I lived a good bit in the south. I explain to my northern husband when I drag him down for a visit... “Remember it is a whole nother kinda hot an humid down there”...lol he didn't believe me the first time😂
I bought Silver Queen corn last week at a farm stand in St. Augustine. I stood in a line for 30 minutes waiting for the fresh corn just picked from the field. Wow is was even better than I remembered! If you never have had some you should try Silver Queen corn. I made Natasha’s recipe for Corn chowed it was out of this world GOOD.
Bruh.....you're onto something with the Garden of Neglect. Why? 'Cause we all got one. We all have that one spot we just keep saying, "Oh I'll get to it eventually!" I don't know how you can make it work with your viewers but I do believe you can use it going forward.
Ginger has my vote. I was wanting to plant turmeric and ginger in the 2 fire rings I have. I have no idea what variety of sweet potatoes I'm growing. I bought an organic sweet potato on 2 different occasions and I'm still growing both 3 years later. One is orange and the other white. But we enjoy both and as long as they produce, we don't care
Every move you made planting those onions was perfect in my opinion they should multiply big time and would love to see you grow some pencil cob corn in raised bed they're small plants good sweet corn
With the bunching onions you always have some to eat or cook with. I have the ruby bunching onions, they actually make a small bulb but it's best to use the whole plant. I pulled out my peas last week, they can't take our heat, but I will be growing more in the late fall.
Hello I’m interested in growing bunching onions as well, my question is if the Ruby bunching onions are sometimes called Japanese bunching onions? If so i know i can get them here in Western Australia. Any help would be appreciated.
Horseradish has rhizomes. It grows horizontal roots, like peonies, and raspberries. Keep growing it. (You probably will now anyway.) You can use the leaves for tannin for pickling. Other suggestions: Rhubarb. Where IS your rhubarb anyway? Dill. Another crop you need to contain. World record pumpkins or watermelons. Seems like a perfect way to control water and fertilization of the roots and keep moisture/mildew off the leaves. The fruits can sit on the ground.
Loved this video. I agree, asparagus is great. It takes a year or 2 to produce groceries but it can last for years. I would be excited to see ginger being grown also. Such a great flavorful addition to anyone who can grow it. Best of luck
Travis I can suggest Trinity sweet corn. I grew it in a 4x8 raised bed and it only got about 5 ft tall. Corn was good and sweet. Quick grower to. Keep up the awesome work!
My Okinawa spinach loves almost full shade here in hot dry farther N. Commifornia, 9a. Grows great early Spring to late Fall then goes dormant for winter. Does NOT put up w full sun, couple hrs max, that's a good thing as not many things produce in the shade.
Potatoes still look fine to keep in longer, you could peek in and have a look, but I think a few more weeks yet. Carrots in the neglected bed close to house when you need some, I don’t know when you grow celery but might be out of season.😊
Hey Travis. My papa Emmette (NC born) always loved Bodacious corn. He grew in Carolina an here in Newport News, Va for years. Its a shorter variety, so uts a bit more resistant to wind blow over an possible goid fir raised beds.
Your garden is looking real good. Onion tops are real hardy. I have been growing Egyptian walking onions for about 4 years now. They get rust sometimes but keep chugging along.
I am also growing walking onions and potato onions. I have figured out if you do not fertilize the walking onions the bulbs are not strong at all and are great for eating by themselves. Just now getting a good supply of potato onions.
Have you ever tried growing multiplying onions? Let us know! SHOP LAZY DOG FARM FIG TREES: lazydogfarm.com/collections/fig-trees 0:00 Intro 0:39 Raised Bed Potato Update 2:25 Why Did These Pea Plants Die? 4:19 Removing Our Raised Bed Pea Trellis 5:31 The Garden of Neglect 7:36 Harvesting Multiplying Onions 9:50 Replanting Multiplying Onions 12:30 Future Plans for the Raised Bed Garden
I am also growing walking onions and potato onions. I have figured out if you do not fertilize the walking onions the bulbs are not strong at all and are great for eating by themselves. Just now getting a good supply of potato onions.
Want to try something different, try a short vine or bush variety winter squash. Preferably a short vine butternut squash. They are very resistant to squash borers and pick a variety that is resistant to powdery mildew. As far as the corn, Burpees has a variety called On Deck Hybrid for containers.
3:30 well the daily mean for South Georgia in May seems to be about 73F. That's already hotter than the daily mean in July or August anywhere in Canada where I live (maybe parts of Windsor that are within Detroit's urban heat island can match it in July, but that's it). Peas can keep going into July here but tend to die off from the heat by late July or early August.
I ordered the multiplying onions last fall. Planted them in two raised beds. Between the cats peeing in the beds and the 4 degree weather at Christmas here in Georgia, I had four onions survive until spring. 😢
I planted some peaches n cream corn for the first time this year. A few didn’t sprout. Should I plant more seeds or can I transfer some of the ones I will be thinning? Thanks, I love your channel. Great information, down to earth and don’t talk down to folks. I am up in the Atlanta area, so a few a few weeks behind your planting schedule.
love your gardens they really look great how big is your farm I was blessed to get 7 acres back that was once my grandpaws 60 acre farm I want to move there just expensive raw land.
I would say ginger and asparagus in the beds of neglect. I grew my asparagus from seed but you might find crowns. Stark bros has 10 crowns for 4.99. I would like to see you grow Yukon Chief sweet corn. I think it's a good candidate for raised beds. Developed at the University of Alaska, AES and released in 1958. It is one of the earliest (55 days to fresh stage) corn varieties. The plants are dwarf (three to four feet tall) and produce six to eight inch, yellow, sweet ears that are slightly tapered with about twelve rows of kernels.
I ordered some ginger and turmeric from Etsy and stuck them in the ground and both are growing like crazy. I’m hoping to harvest some in the late fall and leave some in the ground for next year. Some people take it all up and replant it in the spring, but unless we get another polar blast this coming winter it will be okay in the soil.
Thanks Travis, another good one. I am interested in the bush sweet potatoes. I have been planting Georgia Jets in containers for some time with varying amounts of success. Dealing with the long vines can be troublesome. When will we get a bush pumpkin? Same deal. Keep them coming, I enjoy your vids.
We used to use a lot of synthetic fertilizers. You can grow good groceries with them. But they're not the best for long-term soil health and require more constant inputs over time.
@@LazyDogFarm this soil scientist says microbes can’t tell a difference between synthetic and organic ua-cam.com/video/I7lOqYy6c44/v-deo.html I’m not sold on organic only. She says there’s actually more microbes present when using synthetic. She also addresses the concerns over salts in fertilizers both add salts to soils. Salts can be removed anyway. I believe organic do play a role just mot as big of a role as some believe.
I'm growing a sweet corn trial with 2 beds of sweet corn a 3.5x6ft bed with only 2 rows (spaced apart) and another bed 4x16ft planted every 8 inches also rows only 8 inches apart. Trying to see how much difference between the plenty of space versus crammed together in a raised be this year.
I did that experiment...the coen tasted great but was almost half the size...instead of 8 inches they were 5 or 6..but yummy..2nd batch started of different kind to see if we.can get.3 crops in.
Burpee Seeds has a sweet corn: On Deck Hybrid, described as the first ever sweet corn bred for containers. I’m growing it now in one of my raised beds. Eager to see how it does.
It actually seems to have a decent amount of nitrogen in it. When we got some in the fall to fill our raised beds, the grass where it was dumped greened up pretty nicely.
Monday May 22nd @Travis. Did you film this last week or today? Doesn't make any difference unless you have an upcoming appointment. Lol just checking...
We usually film these videos a week in advance of their air date, but I like to provide the date for reference. A lot of folks watch these videos months after they're published and so it helps them put the video into context.
About collards. I live just below Tallahassee, and I was wondering how long I can expect my collards to produce through the hot months coming up, and if the hot weather as well as age affects the taste. They are the transplants that I got from Hosstools.
for medicinal purposes and animals love it. If in the ground, it has very deep roots and loosen up the soil I have clay and rock and it is good. Actually, I was used to alfalfa to go deep - but it does not do well here.
I've got a question.. I was able to overwinter some kale plants up north here, but as soon as it got warm, they bolted without really bushing out at all. Are kales that overwinter more likely to bolt quickly?
Why raised beds when u have the ground? This my first year. Disabled vet trying to start what yall have for the family. I've got clay white soil, 2acres a 5 ft tiller n tractor 25 hp tractor. I made my own bedder and made 15 30ft raised beds.? Feel maybe I should have just used raised beds. I have crowded ground. Any advice getting started? Wish I could send a pic but can't figure out how lol. Thank yall for videos, love yalls farm!!
That's how we add fertilizer. On top. At the 10:15 mark. Claw it and mix it in with the soil. None of this side-dress nonsense. - Pour it into a trench dig next to the plant. Do the onions blanch white when planted deep? Is the white part mild like a leek?
@@LazyDogFarm Looked like there's was a whole lot of white on them. Reminded me of my leeks. - Which you now just inspired me to grow again this year. Those are yummy. I bought onion slips this year, instead of sets/bulbs. They are just fun to grow. Outside of weeding, maybe water, relatively no maintenance. Oh, and your videos are great because you show by doing.
I’m glad to see I’m not the only one with a Garden of Neglect.
I lived a good bit in the south. I explain to my northern husband when I drag him down for a visit... “Remember it is a whole nother kinda hot an humid down there”...lol he didn't believe me the first time😂
I bought Silver Queen corn last week at a farm stand in St. Augustine. I stood in a line for 30 minutes waiting for the fresh corn just picked from the field. Wow is was even better than I remembered! If you never have had some you should try Silver Queen corn. I made Natasha’s recipe for Corn chowed it was out of this world GOOD.
That kale is borderline spectacular. :D
Garden of neglect is of special importance to ME. lol Seriously you'd lk to have some that carry on without your inputs.
I love “The Garden of Neglect”….sounds very poetic. Travis aka Edgar Allan Poe Jr.
Corn: American Dream. Relatively small ears but sweetest corn I've ever had.
Is that a hybrid? Blessings all.
Bruh.....you're onto something with the Garden of Neglect. Why? 'Cause we all got one. We all have that one spot we just keep saying, "Oh I'll get to it eventually!" I don't know how you can make it work with your viewers but I do believe you can use it going forward.
Strawberries, asparagus, perennial kale. Great video - thanks!
Those potato plants don't look like time to dig, to me either. Many blessings everyone.
Ginger has my vote. I was wanting to plant turmeric and ginger in the 2 fire rings I have. I have no idea what variety of sweet potatoes I'm growing. I bought an organic sweet potato on 2 different occasions and I'm still growing both 3 years later. One is orange and the other white. But we enjoy both and as long as they produce, we don't care
Travis how about planting some cut flowers. John S.
Thanks for showing the string trellis removal..this is the 1st time I have seen that demonstrated on a vlog.
Another GREAT video Trav!!!!
Every move you made planting those onions was perfect in my opinion they should multiply big time and would love to see you grow some pencil cob corn in raised bed they're small plants good sweet corn
Possibly plant your cover crop mixture after your raised bed potato harvest to rest and restore some fertility ahead of fall and winter crops.
Golden bantam sweet corn.
Turmeric and rosemary and garlic; Also butter beans in raised beds❤❤❤
With the bunching onions you always have some to eat or cook with. I have the ruby bunching onions, they actually make a small bulb but it's best to use the whole plant. I pulled out my peas last week, they can't take our heat, but I will be growing more in the late fall.
Hello I’m interested in growing bunching onions as well, my question is if the Ruby bunching onions are sometimes called Japanese bunching onions? If so i know i can get them here in Western Australia. Any help would be appreciated.
I agree...we havent seen any in stores since well before the ccp virus...i.gave up looking
Another vote for asparagus!
Horseradish has rhizomes. It grows horizontal roots, like peonies, and raspberries. Keep growing it. (You probably will now anyway.) You can use the leaves for tannin for pickling.
Other suggestions:
Rhubarb. Where IS your rhubarb anyway?
Dill. Another crop you need to contain.
World record pumpkins or watermelons. Seems like a perfect way to control water and fertilization of the roots and keep moisture/mildew off the leaves. The fruits can sit on the ground.
Yes! I love the sweet corn idea!
Thankyou for showing us how things are doing!👍
Lima beans,egg plant and sweet potatoes in raised beds❤❤❤
I'd vote for limas but might be too late. Blessings everyone.
I agree with asparagus in the neglected garden beds and baby corn (the boys will love) in the taller raised beds!
Super excited to see the progress on them onions
I am trying honey select sweet corn in two of my raised beds from olle.
Loved this video. I agree, asparagus is great. It takes a year or 2 to produce groceries but it can last for years. I would be excited to see ginger being grown also. Such a great flavorful addition to anyone who can grow it. Best of luck
Ginger, turmeric and galangal, if you can grow one you can probably grow all 3. (my personal goal in that space) Harvest as needed.
Nice video I'm getting my garden going. I need more raised beds like yours. Happy growing
Yes, I would love to see you plant the ginger! Also, turmeric.
Maybe Basil,parsley..not sure if you already have some
Travis I can suggest Trinity sweet corn. I grew it in a 4x8 raised bed and it only got about 5 ft tall. Corn was good and sweet. Quick grower to. Keep up the awesome work!
My Okinawa spinach loves almost full shade here in hot dry farther N. Commifornia, 9a. Grows great early Spring to late Fall then goes dormant for winter. Does NOT put up w full sun, couple hrs max, that's a good thing as not many things produce in the shade.
Potatoes still look fine to keep in longer, you could peek in and have a look, but I think a few more weeks yet.
Carrots in the neglected bed close to house when you need some, I don’t know when you grow celery but might be out of season.😊
Hey Travis. My papa Emmette (NC born) always loved Bodacious corn. He grew in Carolina an here in Newport News, Va for years. Its a shorter variety, so uts a bit more resistant to wind blow over an possible goid fir raised beds.
Your garden is looking real good. Onion tops are real hardy. I have been growing Egyptian walking onions for about 4 years now. They get rust sometimes but keep chugging along.
I am also growing walking onions and potato onions. I have figured out if you do not fertilize the walking onions the bulbs are not strong at all and are great for eating by themselves.
Just now getting a good supply of potato onions.
Loved this video! I'm not very good at gardening yet but I think I could manage growing the horseradish and multiplying onions. Thank you!
Try Peaches and Cream sweet corn!
Thanks for that! In the neglected area I would think about a small Lemmon tree and a Bay tree.
Bay tree sounds good.
Have you ever tried growing multiplying onions? Let us know!
SHOP LAZY DOG FARM FIG TREES: lazydogfarm.com/collections/fig-trees
0:00 Intro
0:39 Raised Bed Potato Update
2:25 Why Did These Pea Plants Die?
4:19 Removing Our Raised Bed Pea Trellis
5:31 The Garden of Neglect
7:36 Harvesting Multiplying Onions
9:50 Replanting Multiplying Onions
12:30 Future Plans for the Raised Bed Garden
I am also growing walking onions and potato onions. I have figured out if you do not fertilize the walking onions the bulbs are not strong at all and are great for eating by themselves.
Just now getting a good supply of potato onions.
Want to try something different, try a short vine or bush variety winter squash. Preferably a short vine butternut squash. They are very resistant to squash borers and pick a variety that is resistant to powdery mildew. As far as the corn, Burpees has a variety called On Deck Hybrid for containers.
ginger, tumeric, dill
Purple hull peas do well in the summer
Yellowstone Sweet corn would be my suggestion
Have you done peaches and cream sweet corn?
It's been a few years, but I have grown that one in the past.
How about Baby Corn For the fun of it! Ive seen sweet varieties & still be short corn...
3:30 well the daily mean for South Georgia in May seems to be about 73F. That's already hotter than the daily mean in July or August anywhere in Canada where I live (maybe parts of Windsor that are within Detroit's urban heat island can match it in July, but that's it). Peas can keep going into July here but tend to die off from the heat by late July or early August.
Baby Chinese corn from rare seeds!
Can you please try celeriac? I keep trying to grow it and can't get it to bulb.
I grow the Gotta Have It, in Montana. Great corn easy to grow and taste great. I also can It and keeps the flavor.
Are they hybrids? I like to save seeds. Great blessings everyone, everywhere.
I believe so
@@lawrencebrennan3122 oh. Ok. Thanks. Ps that's my name also. Blessings everyone.
Travis. I have multiplying onions, mine die back in the summer resprout in the fall
I’d like to see you plant a quad sweet corn
I ordered the multiplying onions last fall. Planted them in two raised beds. Between the cats peeing in the beds and the 4 degree weather at Christmas here in Georgia, I had four onions survive until spring. 😢
Lay down some wire mesh fencing with the 2x3 inch "holes" that your plants can still grow through but keep the cats from peeing in your beds
I planted some peaches n cream corn for the first time this year. A few didn’t sprout. Should I plant more seeds or can I transfer some of the ones I will be thinning?
Thanks, I love your channel. Great information, down to earth and don’t talk down to folks. I am up in the Atlanta area, so a few a few weeks behind your planting schedule.
Plant popcorn!!
love your gardens they really look great how big is your farm I was blessed to get 7 acres back that was once my grandpaws 60 acre farm I want to move there just expensive raw land.
Our property is only 2 acres. It looks a lot bigger on camera than it actually is.
Asparagus, Ginger, Turmeric, Strawberry, Jicama....
I would say ginger and asparagus in the beds of neglect. I grew my asparagus from seed but you might find crowns. Stark bros has 10 crowns for 4.99.
I would like to see you grow Yukon Chief sweet corn. I think it's a good candidate for raised beds.
Developed at the University of Alaska, AES and released in 1958. It is one of the earliest (55 days to fresh stage) corn varieties. The plants are dwarf (three to four feet tall) and produce six to eight inch, yellow, sweet ears that are slightly tapered with about twelve rows of kernels.
Interesting corn variety. Do you know where we can buy those seeds? Many blessings everyone.
@@MissBetsyLu I got mine from Victory seeds.
@@matthewking2209 thanks so much. Many blessings everyone.
I think you could grow asparagus, ground cherries, or tree collards in your garden of neglect
I ordered some ginger and turmeric from Etsy and stuck them in the ground and both are growing like crazy. I’m hoping to harvest some in the late fall and leave some in the ground for next year. Some people take it all up and replant it in the spring, but unless we get another polar blast this coming winter it will be okay in the soil.
Asparagus. Ok in southas long as it is in the shade after lunch. The roots are over a foot long and can get their own water so are happy with neglect.
I live just north of I10 in Louisiana so know hot and humid. Geaux Tigers
Thanks Travis, another good one. I am interested in the bush sweet potatoes. I have been planting Georgia Jets in containers for some time with varying amounts of success. Dealing with the long vines can be troublesome. When will we get a bush pumpkin? Same deal. Keep them coming, I enjoy your vids.
We'll actually be planting some of the bush sweet potatoes in our raised beds on this Friday's video. Stay tuned!
Yes, ginger and turmeric please.
Travis, how do you fertilize your potatoes in containers?
We fertilized them as we hilled them. So we'd sprinkle some fertilizer around the base of the plants, then add more soil around the plants.
Hooker’s sweetcorn!! Multiear bicolor short sweetcorn
I am in zone 5 and my snow peas are gone by mis July. The seeds germinated at the beginning of May so we don’t have them for any longer than you.
Thank You for not saying....First. Seems ridiculous to me. That being said.......Second!
I would love to see a comparison plot using synthetic fertilizers.
We used to use a lot of synthetic fertilizers. You can grow good groceries with them. But they're not the best for long-term soil health and require more constant inputs over time.
@@LazyDogFarm this soil scientist says microbes can’t tell a difference between synthetic and organic ua-cam.com/video/I7lOqYy6c44/v-deo.html
I’m not sold on organic only. She says there’s actually more microbes present when using synthetic. She also addresses the concerns over salts in fertilizers both add salts to soils. Salts can be removed anyway. I believe organic do play a role just mot as big of a role as some believe.
How about trying poblano peppers?
I'm growing a sweet corn trial with 2 beds of sweet corn a 3.5x6ft bed with only 2 rows (spaced apart) and another bed 4x16ft planted every 8 inches also rows only 8 inches apart. Trying to see how much difference between the plenty of space versus crammed together in a raised be this year.
I did that experiment...the coen tasted great but was almost half the size...instead of 8 inches they were 5 or 6..but yummy..2nd batch started of different kind to see if we.can get.3 crops in.
You have some mouse ear on your pecan tree there, Travis. Nickel is the solution for that.
Burpee Seeds has a sweet corn: On Deck Hybrid, described as the first ever sweet corn bred for containers. I’m growing it now in one of my raised beds. Eager to see how it does.
Now that sounds interesting!
Artichokes..grow artichokes...yummy yummy
Humidity here is 25% in the house.
Where do we find multiplying onions?
Good question
Native seed search in Tucson, Az. has had some.
Southern Exposure Seed Exchange has lots of onion types.
With getting compost that is primarily woodchips like that, do you have to worry about it being low in nitrogen?
It actually seems to have a decent amount of nitrogen in it. When we got some in the fall to fill our raised beds, the grass where it was dumped greened up pretty nicely.
Monday May 22nd @Travis. Did you film this last week or today? Doesn't make any difference unless you have an upcoming appointment. Lol just checking...
We usually film these videos a week in advance of their air date, but I like to provide the date for reference. A lot of folks watch these videos months after they're published and so it helps them put the video into context.
About collards. I live just below Tallahassee, and I was wondering how long I can expect my collards to produce through the hot months coming up, and if the hot weather as well as age affects the taste. They are the transplants that I got from Hosstools.
Comfrey
for medicinal purposes and animals love it. If in the ground, it has very deep roots and loosen up the soil I have clay and rock and it is good. Actually, I was used to alfalfa to go deep - but it does not do well here.
Any suggestions on where to buy the composted wood chips
We get them from a friend who has a local sawmill.
May want to try planting some tumeric. Helps with inflamation of getting older. Also helps prevent cancer cells.
I have a bunch of that I'll be planting soon. We keep multiplying our stock year after year.
I've got a question.. I was able to overwinter some kale plants up north here, but as soon as it got warm, they bolted without really bushing out at all. Are kales that overwinter more likely to bolt quickly?
Rosemarry??? Great for medicinal use and on chicken dishes.
Are those potatoes laying on the surface, in with the bunching onions? Blessings everyone.
No potatoes in that bed. Those were probably pecans you saw.
@@LazyDogFarm 3" pecans?
Try growing Tomatillo?
please show all the raise beds, ok?
Do you the variety info on those hearty multiplying onions?
I don't. Our friend in Louisiana gave them to us.
I can't find the multiplying onions can you plz suggest where I can buy some ty
Neglected area: asparagus
But if you want bumper crops composted cow poo.
Yes asparagus would be great!!
Mine is too!!! I planted it in a grow bag and shouldn’t have done that. I did not know better. This fall after it dies back I will relocate it.
@@jamestboehm6450 I started my asparagus seed in straight cow poop raised bed.
Ur a meticulous weed remover
Maximilian sunflowers- sunchokes.
Can you teach us how to grow mushrooms?
What would you spray on those collards? Spinosad?
I used Azera, but Spinosad would work as well.
Any tricks to cooking the kale?
We usually just wilt it down in a skillet with some bacon grease, then add some sliced smoked sausage. Quick and easy meal.
@@LazyDogFarm sounds good, but husband is pescatarian!
@@anyat8115 Olive oil and onions cook down. Then add kale, garlic, and soy sauce. Yum. :)
Then make some boiled flounder and a pot of grits….
@@rebeccainspiringhope4357 will try that!
Is it to late to plant carrots
Unless you live way up north, yes. We'll wait until October to plant more carrots.
You said you’re growing Tarragon - do you mean the Mexican Mint imitation tarragon, or the herb tarragon that won’t grow in zone 8b?
It's this: migardener.com/products/russian-tarragon
@@LazyDogFarm Tyvm
You genius! That’s NOT supposed to grow here! Not at all!!!
Why raised beds when u have the ground? This my first year. Disabled vet trying to start what yall have for the family. I've got clay white soil, 2acres a 5 ft tiller n tractor 25 hp tractor. I made my own bedder and made 15 30ft raised beds.? Feel maybe I should have just used raised beds. I have crowded ground. Any advice getting started? Wish I could send a pic but can't figure out how lol. Thank yall for videos, love yalls farm!!
Container raised beds*
We like the raised beds for smaller plantings -- veggies we don't need a 30' row of.
I am disabled too and have CLAY soil and rocks in TN. Raised beds are a great solution - especially for any root crops who struggle in this soil.
@marthaadams8326 this clay is getting expensive to amend!
I NEED SOME HELP IAM TRYING GROWN ONION
Neglected Garden: Rhubarb
That's how we add fertilizer. On top. At the 10:15 mark. Claw it and mix it in with the soil. None of this side-dress nonsense. - Pour it into a trench dig next to the plant.
Do the onions blanch white when planted deep? Is the white part mild like a leek?
The white part is more spicy like a white onion. Haven't grown them long enough to experiment with blanching them deeper.
@@LazyDogFarm Looked like there's was a whole lot of white on them. Reminded me of my leeks. - Which you now just inspired me to grow again this year. Those are yummy. I bought onion slips this year, instead of sets/bulbs. They are just fun to grow. Outside of weeding, maybe water, relatively no maintenance.
Oh, and your videos are great because you show by doing.
Walking onions?? They grow baby onions on the blooms. Is this the same as bunching onions? Thanks
These are different than the Egyptian walking onions.
Why do you guys not even sweat im dripping head to toe when its 80 deg. here in Minnesota.?
We sweat a lot. But it usually takes high 80s to get the juices flowing.
Hey sweetie, do you sell any of those onions?
I don't. These were given to me last year.
@@LazyDogFarm then can you tell us where we can get them?
Would you like to trade a couple I could trade you with some black Egyptian onions.
Sorry, typo walking Egyptian onions