How I Grew 10x Larger Swiss Chard than I Have Ever Seen

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  • čas přidán 7. 12. 2013
  • John from www.growingyourgreens.com/ shares with you his end of season harvest and talks about Peppers, Cucumbers and Bolivian Cucumbers aka Achocha, as well as his Giant Swiss Chard leafy greens and selecting fruit trees for your climate. In this episode you will learn tips on when to harvest your summer garden and plant out your fall/winter garden. John will also compare standard marketmore, pickling, Armenian and lemon cucumbers with the Bolivian cucumbers and which is more cold tolerant. In addition he will talk about Bolivian cucumber culture and how long it takes to start setting fruit. Next he will share his enormous swiss chard leaves and how you can also get amazing growing results. Finally he will share his ideas on how you can get the best fruit trees that will be the most fruitful in your particular area.

Komentáře • 184

  • @Praxxus55712
    @Praxxus55712 Před 10 lety +98

    Holy freakin cow those chard leaves are beyond huge! As I always say John, folks can pick at what you do or how you do it but when you hold up a leaf like THAT....well that pretty much wins without a doubt. You are a gardening machine. Very well done! :)

    • @donaldhare1179
      @donaldhare1179 Před 7 lety

      Praxxus55712 Where is the source of the rock dust. Could clay soil be used as the rock dust? Thanks for all the information.

    • @dontarguewithfools
      @dontarguewithfools Před 6 lety +1

      The man, the myth, the legend.
      *Cheers erupt. PRAXXUS55712!

    • @hopeking3588
      @hopeking3588 Před 3 lety

      That very good Jhon!

    • @hopeking3588
      @hopeking3588 Před 3 lety

      My Swiss chard is in a pot cause I live in an apt but after watering its laying on the ground! Im wondering did I over water? I'm like oh my gosh what did I do wrong now!?

    • @TheOneTheyCallDean
      @TheOneTheyCallDean Před 3 lety

      @@donaldhare1179 Clay is a Good source of minerals, but too much will Make your soil too compact. The reason being that it's too small a particle size, so we look for things that still allow water to drain and yet still provide nutrients such as oyster shells, organic bone meals, (I especially prefer fish and crab bone meals) azomite and greensand. Go for a good balance of organic compounds and fertilizers in your soil with those and you'll do just great! = )

  • @MIgardener
    @MIgardener Před 10 lety +40

    I purchased 60 pounds of Azomite to add to my garden. I added compost and horse manure in as well. I hope my things look that nice next year!

    • @coleweede1953
      @coleweede1953 Před 4 lety +8

      Always fun seeing my dads on each other's channels even if it was 6 years ago

    • @Ash-fd8ww
      @Ash-fd8ww Před 4 lety +1

      Did they ever look that nice doh? as in retrospective.

    • @wizardss3684
      @wizardss3684 Před 2 lety +2

      How did your garden do? And what was the condition of your soil before you added? @MIgardener

  • @blackrose9851
    @blackrose9851 Před 8 lety +10

    John I have to say I've been following you for 4 years. Your passion for growing your own food and eating plants in their natural state... not cooked influenced me to do the same. I have now been vegan... mostly raw for nearly 4 years and very proud to say I grow all my own fruit and veg. Thank you for being the catalyst in my life.

  • @GardenFrugal
    @GardenFrugal Před 10 lety +11

    John you are a Gardening Wizard!!!!!!!!

  • @OneYardRevolution
    @OneYardRevolution Před 10 lety +21

    As always, your garden is amazing, and that Swiss chard is just ridiculous!

  • @alessandra2112
    @alessandra2112 Před 7 lety +3

    That fruit that he called bolivian cucumber is called maxixe (masheeshe) in Brazil. Is popular in the north and northeast of Brazil. It's a ingredient for many typical foods here. We eat the fruit and the leaf. Choose the young leaves for a mild taste. It makes the mouth feel a little numb and people enjoy this feeling. We also use it as a substitute for kale in juices since it is extremely rich in zinc and many other minerals, vitamin C, B complex and beta caroteno. Very good to juice with apples and carrots... oranges, and all other delicious fruits

  • @shizzlethis1
    @shizzlethis1 Před 10 lety +2

    I'm inspired by your passion to make my own organic garden! Can't wait to plan and setup my own container garden!

  • @lexluthor3834
    @lexluthor3834 Před 10 lety

    John the Garden Guru! Another great video brother! My fifty cubic yard pile of wood chips is on year two of slow cold fungus goodness! Thanks for all you do because dreams of a better then good backyard garden have became reality,and grown into a reality of opening an organic farm in the spring! Also,that Azomite is a real game changer,ordered and used all ten 40 lbs bags in my backyard last season and just ordered 50 more for the farm! Thankfully I can get it from an organic farm thirty minutes from my house for they get it by the train load.Again I'm grateful brother,keep up the fight!

  • @CCbalconygarden
    @CCbalconygarden Před 10 lety +1

    That swiss chard is ginormous and no bug damage too! You could use it as an umbrella on a rainy day! Dehydrated persimmons sounds good - I've had a lot of dried ones which I don't particularly like the texture of, but if they are completely dehydrates in slices, like chips, I think they would be fantastic.

  • @socheatathai4804
    @socheatathai4804 Před 10 lety +2

    Wow, this is the first time I have heard of lemon cucumber! I would love to taste it :)

  • @dumanhieu
    @dumanhieu Před 10 lety

    Excellent good block of instruction keep up the good work you are doing rto help us learn from your experience thank you John

  • @margokidder9299
    @margokidder9299 Před 10 lety

    My goodness look at that. I have no words. It is wondrous!

  • @SaunyaAmos
    @SaunyaAmos Před 10 lety

    Huge swiss chard plant!!!
    Squirrels ate all my lemon cucumbers, white cucumbers and popcorn corn last summer

  • @amy3458
    @amy3458 Před 3 lety +1

    Fordhook Giant White Chard is BY FAR my FAVORITE green! They are so good!!! 😋👍🏼❤️

  • @BenjasUberHobby
    @BenjasUberHobby Před 7 lety +1

    Wow that was a huge chard leaf :) Thanks for sharing :)

  • @pitdog62
    @pitdog62 Před 10 lety

    Hello John, I just want to say thanks again for the heirloom seeds. I received my package about a week ago. I am very appreciative for being one of the free seed give away winners. I have grown and saved seeds from Bhut Jolokia (Ghost peppers) and Chocolate Habanera peppers. The Scotch Bonnet peppers you sent me have been impossible to get for free. I’m eagerly looking forward to the spring so that I can grow my first Scotch Bonnet peppers!! You are a man that has made this planet a little better!!

  • @misspomerol
    @misspomerol Před rokem +1

    I live in the Abruzzo region of Italy and we get dinosaur chard like that it’s called BIETOLA MAZA. It’s the size of a thigh-high bush.

  • @billkimp7653
    @billkimp7653 Před 8 lety +1

    john ...luv your videos .....you have too much energy and excitement......

  • @2tommyrad
    @2tommyrad Před 10 lety

    "A wet comb might tame that cowlick. " - Mattie Ross
    Hey John, started watching your vids last week and I am really enjoying them. Thanks.

  • @matthewgibby
    @matthewgibby Před 10 lety

    Hey John, I love how you taste things as you go in your garden! Your reaction after eating that fig was priceless. Great advice on fruit trees. I have a half acre yard where I'm growing over 60 fruit trees with over 30 in the front yard. I have to grow figs in pots but can't wait to taste a fresh one that I grew myself.

  • @GregJoshuaW
    @GregJoshuaW Před 10 lety +2

    John - that fig was so good it almost made you cry on camera. Man it looks delicious.

  • @Sonee777
    @Sonee777 Před 3 lety

    Wow so nicely grown 👍👍

  • @DumpsterMarcus
    @DumpsterMarcus Před 10 lety

    holy swiss chard!!!! wow. i love the bolivian cucumbers!! i grew them this year and they are soooo good and even the lemon ones are really good too!! love you videos!! hope all is well!!

  • @brithegoddess
    @brithegoddess Před 2 lety

    I just love this channel!

  • @rodolphfarah200
    @rodolphfarah200 Před 8 lety +3

    Dear John. I already had the experience of planting Fordhook Giant swisschard, and the results were unbelievable. It produced 2.5 kg of green leaves per month for about 4.5 months. The plantation was completely organic, and the leaves were similar to yours, 80 cm length. What I am more interested to know is the Sweet Gomme tree? I found nothing in the internet that matches the words, can you please identify it more?
    Thank you and keep the good work.

  • @freebird2924
    @freebird2924 Před 9 lety

    WoW! Chard Heaven! You GOooo...John!

  • @spc4ag
    @spc4ag Před 10 lety +1

    Looks like im loading up on the wood chips next spring. Awesome chard.

  • @gardenerbob8058
    @gardenerbob8058 Před 8 lety +1

    Swiss Chard is my families favorite Green leafy to grow.
    In my area is grows so well.
    We prefer to grow the big white stem verity.
    And our soil isn't the best but yet is still grows very well.

  • @suburbanhomestead
    @suburbanhomestead Před 10 lety

    Bolivian cucumber! I'm gonna have to try that next year

  • @AdventureChris
    @AdventureChris Před 10 lety +7

    I love how when your talking about food and your mouth starts watering and you have to stop talking and swallow lol :D 11:48

  • @tyronesart
    @tyronesart Před 10 lety +6

    john you almost cried when you bit into that fig lol........Awsome!

    • @wanik4
      @wanik4 Před 6 lety +1

      That's how he got when he juiced cannabis. So cool!!!

  • @gardenkeeper707
    @gardenkeeper707 Před 10 lety

    so pumped on your chard

  • @michellecastillo8262
    @michellecastillo8262 Před 10 lety

    Wow that is massive!

  • @alaskansourdoughwormsgarde4392

    Be thankful u can plant different things. Here in Alaska we are stuck with few things to grow.

  • @Emiliapocalypse
    @Emiliapocalypse Před 5 lety +1

    You’re right, you could cover an entire family with pico de gallo and wrap them up in that leaf. It is HUGE!
    😂 🍃 ✌️Love the info, thanks!

  • @CryptoNana
    @CryptoNana Před 10 lety

    Inspirational!

  • @Southerngardener27
    @Southerngardener27 Před 10 lety

    Wow that's crazy how big that leaf is

  • @norxcontacts
    @norxcontacts Před 10 lety

    That Chard is insane!
    You should make a video Juicing those massive leaves.

  • @bart_seavey
    @bart_seavey Před 10 lety +1

    Mittleider uses sawdust as part of the growing medium, which is the same thing as wood chips but breaks down faster.

  • @vmcshannon
    @vmcshannon Před 10 lety

    I grew some almost that big a couple years ago. But this year I didn't plan very well so they didn't get going before frost. Great tasting!

  • @cthomasct61
    @cthomasct61 Před 3 měsíci

    Thts crazy....I've not ever seen a Swiss shard leaf tht big....omg...it's as big as the whole top of his body.....wow...1❤

  • @truthseeker9561
    @truthseeker9561 Před 3 lety

    Duuuuuudddeee!
    I was excited about 12 inch chard leaves till I seen this!😂

  • @chasewhitmore5121
    @chasewhitmore5121 Před 10 lety

    HAHAHA peek a boo! That leaf is massive!

  • @purewonka
    @purewonka Před 10 lety

    I ate Bolivian cucumbers in Ecuador a few years ago. Wasn't sure what they were at the time. Thanks.

  • @Andrew_P86
    @Andrew_P86 Před 10 lety +1

    My swiss chard this year was about 2 1/2 feet tall, so pretty close to that size. It's all about the soil.

  • @lesbetts5694
    @lesbetts5694 Před 4 lety

    thats awesome thats my favorite to grow but mines always tiny cause me and child eat it before it grows to full potential.

  • @BetterThanNada1
    @BetterThanNada1 Před 9 lety

    Yikes! I could do a *fan* dance behind one of John's chard leaves! :-)

  • @johnarizona3820
    @johnarizona3820 Před 10 lety

    Great job!!! hey man share the details of the "fungal dominated compost" you mentioned please. Thanks bro!

  • @joelyazell7380
    @joelyazell7380 Před 2 lety

    I grew six plants this year,and the leaves are all that big. Giant stems That are two feet tall from where I harvested. November 19 and the number of leaves has cut back,but not the size. Compost only and they are the biggest I’ve ever had.

  • @isabelthomson5179
    @isabelthomson5179 Před 6 lety

    omg this is amazing something I am going to try in my garden my Silverberg and kale is so tiny 😢

  • @jo232409
    @jo232409 Před 10 lety

    I learned an important thing about Achocha this year: don't grow in pots, it needs to be in the ground. I think I got a pound of seeds, if anyone is Portland, OR is looking for Achocha seeds, please drop me a note!

  • @PrincessShaBooBoo
    @PrincessShaBooBoo Před 6 lety

    😳 That chard is huge!!!

  • @alexgleason5773
    @alexgleason5773 Před 3 lety

    The Swiss Chard section had me crying 🤣

  • @greenhorncity3747
    @greenhorncity3747 Před 7 lety

    you've given me something to strive for! thanks! my chard looks good, but not that good.

  • @VirginiaRux
    @VirginiaRux Před 10 lety

    Figs make my heart sing.

  • @DR-zt9gs
    @DR-zt9gs Před 10 lety

    Great growth and beautiful dark green color! What variety of Swiss chard is that?

  • @2tommyrad
    @2tommyrad Před 10 lety +1

    A couple questions for ya John... By the way, not only is that an extremely large chard leaf but, there is NO evidence of pests [holes, spots, etc] at all. Pretty amazing.
    How do you deal with snails/slugs?
    Have you ever used Agricola's Mineral Mix [4-8-4] in your soil?

  • @donfrancis1400
    @donfrancis1400 Před 10 lety

    Hey John, it looked like there was someone stealing your produce in the background. Nice Chard!

  • @NunyaBizniz
    @NunyaBizniz Před 3 lety

    Ill have to try figs..

  • @justgivemethetruth954
    @justgivemethetruth954 Před 10 lety

    Wow, that is truly amazing ... was that from using compost tea? I'm afraid if I saw that in the supermarket I would not have a bag big enough to carry that huge chard. That is truly incredible.

  • @corporatejungles
    @corporatejungles Před 10 lety

    Can you do some more stuff about the east coast growing. I am in NC and would appreciate more info on growing in that zone.

  • @slasher298
    @slasher298 Před 10 lety

    That shard is nuts! lol

  • @NiniGirl
    @NiniGirl Před 10 lety

    I saw your other video. There are so many different wood chip composts out there. Can you be more specific on what type. Redwood, Fur etc?

  • @StanTheMan709
    @StanTheMan709 Před 10 lety

    That chard was bigger than most rhubarb..
    Stoked to see how you dehydrate and hopefully my local gravel hit has rock dust??

  • @kurlikew
    @kurlikew Před 8 lety

    Would love to have links here to where we can buy your recommended brand of each of the products you mention. Thanks!

  • @Trafalgher
    @Trafalgher Před 10 lety +6

    John can you brix test that swiss chard?

  • @JodiannWalker77
    @JodiannWalker77 Před 5 lety

    I've never seen those giant swiss chard varieties anywhere in Jamaica. It would be nice if we could get the seeds.

  • @WanKiddFong
    @WanKiddFong Před 10 lety

    WHOA.... that thing could feed 3 families

  • @watwudscoobydoo1770
    @watwudscoobydoo1770 Před 10 lety

    It hasn't frosted yet in Sonoma? Wow its frosted for several nights here in the South Bay Santa Cruz mountains.

  • @tinamc2529
    @tinamc2529 Před 10 lety

    Hahaha!!! Love it!!!

  • @Dollapfin
    @Dollapfin Před 7 lety

    Chard is the greatest green. Me no like kale or spinach but me love chard.

  • @thuffman44
    @thuffman44 Před 10 lety

    So, i'm a newbie and I grew my first Swiss Chard plant. For the first time ever, I ate the leaves raw and had to spit it out.. Waaay too bitter to eat raw or in a salad. I tried to juice it, but still way too bitter and had to dump my juice in my compost pile - LOL. I dont know why Swiss Chard is so extremely bitter (maybe its because my diet sucks and I'm not used to eating bitter greens?) I love to eat spinach raw, and Kale, and Beet greens. I wont stop trying and I'll just keep amending my soil with more and more rock dust

  • @happybuddyperson
    @happybuddyperson Před 10 lety

    Did you get any pawpaws this year off your Asimina triloba, John? I found out about them this year and was able to get my hands on 13 or so pawpaw fruits this year. They taste like bubblegum, really ripe bananas, custard, and really good honey dew melon all mixed together. It was such a beautiful flavour, and they all were tasty. I ate about 3 named varieties at a nursery in Niagara-on-the-lake, Canada, called Grimo nut nursery, forget which varieties they had though, and the other 10 pawpaws were a seed grown variety that was smaller fruit, but still delicious like the bigger medium mango sized named pawpaws. Pawpaws should be called Canadian/American mango, because that's what they look like, and they're only good from the tree. I got over 100 seeds from all the collected fruits, and am going to grow them along with my 7 already planted pawpaws.

  • @wendiland
    @wendiland Před 10 lety

    Wow! That Swiss Chard looks like an alien plant. So cool! Btw - do you need to help pollinate to get those cucumbers to fruit? Mine usually gets flowers but flowers drop afterwards...do you know what it may be lacking?

    • @nathanhunt5470
      @nathanhunt5470 Před 9 lety

      It happened too me you need to wait out farther into the session it will produse some latter flowers that have little bulbs that turn into the fruit

  • @timkhay9209
    @timkhay9209 Před 3 lety

    Wow ! What kind of fertilizer do U use to grow giant Swiss chard ? 👍

  • @evankeller4253
    @evankeller4253 Před 10 lety

    The Achocha to me is a little reminiscent of Sicyos angulatus or bur cucumber which is considered a noxious weed in some parts of the U.S. Makes you wonder at what point in the stage of selective growing Achocha stands in relation to bur cucumber....

  • @HFTLMate
    @HFTLMate Před 10 lety +1

    cool vid man I like how yo enjoyed eatin that fig lmao

  • @pascalecaroline8559
    @pascalecaroline8559 Před 10 lety +1

    You should sell some of those seeds you harvest, I can only find standard type seeds in stores. I would like to experiment with different varieties for growing here in phx.

    • @kinnaripandya8463
      @kinnaripandya8463 Před 10 lety

      I live in Tempe. Where can I find standard type seeds.I have vine
      growing in my garden right now but for next year i would like to have some seeds.

    • @MatanuskaHIGH
      @MatanuskaHIGH Před 8 lety

      SSE or seed savers exchanges has hundreds and thousands of heirloom varieties..they offer a few hundred to non members but thousands to members and you can trade with people and everything.

  • @MyLittleGardenPlace
    @MyLittleGardenPlace Před 10 lety

    My Bright Light Swiss Chard did that this year after I added rock dust, kelp and compost tea. I have way too much of it! It has roots that look like small tree trunks!

  • @devlon01
    @devlon01 Před 10 lety +1

    Hey John, does the extra large swiss chard taste bitter the larger it gets?

  • @eeuuggiinn
    @eeuuggiinn Před 10 lety +1

    Hi John, I love your videos but I had one question.
    I love that you use fungal dominated wood chips but dont leafy greens tend to like bacteria dominated compost?
    I think that acid loving plants love fungal dominated compost no? I look forward to your input John. Great job!

    • @djcbanks
      @djcbanks Před 5 lety

      Most leafy soft stem plants will benefit from Endo mycorrhizae and trees or woody stem plants benefit from ecto mycorrhizae. But as bolinki said, all plants benefit from mycorrhiza fungi. It provides a symbiotic relationship to the roots of a plant and simply put, they provide each other with the things they need to grow and live. It will also help your plants be more tolerant to disease, drought and pests. Soil biology is such a fascinating world.

  • @elgallodeojinaga6909
    @elgallodeojinaga6909 Před 10 lety

    Ive seen chard like that growing in some runoff area of an aquaponics system.

  • @jammygrammy1564
    @jammygrammy1564 Před 10 lety

    WHOA!!!

  • @figettablecharms4146
    @figettablecharms4146 Před 5 lety

    JOHN dont let me come cloose to your Fig tree..I have Turkish gray , Turkish Brown, and other Figs ,I have propagated Fiigs soo much have 30 of them in buckets .hoping my Figs that big one day..Gray Figs also Grows slower too more likes hot weather than the cold.they are not very cold hardy at all.

  • @organicgardening987
    @organicgardening987 Před 10 lety +1

    Do you know where to get the achocha seeds? Thanks!

  • @limasarran7868
    @limasarran7868 Před 9 lety

    what do you feed your Swiss chard with?

  • @nitpnz1
    @nitpnz1 Před 10 lety

    is this the New Zealand native spinach coming into view on 12m06sec after the Swiss Chard segment?
    If so - here on the South Island's East Coast of NZ it grows wild with red coloured leaves in the beachfront sandhills..
    In the less hostile environment of a fertile home garden the plant spreads out in a carpet whose green leaves and tips are nothing short of delicious when steamed as a main meal and served with a poached egg on top
    Di, from NZ

  • @SimonHergott
    @SimonHergott Před 10 lety

    It's been around -13 degrees Celsius(7 Fahrenheit for you Americans) in British Columbia for a while. Gardening was finished so long ago up here. Jealous of your climate - and your fig tree especially! 14:22 was so damn funny!!

  • @framel44
    @framel44 Před 10 lety

    Now that is some KIK-ASS Swiss Chard WOW!!, great stuff John, I'm using wood chips in my garden for the first year, last season, can't wait to see what I get next season.
    Frank

  • @busyinVegas
    @busyinVegas Před 10 lety

    John, I'm so jealous that you can pick the fig off the tree and eat it like that. If I do that with my figs, I get an extra bite of ants. Seeds, ants- they're both crunchy so I guess it really doesn't matter. Anyhow, I've given up trying to keep the ants off the tree. I love figs so I guess this is a good way to keep me from eating them day and night, if at all:)

  • @renogreens4273
    @renogreens4273 Před 10 lety

    In "Super Size Your Vegt....video" she states she adds mushroom spores or compost to the wood chips to innoculate; is it the mushroom compost or mushroom spores she adds?

    • @MatanuskaHIGH
      @MatanuskaHIGH Před 8 lety

      spores..the wood grows the mushrooms which break it down..

  • @JCJourney
    @JCJourney Před 10 lety

    you can use that leaf as a salad plate and eat the "plate" together.

  • @mamaspooky7806
    @mamaspooky7806 Před 9 lety

    Do you believe in compost tea?

  • @windella
    @windella Před 8 lety

    Is the swiss chard edible? Is it tough?

  • @ginsederp
    @ginsederp Před 4 lety +3

    11:43 You can wrap a child in that.

    • @jtrose6995
      @jtrose6995 Před 3 lety

      Ginsederp Derpy yum sounds delicious!

  • @sheridunham8935
    @sheridunham8935 Před 10 lety

    Where can you buy the azomite

  • @deebadeeba9220
    @deebadeeba9220 Před 4 lety

    Wow! The Swiss Chard leaves are bigger than you are! LOL

  • @JoeFeser
    @JoeFeser Před 10 lety

    What is the Brix reading?

  • @JustOneAsbesto
    @JustOneAsbesto Před 10 lety

    Middle of October? Does it usually take you that long between filming and uploading?

  • @benice3117
    @benice3117 Před 7 lety

    John, can you send me some seeds for the lemon cucumbers please?