takes over too as well bc of covid fallout, we can be better at having fresh produce at home. perhaps the nefarious want us to do this / am very tired of the displacement of our real valid precovid indutries/farming ,fuel, forestry/lumber, etc. yes , china should pay every nation back and back off our economies w beihjing hoarding, coercing, mal-trading, overtaking , over burdening as xi ping does for his ego and goads other tyrants to enact losses crucially detrimental upon nations making the world weak to get us codependent on xi and his ilk.. no one wants gov centralized police! Pray we all get our independences!! our uniquenesses actually help each other in REAL individual crisis instead of always vulnerable burdens for big gov.

  • @HD-mg9ru
    @HD-mg9ru 2 роки тому +5

    You are phenomenal!!!! I can't believe how many celery roots I threw away cause I love celery.
    Thank you! 🙏❤

  • @chinarivas4937
    @chinarivas4937 2 роки тому +55

    I appreciate you taking the time and tasting your plants shows how much you really care about what you're doing!!! God bless your Harvest.

  • @lindavenport9788
    @lindavenport9788 2 роки тому +658

    This was absolutely fascinating! It needs to be shown in schools, as fundamental learning !! Thank you, you make it fun.

    • @bddollen7384
      @bddollen7384 2 роки тому +13

      -- AAA MEN … !!! COUNTRY SCHOOLS USED TO DO THAT …!

    • @paulredinger5830
      @paulredinger5830 2 роки тому

      Schools not designed to give you knowledge. It’s to make you conform to rules.

    • @marybethg4861
      @marybethg4861 Рік тому +5

      Plant organic.

    • @lindavenport9788
      @lindavenport9788 Рік тому +4

      @@marybethg4861 Hi Mary Beth, that's my mantra, & has been for over 30 years🌱

    • @tleemf6923
      @tleemf6923 Рік тому +1

      Agreed

  • @91splamy
    @91splamy 2 роки тому +454

    It’s actually nice to see you not successful with some of the plants, because it shows that things don’t always work out even for a seasoned gardener. I have struggled with thinking I just suck at gardening because my plants died in the past. It’s good to know that it’s not necessarily the case.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 2 роки тому +7

      I actually suck at growing any plant.

    • @demonic_myst4503
      @demonic_myst4503 2 роки тому +3

      Or that some plants dont have that evelution

    • @ronv6637
      @ronv6637 2 роки тому +13

      Growing is Hard, I have been at it simve a child and years to get good soil (fantastic at growing rocks,they come every year) and now good harvests

    • @tracybird8668
      @tracybird8668 2 роки тому +10

      @@savage22bolt32 start a compost bin. Anything to put in it will grow. You literally ignore it for weeks at a time. It's great.

    • @tracybird8668
      @tracybird8668 2 роки тому

      Try korean/ Hawain natural farming.

  • @hiloviking
    @hiloviking Рік тому +18

    Thanks, you just opened up a whole new gardening dimension to me.

  • @tinysanctuaryminimalistlif5186

    Been regrowing my food scraps since 2013. ❤ So fulfilling 😊

  • @LearnToGrow1
    @LearnToGrow1 3 роки тому +657

    Love regrowing! This year I harvested seeds from these scraps I regrew: carrots, celery, onion, scallion and Bok choy. Congratulations to one million!

    • @daniellane753
      @daniellane753 3 роки тому +3

      Good job.

    • @LearnToGrow1
      @LearnToGrow1 3 роки тому +2

      @@daniellane753 Thank you! 😀

    • @tarunmalik301
      @tarunmalik301 2 роки тому +4

      Hey just one quick question
      How healthy is bok choy
      I mean I recently starting eating it.

    • @charlottesmom
      @charlottesmom 2 роки тому +1

      I came here directly from one of your videos! 🌱

    • @willowbe4747
      @willowbe4747 2 роки тому +3

      Yahoo, Learn To Grow! I wish there was this success when I tried this. I am a newbie and I'm not giving up. I too will have a harvest!

  • @Selfsufficientme
    @Selfsufficientme  3 роки тому +1228

    I don't know why I planted the carrots upside down (and didn't realise it until now). Yes you are SUPPOSED to plant them with the cut side DOWN. What a knucklehead I am... Cheers ;) Edit: For those who were asking and wondering, I'm happy to announce that I've made a deal with Birdies Raised Garden beds in Australia & New Zealand go to birdiesgardenproducts.com.au/ or birdiesgardenproducts.co.nz/ and use Code SSMEbird for a 5% discount. For USA, go here to get Birdies Raised Garden beds: shop.epicgardening.com/ and use SSME2020 for a 5% discount. Cheers :)

    • @christinetaylor2156
      @christinetaylor2156 3 роки тому +45

      Self Sufficient Me knuckleheads are as cool as carrots upside down 😁😝

    • @suekuly4723
      @suekuly4723 3 роки тому +7

      I wondered that🤔🤪

    • @kevinwilloughby8690
      @kevinwilloughby8690 3 роки тому +18

      hahaha I most probably would have done the same

    • @machematix
      @machematix 3 роки тому +77

      The best one from the supermarket is spring onions! They come with the roots already growing and grow easily even in the worst soil. I buy one bunch a week for the first month after our frosts end. Shove the leftover roots somewhere to fill in a gap. They grow straight up so are perfect to use between things like cabbages or in the corners/edges of your beds. Total cost: ~$8 for 9 months of eating spring onions every day. They grow so fast!

    • @ewaturska697
      @ewaturska697 3 роки тому +20

      Mate, it's perfectly fine! You're awesome!! Can't wait for you to hit the 1 mill mark!!!!

  • @TheGingerbreadCat
    @TheGingerbreadCat Рік тому +12

    I love the mixed garden bed idea. I started to plant that way bc I don't have time to actually plan and schedule a garden. So I plant and add wherever there is a bit of space or a free area.

  • @The_doormat
    @The_doormat Рік тому +2

    I do the same thing, i also regrow bok choy, leeks, lemon grass, garlic, ginger, and recently had success regrowing turmeric from an organic one I had purchased at the supermarket.
    Thanks for the video 🙏

  • @ModernBuilds
    @ModernBuilds 2 роки тому +500

    Awesome!! Got me wanting to replant everything!!

    • @glenda1385
      @glenda1385 2 роки тому +4

      Me too! lol

    • @toddoughty2043
      @toddoughty2043 2 роки тому +20

      one of the best things to replant is green onions it only takes a few weeks to see results

    • @taylorheart4018
      @taylorheart4018 2 роки тому

      Yup👌👌 yum🍠🍠🍍🍍🍐🍐🍐🍆🍆🍆

    • @taylorheart4018
      @taylorheart4018 2 роки тому +1

      GO FOR IT!!!🍠🍍🍍🍌🍈🍓🍉🍒🍊🍏🍎🍆🍆

  • @teresabrewington590
    @teresabrewington590 3 роки тому +162

    My husband passed away May 25 2019 . I’m trying to figure out how to grow food for myself.
    Thank you so much for sharing everything. I’m learning so much .

    • @GabuscusBrother
      @GabuscusBrother 3 роки тому +22

      My condolences to you :( I’m in highschool also learning how to grow food for my family! Glad to know everyone can connect through gardening :)

    • @gregre052
      @gregre052 3 роки тому +9

      Can't say that my wife passing was a fun thing, or more efficient. Best thing is do what your brain suggested at first. Gives you the practical side and the accumulated experience from your partner.
      Good Luck

    • @cassychillnoreally8482
      @cassychillnoreally8482 3 роки тому +4

      I feel this. Xx my husband basically died. Not the same thing. But same grief. You’re not alone xx

    • @ord2mia
      @ord2mia 3 роки тому +4

      I’m so terribly sorry for your loss. Hugs from the U.S

    • @matehands7937
      @matehands7937 3 роки тому +5

      @@cassychillnoreally8482 basically died?

  • @girlinagale
    @girlinagale Рік тому +9

    I did a celery base last year, it grew quite big but was thin leafy stems which had too strong a flavour.
    I have three carrot bases which sprouted shoots, in a bowl of water on the kitchen windowsill, I'll plant them out when the UK weather gets warmer.

  • @mexicanmomo
    @mexicanmomo Рік тому +3

    You get so good results because your soil and compost quality is excellent.

  • @ButterCupMMXXIII
    @ButterCupMMXXIII 2 роки тому +190

    A local guy had been "offered" early retirement, so he decided to remove his back lawn and plant garlic. Very happily his crop was a success and sells from his front stand or to stores. I think he also grows flowers. 💐 Thanks for the great video!

    • @llee8325
      @llee8325 2 роки тому +27

      Plus, so much of the store-bought garlic is from China, grown in filth, used this pesticides. Ugh.

    • @rarepepecombos8743
      @rarepepecombos8743 2 роки тому +12

      @@llee8325 that's racist and you know it's not true

    • @ceeemm1901
      @ceeemm1901 2 роки тому

      @@rarepepecombos8743 Haha that's so hair trigger. You remind me of the episode of "Seinfeld" where Jerry says "I really like the Chinese" and everyone started calling him a racist just because he'd singled them out. Just about all imported fruit and veggie produce, except organic certified, from China is fumigated and irradiated to kill pathogens and is often sterile GM anyway. Hawaiians invented surfing-"Hey THAT"S RACIST!!!" Hahaha....So Virtuous......

    • @carmemories4202
      @carmemories4202 2 роки тому

      @@rarepepecombos8743 sorry but mass produced food that leaves china is going to be grown with steroids, antibiotics and Antipesticide. It IS TRUE. You can check out the laws of transporting produce and meat from other countries for one example. The other tool I’d ask you to use is common sense, which most people, including you, don’t seem to have

    • @intothekey
      @intothekey 2 роки тому

      @@rarepepecombos8743 It's not racist you filthy shill. The only racist is you, why do you support the genocide of Weger people?
      Don't you know they're currently kidnapping children from parents and killing cats on mass due to their corona policy?

  • @jttech44
    @jttech44 3 роки тому +107

    So what you're saying is, from one bad potato, I can basically have infinite potatoes. That's awesome.

    • @kristinebailey6554
      @kristinebailey6554 3 роки тому +20

      Yes, but do like farmers do and cut it into small pieces, each with an eye, then the insects don't burrow in to gut the potato.

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 3 роки тому +3

      @@kristinebailey6554 wire worm will eat your potatoes if its on the ground. Some allotment holders used them as a ground cleaning crop on new ground.

    • @coppertopvon
      @coppertopvon 3 роки тому +8

      If a potato has a couple "eyes" sprouting just cut around them & plant in dirt you can still eat the rest of that potato... FYI

    • @shantinaturechild6385
      @shantinaturechild6385 3 роки тому

      @@coppertopvon I was just wondering if a potato that has already driven out and those "sprouts " have been removed can they resprout? I could try if l had enough space. I wanted to eat them but they're all squishy now.

    • @coppertopvon
      @coppertopvon 3 роки тому

      @@shantinaturechild6385 the removed sprouts will grow into a potato basically. I'm not sure I understand your question...

  • @stephenw5647
    @stephenw5647 Рік тому +2

    Love this pure genius!! Funny I didn’t realize potatoes grew a plant above ground. Thanks for sharing this can’t wait to try it

  • @mrssousou7785
    @mrssousou7785 2 роки тому +7

    I took your advice after watching this video. Now I have a garden filled with garlic, scallions, Pak Choi, Napa Cabbage and potatoes. Growing tomatoes and carrots and cucumbers this weekend. I'm so excited. Gardening is my calling and you're making it so easy and informative. I save all my scraps now to make compost. Pissed I have not been saving it for years, but better late than never. Thanks again!

  • @epicgardening
    @epicgardening 3 роки тому +938

    MARK! YOU'RE SO CLOSE TO 1 MILLION MATE! CANNOT BE MORE PROUD...E P I C

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  3 роки тому +110

      You're a champion Kevin and I appreciate your help to get me there mate! Cheers :)

    • @djnamsydsyd
      @djnamsydsyd 3 роки тому +20

      Love both your channels! Keep up the awesome content fellas :)

    • @adamwest1138
      @adamwest1138 3 роки тому +9

      I'm emotionally invested in this. I only logged in to watch this again to check!

    • @vickyfarquhar3476
      @vickyfarquhar3476 3 роки тому +6

      Adam West yes it's crazy 😂 I keep having a peek to see, and it's at 999! I'm sure in a couple of days it will be a million but will probably pop in a couple of times before that to check anyway!

    • @vickyfarquhar3476
      @vickyfarquhar3476 3 роки тому +7

      Epic Gardening Your channel is getting there too! I love your channel as well and have no doubt you'll soon be at a million

  • @KanishQQuotes
    @KanishQQuotes 3 роки тому +495

    I just finished planting leftover cheese
    Wish me luck

    • @lectric
      @lectric 3 роки тому +110

      Careful, the cow gains size pretty quickly and you gotta keep repotting constantly

    • @sydthegoat6773
      @sydthegoat6773 3 роки тому +40

      Might end up with a tree laden with babybel cheeses like fruit

    • @RoseThistleArtworks
      @RoseThistleArtworks 3 роки тому +10

      @@sydthegoat6773 Yummmm babybel tree. I hope it happens.

    • @TXJan0057
      @TXJan0057 3 роки тому +37

      What in the world is left over cheese? I have never experienced that, every scrap of cheese is gone when I get it out

    • @lexica510
      @lexica510 3 роки тому +22

      It's like those articles about what to do with "leftover wine". What is this thing? It certainly doesn't occur in my household. 😂

  • @markskipworth7570
    @markskipworth7570 Рік тому +4

    1 word to describe you Mark...... GENUINE ! :) down to earth, caring for others, and REAL, as opposed to all the Lame-Stream Media PROGRAMMED Zombies in the world today.
    Much Respect.. from Mark from Tasmania, Australia.

  • @curban616
    @curban616 Рік тому +2

    I have regrown onions several times with great success!! I love your videos!

  • @lennieblake3444
    @lennieblake3444 3 роки тому +227

    As someone not particularly green fingered, it really helps to watch someone so proficient pondering what occurred, why, and how to move onward.
    All I have see before are people getting it right all the time and it really puts me off because I know I am not anything like that!
    Your enthusiasm, humour and willingness to show it all, as it is, is awesome and genuinely inspiring.

    • @tanyagarcia3721
      @tanyagarcia3721 3 роки тому +1

      He does put it where the goal would be more more attainable. I had something similar with the guy across the hall from me Werth my keys where I left mine in the lock by accident only it made him feel like he wasn't alone and that everyone does that sometimes

    • @HGrrrr
      @HGrrrr 2 роки тому +9

      The funny part that gardeners “always getting it right” is such a fallacy. All gardeners, even pros,, have hiccups and things happen which makes them have to problem solve. It’s what makes gardening fun, yet challenging, and makes you a more patient introspective person.
      Go for it, mess up, learn, and go for it again.

    • @jamescanjuggle
      @jamescanjuggle 2 роки тому +10

      my first garden was " the fuck it bucket" 😂😅
      just threw some seeds in a bucket of soil just to watch what would happen
      you really do learn a lot and it made me more confident in the garden!

    • @HGrrrr
      @HGrrrr 2 роки тому +3

      @@jamescanjuggle I love this idea! 😆 Super great way teach yourself the basics of gardening

    • @NsTheName
      @NsTheName 2 роки тому +3

      Most gardeners are like this guy. That's how you learn! You ask questions, you learn, and you move forward. Sure there are people with green thumbs, but at the end of the day, it's all about experience. My garden this year has been terrible. We've had serious drought and it was way hotter than normal so our crop has been...pretty pathetic, honestly. We're only just barely getting tomatoes and pretty much everything else has died. It's taught me a lot, though. I've got some ideas for next year and will have better planting sites as well. So, moral of the story, don't get discouraged! Success honestly comes through failure and then learning from that and trying again.

  • @gazoakleychef
    @gazoakleychef 3 роки тому +310

    love your advice, charisma & videos

    • @Pathologymadesimple
      @Pathologymadesimple 3 роки тому +9

      Hello avantgardevegan 😍 I m your fan

    • @awarenessvillage
      @awarenessvillage 3 роки тому +7

      @avantgardevegan Nice to see you in another spot I frequent. 😁 Your recipes are soooo yummy!

    • @reesegreenwood4036
      @reesegreenwood4036 3 роки тому +7

      @avantgardevegan Woah, that’s so weird, me and my girlfriend watch your videos all the time, we’ve been vegan for about a month now. It’s weird randomly running into you on another channel. :)

    • @Wings_of_foam
      @Wings_of_foam 3 роки тому +1

      Calm down lol.

    • @tmar8959
      @tmar8959 3 роки тому +3

      Ayy Gaz fancy seeing you here lad

  • @highspeedboom
    @highspeedboom 2 роки тому +67

    Watching him eat fresh vegetables on camera is like watching a kid in a candy store for the first time!, really in joy your videos!, keep up the good work! I now feel excited to grow more in my own garden now..

  • @neilwilliams2172
    @neilwilliams2172 Рік тому +2

    Jolly good show mate! I will definitely try this at home. Thank you so much for a valuable video. Keep up the good work. Kudos

  • @cyberwaste
    @cyberwaste 3 роки тому +171

    My wife and I have been living in Tokyo for six years, but we're moving back to Australia as soon as it's viable. The first thing I'm going to do is make myself a nice veggie garden. It's quite depressing being in an environment so separated from nature. I can't wait to go home and smell the trees and touch the grass.

    • @amandaham7571
      @amandaham7571 3 роки тому +8

      Enjoy the huge spiders is all I can say. Lol

    • @haruchai
      @haruchai 3 роки тому +16

      @@amandaham7571 Dont worry about them, the snakes take care of them.

    • @yw123wallace4
      @yw123wallace4 3 роки тому +1

      Me too

    • @thelastsoldierofgod3493
      @thelastsoldierofgod3493 3 роки тому

      @@haruchai danm two things humans fear alot

    • @judyjudd2352
      @judyjudd2352 3 роки тому +6

      Go to the wild places, my friend. Not night life wild, mind you. Just get outta the urban and go rural for a day. How refreshing!

  • @sandakureva
    @sandakureva 3 роки тому +110

    I wasn't even aware you COULD re-grow veggies from scraps of different veggies.
    Now that I know, I'm gonna try it this spring.

  • @karenrestingwitchface11
    @karenrestingwitchface11 Рік тому +3

    I planted a pineapple top and now I have 4 and many pups. Awesome use of scraps.

  • @camibabolik6908
    @camibabolik6908 Рік тому +7

    Central MN here, last year we had a beautifully warm growing season and we’re able to second crop our cabbage, just cut first heads and left the roots/plants to grow. Happily we harvested multiple smaller cabbages from those same plants! Thanks for the reminder on celery - think I’ll plant the base of a store bought one now to harvest while the 6-pack starter plants grow over the summer.

  • @iliumis
    @iliumis 3 роки тому +370

    Wow, Alex Jones became much more relaxed after he started farming.
    I want to try it myself now.

    • @notme5744
      @notme5744 3 роки тому +34

      Was just about to comment that this guy is Alex Jones if he'd gone the other way

    • @Sentient_Blob
      @Sentient_Blob 3 роки тому +15

      He’s so soothing

    • @Kricket2020
      @Kricket2020 3 роки тому +10

      Hahaha, this is funny.

    • @katyungodly
      @katyungodly 3 роки тому +19

      If Alex Jones was a sane person 😂

    • @icummins1806
      @icummins1806 3 роки тому +10

      He is turning the produce gay..

  • @bencowles2105
    @bencowles2105 3 роки тому +70

    The benifits of gardening go far beyond just growing healthy food. It is good exercise. It is also a marvelous method for fighting depression. The fresh air and sunshine not only boost the immune system but also counter depression and stress which can afrect your health. By countering stress and depression gardening helps stabilize your mental wellbeing as well. It can also provide a challenge which will help you with developing coping mechanisms and learning to develope strategy. It also helps develope a sence of value for your work and an better understanding of the world around you.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  3 роки тому +6

      All true! Cheers :)

    • @dothedewinme
      @dothedewinme 3 роки тому +4

      I garden alot too, have a 20x20 plot, and whenever tons of times i dont even have a ton to do necessarily, but it just relaxes me and puts my mind so much at ease. I LOVE it, and I love being able to grow (almost all) the organic pesticide free veggies and greens i use during the year! so many more benefits than just veggies!

    • @bencowles2105
      @bencowles2105 3 роки тому +11

      @@dothedewinme that is basically how i got started. I started with a small 20×20 garden space. I used it to help with depression and to grow food for my family. That was ten years ago. Now i am a market gardener growing for farmers markets, restaurants, and a few small stores. My hobby/ therapy turned into a full time job and i love it so much more than my old nine to five job. I have also learned so much not just about gardening but about myself and the world around me. Believe it or not i actually make more money growing food than i did in my old job. Wish i had started doing it thirty years earlier.

    • @vickyfarquhar3476
      @vickyfarquhar3476 3 роки тому +8

      Ben cowles Wow I feel so encouraged reading your post! I have always wanted to grow my own veg and better still grow enough to sell them in a farmer-type market, pesticide free, earth friendly etc etc. Currently I just do not have enough space to do so. Anyway this year during lockdown I decided just to start anyway, which means repurposing the flower pots for veggies, as we have virtually no garden, and growing from harvested seeds from store bought veg. Lockdown resulted in my having to find a different source of income, so I thought I just somehow have to start doing this. I am in South Africa and everything has become crazy expensive. It is amazing though how when one begins something, things start to seem to come ones way! Anyway, I really just wanted to say your comment just lifted my spirits at a time when it seems impossible to do this. Thank you!

    • @miagi84
      @miagi84 3 роки тому +4

      @@vickyfarquhar3476 Look into micro greens if you are tight for space. They sell for crazy prices here in the states and can be grown in small growing space. The caveat is some of the seeds can be expensive depending on what you want to grow. There is channels on youtube that dedicated to starting/running your own micro green business and selling to high end restaurants, farmers markets, etc. It's interesting if you are a gardener or wanting to get into the business anyways. Good luck.

  • @songlyon7795
    @songlyon7795 2 роки тому +4

    The celery leaces are like gold to me for addition to salad and soup. Also if dehydrated they are excellent when used to season savory dishes!

  • @juliaphillips7963
    @juliaphillips7963 2 роки тому +3

    This is great info. Many people are worried about the GMO companies controlling all the seeds, but what is great about this is we don't need seeds . I love the big bin vs the beds.

    • @AaronShenghao
      @AaronShenghao Рік тому +1

      GMO isn't that scary. Matter of fact, cross breeding is just a natural form of GMO.
      These scraps he planted are technically GMOs. There can be no fertilizers or too late in season, but GMO and cross breeding is one of the reasons why the plant you got back from panting seeds doesn't seem to match what's sold in supermarkets.

  • @charliebishop103
    @charliebishop103 3 роки тому +341

    “just Cos” killed me. i watch these videos to fill the dadless void in my life. mark is my dad now.

    • @nottechytutorials
      @nottechytutorials 3 роки тому +18

      If you're interested there's a channel called "Dad, how do I" that teaches you how to do some stuff.

    • @michellebamtyles
      @michellebamtyles 3 роки тому +12

      Jesus Christ is King and is coming soon… John 3:16 “For God so loved the World he gave is only begotten son(Jesus Christ) and whosoever believes in shall not perish but have everlasting life.” This is a sign from God to come back to him and repent. Repent meaning turn away from sins and give your life to Jesus. Jesus died so that you can have a chance to live with him in peace and pure bliss instead of going to eternal torment in hell. Jesus loves you so much. Read the Bible and learn more about him. God bless you🙏🏾

    • @SaraSara-bc8ts
      @SaraSara-bc8ts 3 роки тому +6

      😂😂 sending you love. Hope Mark fills your heart ❤️

    • @ninilovenana
      @ninilovenana 3 роки тому +1

      Congratulations

    • @StanHowse
      @StanHowse 3 роки тому +12

      Same man, exactly the same. My name is also Charlie. And I too am, dadless.

  • @itchyballsack6627
    @itchyballsack6627 3 роки тому +76

    I've just put a 20 pound note into fresh organic compost. Money tree will be ready in 16 weeks...👍

    • @TheUltimateBlooper
      @TheUltimateBlooper 3 роки тому +6

      Should have planted a 50 quid note for a better harvest!

    • @almamalima1660
      @almamalima1660 3 роки тому +1

      I re plant my potatoes but I don't know how many weeks and month take potatoes to be harvested ? Thanks to letting me knows

    • @palipali4264
      @palipali4264 2 роки тому +4

      You have to water it with greed and tears of despair. it will grow marvelously!!

    • @maryyu4010
      @maryyu4010 2 роки тому +1

      If only … 😬

  • @leahroberts554
    @leahroberts554 Рік тому +8

    Mark you are such a national treasure. Absolutely love your videos. You inspire us to give it a go and embrace the results. Love how you understand Aussie issues - cockatoo probably had a feed I get it!

  • @conniephillips8217
    @conniephillips8217 Рік тому +4

    This channel is right up my alley! I love to experiment in my garden and I always have so much fun. Thank you for all the great information!

  • @strandedinseattle9931
    @strandedinseattle9931 2 роки тому +256

    The jelly-like membrane inside of in the tomato which the seeds reside in actually works as an inhibitor for the seeds to sprout. If you cleaned the seeds off and planted them, you might have had a better shot at germination.
    Off note- I'm currently growing store-bought ginger the same way, a bit of root sprouted pups.

    • @shaec3405
      @shaec3405 2 роки тому +1

      So maybe just plant the whole tomato??

    • @BayStreetGardening
      @BayStreetGardening 2 роки тому +22

      Soak the seeds first for a few days to ferment them and you’ll have better germination rates. But actually, throwing a few tomatoes in the garden works too. I had good luck both ways.

    • @veroniquetrudel2931
      @veroniquetrudel2931 2 роки тому +4

      How so you grow ginger?

    • @veroniquetrudel2931
      @veroniquetrudel2931 2 роки тому +2

      How do you grow ginger ?

    • @strandedinseattle9931
      @strandedinseattle9931 2 роки тому +21

      @@veroniquetrudel2931 If you have ginger root and it begins to sprout, you'll notice the root begins to wither while the pups/nodes feed on it for moisture to grow. You just plant it in a large pot deep in the soil, pups pointing upward. They will continue to feed on the old bit of ginger and become big root systems of their own for you to harvest and begin the cycle all over. I think you can look it up for more precise directions, but super easy!

  • @paddydoyle2148
    @paddydoyle2148 3 роки тому +76

    i dont know how i came here but i am glad i did
    thank you

  • @bethhubbs9937
    @bethhubbs9937 Рік тому +1

    That is super cool how you left a cabbage plant in the ground after harvesting a mature head and then the plant pumped out three more heads! Amazing! I think every home gardener should do this. I've never grown cabbage before but I'm ready to give it a try!

  • @Lolabelle59
    @Lolabelle59 Рік тому +15

    Really enjoyed this and learned a lot. I don't know anything about gardening and didn't realize you could regrow such wonderful produce this way. New to your channel and will be definitely looking at and forward to more videos.

  • @notmyfault6835
    @notmyfault6835 3 роки тому +46

    That soil is magically beautiful

  • @davidtomes2298
    @davidtomes2298 3 роки тому +230

    Yeah, presently I have potatoes, Swiss chard, Kale, 2 types of Basil, Shallots, and Ginger, all grown from kitchen SCRAPS.

    • @cindyreinhart9552
      @cindyreinhart9552 3 роки тому +3

      Thank you. Great ways you show us. I appreciate your channel.

    • @kingjames4886
      @kingjames4886 3 роки тому +4

      good for YOU
      I grew all of those things from seed and considering my climate they all did better.
      edit: cept the ginger and shallots... grew the ginger from a tuber and it didn't do for shit in my climate... grew the shallots from old bulbs from last year people said you can't use and they did fine... onion type things are generally fine but tend to bolt more.

    • @vulcanfeline
      @vulcanfeline 3 роки тому +1

      swiss chard? do the stems root? i had no idea that would happen

    • @tazwowe
      @tazwowe 3 роки тому +1

      How do you grow basil from scraps??

    • @kingjames4886
      @kingjames4886 3 роки тому +3

      @@tazwowe root it

  • @darknightofthesoul7628
    @darknightofthesoul7628 Рік тому +1

    Very worthwhile video, thank you. If ever we do end up with the unthinkable (which we think about all the time...), it is valuable to know what we have can be used to give us more produce, instead of waste.

  • @sarabennett3732
    @sarabennett3732 Рік тому +2

    I just started the regrowth journey! Looking forward to further learning!! Thank you for all the super helpful info!!! 🙏❤️

  • @KanishQQuotes
    @KanishQQuotes 3 роки тому +90

    This man is comforting to watch in the garden

    • @Babyluthi
      @Babyluthi 3 роки тому +5

      Really is! Such a wonderful de-stressor😊

    • @sybur3239
      @sybur3239 3 роки тому +4

      Hes the Steve Irwin of the plant world.

  • @snowflakemelter1172
    @snowflakemelter1172 3 роки тому +499

    I've got 5 stale donuts planted out, fingers crossed.

    • @thatgirl3757
      @thatgirl3757 3 роки тому +52

      You'll have the police waiting in line for "harvest", lol

    • @bwhite3872
      @bwhite3872 3 роки тому +5

      If they grow you will have allot of customers at your door. Donuts anyone?

    • @carlswanson8041
      @carlswanson8041 3 роки тому +5

      Love the idea, may have to try a grouping of a couple of bagels and some cream cheese in a container... ;-) (Aren't cheerios doughnut seeds?)

    • @0623kaboom
      @0623kaboom 3 роки тому +10

      try a row cheerio's ... maybe you get some bagels to grow ;)

    • @clintg3435
      @clintg3435 3 роки тому +3

      Found the cop.

  • @ZA-Khosseyn
    @ZA-Khosseyn Рік тому +1

    That was great to watch, your love towards nature is respectable!

  • @arescue
    @arescue 3 роки тому +71

    When I was a little girl, one spring my mom bought us a bunch of carrots with the leafy tops still on them. I decided to plant mine in the backyard. To my delight, they grew to be really big, taller than i was at the time. It was hilarious, like Jack and the beanstalk. They weren’t edible. I wish that I had a picture, but back in 1982, the phone didn’t take pictures.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 роки тому +11

      No, but cameras did lol.

    • @catslife5501
      @catslife5501 3 роки тому +10

      @@anti-ethniccleansing465 Agreed!!, I grew some in 1949 and my phone would NOT answer when I phoned the plants.

    • @jacquesdesardjins6129
      @jacquesdesardjins6129 3 роки тому +1

      @@catslife5501 how old r u

    • @catslife5501
      @catslife5501 3 роки тому +4

      @@jacquesdesardjins6129 Not that it matters but 78, and you?

    • @Sackmatters
      @Sackmatters 3 роки тому +1

      Cats Life Judging from their comment, I’d say they are in the realm of 12-25.

  • @JerichoJack
    @JerichoJack 3 роки тому +118

    This man has the most gentle demeanor ive seen on this kinda video.

    • @sandi9546
      @sandi9546 3 роки тому +2

      Yes, I like him.

    • @Jono4174
      @Jono4174 3 роки тому +1

      Careful, he eats his friends or family.

    • @thomasskokan4644
      @thomasskokan4644 3 роки тому +4

      @@Jono4174True ... But he plants
      their scraps & they RE-grow ! !
      There was actually an old B & W
      outer limits / twilight zone 📺 show
      ( circa 63 ' ish ) about an old lady who could grow anything , & , sure enough , she regrew herself !

  • @darkbaypilotz3886
    @darkbaypilotz3886 Рік тому

    Thank u for your patient
    I can see u realy love what u do
    God bless u.

  • @tselengbotlhole750
    @tselengbotlhole750 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for motivating me. I've been trying to start a backyard garden using scraps. I'm definitely going to go for it

  • @kristendavidson7885
    @kristendavidson7885 2 роки тому +72

    I have 4 year old Brussels Sprouts growing in my greenhouse here in central North Carolina. I grow potatoes from supermarket waste every year. My biggest issue is tobacco worms (cut worms). This year I lost my two year old carrot plants (they lived in a raised bed out doors) to the cut worms. I also grow vegetables from my composted scraps... the compost bin in the perfect environment for good things to happen. Every year I empty it, and have tomato plants and avocado trees (avocado trees never make it through the winter here, but they are fun to see get tall) come up from the seeds that didn't compost completely away.
    I also incorporate earthworms into all of my gardening areas. They are the best fertilizer you can have (and they're free).
    At this very moment, I have a five year old catnip plant (they reseed themselves- do not trim them back no matter how ugly they look... the dry stalks are not dead.. mine grows back from them). I have an 8ft tall supermarket scrap tomato plant, some planters peanuts (don't buy them roasted if you plan on using them in the garden- I grow them for the animals). I have banana trees that I never cut back... they grow right back out of their stalks (even in central North Carolina ). I have had kale, romaine, spinach growing since early January (is late August now) that never died off.
    I swear by growing your dirt, your food, and staying away from fast food (that crap will kill you).
    All it takes is time and patience.
    My neighbor's chickens love my property and come feed on the endless supply of earthworms.

    • @diannenaworensky6698
      @diannenaworensky6698 2 роки тому +4

      Great job Kristen 👏

    • @kimberluna2226
      @kimberluna2226 2 роки тому +6

      Sounds like your living quite the blessed life.

    • @Robin-ci2kx
      @Robin-ci2kx 2 роки тому +2

      Sounds like heaven in earth. A healthy soil makes a healthy human.

    • @no834
      @no834 2 роки тому +2

      Damn where can I get some of this patience you speak of?

    • @Linkisss
      @Linkisss 2 роки тому

      Sounds like paradise there.

  • @ms.charlie841
    @ms.charlie841 3 роки тому +90

    “ and as you can see, it’s hard to see” you are so unintentionally funny 😆 love itttt

  • @mcposch
    @mcposch 2 роки тому +4

    I just discovered your videos! Wow! They are super helpful, informative & positive! Thank you for making them! Love your sense of humor too ❤️

  • @LittleBearBBQ_Food_Original
    @LittleBearBBQ_Food_Original Рік тому +1

    Love it. Years ago, I chucked a bit of Fennel base into my Lily Bed, thinking that "It's organic, it'll be 'right..." Yeah, I had so much Fennel, it was great!

  • @PersephonePersonified
    @PersephonePersonified 2 роки тому +314

    I did this (activity) with my boys and sister to show them the process (of growing produce from kitchen scraps) before the pandemic. (Everyone's an English teacher after high school.) 🙄
    I was fortunate to have a grandfather that loved to garden and a creative mother. I continue their teachings for the newer generations self sufficiency.
    Truly enjoyed your video. Watching the roots/ plants grow is always fun.
    I highly suggest shopping from the farmer’s market for fresh produce that grows well in your area. Picking up tricks from others is also helpful.
    I definitely recommend getting your soil tested as stated. Utilizing UA-cam to learn about different produce and each plants needs. Also buying a Farmer's Almanac and observing your yards sun exposure is helpful.

    • @InnaVitamina777
      @InnaVitamina777 2 роки тому +7

      ♥♥

    • @lifeisfun_28
      @lifeisfun_28 2 роки тому +21

      So if you planted your boys and a sister, did you get identical twins back for each?

    • @wendyhannan2454
      @wendyhannan2454 2 роки тому +13

      I’m going to grow my own veggies following Marks advice, he’s a ripper. The rubbish we are buying in the supermarket, is half dead the next day , the fruit is appalling and so expensive. I know the pandemic hasn’t helped. But instead of the super markets discounting the price, they’d rather throw them out. 😩

    • @MonicaGarcia-ys9kh
      @MonicaGarcia-ys9kh 2 роки тому +9

      What's the best soil to use?? Please advice

    • @texasgirl6000
      @texasgirl6000 2 роки тому +3

      @@MonicaGarcia-ys9kh, look for garden soil for vegetables.

  • @eeds9714
    @eeds9714 3 роки тому +8

    every time i have a REALLY good organic tomato, I plant some of the seeds and they almost always sprout! I just recently had a ton of wonderful tomatoes from my plant i grew that way!

    • @eeds9714
      @eeds9714 3 роки тому

      @@bnice2all www.growveg.com/guides/top-3-reasons-why-your-tomatoes-are-not-setting-fruit/ you could check this article out on why you might not have gotten fruit, that is a bummer you didn't get any tomatoes. good luck!!

  • @janissharkey7174
    @janissharkey7174 Рік тому

    I’ve been enjoying my own veggies from regrown grocery produce, thanks to UA-cam posters like you. Thanks!

  • @angelfaith3798
    @angelfaith3798 2 роки тому

    You are a blessing to this planet. Thank you!

  • @kpardeer3090
    @kpardeer3090 3 роки тому +88

    I regrow pineapple, onions and celery this way and I don't dig out my sugar loaf cabbages but I cut them off and leave the stems and in a few weeks they resprout leaves and about 8 weeks later I have up to five mini cabbages regrow. Great for Summer salads.

    • @marykater.7169
      @marykater.7169 3 роки тому +4

      I really want to try pineapple! I had forgotten about that!

    • @dusti755
      @dusti755 3 роки тому +7

      Get the sweetest pineapples from tops

    • @TheMeatLogo
      @TheMeatLogo 3 роки тому +2

      Pineapple takes years

    • @jacquiej5330
      @jacquiej5330 3 роки тому +1

      I tried onion but after the shoots grew, nothing else happened. Can you grow actual onions from a scrap?

    • @grovermartin6874
      @grovermartin6874 3 роки тому

      @@TheMeatLogo Does it depend on what kind of pineapple? My sister in southeast Florida regrows pineapple tops. It takes a few months to get amazingly sweet and succulent pineapples. I don't know when she plants them.

  • @frankbarnwell____
    @frankbarnwell____ 3 роки тому +72

    keep bringing it to us Mark. real gardening

  • @claudiasecco388
    @claudiasecco388 Рік тому

    I love the fact that you show us everything
    What grows and what does not a lot of web sites only show grow so when we do it and fail we have no idea why
    Love you keep it up 👆

  • @Julie-mq4nh
    @Julie-mq4nh 3 роки тому +103

    I do this with everything I can sometimes successful sometimes not, enjoy seeing what grows.

    • @JulieQHHT
      @JulieQHHT 3 роки тому +1

      Myself as well 😊

    • @frikandelspeciaal1431
      @frikandelspeciaal1431 3 роки тому +1

      Yes me too👌🏻

    • @CaffHCloudlow
      @CaffHCloudlow 3 роки тому

      And you learn every time

    • @skippy5506
      @skippy5506 3 роки тому +3

      Me too, I even save all the bits of potato skin I think might still chit, some work some don’t but I always have more harvest because I do it, last year I regrew carrot tops and some other stuff for seed, had tonnes of success 😁

    • @Julie-mq4nh
      @Julie-mq4nh 3 роки тому +1

      Oh I will try the potato skins👍

  • @ofpd9330
    @ofpd9330 3 роки тому +39

    My dogs love tomato's and eat them all the time. Come spring/summer time there's tomato plants growing all around the property!!!

    • @moix5799
      @moix5799 3 роки тому

      😆

    • @BRI33NOR
      @BRI33NOR 3 роки тому

      @@moix5799 Sort of self seeders, ?.

    • @coralleemundwiller853
      @coralleemundwiller853 2 роки тому +1

      Dog poop tomatoes? Lol I've got pig poop squash growing wild too. 😂

  • @princessp1361
    @princessp1361 Рік тому +4

    Can't wait to start my journey this is so need for me and my family we been threw so much I'm definitely about to do this in my new home 😊 keep up the good work

  • @deennmckeague9301
    @deennmckeague9301 Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing your progress with kitchen scraps. Great idea!

  • @p.w.7051
    @p.w.7051 3 роки тому +27

    Love this kind of stuff. Two years ago I chopped up a couple of imperfect heirloom tomatoes and put them right back into their bed for fertilizer. Converted that bed to flowers and this year got a late season crop of delicious unexpected tomatoes.

  • @mountainstartemple6041
    @mountainstartemple6041 3 роки тому +28

    I accidentally cut off a finger whilst gardening and just left it there ... in 7 weeks a whole new me sprouted ... this stuff is amazing!

    • @sjt4689
      @sjt4689 3 роки тому +4

      Funnily enough, experiments have been done regarding why some animals can regrow an appendage yet humans don't. Its some fascinating stuff. If scientists can ever get it together and stop behaving like school aged cult members, we may one day be able to regenerate limbs using magnets and crystals. Yes, proven by these studies and experiments, not some airy fairy BS. Read The Body Electric: Electromagnetism and the Foundations of Life.

    • @thomasskokan4644
      @thomasskokan4644 3 роки тому +1

      @@sjt4689 " Body Electric " was a good book.Few ppl realize that SCIENTISM is actually a new religion
      & , as with any ridgid beliefs , stunts the growth of the human soul ....

    • @spacewolfcub
      @spacewolfcub 2 роки тому +3

      All I see is Deadpool’s tiny regrowing hand... 😳😱

    • @lisarochwarg4707
      @lisarochwarg4707 2 роки тому

      The power of whiskey.

    • @azraphon
      @azraphon 2 роки тому

      @@sjt4689 Crystals.

  • @FemaleObserver
    @FemaleObserver Рік тому

    I've never been greatly informed. Thank you so much, more please to let us know with all the testing and trial. This is one of the best videos. Can't wait to know some more.

  • @najmanadeem5648
    @najmanadeem5648 2 місяці тому

    Best explained video. You have taught us and busted the myths on UA-cam. Very informative, loved it.

  • @Soldecision
    @Soldecision 2 роки тому +92

    Living food! replanting your compost has yielded several edible potatoes. I love videos like this, thank you for sharing your experience!

  • @svarghese9424
    @svarghese9424 2 роки тому +16

    Nice to see your video and encouraging people to grow own veg. Am from Dubai, we have hot and humid climate. Hardly any rain. But in a limited space of backyard, developed figs, pomegranate, citrus plants. Tomatoes, lettuces and potatoes was a great inspiring success. Thank you for your contributions in cultivating such interests among people.

  • @DailyPragmatism
    @DailyPragmatism Рік тому

    This is the first time I’ve seen one of your videos. Idk why it was even suggested but it was great. I’m digging your approach and general attitude. Thanks for posting!

  • @Spangletiger
    @Spangletiger 2 роки тому +5

    Love this experiment! With the lettuce and the 2nd cabbage experiment, it looks like the same thing is happening as when you pinch out the top of a plant to allow side shoots to develop. The result is really impressive! 👍

  • @KY-dx4rf
    @KY-dx4rf 3 роки тому +31

    Great guy u are!
    A mix of Steve Irvin and Russel Crowe,
    with a green thumb 😀👍

  • @andylimb
    @andylimb 3 роки тому +26

    I have mystery tomatoes and vines growing in two of my raised beds. I’ve been tossing my kitchen scraps right on top of the soil and letting nature do her stuff as an experiment.

    • @missg.5940
      @missg.5940 3 роки тому +1

      One of my best tomato plants ever grew from seeds in the compost. Happy accident and great tomatoes! I got a beautiful honey rock Melon vine which l just let grow in amongst the flowers and was rewarded with three delicious fruits😊Gardening, the grief and the glory! 🤗😷🇨🇦

    • @andylimb
      @andylimb 3 роки тому

      @@missg.5940 two weeks ago I found a suspicious looking plant. I carefully dig around it and pulled it out. It turned out to be a volunteer avocado!! I’ve been trying to grown them purposely for months with no luck!

  • @ERSwanger
    @ERSwanger Рік тому +1

    I am in the process of regrowing green onions, ginger, turmeric and garlic from scraps. I loved this video! Thank you!

  • @philomenamiranda4803
    @philomenamiranda4803 2 роки тому

    Thanks very much. You are quite the guru on growing vegetables. Esp with veggie scraps. I do this already but u have inspired me more.

  • @LokiandBjorn
    @LokiandBjorn 3 роки тому +46

    The leaves of celery, as well as the ends of many of your veggies will make a GREAT broth - the heads of your carrots too.

    • @reneezancewoman
      @reneezancewoman 3 роки тому +5

      I enjoy the leaves in my broths and soups too! I never tried them till I was as n adult- I didn't even know the tops were edible, lol. The tops of carrots taste just like the carrots, too.

    • @froglobster
      @froglobster 3 роки тому +2

      That’s good to know thanks for the tip 🥕🥬

  • @ProsciuttinoXL
    @ProsciuttinoXL 2 роки тому +9

    I like how he really shows his results, failures and all.