How to Grow Spinach Organically

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 191

  • @Pickles6115
    @Pickles6115 Рік тому +13

    I love the bloomsdale long standing spinach. I winter sow them in large containers. My "chef" hubby ( our kiddos tell me to stop calling him that) loves cooking it in soups. By the way he isn't a chef but I gotta build him up. We will be celebrating our 40 yr anniversary in June 💕. Happy gardening Farmer Jesse .

  • @StayDownComeUp512
    @StayDownComeUp512 10 місяців тому +1

    It eat spinach and kale with a few grapes for a flavor blast every day for lunch and that's the best meal ever. Just wanted to drop that here. 😊

  • @CtrlAltDUST
    @CtrlAltDUST Рік тому +24

    I was literally wondering today why my spinach wasn't germinating like my other seeds! Every single one of your videos are EXTREMELY helpful in my home garden. I've utilized many of your suggestions and techniques in my garden. CHEERS and keep up the good work!

  • @shawnueda8909
    @shawnueda8909 Рік тому +12

    We grow butterflay variety for the shoulder season and for winter. For late spring and early fall we switch to Space because it is bit more tolerant to heat. We don't sell cut spinach just bunched. Spacing is 6 to 8 inches. For summer month we substitute bunched tatsoi and sell as Chinese spinach (Tatsoi is also known as spinach mustard). We'll easily sell 60 bunches per market day. Bunching size for both spinach and tatsoi is around 8 inch tall plants. Watering is by drip ONLY!! Insect netting is a must. It's not just for aphids but to keep sparrows from feasting on the plants. We also place around 10 mouse trap inside a down spout of a rain gutter cut to 12 inches (two traps per 12inch tube) per 100 foot rows.

  • @nedbluestone
    @nedbluestone Рік тому +21

    Great vid. I always let several plants go to seed then harvest and spread the seeds in the Autumn here in Boise, ID. I have been doing this for 15+ years and I honestly don't remember what I started with. It has turned into a majority of savoyed spinach but there always is a chance for a smooth leaf plant or two. It germinates and grows as the weather warms, and I never worry about fertilizing and it is all usually harvested before pests have a chance to become a problem.

  • @mattreinecke4399
    @mattreinecke4399 Рік тому +79

    Spinach is a royal vegetable. The name Savoy comes from the House of Savoy (Savoia) The royalty of Piedmont, Sicily and Sardinia. They were even the kings of Italy from the 1860 unification until Mussolini. And you thought it was just nice in salads...🤪

  • @MK-ti2oo
    @MK-ti2oo Рік тому +3

    I started soaking my seed in a peroxide/water mix on a paper towel and have gotten nearly 100% germination since I started doing it this way. Before that it was really hit or miss.

  • @matprather5833
    @matprather5833 Рік тому +11

    I do the pick one leaf at a time harvest. I also let them get big so it's faster filling up the tote. I have trained the customers at the market to love big leaf spinach like 6-8" diameter. I prefer the crinkly leaf type so they have volume in the bag not all flat together. My favorite varieties are a Red Tabby for a Red Vein and Lizard or Sunangel for green. I do a mix or red and green.

  • @johndyer9232
    @johndyer9232 Рік тому +2

    I love how cold hardy Bloomsdale Longstanding spinach is during winter in zone 6b. It tastes better after it goes through winter.

  • @taitsmith8521
    @taitsmith8521 Рік тому +2

    I literally just throw spinach on the ground in the fall and harvest through spring.
    NW Texas Zone 6B

  • @EDLaw-wo5it
    @EDLaw-wo5it Рік тому +3

    I really appreciate the work and research you must do to present these great videos. I know you are monetized but you go above and beyond. All of you watching should buy the book. It absolutely is worth every penny spent. Havagudun Jesse.

  • @renatehaeckler9843
    @renatehaeckler9843 Рік тому +34

    I like bloomsdale longstanding spinach for fall sowing because it will often overwinter and then you get giant leaves almost a foot across that are sweet and mild tasting in the early spring. Unfortunately that -6* weather last December was too cold for my (unprotected) spinach. It is a savoy type. One year I saved seeds from some just to see how that worked because there are male and female plants, and the seeds I saved grow pretty well so that's cool.

    • @Rosemountainfarm
      @Rosemountainfarm Рік тому

      Ditto

    • @mylesfalconer9183
      @mylesfalconer9183 Рік тому +3

      I have yet to see a spinach variety that does not overwinter well here in Ontario, Canada. I plant last week of August and get a few pickings in before winter, and then it comes back 100% in the spring. I've used Renegade, Space, Bloomsdale and Reflect. Sometimes I throw a low tunnel on a bed in March to get a good succession of spinach...

    • @renatehaeckler9843
      @renatehaeckler9843 Рік тому +2

      @@mylesfalconer9183 I think what kills mine when I try to overwinter it (if it does die) is when the weather flip-flops so it's 70* one day and -6 the next. I think if it stays cold the plants make their "antifreeze" and are protected but they don't if it's too warm. My best guess, anyways.

    • @infiniteadam7352
      @infiniteadam7352 Рік тому +3

      You know it takes seven generations for a plant to adapt to a specific climate, save those seeds again and over time they will adapt to your area.

    • @RealBradMiller
      @RealBradMiller Рік тому +1

      @@infiniteadam7352 Agreed. I'm obsessed with saving seeds! I carry little plastic tubes just in case I come across a seed head of a plant I like. 😋

  • @pamalajjohnson9576
    @pamalajjohnson9576 Рік тому +1

    Great noble is my favorite, in summer before I plant store the seed in the refrigerator plant in ground in September for the winter into spring I harvest alot.

  • @dawnlemieux3877
    @dawnlemieux3877 Рік тому +3

    In New Hampshire, I sometimes seed spinach out very late in the fall, but before ground freezes. Then as soon as the soil starts warming up in the spring I will have a crop of spinach. Bonus if it snows soon after planting so the seeds don’t start to germinate in the fall. Timing is critical as too early a planting could germinate seeds in the fall just to be frozen and wasted.

  • @momcomputer6461
    @momcomputer6461 Рік тому +6

    I'm not a market grower (yet), but for the home gardener I would highly recommend Malabar Spinach. Fantastic flavor and loves the summer heat. It's not as abundant as other types but most of the leaves will get to be a heart-shaped 7". They are also beautiful vining plants, so have a trellis available. I've even grown it in pots and brought it indoors over winter for fresh greens. It will seed abundantly and the late fall seeds that I didn't catch are growing new plants. I love it and will never be without it again! ThanQ for all your wonderful educational videos, Jesse! Oh, and if you use your left hand to point to other videos, you'll be right on the mark. 🤣

    • @virginiaseedsskogen2038
      @virginiaseedsskogen2038 Рік тому

      Shawn Ueda, a few comments up mentioned using drip irrigation only and netting.
      I am a home gardener too, and have had some pest issues from potato bugs on potato plants and other plants. I fill a 1 liter or smaller plastic bottle or jar 1/4 -1/2 with water then add a few drops of dish soap, a few drop of oil, then with the lid on shake it up. I put the container in my potato patch and take the lid off. Then I pick off the potato beetles and drop them in the jar. I also fill a spray bottle with the same type of solution and spray it on the leaves top and bottom sides.
      I may follow what Shawn Ueda does this year and buy some netting for extra protection against the harmful insects, but wondering what the effect would be on the helpful insects, both with the spray and the netting?

  • @hopehochhalter5150
    @hopehochhalter5150 Рік тому +2

    In the mid 2000's, a successful organic farmer in my area, Dave Swett, spoke to our MG group about spinach, beets and chard. He always prepped his seed by soaking it in strongly brewed black tea (cooled), then seeded with it. It has served me well. Something about the tannins in the tea helped with germination? Food for thought.

  • @thewealthbuildingtx
    @thewealthbuildingtx Рік тому +1

    My grandson always stops to dance to your music when your videos start!

  • @10minihaven
    @10minihaven Рік тому

    I'm having major germination problems with spinach, so this is just the information I need.

  • @makilahduncan556
    @makilahduncan556 Рік тому +19

    Loved eating spinach even as a kid so I'll definitely be rewatching this video a few times. I'm enjoying the book and can't wait to add another hat to my ball cap collection haha. Plus it'll be great for the Tennessee heat
    Thank you for being a good source of knowledge. I appreciate all the work that goes into these videos that we don't even know/think about.

  • @CS-bn4un
    @CS-bn4un Рік тому +2

    We're older growers-at-home only to eat, freeze and share, but really appreciate your specific details as we have not had much success in growing spinach in a warmer (8a) climate. May wait and try again in the fall now that we are already warming up so much...way too quickly! When you are selling your savoy varieties at a market (I think you sell in that manner..sorry...newer to your channel so not sure), do you let folks have a little taste to entice them to buy it? Thanks again for informative and well-produced videos! For any one who didn't watch until the end clip...you missed a good one!

  • @Howwerelivingfishing
    @Howwerelivingfishing Рік тому +2

    My spinach did great last year 👍 was my first time growing it in a raised bed. I was very surprised how much I harvested in a small area. I harvested all of it with a pair of scissors and it was very hard on the back.😣 Definitely growing more this year. Watching from Dartmouth Nova Scotia 🇨🇦 also zone 6b 👍

  • @ethansmith7659
    @ethansmith7659 Рік тому +3

    So much good info in this video. I grow only bunching spinach here in Texas. Baby leaf if too common and cheap in the store for me to compete. I freeze and can a lot too for our family and the bigger spinach works better.I will plant multiple beds at a time fall, mid winter, early spring, and late late spring by actually seed priming in the warmer temps. I will use 60% shade cloth in warm months, but I think it’s more important to have the moisture retention in hot weather rather than actual cooler temps. I only direct seed, earthway seeder with I think the beet plate???? (I paint my plates for easy identification). I go with 6 rows on 30” beds and let them fight for space. Jun, Jul, and Aug I don’t even attempt to plant. And usually September as well is too hot, but fortunately I’m in big time okra, squash and cucumbers so it doesn’t really hurt.

    • @cherokeecountry
      @cherokeecountry Рік тому

      I'm in Texas as well, I'm new to gardening, so I'm learning as I go. The heat is my bane for most planting.

    • @ethansmith7659
      @ethansmith7659 Рік тому +3

      @@cherokeecountry just keep in mind to have everything you want to plant in the ground by the end of may. So many market gardeners rely on short dtm crops, but we get so hot that we can’t plant those things mid summer. So personally I will plan to have things that continue to produce in those months okra, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers. For all others I make sure to have a lot planted and growing before the extreme heat kicks in (almost like you would for winter). The fall is the same. That first cool front of the year, I want as much ground planted as I can so that it’s grown by the time the cold hits. Then you can harvest as needed until spring planting or until heat forces you to harvest. For summer you just want those crops germinated and growing by the time it gets hot. The key is moisture. We’re in dry country here, so I plant densely and let the plants protect the ground from drying so fast, and definitely water in the evening and harvest in the morning. Hope that helps

  • @circledot-kc8il
    @circledot-kc8il Рік тому +1

    I sell bunching spinach. It sells quite well here in South Carolina. It is just so much quicker to cut by hand that I naturally gravitated to it accidently. I ordered a type of spinach one year that was bunching and it just worked. Have stuck to it ever since.

  • @3crowsfarm16
    @3crowsfarm16 Рік тому +3

    Jesse!
    Here in the mountains of SE BC (zone 5a) I have learned that I can plant spinach in late August for an October harvest (CDN Thanksgiving = big sales), then leave it uncovered over winter (60cm snow and -25c spells) and it will regrow in late March. early April. My first cutting is a mowing and weeding to freshen up the bed (many damaged leaves), but my second cutting happens 3 weeks after that (end of April) and it is a crazy sweet leaf!
    Like, you can ICE A CAKE with this spinach!
    I usually take 1 more cutting mid-May before it bolts and sell it for commercial juicing -however, last time I did that she said all her juice turned very brown very quickly (natural oxidization, but ugly). I don't know it was the extra sugars or oxalyc acid, or her crappy lemons or... ?
    But it was too bad because I can sell her 100kg a week at $7/kg (crazy cheap, but that's only 2 hour labour on an extra cutting)
    I usually grow Space because it is so fast and tastes great, but you taught me some things about Savoy so I might try that again.

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Рік тому

    I love spinach! This it the 1st year that I have grown it! I dont know why! I obly grow for ma nad my family but its so nice to have bulk to freeze or to dry. I love ti be able to grow as much as I can every year. It gets better and bettter each year! i love that you have so much knowledge!

  • @melissaschloneger9902
    @melissaschloneger9902 Рік тому +4

    I have watched many of your videos twice and the snarky humor is still funny on round 2. You pack so much info into your videos and I appreciate your desire to share the knowledge. I think its time for me to buy a hat and the book, since I have been following you for a while (not stalking but we do live in Ohio). Keep up the good, hard work! And bring the cat back into the videos…

  • @Mtpumpkinsman
    @Mtpumpkinsman Рік тому +10

    So enjoy all these videos you put out and these crop break downs are amazing and full of good nerdiness! My ground is still frozen and so can’t wait to get spinach radish and arugula started.

    • @j87waldo
      @j87waldo Рік тому +1

      I do some in containers in my sunroom just as a kids project it's always fun to see stuff grow with arctic back ground .... It grows slower of course but when you have cabin fever anything else alive besides you is a treasure...

  • @kimberlykelly2648
    @kimberlykelly2648 Рік тому +1

    Thanks! Runs to unplug the heat matt on my primed spinach seeds...ughhhh.😂

  • @NannaCarlstedt2
    @NannaCarlstedt2 Рік тому

    Successfully grew this bigger kind of spinach this season. They were thriving in compost from horse manure combined with some coconut coir, maybe 1/6, and perlite; in partly shade. They got bigger leaves than usual, otherwise the same consistency and taste. Gonna try them in fall again. Spinacia oleracea 'Matador'. Large dark green leaves. With the bigger leaves it felt I got "two-for-one"!

  • @michaelhostetler5190
    @michaelhostetler5190 Рік тому

    We just planted some this spring knew nothing about it. Thanks for the info. It's coming in pretty good....

  • @scottholloway316
    @scottholloway316 8 місяців тому

    Great wisdom. I love your breakdown on price for chefs. I’m a chef from Alabama but live in Norway. My seeds are soaked and going into the green house. I need to find some of the heartier spinach you mentioned. They sell Metador spinach seeds here so I have to get seeds like Bloomsdale from back home. Keep up the good work and the comedy.

  • @Oktopia
    @Oktopia Рік тому +1

    I saved seeds from spinach last season. It germinated fast and reliably on my cold drafty windowsill. My house doesn't get really hot inside so I guess the seedlings like that lol

  • @rosea830
    @rosea830 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for what you do! I usually start chard when I start spinach because I'll still have chard when the spinach bolts. We had those 80 degree days last week and my chickens are loving the bolted asian greens they've been eating. The Corvair spinach hasn't bolted, yet.

  • @tanarehbein7768
    @tanarehbein7768 Рік тому +7

    A greenhouse guy told me a hint that has been full proof for me concerning aphids. He said to add vitamin B complex to your watering solution. I've tried it with one capsule dissolved in a five gallon bucket of water as well as 1/2 capsule per 5 gal water. Either has worked great. One dose is usually eno, two for a really horrendous infestation.
    By the way, for white fly treat the water with vitamin C.
    Why has no one ever done a video on that?

    • @Paula_T
      @Paula_T Рік тому +2

      Gonna try this today. HATE the little bastards! Thank you!!

    • @BellaMarsilioRN
      @BellaMarsilioRN Рік тому +3

      Aphids: Vitamin B
      White Fly: Vitamin C
      Mildew on soil : Cinnamon or palm bark

    • @JoeN-S
      @JoeN-S 7 місяців тому

      Say what? Is that as a foliar spray?

    • @tanarehbein7768
      @tanarehbein7768 7 місяців тому

      @@JoeN-S I have folier sprayed and I have saturated the soil. Either seems to work since it is really building the plant's immunity and causes less stress hormone production. I have mixed it with neem or liquid seaweed. Seems to work about the same.

  • @Followyourlight420
    @Followyourlight420 Рік тому

    Another great episode. Just got my book in the mail, dove into it and it’s amazing. One of two books I will refer to in the future. Thanks for all the info you supply! You research same me so much time and effort. RESPECT!!

  • @amyk6028
    @amyk6028 Рік тому +3

    Coincidence!! I’m starting my Spinach seeds today. I’m in zone 7b. Thanks for another very helpful and informative video! Love your detail ❤

    • @bbtruth2161
      @bbtruth2161 Рік тому

      Started some last week....zone 4a

  • @dubo5
    @dubo5 Рік тому +1

    I use to do Bloomsdale. Now I'm sold on Noble Giant. Huge leaves and great taste. Easier to start too.

  • @lindaswedenlifestyle
    @lindaswedenlifestyle Рік тому

    thank you for sharing spinach temperature.. i grew that kind of vegetables its so great compare the other vegetables.. i well try again soon when the snow desapear..

  • @wannabefarm8831
    @wannabefarm8831 Рік тому +1

    Great to see you back. Spinach was a challenge for me last year definitely appreciate this video

  • @michaelasmith3616
    @michaelasmith3616 Рік тому +3

    I'm going to be growing my garden in middle/east TN, and I am about halfway through your book! Looking forward to implementing these practices :)

  • @Dom10Sage5
    @Dom10Sage5 Рік тому +1

    "Beer. Sorry. Spinach" 🤣 yes.
    We currently have 4 types of spinach planted at the moment. Giant noble, bloomsdale, red stem malabar,and baby leaf.

  • @poeticpursuits1332
    @poeticpursuits1332 Рік тому +1

    I am in the same state and zone so these tips are really relevant, thank you so much.

  • @patriciareynolds2729
    @patriciareynolds2729 Рік тому

    luv the cruncyness of romaine lettuce over spinach or kale. i have grown kale 8-9 months a year.

  • @Нарангэрэлэнэхэнбэ

    Hello from Moldova. Our favorite spinach is Matador

  • @coopsblooms5824
    @coopsblooms5824 Рік тому +2

    The greens harvester totally destroys it for a second cut. We went to hand harvesting, which is pretty time consuming. We’re going to try the paperpot method this year. We used space,
    Lizard, and kookaburra last year. Can’t say I had a favorite yet.

  • @Organicagain
    @Organicagain Рік тому

    Thanks again, you’re a gem, Farmer Jesse. The Cream of the Crop.

  • @je-fq7ve
    @je-fq7ve Рік тому +1

    savoy spinach holds salad dressing better. and taste better to me. Tyee.

  • @RobertoJuanSurMontana
    @RobertoJuanSurMontana Рік тому +1

    I am trying ALL spinach garden to start now... then after harvest, will go to Chard and Kale. I have not tilled in YEARS. I do, however, remove my thick plastic sheet, and use a mega-propane flame thrower, and hand broadcast the seed, shuffle my feet all over the place, and do this the day prior to a full rain. No rows. Correct, I am not pursuing aesthetic beauty. I just want the spinach to be "happy"

  • @panjab6119
    @panjab6119 Рік тому +1

    My spinach survived overwinter here in uk, outdoor and uncovered

  • @patriciareynolds2729
    @patriciareynolds2729 Рік тому

    deer got mine last fall, we had drought in Tenn and no acorns in woods. deer hungry all winter and saw herds in the fields. will have put electric fence up soon to have any garden, sowing spinach/ onions now. trying replanting romaine lettuce stalks that greened up guickly.

  • @Firevine
    @Firevine Рік тому

    Thanks a ton. This was helpful in understanding why I've been having so much trouble with spinach, and possibly orach as well.

  • @christopherscott5152
    @christopherscott5152 Рік тому +1

    I love your channel No tiller Growers. Learning a lot ❤

  • @donisenberg3032
    @donisenberg3032 4 місяці тому

    Space is my favorite spinach.

  • @nextchancenow7153
    @nextchancenow7153 Рік тому +1

    Sunday morning with Farmer Jesse. Looking like a good day already! (Someone say beer? 🍺)

  • @nininoona
    @nininoona Рік тому

    The first year I grew spinach (five years ago), I grew the smooth variety (mostly) and did a medium-sized grow pot of Bloomsdale Longstanding to give a try. That was the LAST year I grew smooth spinach. I have noticed that seed quality between suppliers is super varied with Bloomsdale. Some batches germinate at 90% or better and then some basically fail. So I am still in the process of finding a supplier for Bloomsdale that has a fairly consistent germination rate.

  • @prisillaspace
    @prisillaspace Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for your thorough instructions!
    I appreciate your sense of humor and I apologize I don’t have enough greens to become a patron, yet. 😁
    I’m in the coastal bend of Texas…..So I have malibar …
    I prefer young leaves raw as I’m pottering around my haphazard garden. Thanks for the tip regarding germination…..nasturtium is the same….some did germinate for me in Jan….
    Take care!!
    💚🌱🍃

  • @elizabeth-pi9ho
    @elizabeth-pi9ho Рік тому

    Thanks for the information! I’m in Kentucky zone 6b and had moved from NY, so I’m relearning some things here since the growing season here is different.

  • @bobwilliams4528
    @bobwilliams4528 Рік тому

    I've been struggling with spinach, appreciate the info

  • @greenspiritarts
    @greenspiritarts Рік тому

    Bloomsdale for sure! I also remember liking Tyee but I’ve not seen it in a while. Definitely like deeply savoyed leaves and dark green color.

  • @thistlehillfarms7118
    @thistlehillfarms7118 Рік тому +3

    Zone 3b and we use Space variety. I find the first leaves are smooth but subsequent growth is savoyed. 7 rows on a 30" bed , seed spaced 4" apart gives a nice full bed. We hand harvest as the first leaves are very low to the ground, with later growth being higher up the plant stem. Very cold hardy. Seeded our greenhouse late Fall aand super curious if that spinach will be up early or is -40f a tad too cold. Great vid as always:))

    • @matprather5833
      @matprather5833 Рік тому +1

      Here in zone 4, I seed some in the greenhouse (unheated) in the fall and will survive the winter and will be ready to harvest in the early spring. I haven't any trouble with them not surviving the winter yet. The biggest problem has been the mice and rats eating out the centers and killing the plants.

  • @freedomlover3834
    @freedomlover3834 Рік тому +3

    I mean seed priming is primal right? Great video as usual!
    Have you introduced nemintoads to your soil to eat the aphid after you knock them off? I like to have subsurface and surface warfare!

  • @ahnaahna7278
    @ahnaahna7278 Рік тому

    Thks. I bought transplants last fall…..to experiment with growing spinach against my south wall . Success! I wrapped the big pots of spinach with double clear shower curtains for protection if got too cold. I think it is Savoy, crinkly. I may sow seeds next fall. Was fun to pick and eat! Last year I grew collard and kale transplants against a south wal. . Thanks for your encouragement to grow! Ahna (Atlanta ga).

  • @koreanature
    @koreanature Рік тому

    Wow... My best friend, Made an excellent video. I really liked it. Beauty is extraordinary. Thank you very much for the video.

  • @meolson9197
    @meolson9197 Рік тому +1

    I was hoping you would follow through on details of moving the germinated soil blocks into a bed - depth and spacing. But you jumped to direct seeding baby leaf. Did I miss that?

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead2839 Рік тому

    Savoy since it's preferred by customers & my own use. Tundra & Space I've had luck with (zones 3 & 4).

  • @jvin248
    @jvin248 Рік тому +4

    Seems like the Savoy style seed is what I need to order. Have you found any problems washing the non-smooth spinach to get all the 'grit' out of the leaves?
    How about seed saving of spinach in your system to get localized fungal and insect resistance (J Lofthouse Landrace techniques)? I'm trying that method with cucumbers to hopefully escape powdery mildew.

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  Рік тому +3

      good questions and yes sorta. They can be harder to clean, especially with pests like aphids that can hide in the creases. Just have to be vigilant and double dunk them. As for saving seed, no reason why you can't, especially on the OP crops like Bloomsdale

  • @Sssanbo
    @Sssanbo Рік тому

    I noticed spinach does like a more neutral soil, since mines acidic i like adding a tad of lime or minerals and seems to really help for me .

  • @shawnrusselld
    @shawnrusselld Рік тому

    @1:20 Fun fact, Myron E. Scott the guy who named the Corvette was from Preble County Ohio, which is where I'm from. Love your book too BTW.

  • @CliverMcguiver
    @CliverMcguiver Рік тому

    I am so envious - I am in zone 3 - 3b...

  • @MsCjgibson
    @MsCjgibson Рік тому

    I love all your vids, but especially the “How To’s” … please please keep doing them 👏🏻

  • @jamesrichey
    @jamesrichey Рік тому

    I enjoy how your videos are both informative and funny.

  • @charlenequinilty7252
    @charlenequinilty7252 Рік тому

    I grow bloomsdale spinach. Usually have good results.

  • @ballincarey
    @ballincarey Рік тому +1

    Very informative
    Thanks again Jessie

  • @JennWang
    @JennWang Рік тому

    You didn't talk about bolting - my backyard garden spinach bolts quickly, but I guess I just need to keep it cooler...

  • @susanbritton-giza5054
    @susanbritton-giza5054 Рік тому

    I love Viking spinach !

  • @rwg727
    @rwg727 7 місяців тому

    you're so funny Jesse! thanks for the videos.I like Bloomsdale long standing spinach. its savoyed.

  • @Seedtotableacres
    @Seedtotableacres Рік тому

    Great content. Gonna try your favorites. Also just love ur humor. You make me laugh out loud almost every video:)

  • @shyekiera
    @shyekiera Рік тому

    I guess I'll try seed priming because I've been trying to get spinach to germinate for 2 years

  • @AnenLaylle7023
    @AnenLaylle7023 11 місяців тому

    Red Tabby Spinach sells really well, I have found.

  • @cherokeecountry
    @cherokeecountry Рік тому +5

    I see these video games having 1, 2 or 3 million subs. How does No Till have less than 200k. Learning techniques for food germination is a lot more valuable to be than learning how to dominate in asteroids.

    • @notillgrowers
      @notillgrowers  Рік тому +4

      Maybe I start growing asteroids and split the difference 🤷

  • @sheliadean9548
    @sheliadean9548 Рік тому

    Thank you for sharing this information with us

  • @cherylsmith8541
    @cherylsmith8541 Рік тому

    Thanks for the video! All great info that helped me have better germination than I have in years past! I started mine in soil blocks and one quick question - when you plant the 2-4 seeds per block, if several germinate, do you thin them to one per or do you plant the whole block with multiple starts and they do fine that way? I know that some plants don't mind being planted in clumps but didn't know what your experience is for Spinach in particular. Thank you!

  • @tolbaszy8067
    @tolbaszy8067 Рік тому

    "Fertigation"? Is that a Jesse word? I like it! Nice haircut! I'm due for my Spring flea dip, so I'll be going in for my cover crop termination soon. Can I buy a dirty hat? I like the idea of a ready to wear version that looks like I'm a hard worker. Thanks for another great video!

  • @willanderson5088
    @willanderson5088 2 місяці тому

    I deck garden. I have a really hard time with heat even if the temp isn’t high the heat from being between buildings I can’t grow it mid summer. Twin cities Minnesota. Spring and fall crop for me and indoors all winter

  • @cristelle121
    @cristelle121 Рік тому

    I love them all. Great video

  • @hogue3666
    @hogue3666 Рік тому

    Awesome video. Thanks. So, you are seeding spinach in August indoors and transplanting in September, primarily?

  • @JenniMBE
    @JenniMBE Рік тому +1

    You are so funny 😆 The spinach info was good too

  • @SG-ce7ji
    @SG-ce7ji Рік тому

    Thank you!!
    Very informative🙏

  • @feirmebeardonn4597
    @feirmebeardonn4597 Рік тому +2

    Tundra has been the only variety that doesn't bolt in our long summer days. Context: we are in Kodiak, AK

  • @MYDREAMGREENVILLA
    @MYDREAMGREENVILLA Рік тому

    Thank you! so informational. My spinach, out leaves turns yellow, wonder why.

  • @fiveinitaly
    @fiveinitaly Рік тому

    Cool video as always friend 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @fox8340
    @fox8340 Рік тому

    Very informative video! Thank you!

  • @cuznclive2236
    @cuznclive2236 Рік тому +1

    I tried to grow beer plants many times, but I cannot get them to germinate no matter how many starts I add; there must be a trick to it... cool tunes btw!
    Thank you!

    • @MK-ti2oo
      @MK-ti2oo Рік тому +1

      It helps to run the beer seed through your digestive track before spreading around your favorite tree, and succession planting is important, so do this repeatedly until you see results in 3D.

  • @uncommoncents2152
    @uncommoncents2152 Рік тому +1

    As always Jesse great video

  • @timsonder8467
    @timsonder8467 Рік тому

    My problem with spring sown spinach is bolting. I was surprised you barely mentioned that. I assume it's partially a day length thing, but also a stress response. Perhaps I need to water? Any tips to avoid bolting appreciated!

  • @bigbrusta
    @bigbrusta 8 місяців тому

    For spinach transplants - you say plant 2-4 seeds. Do you thin down to one? Or transplant as a bunch? Thanks!

  • @catejordan7244
    @catejordan7244 Рік тому

    Interesting video. I adjust a backyard gardener but I have trouble with the green leaf hoppers and wonder if there is any thing I can do to prevent them

  • @PharMamaUSA
    @PharMamaUSA Рік тому +1

    Great info, appreciate you sharing the varieties you like and your humor. 🥬

  • @yolebrutus1396
    @yolebrutus1396 Рік тому

    What is the name of the tool you using in your garden please. Thank you for those information.

  • @Rosemountainfarm
    @Rosemountainfarm Рік тому

    Thank you. Awesome again!