Great information Jason. Always good to review from time to time, especially for new and hobby gardeners, so many common confusions, annuals, biannual, perennial, leaves vs needles. The perfect time of year to freshen up on the terms and types of plant getting ready for spring.👍
I really really appreciate your great effort in making wonderful videos. I can feel how much passion that you have in farming/ gardening; and most importantly, in sharing your knowledge with others. I like you pace in explaining things in detail. I feel like I am going back to college and taking a horticulture degree class. Do you know how excited I was when I saw your video covered the questions which I dropped in the comments recently. You are the best. You are so REAL, you are a man in real life who really respond to my question. Thank you so much Jason. Your big fan from Hawaii. 😊
Thank you ,teacher. I will start to learning this major, this video is very helpful for me, hope you share new videos about horticulture. thanks again.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you! I'll be going for a Hort position with my city's parks division so I'm trying to get myself up to speed for it, your channel is more than likely going to be my main resource for this :)
Hey Jason, that's for the accurate, interesting information, as always. Could you do a video on the gardening channels you trust or respect or recommend, there's so much misinformation out there. Deliberate misinformation just to make an interesting video. Speaking as a person who started propagating roses with cinnamon, aspirin, saw online I thought it was really a "natural" root hormone.
Thanks for this Jason! Very helpful :) My 2 biggest pests are 'pandemic rabbits' and Japanese beetles! What roses and hydrangeas the rabbits don't eat, the beetles will :(
I was told to “go to college and don’t take a gap year” after high school and was misled to think my destiny was some sort of dry academic professorial direction, but I find out I’m not motivated nor interested in that; all along I’ve always had a vigorous passion for plants, soils, rocks, the environment, green living, and horticulture. I’m wanting to pursue a more serious engagement with “horticulture”, I’m just not sure if it’s agrobiology or horticulture that interests me since I’m for some reason turned off by the boutique-ornamental stereotype or Marijuana cultivation stereotypes pertaining to plant growing on a small-scale, instead I’m more inclined towards the more rigorous and intellectual side of horticulture having to do with the plant biology, soil ecology, growing mediums, CEA, etc.
Thanks for the video! I learned some new terms. I was wondering if you could answer this question: are there tables or textbooks that detail the ideal growing conditions/schedule for each type of plant? Or is that something that you learn on the job?
The most specific culture guides like the ones you're describing are usually available (and often free online) from the breeders, seed or cutting suppliers. Ball Seed is one such supplier, and here's a link to one of their documents on mums: www.ballseed.com/PDF/GardenMum-CultureGuide.pdf they also will often have more specific info for each cultivar or series.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm nice. I thought I saw an outdoor peach as a background tree in a previous video, it looked happy but I know a lot of people are fed up with leaf curl and canker and have moved under cover. I'd love a video on your fruit trees, what's worked and what hasn't as I live in a similar climate and my yard is almost all edibles. I watch your videos because your horticultural knowledge helps me even though it's in the context of plants I don't grow
Hey - quick question, what is exactly the difference between layering and cutting? (referring to propagation, would be great if it can be explained in very easy english.. thank you!!)
Sure. Cuttings are stems that are cut entirely off the plant and rooted elsewhere. Layering is when you keep the stem attached to the mother plant, and then just bend & pin it down to be covered with soil. Only after the pinned stem has rooted is it detached from the mother plant.
A monoecious plant has both male and female parts on the same plant, but not always on the same part of the plant or the same flowers. Some conifers will have pollen bearing male cones up high, and then the female cones separately, for instance. A "perfect" flower has all the male and female parts on the same flower. So it monoecious too, but also combines the flowers.
I am starting my Horticultural journey and this was easy to understand and informative. Thanks for posting this video!
My pleasure Takeya - I hope it all turns out well for you
I love your channel. It's so thorough and so full of actual content that is actually useful instead of very vague terms and tons of fluff.
Came here because Britney Broski told me to watch a video on horticulture and I’m pleasantly informed thank you
Great information Jason. Always good to review from time to time, especially for new and hobby gardeners, so many common confusions, annuals, biannual, perennial, leaves vs needles. The perfect time of year to freshen up on the terms and types of plant getting ready for spring.👍
I really really appreciate your great effort in making wonderful videos. I can feel how much passion that you have in farming/ gardening; and most importantly, in sharing your knowledge with others.
I like you pace in explaining things in detail. I feel like I am going back to college and taking a horticulture degree class.
Do you know how excited I was when I saw your video covered the questions which I dropped in the comments recently. You are the best. You are so REAL, you are a man in real life who really respond to my question. Thank you so much Jason.
Your big fan from Hawaii. 😊
Loved this thank you. I'd love to go to school for this
Chose this as my major so really loving the extra studying material! :)
Thanks for sharing your wonderful knowledge of roses & horticultuer terminology.
Great resource video for starting to learn or freshening up on horticulture terms! Thank you!
Thanks Jenny
That was my whole year horticulture course in one Video FANTASTIC! REVISION THANK YOU
I'm so happy you found it helpful!
Great video I hope you do more terminology videos
Thank you ,teacher. I will start to learning this major, this video is very helpful for me, hope you share new videos about horticulture. thanks again.
Thank you! You are such a good teacher🤓 I really learn a lot from your videos👍
I start school for Horticulture soon and I am so glad I found your channel, real chock full of useful info and it's all very direct!
Congratulation - and best luck in the industry. Let me know if I can be of help.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you! I'll be going for a Hort position with my city's parks division so I'm trying to get myself up to speed for it, your channel is more than likely going to be my main resource for this :)
Thank you! You are such a good teacher I really learn a lot from your videos
Thank you!
Thank you very much for this excellent course. Learning fundamentals is essential.
Wow that’s a beautiful array of plants - this was so useful as a student studying horticulture!❤ thanks for this video!!!
Always precise and clear. Thank you Jason.
Thanks elraed
Thanks for making this video. I had fun learning with you!
Thank you ,I will start working for the botanical gardens in the city of Wellington New Zealand ,and this is super helpful 🙏🙂❤️
Nice. Best of luck with the new job. Sounds like paradise.
Very succinct and great for note taking - good video!
Thanks! Always learn something new from you :)
Great introduction! I subscribed right away!
Hoping of attending the UBC botanical garden program. Thanks for the great introduction to the trade.
I wish you the best - and maybe we'll meet up at one point or another in the industry. BTW, that's a fine objectivist name you've got there
Thank you for this education. I learned a lot.
I'm so glad you found it useful Christina
Excellent video!
Great learning videos. Thank you! Keep it up
My pleasure. Thanks for watching and for the encouragement Bonsai Bob
Hey Jason, that's for the accurate, interesting information, as always.
Could you do a video on the gardening channels you trust or respect or recommend, there's so much misinformation out there. Deliberate misinformation just to make an interesting video. Speaking as a person who started propagating roses with cinnamon, aspirin, saw online I thought it was really a "natural" root hormone.
That's a good point - I've seen some pretty shady methods promoted on gardening channels. I'll put your idea down for a future video.
Excellent, as always!
Thanks Kristine
Thanks for this Jason! Very helpful :) My 2 biggest pests are 'pandemic rabbits' and Japanese beetles! What roses and hydrangeas the rabbits don't eat, the beetles will :(
Ugh - what a combo!
Fantastic video. Thank you
Rabbits are my pest. 30 white oaks, 15 roses, 10 red cedar and a few others all in one night. That's 50% of my plants from last year.
That's rough David. And not too many good solutions to deter them.
Oh, how frustrating. You need a coyote. Serious. 😕
Years later but livestock guardian and some fences will deter them pretty hard
Super informative thank you!!!!!
This is so great, thank you!!!
Great video! Are there any horticulture books that you would recommend?
Great video, thank you
beautiful
I was told to “go to college and don’t take a gap year” after high school and was misled to think my destiny was some sort of dry academic professorial direction, but I find out I’m not motivated nor interested in that; all along I’ve always had a vigorous passion for plants, soils, rocks, the environment, green living, and horticulture. I’m wanting to pursue a more serious engagement with “horticulture”, I’m just not sure if it’s agrobiology or horticulture that interests me since I’m for some reason turned off by the boutique-ornamental stereotype or Marijuana cultivation stereotypes pertaining to plant growing on a small-scale, instead I’m more inclined towards the more rigorous and intellectual side of horticulture having to do with the plant biology, soil ecology, growing mediums, CEA, etc.
Thanks so much for sharing this. 😁
You bet. Thanks for watching
Thank you so much man. So helpful
Thank you for clarification ☺
I'm surprised colleges can give tests with no study guide
Thanks for the video! I learned some new terms.
I was wondering if you could answer this question: are there tables or textbooks that detail the ideal growing conditions/schedule for each type of plant? Or is that something that you learn on the job?
The most specific culture guides like the ones you're describing are usually available (and often free online) from the breeders, seed or cutting suppliers. Ball Seed is one such supplier, and here's a link to one of their documents on mums: www.ballseed.com/PDF/GardenMum-CultureGuide.pdf they also will often have more specific info for each cultivar or series.
Love it! Thank you.
Thank you
thanks Jason. what are the trees in the high tunnel at 10:00? my guess was cherries
Hi Michael - not too far off: Peach
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm nice. I thought I saw an outdoor peach as a background tree in a previous video, it looked happy but I know a lot of people are fed up with leaf curl and canker and have moved under cover. I'd love a video on your fruit trees, what's worked and what hasn't as I live in a similar climate and my yard is almost all edibles. I watch your videos because your horticultural knowledge helps me even though it's in the context of plants I don't grow
Thanks!
Subscribed
Hey - quick question, what is exactly the difference between layering and cutting? (referring to propagation, would be great if it can be explained in very easy english.. thank you!!)
Sure. Cuttings are stems that are cut entirely off the plant and rooted elsewhere. Layering is when you keep the stem attached to the mother plant, and then just bend & pin it down to be covered with soil. Only after the pinned stem has rooted is it detached from the mother plant.
im just a little confused are monoecious and perfect the same exact thing?
A monoecious plant has both male and female parts on the same plant, but not always on the same part of the plant or the same flowers. Some conifers will have pollen bearing male cones up high, and then the female cones separately, for instance. A "perfect" flower has all the male and female parts on the same flower. So it monoecious too, but also combines the flowers.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarmok perfect thank you! I am making flash cards for my college course in horticulture so this helps to study thanks!
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Spray labs serum wherever there is algae
Your first definition “horticulture “ is based on Latin. It does not mean that. Stopped watching at that point.
Great video, thank you!