Cool Ideas for Inexpensive and Easy to Make Root Cellars

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 92

  • @lb476
    @lb476 Před rokem +5

    As a senior citizen, I got upset not being able to purchase fresh vegetables during the Pandemic. The produce was always empty, so I believed I had to grow my own.
    The truth is, until I see prices go back down I know I have to continue growing my own vegetables, or go without.
    Storage was hard for me because I'm extremely handicapped. But your video has given me some great ideas, thank you.

  • @zone4garlicfarm
    @zone4garlicfarm Před 4 lety +16

    I have been using the buried metal trash can for several years. I leave the rim and lid a couple inches above ground for easier access. The only insulating covering on top is natural snowfall. I place a 4 foot tall stake next to the can as a marker so I can easily find it in winter. Every couple weeks I dig through the snow to stock my pantry, then I shovel the snow back on top. Last winter the 4 foot stake wasn't tall enough. I was removing a foot of snow to find the stake so I would know where to dig.

  • @willowriver7918
    @willowriver7918 Před 4 lety +14

    Im learning as well, ive been soaking information up like a sponge. I was raised basically growing everything we ate, with the exception of sugar, yeast, vanilla. We got 1 bag of chips a month for a treat. I remember sitting in my Grandfathers lap , looking up as told the family as long as we had the family land and the fresh water spring , we could survive anything. I did not understand he was talking about the cold war. Now we face a new war and memories lost for so many years have come flooding back, I see there hands and tools creating the gardens, I remember every step, Ill be canning this year, ive done well to ready my husband and myself, others after the bad , bad passes, with garden, studies every possibility. I can do anything, i may be slow, and i may or will haft to work at night , unable to controlle body temp.So thankyou so much , everyone stay safe!!!

    • @NonToxicHome
      @NonToxicHome Před 3 lety +1

      Few have eyes to see and ears to hear, but the first seal was opened in March 2020. So yes, this is spiritual war!
      Take heed that no man deceive you. (We have many videos up regarding the times we are living in.)

  • @farmerbrown6157
    @farmerbrown6157 Před 4 lety +11

    Put carrots onions in a box. With sand around them we use to just have a potato bin in the farm house cellar. By spring the eyes would be 3ft long lol. Squash dependin on variety would be in cellar on shelves. Fall squash would last better like hubbard acorn. . My granny born in 1800s been thro it all when i got big en9ugh to run the tracter with bucket would have me dig a hole in corner off garden about 3ft or so deep. .the frost can go that deep or deeper but thats the frost line here . Lay loose hay all over bottem piled the the carrots, summer squash. Cabbage taters and some other stuff in the whole cover it with hay then piled ft or so 9f dirt on top. And in match or so depending when she said so after frozt out of ground some yrs march some goin into april id dig the top dirt off and dig out the hayy and there be a bunch of fresh veggies. Slightly soft but still fresh . This was from a farm woman from the 1800s lived till 1988 ... stuff would be canned like peaches apples . Tomatoes corn beans. So.e stuffbl8ke taters carrots buried in sand would be in the root celler off the main celler with some canned goods there on shelves while some canned goods in regular celler and she had me diggin holes . Said it kept the food fresher. I think in the old days they spread the risk around.

    • @mt8149
      @mt8149 Před 4 lety

      How much dirt did you pile on top of the hay covered veggies? Is that 1 foot?

  • @sjt4689
    @sjt4689 Před 3 lety +6

    Awesome video, thank you. Now I can increase my planting this year and keep myself through the winter. Self sufficiency rocks 😀

  • @myacrylicjourney624
    @myacrylicjourney624 Před 4 lety +8

    This has given me a lot of hope because I was getting a bit stressed trying to figure out how we were going to preserve the enormous amount of food that we need to grow for our family this summer. It just dawned on me that we have a crawl space around the outer edge of our home that would be a perfect place for putting totes of produce.
    Thank you so much!

    • @notmeee8294
      @notmeee8294 Před 2 lety +3

      I believe you don't want to store them in plastic totes in the crawl space. Cardboard boxes or wooden crates. You have to be careful with the critters, and make sure it's dry so there's no mold growth

  • @EileenHagerman
    @EileenHagerman Před 5 lety +21

    I don't know why you all don't have more subscribers! I'm learning so much from your channel. :)

  • @hughmanatee7433
    @hughmanatee7433 Před 2 lety +1

    We store all of our root crops plus apples cabbages etc in vented plastic crates (like milk crates but larger). In each crate we lay down a layer of soaking wet pine shavings then a layer of vegetables, placing them so that they don’t touch each other. We then keep layering up shavings and crops until the crate is full ending with a layer of shavings on the top. The wet shavings retain the right amount of moisture to keep everything crisp well into spring. Once we have eaten the contents of the crate we just use the shavings on the hen house floor. The pine shavings are acidic which discourages rot in the vegetables. Carrots come out just like they went in even into April. Unfortunately, we don’t have a root cellar yet but we do have a walk-in cooler that we use for our farm vegetable business. I installed a small strip of electric heat and a thermostat that can keep the room at 40F. This works for us in Maine where it is cold all winter. Our limitation is that our cooler is above ground and does not keep food cool enough in the spring.
    If we had a basement we would partition off a corner and insulate it heavily to keep the heat of the house out. The evaporative cooling from the wet shavings would easily reduce the temperature a little below the the temperature of the ground, perfect for root cellaring.

  • @johnpowell8568
    @johnpowell8568 Před 3 lety +1

    Greetings friends.I like your carrot-under-tops idea.Using half the row's tops from harvested carrots to cover the other half.Cool.I once found in spring time a vole's 'root cellar' under the late spring snow I was clearing from the garden area.It was simply a few small spuds, and some pieces of Dandelion roots, nestled into some dried grasses and covered with just a little more grass and left that way all through an Alaskan winter.Really opened my eyes to the amazing and timeless wisdom of Mother Nature's ways of taking care of Her children.We as 'civilized' folks are running around buying ENDLERSS gadgets and wondering why things don't work.
    Anyways, thanks for the part about principles of root cellars.I always thought they were supposed to be dry.

  • @anthonysharp9136
    @anthonysharp9136 Před 5 lety +6

    Wow, that small hidden cubbie under the house's front steps is a great use of space.

  • @thinlizzy535
    @thinlizzy535 Před 4 lety +12

    You guys have the most amazing ideas for easy and functional root cellars that anyone can make, even if you rent or physically limited. Bravo!

    • @dougtuck1449
      @dougtuck1449 Před rokem

      How cool is your basement ours stays around 45 degrees all winter will that work for squash?

  • @utbr2
    @utbr2 Před 5 lety +3

    A cornucopia of ideas of Long term storage. I was amazed by the ideas presented. Great Content

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 Před 11 měsíci

    We are in the process of building a root cellar with reclaimed refrigerated building panels above ground. We dug it down about a foot. We will put a vent in and cover with rubber. The whole box will then be domed with wood chips. I chose to put it out in the open because too many obstacles elsewhere, like roots and utilities. We will use a remote temp humidity sensor with alarm and we will see how that works.
    This winter may be a cold one. We need a better storage system as keeping a room cool doesn’t work. By opening a window it creates a draft in the house and not efficient. Z5a, WI.
    Love all the ideas. I have done carrots in ground before, but if it’s a really cold winter it may not work. The insulation would need to go way out around the carrots.

  • @florarix7091
    @florarix7091 Před 4 lety +3

    Your info and presentation are much better than most channels I've seen on this subject. Thank you. Has definitely given me some ideas.

  • @elizabethc9832
    @elizabethc9832 Před 2 lety

    This video really got me thinking on different ways to store root crops, especially potatoes. I've upped the amount I'm going to grow this year so I've been researching this. I think I might actually have one of those nooks in my basement with the little door. I've never even looked in there, but it goes out so it is actually outside the basement perimeter. Or one other method I might try from the video - using one of the bedrooms, sealing off the heat register and the light, and cracking the window a bit to chill it down. Certainly worth a try. I loved the idea of the black bags full of leaves, but I have a feeling I would be accused (here in town) of having bags of trash laying in my yard. I still might consider this if I can think of a way to disguise the bags. Thanks so much for all these ideas!

  • @Soul.On.Fire.88
    @Soul.On.Fire.88 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you so much. God Bless you both.

  • @agrarianarc
    @agrarianarc Před 3 lety +6

    We have a large egress window in our basement that I experimented with as a root cellar this past winter in northern Wisconsin. It worked really well

  • @marias835
    @marias835 Před 5 lety +4

    This is so fabulous!! You guys are amazing.

  • @fadeddenims501
    @fadeddenims501 Před 2 lety

    The last one would work for me the best, using totes in the garage. I have a two car garage that is deep, so if I have potatoes this year to harvest, I will be using this method. Thank you!

  • @whisperingsage
    @whisperingsage Před 5 lety +2

    I grew up with a basement, on a split level house, and it wasn't anything special, but a 40 lbs box of apples would keep for months. I just really miss that house and the way things were in it.

  • @hhhhhhhhh61
    @hhhhhhhhh61 Před 4 lety +1

    So much information, delivered well! Thank you for sharing!

  • @scotts595
    @scotts595 Před 4 lety +3

    Amazing ideas! Thank you ✌🏻

  • @sabiaknows
    @sabiaknows Před 2 lety

    Thank you!

  • @Margarita-dt5th
    @Margarita-dt5th Před 3 lety

    wow time to learn so glad i found you thank you so much may God bless us with your knowledge

  • @lindamoses3697
    @lindamoses3697 Před 5 lety +3

    Great ideas

  • @edwardcuevas5667
    @edwardcuevas5667 Před rokem

    Your helping so many people keep it up

  • @ruthcrawford3015
    @ruthcrawford3015 Před 2 lety

    Awesome!! Thank you very much!

  • @gloryrow100
    @gloryrow100 Před rokem

    Best vid on the topic!

  • @esrcornwell
    @esrcornwell Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this!

  • @cynthiacarr2093
    @cynthiacarr2093 Před 2 lety

    Tyfs!😁❤

  • @crv20051
    @crv20051 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for posting, a really helpful list of options.

  • @lulabelle4760
    @lulabelle4760 Před 4 lety +3

    The last idea-using a tote for potatoes. Would holes need to be drilled for ventilation? And could it be kept outside, say sitting on the deck, wrapped in a tarp? Appreciate you and your channel !

  • @EskimoInAlaska
    @EskimoInAlaska Před 3 lety

    THANKS SO MUCH

  • @jackieo8693
    @jackieo8693 Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @GamesWithSpawn
    @GamesWithSpawn Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video. You are really a wealth of knowledge! I love in the PNW and am looking for inexpensive and small root storage solutions that won't be too wet when winter soaks the ground. We don't OWN the property, but we can fill a small hole when we move, so I was thinking of steel or plastic barrels in the ground. How much sand should we put in the bottom to increase drainage? Do you have any gems of knowledge to help me in this endeavor? Thanks!

  • @ulaper6465
    @ulaper6465 Před rokem

    You two are brilliant and good people

  • @joseortiz5965
    @joseortiz5965 Před 2 lety

    Awesome

  • @NotAnAngryLesbian
    @NotAnAngryLesbian Před 4 lety +2

    ...the need for a well regulated root cellar..

  • @janacox3686
    @janacox3686 Před 4 lety

    I'm interested in the window well root cellar idea. One question I had was regarding the ventilation. In your freezer root cellar you installed pipes...one at the top and one at the bottom for warm/cool air exchange. The window well cellar idea didn't mention anything about doing that. Do you think a high/low pipe is just as necessary for a window well as it would be for other types of cold storage?

  • @jksatte
    @jksatte Před 3 lety

    These were really good ideas. I wonder if you have any ideas for us southerners. I know about a room with a cool bot is that the only way. I would love any ideas. Thanks! Janice

    • @jksatte
      @jksatte Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper Thanks, I live in the city with a small plot. I want to move to a rural area with more land to grow my food so I am just researching. I doubt my current neighbors would have any idea lol. Thanks again. Janice

  • @13kingofbattle47
    @13kingofbattle47 Před 3 lety

    Paint one side of window black and insulate the other side will foam

  • @christopherkeillor9728
    @christopherkeillor9728 Před 3 lety +1

    One thing I am trying to figure out and find out keeping my canned goods from freezing in the winter I don't have regular heat and if I don't keep my fire going things can freeze but if I keep burning my wood stove I go through a lot of firewood

    • @LLjean-qz7sb
      @LLjean-qz7sb Před 3 lety +1

      Christopher Keillor.... Would you be able to get a chest freezer that does not work, or a stand up freezer that quit working and use that for a cupboard for your canned goods? It is insulated already, (I don't know how much room you have) and you can put it out of the way somewhere in the house! You can probably get one for free if someone is buying a new one and getting rid of their old one! Pick a size that fits your space, even a dorm room size refrig for a small storage space! Good luck and God Bless!

  • @setapart6613
    @setapart6613 Před rokem

    Has anyone tried any of these methods in Minnesota?

  • @sageclark5473
    @sageclark5473 Před 4 lety +2

    where I live we get a lot of snow. I trying to find a temporary solution to building a root cellar but we have a lot of potatoes that need storing and most of these ideas wouldn't work because of the amount of snow we get(in some places the snow is up o my waist!)

    • @florarix7091
      @florarix7091 Před 4 lety

      Don't know your circumstances but perhaps you could build a lean-to to help keep the snow off whatever you put into the ground.

    • @velmahenson981
      @velmahenson981 Před 4 lety

      Get containers sawdust or straw,layer not touching put on North side of house.

    • @disgruntledvet11b18
      @disgruntledvet11b18 Před 4 lety +3

      At least you can freeze your meats and dairy in the snow for free all winter long,)

  • @reeintili6927
    @reeintili6927 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for a great video. I've wanted to store my root veggies in my basement but even now in the dead of winter is above 50° and less than 40% humidity. The north and south side of the interior basement all have the same reading more less.
    How would a cellar outside prove better and what can I doin the basement cheaply to utilize it?
    Thank you
    Ps, I'm in New Jersey

    • @reeintili6927
      @reeintili6927 Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper thank you very much but I'm still confused. Why doesn't a basement work as well?
      Isn't a root cellar essentially the same thing?

    • @reeintili6927
      @reeintili6927 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheProvidentPrepper what an educated and well articulated response.
      Thank you. I will definitely heed your response

    • @reeintili6927
      @reeintili6927 Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper BTW, you gave no bad impressions

  • @cominginthecloudsforus

    What is your basement's average temperature when you are storing your produce down there? Do you have to regulate the humidity? Thanks!

  • @saflem1
    @saflem1 Před 4 lety

    Can you tell me why holes in the buckets are necessary? I watched another video where they did not do this... thank you!! :)

  • @eternalvitality
    @eternalvitality Před 2 lety

    What about storing insulin?

  • @AnnBearForFreedom
    @AnnBearForFreedom Před 4 lety +1

    The only thing getting in the way of my having a coolish root cellar is.....my desert. Zone 9b to 10, in other words. I've had some luck storing indoors, in my pantry, but it won't hold anything over the winter. It seems to be a no-can-do. :(

    • @Johnny-rj9on
      @Johnny-rj9on Před 4 lety

      I'm sorry, I don't understand your comment. You live in a desert, right? In zone 9b-10? And that prevents you from using natural refrigeration because...? Look up Iranian windcatchers and the coandă effect.

    • @Johnny-rj9on
      @Johnny-rj9on Před 4 lety

      @@AnnBearForFreedom I assumed there was something I was missing concerning your situation. Apparently not.

  • @borispetkau1246
    @borispetkau1246 Před 2 lety

    Ventilation will save your lfe

  • @TaraandSky
    @TaraandSky Před 4 lety +1

    Hi I just found your channel and would love some help. I have a small basement and a small root cellar off of it and I wanted to begin storing food. Because my house is old and the basement floor is dirt, it is constantly wet if it rains. I am afraid to store in case there is mold ( I don't see any). I don't have the funds now to have someone come and seal the basement. Do you have any suggestions I could do myself to store food there? Thank you for your channel.

    • @TaraandSky
      @TaraandSky Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheProvidentPrepper Oh wow, your reply was so beautiful. Thank you! I didn't expect such a lovely reply. Wow! That is a fantastic idea! I will look that book up now and look into plastic buckets. I was always afraid of mold. I do have a dehumidifier down there. Wow, thank you so much!!! Bless you!

    • @TaraandSky
      @TaraandSky Před 4 lety +2

      @@TheProvidentPrepper Thank you. You made my day. I so appreciate it now.

    • @jonimarie4255
      @jonimarie4255 Před 2 lety +1

      You asked the question I was going to ask! An old farmhouse basement that gets wet from time to time but small dark rooms with rock walls, I am going to find plastic shelves tomorrow because I have turnips to dig and potatoes soon after! I appreciate the question you asked and the fantastic answers from the Provident Preppers! Appreciate all the information and I just went and bought the suggested book.

  • @leegalloway9508
    @leegalloway9508 Před 7 měsíci

    if the screen openings are a 1/4" which they look like they could be, a mouse can get in it.

  • @astatine0085
    @astatine0085 Před 2 lety

    How do you keep worms and grubs out of the vent holes?

  • @dewuknowHIM
    @dewuknowHIM Před rokem

    In a garage w no heat...does the "tote" potatoes freeze ?

  • @snvm69
    @snvm69 Před rokem

    What about -20 temps and 3 to 5 feet snow .....

  • @marybethstephens6576
    @marybethstephens6576 Před 3 lety

    I live in Michigan. Would an old fridge or freezer unplugged in the garage work?

    • @marybethstephens6576
      @marybethstephens6576 Před 3 lety

      So in lower Michigan, I would have to dig down at least 48 inches to get below the frost line so food would not freeze during winter? That’s 4 feet. Seems excessive.

  • @Shanmammy
    @Shanmammy Před 3 lety

    How do you keep varmints out?

  • @clncaaquintero3595
    @clncaaquintero3595 Před 2 lety

    Did you have any problem with mice in the basement with your produce there?

  • @agrarianarc
    @agrarianarc Před 3 lety

    For the last example, the plastic tote, do you need to drill holes in the tote?

    • @agrarianarc
      @agrarianarc Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper thank you!

    • @Tina-7773
      @Tina-7773 Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper Hi, would the last example with the potatoes in the tote, work in the Florida heat, either buried in the ground or in the garage? If so, about how long would the potatoes last? Thank you.

    • @Tina-7773
      @Tina-7773 Před 3 lety

      @@TheProvidentPrepper Ok, thank you.

  • @denisegirmer4550
    @denisegirmer4550 Před 3 lety

    How would I protect my veg. Or potato’s from mice in my unfinished part of basement

  • @milo74156
    @milo74156 Před 4 lety

    how about saving your long term food in the summer without electricity

    • @mt8149
      @mt8149 Před 4 lety +1

      A root cellar or very deep hole in the ground is still your best bet depending on where you live. If you live far enough north, you could put large blocks of ice in a tote or other container (to control moisture and melting) and place those in the cellar and that might get you by fair bit of the summer depending on the conditions. You could adapt this concept to any of the buried containers with a layer of insulation to prevent direct contact freezing and a container to keep the melting ice from getting everything wet. I live in Michigan and this works here.

  • @JAYWAY1982
    @JAYWAY1982 Před 5 lety

    No mention of what region/climate this would or wouldn’t be good.

    • @anthonysharp9136
      @anthonysharp9136 Před 5 lety

      The good thing about going underground is the math is simple. Once you reach the right depth they tend to stay around the average of your summer and winter temps.

  • @donnaleicach832
    @donnaleicach832 Před 5 lety

    I 3

  • @ajb.822
    @ajb.822 Před 3 lety

    Most of this won't work in nw WI or esp. in the coming years of super cold due to the grand solar minimum. Too cold.

  • @robertkadow3367
    @robertkadow3367 Před 3 lety

    Please do not over act - would like to hear what you have to say but you seem to be natural

  • @MrThidj901
    @MrThidj901 Před rokem

    she speaks like Justin Trudeau gave her drama courses

  • @robertkadow3367
    @robertkadow3367 Před 3 lety

    Not natural