GROWING ABUNDANCE Using BIODIVERSITY: NO ANIMAL FORAGERS, NO PESTICIDES, NO HERBICIDES, NO CHEMICALS

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • It's the end of the first week of July, and the gardening is exploding with growth. Come see all the VEGETABLES, HERBS & EDIBLE FLOWERS growing in the garden! You will also see ALL the OTHER PLANTS growing in the garden, there to help protect the food we grow from the many foragers that could come and eat them, there to attract the predators that work with us to create our abundance. The birds, frogs, toads and predatory insects! GARDENING GUIDED by NATURE, through GROWING BIODIVERSITY throughout the garden, and outside the garden. Setting up the conditions so that all of nature helps us Create ABUNDANCE, for wildlife outside the garden, and for us inside the garden!

Komentáře • 112

  • @asbjorgvanderveer5050
    @asbjorgvanderveer5050 Před měsícem +15

    You've done a wonderful job restoring your land into an abundant paradise. Thank-you for sharing it with us!

  • @usethatherb4913
    @usethatherb4913 Před měsícem +8

    Diversity rules! It keeps us harmonious with nature. Thank you for sharing your abundance. Blessings!

  • @Welcometothewild
    @Welcometothewild Před měsícem +5

    My sir i hope you have many children and may they have many more. We need more people just like you on this planet. Never cease to be amazing

  • @GrandmomZoo
    @GrandmomZoo Před měsícem +3

    Fish pedicures are fabulous!❤❤❤

  • @drrahilakurdi5943
    @drrahilakurdi5943 Před měsícem +1

    Good morning ❤❤❤❤

  • @GrandmomZoo
    @GrandmomZoo Před měsícem +3

    You are rocking the permie badge friend! Everything looks fantastic!❤

  • @AlmostaGreenAcre-zs5eu
    @AlmostaGreenAcre-zs5eu Před měsícem +2

    Beautiful garden 🙂

  • @ManivaHouse
    @ManivaHouse Před měsícem +2

    💚

  • @jesse5027
    @jesse5027 Před měsícem +2

    So lovely to hear your voice & be granted your teachings, sir. Blessings on you & this land!

  • @barbsoddznendz1896
    @barbsoddznendz1896 Před měsícem +1

    Wow your gardens are just bursting with life! Loved the video.

  • @Laura-Redrockgsp
    @Laura-Redrockgsp Před měsícem +2

    I've got so much grass that took over.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +3

      Yes. Grass can take over quickly. When I see it, I pull it out. After a rain is best. You look for the base of the grass plant, gather together the base of all the stems, and pull. You can usually get it all out this way. Don’t use it as mulch, and don’t put it in your regular compost pile.

  • @lindaclough9234
    @lindaclough9234 Před měsícem +2

    We live in Texas, have those fire ants all over, I use to go bare footed when I lived in Washington State Miss that!

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      We have those too, but not everywhere. Curly dock, plantain or Jewelweed all help in case of fire ant bites.

  • @rachelhobbit
    @rachelhobbit Před měsícem +1

    Just amazing, so inspiring. Love the fish pedicure!

  • @laurakamal8842
    @laurakamal8842 Před měsícem +2

    Wonderful video! Thank you so much!

  • @samanthabrown9671
    @samanthabrown9671 Před měsícem +2

    The gardens look awesome

  • @Tiffany-Rose
    @Tiffany-Rose Před 25 dny +1

    So many helpful tips! I'm definitely saving this video to look back on. Thank you for sharing. Your garden is so diverse and abundant! 🙏

  • @AlsanPine
    @AlsanPine Před měsícem +5

    man! what would i give to have water going through my little orchard! looking really great. do you have any ginseng? you have perfect spots for it. great as always to see the magic. nice ending 🙂

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for this suggestion. No I don’t. Are there different kinds? What would you recommend?

    • @AlsanPine
      @AlsanPine Před měsícem +1

      @@WillowsGreenPermacultureamerican ginseng would be the native choice. it is less potent and has milder taste. asian, ie. chinese, ie. korean ginseng is more potent and tastes more of dirt🙂that is only a problem if you want to consume it as tea. i am not a fan so i take it in capsules. they need to be under tree canopy. dapple shade. protected from harsh direct sun. it takes at least 7yrs for good potency so you might get started if you want some 🙂

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem

      @@AlsanPine Thank you! I have a local grower of native plants whose plant material is of excellent quality. Natural Themes Nursery in Frankford. I'll see if I can get some from her.

  • @raddasra7084
    @raddasra7084 Před měsícem +2

    hey i got one of your videos recommened a few month back and subscribed instantly, watching on and off. I do like that you radiate very positive energy. I also watch Exploring Alternatives, saw a thumbnail of a garden and was like, that looks familiar. Who would have guessed, it was your garden!
    I might be very lucky in the near future to have my own garden. Keep it up sir! :)

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you! You know, even if all you have is a window sill, you can grow stuff! Welcome to Willows Green Permaculture!

  • @ayelean9397
    @ayelean9397 Před měsícem +3

    Another great and informative video! I haven’t tried to use jewelweed as a mosquito repellent but now I’m definitely going to try that, we have an abundance of it growing in our yard. I’ve also been trying to let our wild lettuce grow too. Your forest inspires me to get more plants in the ground and grow many plants together - like your patch of dill, calendula and cilantro. Thanks!

  • @ssgmymslife
    @ssgmymslife Před měsícem +2

    ❤❤❤ such diversity. Love it.

  • @SpecialSP
    @SpecialSP Před měsícem +2

    Thanks for sharing your toes with us! I loved the fish …

  • @danielapettus7693
    @danielapettus7693 Před měsícem +2

    Very healthy and beautiful ❤

  • @grandfatherrabbit
    @grandfatherrabbit Před měsícem +2

    Such a beautiful garden!

  • @shames59
    @shames59 Před měsícem +1

    love your show working on my back yard planting pollinators and veges perennials and annuals retired now so looking to make a little paradise

  • @creekwoodfarmandhomesteadc6440

    Cool stuff

  • @florincemasapit7695
    @florincemasapit7695 Před měsícem +1

    Wow, everything looks so nice and i love it so much

  • @rogerkenworthy6380
    @rogerkenworthy6380 Před měsícem +1

    What an amazing garden and with loads of useful information. Thanks, Roger

  • @bonstar3221
    @bonstar3221 Před měsícem +1

    I always learn something from you
    THANK YOU😊

  • @garrettpeters3438
    @garrettpeters3438 Před měsícem +2

    I will have to find some jewel weed at our garden! I have never heard of using it as an insect repellent.

  • @JunkyardGold
    @JunkyardGold Před měsícem +2

    You've got a nice garden

  • @Greenmahn333
    @Greenmahn333 Před měsícem +1

    👍

  • @sheamaloney5527
    @sheamaloney5527 Před měsícem +2

    Great video!
    Can you talk about the Daylily’s some time please?

  • @lucschoonen
    @lucschoonen Před měsícem +1

    you are doing so many unusual things, I love it! I don't know how you manage all this tho

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you! If you have a look at more of our videos, you will start to see how we set it up so nature helps us manage in so many ways.

    • @lucschoonen
      @lucschoonen Před měsícem +1

      @@WillowsGreenPermaculture I will, thanks

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      @@lucschoonenthank you for watching!

  • @KellySandra716
    @KellySandra716 Před měsícem +2

    What is your planting zone? how magnificent!!!

  • @CoastalGardensNW
    @CoastalGardensNW Před měsícem +1

    Amazing love your garden new sub here 👍

  • @aaronschmidt9753
    @aaronschmidt9753 Před měsícem +1

    Looks amazing! I'd love to work on your farm!

  • @doinacampean9132
    @doinacampean9132 Před měsícem +3

    28:13 - what berries are those?

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +2

      They’re a non-native honeysuckle. Apparently not edible. The plant is considered invasive here, however, I’ve had to pull one or two out where something else needed the space, and I didn’t find it difficult to pull out at all. Nothing at all like buckthorn, for example.

  • @happyhobbit8450
    @happyhobbit8450 Před měsícem +1

    The birds don't eat much -- the saying 'you eat like a bird' :)
    My Amaranth is a burgundy red -- would it be better at attracting pollinators or some pests will go for it rather than your more edible plants?
    Thank you for the tour through that wonderful garden!
    I would like to try making ponds and chinampa ... I think it would be possible here but it's just me -- I'll have to research it more.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Amaranth is definitely a plant animals can browse on. I’m pretty sure some dear are some of ours last week. Trimmed off the top. We have burgundy and also green amaranth. For ponds, all you really need to do is find where water collects after a rain. If it stays there longer than anywhere else, you’ve got a spot where you can bit by bit start creating a pond and later chinampa.

  • @pilgrimshodl8628
    @pilgrimshodl8628 Před měsícem +2

    What were you using for mosquito repellent in at the start? I did not catch what you said. Thank you

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +2

      Jewelweed. You can also use yarrow, or burdock. In the same way. Also, any aromatic herb might even work. I haven’t tried herbs yet, because I would use too many of our herbs to do this. However, we now have a ton of catnip, so I am going to start using it. Apparently it keeps ticks away too.

    • @kleineroteHex
      @kleineroteHex Před měsícem +2

      Jewelweed, I think also called touch me not.
      I have lots/had lots before I pulled it out of my walkway and before we had hot and no rain. Once what is left goes to seed it will be everywhere again😊.
      I tend to rub catmint and lemonbalm over my skin, grows all over as well.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      @@kleineroteHexyes. I use those too.

  • @happyhobbit8450
    @happyhobbit8450 Před měsícem +1

    I thought you would have talked about 'no animal foragers' ... all the other permaculture people say you need animals to complete the cycle. I have chickens and it's great to have fresh eggs and the poop for fertilizer but I buy the feed and wanted to figure out how to not buy feed or just do away with them because they tie me to the place.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      I talked a little bit about the fact that animals take very little from our garden because we plant native species for them outside the garden. In a sense, the animals that complete the cycle for us and help us out are the wild ones. The birds. The frogs. The deer. Etc. You are right the raising goats or chickens makes it hard to leave home for a few days. I would like a couple of goats for milk, cheese and yoghurt, but I haven’t considered myself ready for that adaptation.

  • @erinjohnson8140
    @erinjohnson8140 Před měsícem +1

    I live using hay in my garden. But I've had issues finding a source that hasn't been sprayed by pesticide in Demossville KY. Have you heard of the grazon / gliphosate issue??

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem

      I have to admit, I haven’t been paying attention to the news. I am aware, however, of the major problems with glyphosate and have been aware of it since the beginning. It is poison after all and should not be in our food. Wouldn’t want to touch it with a ten foot pole as they say. What is the grazon/glyphosate issue?

    • @erinjohnson8140
      @erinjohnson8140 Před měsícem

      @@WillowsGreenPermaculture Grazon is a persistent broadleaf herbicideforever chemical that they spray on the hay fields. It stays in the hay and when it starts to break down on your soil it kills your plants. Not for just that year either. It stays in the soil for years!! So Im afraid to use hay from here. I ask places if they know if it's been sprayed and no one has an answer. Then I ask the growers and they all say yes they spray. Ugh

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem

      @@erinjohnson8140rather than use hay in the garden, I would suggest leaves, and also compost you can generate from kitchen scraps and the weeds you pull and so on. I collect the bags of leaves people put out in the fall for the municipality to pick up. I cover the garden with them.

  • @bitethebullet8213
    @bitethebullet8213 Před měsícem +2

    any concerns with ticks? that's an ongoing issue with my property.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for your comment. I am no more worried than I am with any of the other wildlife. We have ticks here. We also have catnip growing everywhere, and when I think of it, I wipe myself down with it. Ticks dislike catnip. Of course, it’s the summer now. Ticks are inactive here in the summer. Spring and fall is when we find them. I rarely think about them in the summer. Even in the spring and fall, I don’t worry too much. It’s a small percentage of some kinds of ticks that carry lime disease. I could also worry about coyotes, bears, falling trees, cars, pesticide runoff from local farms in the creek, and more. But then, I wouldn’t find time to start living, and enjoying life. I’m not careless, but I do believe we are all here for a reason, and until we have fulfilled what it is each of us is here for, we’re here for the duration. I’m tempted to go on, but this is a gardening and living guided by nature channel, not a spiritual channel. 😊

    • @kleineroteHex
      @kleineroteHex Před měsícem +1

      ​@@WillowsGreenPermaculture❤

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      @@kleineroteHex😊

  • @august1731
    @august1731 Před měsícem +1

    I’m having real trouble with powdery mildew on my courgettes, cucumber and squash’s. What would you recommend?

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      Try watering from below. If you water by hand, you can use a wand that will allow you to water from below comfortably. Also, avoid watering too much. Now I get powdery mildew every year on my squash and they they get through and give me a Harvest anyway. It just doesn’t look as nice.so long as I’m watering below, it doesn’t spread. Another thing you can do to make your plants stronger, and therefore more resistant to powdery mildew, and so on is to bury the vines at the leaf nodes, using mulch, or soil, or leaves, or even weeds. The vines will sprout roots at the leaf nodes and make your plant stronger it will grow new vines. It will get more fruit

    • @august1731
      @august1731 Před měsícem +1

      @@WillowsGreenPermaculture thank you so much!

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      @@august1731you’re welcome!

  • @Judi-CA
    @Judi-CA Před měsícem +2

    Love what you both have done to your land. However, it’s bothersome that YT gardeners don’t show what zone they’re gardening in! I had to dig in your “About” it shows Canada but what Zone? I want to watch successful permaculture gardens that thrive in my zone 9b.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem

      Unfortunately, I can’t even get an accurate idea of my climate zone. I am convinced our current map is totally out of date. It says we are 5b. But I think we are at least 6a, if not 6b. I used to live in Toronto and it feels like Toronto here. Some parts of Toronto are 7a. So as you can see, you’re starting to get the picture… I’m doing my best to help people to learn to grow their food using nature as guide, living with with, inviting nature into the gardens. The principles are the same in all climate zones. The details will vary.

  • @michaelgroves3460
    @michaelgroves3460 Před měsícem +2

    You're funny if you think no animals are involved in your garden.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +2

      It’s just the opposite. I am always talking about how I attract animals to the garden to help us. All kinds of animals.

    • @michaelgroves3460
      @michaelgroves3460 Před měsícem +1

      @@WillowsGreenPermaculture Good... the title with no animal foragers made me think you didn't think you had animals taking part in your garden. I love animals in my gardens, though ground hogs are not really welcome in most of mine. I don't really love vole infestations either... but with time the predators will balance them out. I guess I should have spent the time to watch more, though my gardens take most of my time and I don't have much to spare. Nice garden! The vines in the garlic are called mile a minute, a very nasty invasive worth keeping out of the garden.

    • @WillowsGreenPermaculture
      @WillowsGreenPermaculture  Před měsícem +1

      @@michaelgroves3460 Yeah. The title would be better if it's said 'relatively speaking' but of course that would make it too long, if it isn't too long already. I try to give as much info as I can in the title. We call mile a minute 'bindweed' here. At least, that's what I think it is. In the morning glory family.