Gardeners React To Gardening Hacks That...Work?

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 466

  • @epicgardening
    @epicgardening  Před 17 dny +4

    Get a FREE sample pack with any LMNT order: DrinkLMNT.com/EPIC

    • @Nyfob
      @Nyfob Před 16 dny

      The screen held it up turning the egg shell into a mini hydroponic tank.

    • @Nyfob
      @Nyfob Před 16 dny

      Which in theory is actually pretty smart.

  • @nickm7911
    @nickm7911 Před 19 dny +116

    11:00 This was my project. The original aim was to mount the laser on a drone instead of wheels. It would automatically detect and map the locations of weeds in pastures/farms, and then zap them (and then check back on them in a couple of days to see if they need a re-zap). This is back in 2018. As a research student my project originally was to identify the most effective laser source for this application. But given how much I learnt about the spectral signatures of plants, I also ended up helping them to use hyperspectral imaging to delineate weeds from crops. Unfortunately my contract expired during covid lockdown and haven't been able to find a job either in physics or agriculture.
    Anyway this selective approach avoids injuring the crops, and may provide a real alternative to herbicides...

    • @jointgib
      @jointgib Před 17 dny +6

      i would bet this becomes a thing

    • @lbarmstrong1
      @lbarmstrong1 Před 16 dny +17

      Wow, all respect and I'm sorry about your bump in the road and hope it's temporary! Glad you commented.

    • @khills
      @khills Před 16 dny +3

      VERY cool project! Are you too far in your career to do a postdoc at an ag school?

    • @Sgt__Hawk
      @Sgt__Hawk Před 14 dny

      How was the laser on a drone supposed to be powered? Aren't these lasers real power hogs making it necessary to carry a huge (and heavy) power source around? I think having it on a trailer like that is much more achievable. Or was the drone just supposed to do the mapping while the laser was being towed? But then I'd still think it's much easier to just include the recognition part on the towed platform.

    • @Ayverie4
      @Ayverie4 Před 14 dny +2

      I would bet it doesn't become a thing. "Roundup hates this man!"

  • @ellemcclearly1800
    @ellemcclearly1800 Před 19 dny +99

    I know someone who put a brand-new, clean septic tank in the side of a hill to make a bunker/root cellar. The tank was cheap because it was unusable due to a crack but that was easily patched.

    • @khills
      @khills Před 16 dny

      Huh, what an interesting idea!

    • @paulineferrill4348
      @paulineferrill4348 Před 16 dny +7

      Key words here being "brand-new, clean" 😂

    • @skylark.kraken
      @skylark.kraken Před 10 dny

      @@paulineferrill4348 I mean, it's plastic, you can use a used one it's just that it'll be kinda gross to fully clean it out

  • @RunaaSteinamrk
    @RunaaSteinamrk Před 19 dny +31

    I’m from the Faroe Islands and I can confirm that I know some people who plant potatoes in wool. We have so many sheep here, that farmers have too much wool (point being that the sheep aren’t sheared to provide for the potatoes). It works just as well as burying them in the soil.

  • @AlfredTanious
    @AlfredTanious Před 19 dny +34

    Great video as usual guys
    We do this orange light in Egypt for hundreds of years now, we always do it at the time of the feat of Epiphany usually in February (Coptic Orthodox Church). The idea is that the inside flesh of the sking will wick and be saturates with the oil (olive oil is the best) and will create a good oil lamp for several hours. We also cut/ engrave crosses on the top part( the dome) for cross light/ shadow. It has a religious meanings but now you know where did this come from. If you google it you will get the idea

    • @jhahn578
      @jhahn578 Před 15 dny

      Definitely going to try this!

  • @howarddavies3744
    @howarddavies3744 Před 14 dny +11

    I live in Wales and we have lots of sheep, I have used the wool trick it is very effective and seems to keep slug attack down and mulches the plants. The other cool thing is that it rots down over about 18 -24 months and adds nitrogen to the soil.

  • @DiBaozi
    @DiBaozi Před 19 dny +36

    I found a slow water dripping pipe from next to our A/C unit and I can't afford to fix it so I put some melon seeds in the ground where it drips and left it alone. That was in mid July. So far it has a 3 foot vine and 7 flowers and I haven't done a thing. I can't wait for the melons to come. I'm gonna put pumpkin seeds there next.

    • @avr1590
      @avr1590 Před 19 dny +11

      The water is condensation from the air being cooled and should be happening, not an issue that needs fixed

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 18 dny +6

      Amazing idea!

    • @Super_Nova739
      @Super_Nova739 Před 15 dny +2

      That is the ac drain line, it is supposed to be there and there is supposed to be water coming out of it when the unit is in use. Like water on the pavement when a vehicle is running the ac.

    • @circuitsalsa
      @circuitsalsa Před 14 dny

      I put my ginger planter under my AC doing the same thing! It's so lush and I'm in zone 4. Hope your melons and pumpkins are delicious for you!

  • @jean-lucalexander4719
    @jean-lucalexander4719 Před 19 dny +19

    Protip: If you have a mortar and pestle or a coffee grinder, you can save up your eggshells and dry them out until you have a decent amount, grind them into a powder and boom. NOW you have something that's great for your soil. I add shell powder to all my potting soils and if i've saved up a bunch over the winter, i can use them come spring to amend the soil of my yard as well before transplanting any seedlings to my yard.

    • @nicothenatural
      @nicothenatural Před 14 dny +2

      I let mine dry out in a bucket, smash them by foot or tool, and spread it into my garden with compost. I never had the space or patience to do more than that lol

    • @milesfromnowhere1985
      @milesfromnowhere1985 Před 14 dny +5

      I grind mine up and mix it into my goats' mineral blend, and I have neighbors who mix it with their chicken feed. The gastric juices react with the shells and make the calcium available in the manure, which then gets mixed into my compost.

  • @deb1973d
    @deb1973d Před 17 dny +12

    I "regrow" onions for the tops. They're a bit thicker than standard green onions, IMO, so hold up better on hot foods. They can also be dehydrated and ground for onion powder. It makes me happy to squeeze every penny I can out of things. The orange candle works.

  • @craftywamama
    @craftywamama Před 19 dny +30

    The part of the wool is probably the skirting, which is the “junk” wool that may be stained, or contain too much vegetable matter and/or animal waste.

  • @car-uh
    @car-uh Před 19 dny +45

    It's cassia cinnamon and unfortunately you can't perpetually harvest which is why sourcing from those who prioritize replanting is so important. It can also take 15 years to reach maturity for harvest 😓. We use cinnamon in so much but so little is known about how environmentally and culturally impactful its harvesting process is. Ceylon is different and papery, the one that is more known for its health benefits. It's not used in baking/cooking in the same way cassia is.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 19 dny +8

      This is good to know!!!

    • @HI74IH
      @HI74IH Před 16 dny

      So are we all gonna try and grow a cinnamon tree? I'm totally down to try

  • @jlord4843
    @jlord4843 Před 19 dny +49

    when I was an archaeologist I dug up egg shells that were well over a hundred years old. so there.

    • @SefureX
      @SefureX Před 18 dny +8

      nah, that was just your assistant having eggs for a mid-day snack.

  • @rinarose9544
    @rinarose9544 Před 19 dny +52

    I've done the orange peel pith candle and it makes the room smell nice too :D and yeah - when wool is sheared from sheep, it gets sorted (or "skirted") into categories of firsts, seconds, and thirds. Firsts are what largely make it into commercial yarns and fabrics or into fiber for handspinning, seconds require a bit more work and are sometimes used for blends and more textured/novelty yarn, and thirds are parts of the fleece that wouldn't be terribly useful for yarn (things like wool that's especially dirty, has excessive vegetative matter in it, or is too coarse). Thirds and sometimes seconds would be excellent use cases for wool mulch!

    • @tannenbaumgirl3100
      @tannenbaumgirl3100 Před 19 dny

      @@rinarose9544 Up in Canada they have problems getting rid of sheep's wool, not profitable they say, can't even give it away. Watch "Sheepishly Me". She got so frustrated about it and decided to develop items of her own for sale, cute items. Check her out.

    • @dethmaul
      @dethmaul Před 17 dny +1

      I saw a video of wool baths to clean it, it's a pain in the ASS and uses a lot of water. For quantities like pallets full of wool that have to be forklifted.

  • @foodgrowers1531
    @foodgrowers1531 Před 18 dny +12

    If you thin apples every year, you get large apples every year instead of one big year and then nothing the next. We hand thin apples, pears, and Asian pears at the school orchard to ensure fruit for the kids. We thin when the apples are nickle sized, not be the flower, but this tool looks useful.

    • @emmalowmax
      @emmalowmax Před 16 dny +1

      Is that true for all apple varieties?
      My apple tree came with my house, and after reading that, I can’t actually decide if I even want it to fruit every year. She’s been full of problems and I’m not diligent enough to keep on top of them. 😕

    • @foodgrowers1531
      @foodgrowers1531 Před 10 dny +1

      @@emmalowmax Let go and it will produce or not and you can pick or not, prune or not. Be as diligent or lazy as you want - no judging ;-)

    • @emmalowmax
      @emmalowmax Před 10 dny

      @@foodgrowers1531 right now she produces a BANANAS amount every other year, but this year I've got a sooty blotch problem, a continuing problem a lack of calcium and maaaaybe a pest; when I read your comment I thought "maybe if it produces every year I can get a better handle on fixing her problems..." but if I put a bunch of effort into pruning back only for her to not produce in the off year, I miiiight get arrested for screaming obscenities at a tree... ha!

  • @MyFocusVaries
    @MyFocusVaries Před 19 dny +26

    The laser weeding is so much better than chemicals!

  • @DavyOneness
    @DavyOneness Před 18 dny +9

    Resusing old water bottles like that in garden is never good idea. That kind of plastic is not meant to be out in UV or used beyond its one time use for water. It starts breaking down and you get chemicals and microplastics in your garden.

  • @FollowingMyBliss
    @FollowingMyBliss Před 19 dny +19

    Ive made the oil lamp out of the orange peel and pith. I did not put the top piece on it. But if you dont accidentally tear off the center pith, it works

  • @jeannamcgregor9967
    @jeannamcgregor9967 Před 19 dny +14

    My grandparents had a cool DIY fruit picker for their huge avocado tree. Cut a 1" square from the upper lip of a tin can. Nail the can to the end of a long 1x1 with the cut facing up and out. Cheap and brilliant. 💚

  • @conorcroskery6195
    @conorcroskery6195 Před 2 dny +1

    The rake that makes grid lines is actually really handy in a farming situation. Having the gridlines already down makes planting so much easier and faster since there are usually multiple people planting hundreds of plants and everyone is trying to maintain spacing. Probably wouldn't be used on a large industrial farm, but the small farm I worked on really wanted one

  • @suzanak5197
    @suzanak5197 Před 19 dny +53

    That FISH is a Betta and needs to surface for air. Mindless.

    • @lurklingX
      @lurklingX Před 19 dny +12

      i'm a fishkeeper, too. first thought was "oh no..... that foam is gonna kill the vapor exchange" that lets the water oxygenate and all with surface agitation. i hope no one implements that PARTICULAR setup. there's other ways to accomplish the same thing tho.

    • @anissaferringer4965
      @anissaferringer4965 Před 19 dny +2

      I have pathos stuck in one 9f the little cutouts of my 50g lid.

    • @flufflebut8781
      @flufflebut8781 Před 17 dny +3

      I was thinking instead of an entire slab it might be fun to make little boats that the plants float in.

  • @charlesisdumb395
    @charlesisdumb395 Před 18 dny +7

    2:26 very true, best thing to do if you want the calcium in the shells is clean them, toast them, powder them, then leave them in some vinwgar for a few days, youll have WCA or water soluble calcium when the reaction has finished

    • @milesfromnowhere1985
      @milesfromnowhere1985 Před 14 dny +2

      You can also feed them to chickens or other livestock, and it breaks them down the same way. I mix powdered shells into my goats' mineral blend, and their manure of course ends up in my garden!

  • @MyRamblingRose86
    @MyRamblingRose86 Před 19 dny +9

    Rubber snakes and rats I got at the dollar store keep squirrels out of my garden. I just have to move them periodically

    • @morin6675
      @morin6675 Před 17 dny +1

      I wonder if the rubber snakes will work for a stray cat?

    • @the_homun_system
      @the_homun_system Před 6 dny +2

      ​@@morin6675knowing cats itll probably play with it

  • @RFC3514
    @RFC3514 Před 15 dny +2

    Cork can be harvested pretty much forever, as long as it's removed without damaging the tree. It takes 7 to 12 years to regrow to "commercial" thickness.
    The two most common types of cinnamon are "true cinnamon" (Ceylon / zeylanicum) and "chinese cinnamon" (cassia), although there are a few more variants (Saigon cinnamon, Malabar cinnamon, etc.). Ceylon is slightly more expensive than cassia but I actually find that it tastes a bit "burnt" when ground into powder, while cassia tastes a bit sweeter. So, I tend to use ceylon cinnamon sticks but cassia powder.

  • @Digitalhunny
    @Digitalhunny Před 19 dny +247

    I've been here with you guys for well over a year & TODAY is the day, that I learned you are not a married couple?? 😂😂😂❤

    • @Bob-bo8ik
      @Bob-bo8ik Před 19 dny +25

      Why did you assume they were? Two people don't make assumptions.

    • @mrigakshi0902
      @mrigakshi0902 Před 19 dny +57

      No, Jacques is married to Eric!
      Common enough mistake to make!

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 19 dny +242

      We're both straight men who happen to be friends and love to garden

    • @lurklingX
      @lurklingX Před 19 dny

      @@mrigakshi0902 ahaha

    • @lurklingX
      @lurklingX Před 19 dny +22

      i get why. when you see friends who are really in sync and get along so well you can wonder if it's a ship. but, nope! lol. both dating other people. it's so fun to watch people when they jive like this. it's about as satisfying as kevin looking at that carrot puller and talking about driving the machine. haha! i also agree with jaques, going too hard on "ORDER" can be nightmares. i love that they come from totally different ends of that perspective. chaos gardening versus super orderly. lmao on some of the silly vids involving that, too. :D

  • @jenniewolford1631
    @jenniewolford1631 Před 19 dny +5

    i got two bulbs off the onion bottom i bought from a local, bolted, and i cut it back. let it go again, harvested several months later, when it bolted again, got thousands of seeds, processed the stalk and dehydrated and made powder, processed the bulbs to onion flaks !!!

  • @firefly5247
    @firefly5247 Před 19 dny +88

    I want an entire video of Kevin and Jacques reviewing million-dollar farm machines.

  • @noorarahimi1498
    @noorarahimi1498 Před 18 dny +7

    The angry mango lady is a part of marketing trend in China that says “we’ve got such good products but we don’t have enough buyers “ and the package thing is to protect them from birds and pests

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Před 17 dny +1

      @noorarahimi1498 - Such a shame. Not. Maybe they can sell them to Russians.

  • @angeliquerider-mitchell2538

    Hey Kevin & Jacque,
    I recently saw a cool hack on yt shorts by an older gentleman that refers to himself as grandpa. Before his strawberries put on fruit he scatters a bunch of small, red painted rocks around his plants. The idea is that the birds will come and peck at the painted rocks and learn that they don't enjoy these "strawberries" . So, when your real strawberries come in they'll leave them alone. I'd love to see you guys try this out!

  • @morganalori
    @morganalori Před dnem +1

    The best thing about that lazer weeding thing is the lack of needing chemicals to kill the weeds. That's cool. The wool, if you don't have the soft/pricey wool can cost more to process than would ever make. So it becomes a waste product.

  • @octoberopal8419
    @octoberopal8419 Před 19 dny +30

    YOU TWO GUYS HAVE TO SWITCH HATS ONE DAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @lurklingX
      @lurklingX Před 19 dny +6

      hahaha i will laugh my A$$ off if they do an episode with switched hats. OR if they cosplayed as each other. like jaques has to talk and act like kevin and be all about "ORDER IN THE GARDEN" and kevin has to suck it up and do floppy hat chaos gardening. i LOVE the spoof episodes. they're just so fun. immediately several come to mind and it's one of the reasons i watch this channel over others. plus they have that good wholesome BFF vibe and it's cathartic, a nice foil to the absolute chaos going on IRL everywhere. this channel really helps shut that out for a bit.

    • @GrowsGoneWild
      @GrowsGoneWild Před 19 dny +1

      💯 🤣

    • @sirsanti8408
      @sirsanti8408 Před 19 dny

      I'm 95% sure they switched entire outfits in one video

  • @ghmichel72
    @ghmichel72 Před 19 dny +13

    @16:45 it would be great if Epic Gardening did tours to farms like these once in a while ✊🏾

  • @nick-hdh
    @nick-hdh Před 19 dny +6

    Save your egg shells. Bake them at low temp then toss in a food processor to make a powder. Free calcium.

    • @dianelakata1308
      @dianelakata1308 Před 17 dny

      I do the same and give them to my hens. The like the egg shells more than the commercial 17:39 oyster shell product

  • @manosalatierraconPaty
    @manosalatierraconPaty Před 13 dny

    Hi Kevin and Jacques, your neighbor here from Tijuana. I have done some tests regrowing things just for fun and I have had great success regrowing onions from the root base, also regrowing celery the same way. You do get a full onion not just the greens. I planted two, one base rotted (I think it was too thin), but the other one did develop and I had a big onion bulb, you couldn't tell the difference from the ones I grew from seed. If you plant an onion root base you do get a full onion, if you plant a green onion base you will get green onions, same goes for leeks.The orange candle does work too. 👍

  • @lvs6775
    @lvs6775 Před 17 dny +3

    13:24 Not only do I have the patience, I have the grit and I have the determination, and I have the willpower.

  • @veryberry39
    @veryberry39 Před 19 dny +21

    Y'all. That thumbnail came straight off a Harlequin romance novel. I'm not even one of the people who thought you two were in a relationship, so it's not that! All you need to do is slap "Sowing Love" on top and you've got yourself a bestselling novel. 😅😂

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 19 dny +5

      LOL

    • @midwestribeye7820
      @midwestribeye7820 Před 19 dny

      😂❤😂

    • @feetsoap4266
      @feetsoap4266 Před 18 dny

      @@epicgardening
      Kevin, I just watch a short of yours on growing beans from store bought beans.
      Can suggest a few to grow both pole and bush varieties? Thank You.

  • @sailorvlogs3603
    @sailorvlogs3603 Před 16 dny +3

    So what was the cost of building your homestead/ epic garden? What % came from yourself and what % was from the firm investors you partnered with to buy a family owned seed company?

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 16 dny +3

      100% of the money to build the homestead came from my own pocket, feel free to check the Reddit post for my response as well. That video is fear mongering and misleading

  • @Iceycube1404
    @Iceycube1404 Před 16 dny +3

    8:30 there's actually like 5 types of cinnamon. They get grouped into two groups: true cinnamon (one type) and fake cinnamon (4 types).
    You're most likely to get the fake cinnamon in stores and actually the fake cinnamon is better for baked goods as it retains the flavor of cinnamon after heating.

  • @natso2001
    @natso2001 Před 19 dny +5

    "This looks like some war of the worlds type shi- ..action" 😂 almost slipped!

  • @harvestheim
    @harvestheim Před 14 dny +1

    The double sided pruner is used to preserve the king blossom when thinning apples.

  • @Amilli182
    @Amilli182 Před dnem

    A little bit of bark dust 😂😂 I love this episode! My favorite gardeners!

  • @danagwena
    @danagwena Před 19 dny +8

    Potato Ty always amazes me with how much he harvests.Kevin is the potato daddy 😂. But potato Ty is the granddaddy of potatoes and maybe, just the carrot daddy. Anyways, found the new drip irrigation with the sponge helpful and looking forward to more sus garden hacks and more videos soon.😊

  • @SeanL.-sg3jy
    @SeanL.-sg3jy Před 19 dny +5

    both sugar cane and bamboo are part of the grass family so they would grow similarly

  • @lurklingX
    @lurklingX Před 19 dny +9

    that logging machine blew my mind!!

  • @LisaMangan-zx9rk
    @LisaMangan-zx9rk Před 18 dny +3

    I once used duct tape on an apple tree branch that got damaged by a fallen branch. It had absolutely perfect fruit that I didn't want to lose. Couldn't believe it when it worked! Branch healed perfectly and I didn't lose the apples😊

  • @sleepydrJ
    @sleepydrJ Před 19 dny +10

    Sheep need to be sheared, and with so many synthetic fabrics, most wool now just gets composted. There used to be tons of breeds of sheep that were specialized for different terrains and climates. Their wool had a variety of textures and characteristics, not just for soft garments. Lots of it was best for rugs or upholstry or outerwear. Now people only want merino.
    It’s too bad because wool s such an amazing fiber

  • @Arrowdodger
    @Arrowdodger Před 18 dny +6

    7:18 Doomsday prepping with Bilbo Baggins.

  • @sarahp775
    @sarahp775 Před 18 dny +5

    It looked like there was no pesky seed in the big, beautiful mango!

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Před 15 dny

      Likely to be fake, going by the "I love China" shirt. Tends to be subtle propaganda/a scam in some way.

    • @sarahlacascade1522
      @sarahlacascade1522 Před 6 dny

      Some mangoes have very thin seeds. They're way less annoying to eat.

  • @nebsun
    @nebsun Před 19 dny +2

    14:17 Apple and similar fruit trees need to be thinned since they make far too much fruit per cluster, usually the middle flower (king bloom) produces the biggest and best fruit - so I guess they use that tool to selectively thin the outer flowers / fruit to get the best one. I usually just wait until after pollination and fruit set, since some of the fruit might fall off due to lack of pollination, and the unpollinated fruit will easily just fall off - so that tool doesn't really solve much.

    • @heikek2134
      @heikek2134 Před 16 dny

      That's exactly what I was wondering, since I seem to remember that most flowers don't get pollinated and never grow into apples!

  • @nannybannany
    @nannybannany Před 18 dny +2

    I totally agree with the egg shell thing. Even feeding them to my worms super crushed up it even takes them ages to get through a lot of shells at once.

  • @hedgehogshill3522
    @hedgehogshill3522 Před 11 dny

    2:35 Agree. Even in our compost the eggshells are one of the things that are visible the longest. Even they break into smaller pieces over time it takes a long time to acutally decompose. But my sister is using eggshells on her balcony for her snails XD

  • @user-ix1fi2su6w
    @user-ix1fi2su6w Před 16 dny +6

    Can you please speak about your private equity investors????

  • @JCC_1975
    @JCC_1975 Před 14 dny

    So as an "unprofessional gardener" who's grown nearly all my food for 30+ yeeqrs I can tell you guys the snail roll method for seed starting works great. I thought why not try this spring and the root system on my starts was incredible. Don't knock it until you try it. 😉

  • @BLynnE
    @BLynnE Před 17 dny +1

    I have a root cellar in our very old home, and I have no idea if it’s good or not. It’s about 5x8, with dirt/sand floor and what looks like an old potato bin. It seems really humid, and is really musty. I suppose I could re-line the floor with clean sand, but I don’t know if that would take care of the mustiness. It’s on the same level as the basement, so not deep underground. The house is well over 100 years old. It was used to store crockery planters, etc. We’d have to remove all that, and probably the wood of the bin (stall?) as it is really punky. I don’t know if it’s worth fixing up as a root cellar though. Decisions decisions… (edited for clarity)

  • @stephanievineyard2249
    @stephanievineyard2249 Před 14 dny +2

    Horticulture student here! The grafting is correct and will work, but grafting like that is not easy. It has a low success rate and has to be done at a specific time of year under specific circumstances depending on the species of tree. It's pretty cool though!

  • @PoliteChihuahua
    @PoliteChihuahua Před 14 dny +1

    Jacques face in the thumbnail, that is destined to become a meme

  • @clarissagafoor5222
    @clarissagafoor5222 Před 18 dny +1

    In Malakka the gardeners graft different coloured bougainvillea together so the trees/bushes/plants have many different colored flowers. Looks magnificent.

  • @happymamaof5803
    @happymamaof5803 Před 13 dny

    Jacques, you look amazing, super healthy! I’m mostly a listener so I haven’t actually watched the visuals in ages. You look great.

  • @franceslamont9121
    @franceslamont9121 Před 18 dny +1

    Is it wrong that I have a crazy crush on Jacque?!? I just love his laugh!!

  • @GoingGreenMom
    @GoingGreenMom Před 19 dny +3

    Love the hobbit hole root cellar!!

  • @BrichaJulbry
    @BrichaJulbry Před 14 dny

    That mango is called เขียวเสวย (kiew-sa-weui), meaning green eat (as in delicious or gourmet), in Thailand. It's very mild in flavor but very meaty, long, and big. You can find it imported at Vietnamese or Southeast Asian grocery stores in Summer. (Pan Asia and Hiep Thai have it.)

  • @mirandahermes2554
    @mirandahermes2554 Před 17 dny

    I LOVE THE LONGER VIDEOS AND THE COOKING ONES. The expirements and weird plants are def fan favorites. I think traveling to different greenhouses and gardens would also be super cool.

  • @Super_Nova739
    @Super_Nova739 Před 15 dny

    There is someone I follow who uses wool in their seed starting mix for soil blocking.
    And they say necessity is the mother of invention.

  • @maitai7375
    @maitai7375 Před 16 dny +3

    I’m in true disbelief. Say it ain’t so

  • @GrrlRiot88
    @GrrlRiot88 Před 19 dny +2

    According to google Black Diamond Apples are actually real. Its just that they are rare, difficult to grow and near impossible to export out of China where they are viewed as an extreme luxury gift.
    They're also not true black but a deep plum purple and supposedly incredibly sweet and rich tasting.

  • @dollyperry3020
    @dollyperry3020 Před 19 dny +3

    Fun video. I do wonder though how they keep the cinnamon tree alive cutting it all the way around. I was taught this was girdling and would kill a tree.

  • @thehangmansdaughter1120

    Oh Honey, that's not just wool, that's what we call dags. That's the poopy wool around the backend of the sheep. It makes great mulch, bringing it's own fertilizer.

  • @zeahlessley6108
    @zeahlessley6108 Před 14 dny

    1:14 the way they showed this was super silly, but for starting fragile seedlings and making them easy to separate and put into the ground later, this is actually a really decent method! The way they just then tossed it in a pot and put soil on it was...not the method. 😅

  • @nenengceriwis
    @nenengceriwis Před 10 dny

    Wool is commonly used as mulch. You can get them from eat sheep farmer 1-2 times a year.

  • @crimson_chaos
    @crimson_chaos Před 4 dny

    I'd love to see you review and even test things like homemade/DIY rooting hormone, insecticidal soap, etc. There are so many recipes out there for this stuff, I'd love to know what actually works!

  • @SolomonJaye
    @SolomonJaye Před dnem

    That was a very satisfying watch lol. This is how I know I'm no longer in my 20s.

  • @PatienceMarie88
    @PatienceMarie88 Před 14 dny +1

    The hack at 1:10 doing the spiral seed thingy, does not work. I bought some herb starters from the Dollar Tree (I just wanted to see if they work) and that's how they did the seeds in the herb starter. Barely any of them germinated, and 3 out of I think 5, didn't germinate at all lol.

  • @briancook1
    @briancook1 Před 5 dny

    I work in a factory setting all night long then 3 - 4 hours in the garden in an Arkansas summer with zero dehydration.

  • @B-Th-Change
    @B-Th-Change Před 19 dny +3

    I love it when you guys do these videos

  • @christineborgatti3760
    @christineborgatti3760 Před 13 dny

    I once used left over wool (I spin) as mulch around a plant and my son wondered if there was a dead cat out in the yard.

  • @nictnt8197
    @nictnt8197 Před 19 dny +8

    The hydroponics thing is one thing. But that particular system I would suspect would kill that fish. No way to get oxygen.....

    • @LuminaryXion
      @LuminaryXion Před 19 dny

      Beta fish breathe surface air, if I recall correctly.

  • @milliedragon4418
    @milliedragon4418 Před 13 dny

    Besides that, it's like a waste of eggshells. You can actually eat eggshells if you, blend/grind them up or you can put them in either your cat food I have seen people put eggshells in cat food. It's a good source of calcium. It's what calcium supplements are made out of.

  • @foodnwords
    @foodnwords Před 19 dny +1

    Saturday tea post-gardening with my favorite boys! Let's go!

  • @Mya-Pearson
    @Mya-Pearson Před 19 dny +2

    Where’s the mango pit????😅

  • @janetskitchengarden2038

    Fun video, thanks.
    Just an FYI the massive square planting is taking place in the Chateau Villandry's vegetable garden in the Loire Valley of France. The garden is designed in the typically classic French style.
    The garden is massive and the produce is all used it is not an ornamental garden, it does feed people.
    The low fences surrounding each garden patch have espaliered apple trees that have trunks as thick as 3-5 inches thick.
    An absolutely visit for ANY veggie gardener and worth the trip to French. It was my first stop after landing in Paris.

  • @ChristineKing-i5c
    @ChristineKing-i5c Před 2 dny

    Eggshells are good if you dry and blend them into a powder

  • @lbarmstrong1
    @lbarmstrong1 Před 16 dny +1

    In my family, we are the suburban kids. But our cousins are the farmers and ranchers and almost all of them have invented machinery of some kind (or another invention) that makes their jobs easier. The level of innovation is amazing and from what I've observed from a distance even, that kind of mindset starts when they are very small. Successful American farmers are some of the most creative, intelligent innovators and problem solvers in history, and don't get enough credit for what they do. (So when they sound an alarm or make a complaint about something, yes, even political, we should listen to them).

  • @mrsmiley631
    @mrsmiley631 Před 19 dny +1

    After you establish your sugarcane field, you can move onto making Epic rum.

  • @daleservidio2034
    @daleservidio2034 Před 19 dny +1

    I tried the orange candle. Definitely works, but burns out way tooooo fast. It’s another investment in oil 😮

  • @harvestenthusiast4519
    @harvestenthusiast4519 Před 15 dny +1

    Wow imagine all the carrot rust flies running (flying) to that field when those tops got cut.😳😱 From what I read off the internet their sense of smell is insane they can sense carrot tops being cut for miles away. I remember correctly .😅😅 0:11

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 Před 16 dny

    Jacques saying he would purposely plant outside the box😂. Creative 😅

  • @Superiorlumbago9260
    @Superiorlumbago9260 Před 15 dny

    The orange candle is cute but burns fast, with that top half you can get "Halloween creative " with it, its a bit of a olive oil waste

  • @carol7119
    @carol7119 Před 16 dny

    Hi, I live in France (Loire Valley) and think that the chateau with the precise planting technique might very well be Villandry. Their beautiful vegetable gardens are quite famous and definitely worth a detour if ever visiting.

  • @SilverDragonJay
    @SilverDragonJay Před 13 dny

    The laser weeding device is all fun and games until the weeds become resistant to lasers. And then what will we do when the plant uprising happens?!

  • @lassanai-music
    @lassanai-music Před 2 dny

    Tips and hack : from reusing a plastic thingy to grab an apple to buy multimillion worth of machinerie and become the Lord of Carrots

  • @savinginstyle
    @savinginstyle Před 18 dny +1

    Since you guys do experiment's. Have you thought of getting everyone in different zones to try and Plant something that you don't typically plant? Like Avocado, pineapple, lemons, papaya etc? I'm from Minnesota and Now live in Iowa and people do this type of thing and I'm amazed at how they've done this! I've seen Pears, oranges elderberry and Avocado. I do realize these may take multiple yrs but it's be an interesting series and something to check back in on every 6 months or per season.

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Před 17 dny +1

      @savinginstyle - Can't just plant Avocado. A live shoot of a known cultivar has to be grafted to root stock.

  • @NatureDerek
    @NatureDerek Před 17 dny +1

    Do not ever do that to a betta tank. Bettas are obligate carnovres and they're members of Anabantoidei, they have to come to the surface for air sometimes as their gills can't gather all they need.
    that's an echo of the "betta vase' and it is bad, it kills fish. don't do it.

  • @ericnienhuis1425
    @ericnienhuis1425 Před 19 dny +2

    Wool is almost worthless at the moment due to synthetic fabrics , carpets etc.
    It costs the farmer to shear as opposed to earning from it… so wool mulch is becoming very popular

  • @mary1973tx
    @mary1973tx Před 19 dny +2

    awesome video
    I just saw a video that said that tomatoes and cucumbers should NOT be grown together because it will stunned the growth is that true? if it is you should do a video about plants that shouldn't be grown together
    🙂🌻

  • @liquid2air
    @liquid2air Před 15 dny

    that betta fish at 2:03 is the type of fish that needs to go to the surface of the water to breathe so that's not a great practice if you want your fish to be alive

  • @ceeemm1901
    @ceeemm1901 Před 13 dny

    I saw you in the "Garden Answer" video at Peggy's place!

  • @megmoore335
    @megmoore335 Před 19 dny +1

    As a side note, that amaranth behind you is just gorgeous 😍

  • @BrendaBodwin
    @BrendaBodwin Před 6 dny

    😁👍👏👏👏 You guys are funny. Sonedsy youll have to come out to the TN family estate, and see how we do it. Might surprise you how we mix very old with with the new.

  • @mirandaryan6491
    @mirandaryan6491 Před 9 dny

    Wool is also used to impede slugs!

  • @angienavarro7362
    @angienavarro7362 Před 7 dny

    This was so entertaining
    Thank you guys❤️❤️

  • @D4ni3773
    @D4ni3773 Před 5 dny

    Thanks for sharing!
    Great video!