Very convincing as soon as he said Cassava at the start of the video. The 4 children who survived 40 days after the plane crash on the Amazon mostly relied on Cassava flour they had! Apparently it's a very important survival food.
@@ellisprescott1415Florida is the hardest state to grow food in that there is. Our soil is sand, our temps are too high, and the sun is brutal….lots of bugs too.
This video has absolutely blown my mind! Almost half of your featured plants are growing in my surroundings (in the Philippines), of which either I thought had no use, or had no clear idea how to use or eat them. I was in my garden just yesterday, chopping down lots of bidens alba, thinking they were just weeds. I was so wrong! I can't wait to go back into my garden and find the survivors and say sorry lol.
I am so proud of myself .. I am growing 20 out of the 30 he mentioned in this video. I also have beauty berries, mangos, avocados, guava, blueberries, 4 types of bananas & plantains, yam , etc etc 😅so happy.
This is an awesome video. Thank you so much! I recognized my oregano in here (in Nayarit, Mexico), or a very close cousin more round leaved). I was surprised your list didn't include purslane, as it is so edible and common, but maybe not so much in Florida? I found and identified a soft edible thistle here, very wonderful and mild, like soft lettuce. But, you made my day with the Cuban Oregano. I love it more than regular oregano.
I'm so grateful to have found this video and your channel! I have such limited space, but have just started growing rosemary, everglade tomatoes, dandelions, and lamsquarter spinach. Can't wait to plant some of the incredible plants you've described here! Thank you!
In Jamaica 🇯🇲 we call pigeon peas, 'gungo peas' 😁. It is indeed one of our staple peas that we enjoy cooked in rice with coconut milk and seasoned with scallions, thyme, pimento seed, and a scotch bonnet pepper 😋
@@gogogardener peas or beans are direct sown here (northern NY USA) presoaking makes them sprout faster but peas might fall apart if not very careful. Many blessings everyone.
OMG that is heaven on earth.Unfortunately in can’t grow all of tropical fruits and vegetables that you have in Europe. I miss having papaya, banana, jackfruit, mango, cassava , moringa tree and many more in my garden😢
The channel Arktopia shows how he is growing tropical food in snowy Canada using solar greenhouse. Not easy or cheap I imagine lol! Pretty impressive to follow him and see him do it though! I live in hot weather too but not as humid so we could do sugar cane but would have to really add a lot of water bc it is sooo dry in SoCal. People do manage papaya and mango and other tropicals here though!
Hey brother. It's been a while since I've last seen one of your videos. What a beautiful life you live. I love that you strive to do better and learn each day. Love you!
I've been looking for a video like this for so long!! Trying to plan a food forest in Central America and this is just what I needed! Thank you so much!
Wow once again proving Rob that we can all get off the shopping trolley system of waste. We cant rely on governments but it is just crazy that we are not educated to know this-why and earth is food traveling hundreds of miles, arriving in cellophane packets when we could all be eating really fresh free produce!! Super fan of your educational blogs-thank you so much!
Thanks for a great video. l am from Florida but now in Mexico. Tropical high desert so same things grow here. Had a permaculture food forest in my back yard in Miami. l would add 2 others to your list. My favorite green, Malabar spinach (a vine) and Florida native Soapberry tree. You pay a lot of money for those and they are better than detergents.
Thanks so much. I've been following you for a few years but my being a senior citizen has led to much local resistance. The HOA generally restricts us growing things beyond the pattern book.. Neighbors argue it's easier just to go to the grocery store. I'm still going to try small and get motivated. This video encouraged me to get outside more often.
It's not right that they try to restrict you from growing food! I am always shocked to remember that this is a thing in the US, as I am from Australia. It's easier to go to the grocery store if you ignore the environmental, physical and mental health benefits to growing your own food. Good luck with your garden and I hope you find a way despite these unfair restrictions!
Plant ornamental corn and ornamental peppers! To start weakening their stand. Also sorrel is good for greens and very beautiful. Also a perennial. Micro tomatoes are less than 12 inches high and can sit on a porch step. No body can tell us we can't have a potted plant outside, especially when it's tiny and beautiful. Lol. Parsley or other herbs are as pretty as any flower and edible. Also lots and lots of edible flowers. Many blessings everyone everywhere.
Okinawa spinach is one of my favorites. Very easy to grow and propagate. Stick a cutting in the ground and you got a new plant. One other good thing about rosemary is that you can use it around the garden as a pest deterrent.
You are the reason why I started gardening! Thanks for sharing your talent and knowledge with us. I plan on supporting your cause as well, but was wondering why the bundle does not include clippings as shared in the video. Also, when will you get the pumpkin seeds and the cranberry hibiscus seeds? Thanks so much!
You probably want someone who lives there to do that. Floridians don't necessarily understand northern climates and northerners certainly don't understand the climates of the American Deep South (let alone FL) or the Southwest either. Yankee riffraff moves south and try to recreate England, failing miserably. I would look at regional foraging books to expand your list of "stealth edibles," but there is *a lot* written about conventional, cold climate, vegetable and fruit cultivation. That would be most English language gardening channels.
@@janew5351 I would definitely see what temperature zone you are in for starters. We have zoned in America with our first and last start dates. Look for what you can plant and when I’m your zone. For sure you could use a similar zone if the frost first and last normal dates are similar from some zone in the US. Might have to back up a week or two for that zone unless your close.
Just discovered your Channel Robin. Really dig your Enthusiasm and Knowledge of Edible Plants! Also the World Really needs all these Videos you make now so people can live Healthier lives!! Good job bro!!
Love these but I wish you would make more versatile content on this topic for more regions all over but nonetheless thank you for this information GOD BLESS! Peaceful growing and abundant harvest be to all! One love
Also,Thank you Robin so much for inspiring and teaching us how to grow food. My granddaughter and I want to grow and share, with others. Keep up the good work, you and your organization are a tremendous blessing.
Thank you so much for all this information. I was going to write down all the plants to buy then somehow. Im glad I waited to the end . Im going to read every line on the description and I will order “ “the bon-del ASAP”! Thank you.
Hello Dear Friend! You can learn about the Food Forest Starter Bundle and place an order on the website: robingreenfield.org/foodforest Health and happiness to you, Robin
You are an awesome human being. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, I love the way you are so natural and did your research to teach others the good news you test from your own experience.
Ask town/city for space. Or start community garden. I had only to ask and had wheelchair accessible garden in less than a year. Many blessings everyone.
Thanks so much for sharing this. I absolutely love the content given. I’m excitedly looking forward to getting my mine to start. Pammie from Chicago Illinois 🎉
Water spinach (Ipomoea [sp?] aquatica) is *illegal* in the state of Florida because it is seen as a looming aquatic weed. After water hyacinths, the state is paranoid about that. Malabar spinach is good, if you like it and are willing to trellis it.
Hola hello beautiful world God Almighty bless all ❤️ Thank you beyond words u are awesome keep shining your brightest light on us hopefully for God as well i wish i could do this have lots of health issues's not able to i eat gluten free and i only eat turkey and chicken,fish and still keep getting health issues's God Almighty bless you ❤️🌈🌟✨🌈❤️
Would love to see the equivalent for western Washington. Annuals in an urban lot have not priven to be time or cost effective but i would love to get edible perennials and self seeders adapted to our special climate where plants do well in spring and soils dry up by early July and all the way through sept right when you are trying to get annuals maturing
Yuca is the plants we always have in borneo.. We cook the leaves stir fried or curry, and then the roots to make cakes, boiled, steam or fermented.. Same goes to sweet potatoes.. The leaves are my favorites
Love the video. I live in south east kansas zone 6 there are several plants i am growing here. I would love to know which ones will grow here. Thank you
Aloha! Such good info. Big ups for doing Jah works and stewarding our sweet Mother Earth and giving and receiving of the abundance! Quick question, can you ship the "food forest starter bundle" to Hawaii?
God Bless you Robin! What a wonderful, outstanding idea to offer the survival bundle. I'm sure you are busy, but can I suggest another video idea? Many of the foods you mentioned are growing here in my zone 6b Illinois garden very well, but you know if you are just starting out you have no idea that you can grow these things and many midwesterners will never check out your video because they will assume it's all stuff they can't grow. I think if you made a Midwest Survival garden video it would help A LOT of people. I have Egyptian Spinach and it's still producing in my north/east garden on my 1/10th of an acre city lot. I only have two rows of it, and it's covered with row covering now, but here it is Jan 2nd and I'm still harvesting and making salads from it. I also have mulberries, gooseberries, elderberries, basically every berry that will grow here. I can't say enough about the Japanese white yam. THAT is serious amounts of food. I adore the daikon radish and I've started to make flour from my Jerusalem Artichokes aka sunchokes. That right there is a serious no brainer. You can't fail with sunchokes. They are literally plant them and forget them and just come back to harvest.
I have been watching RUclips to get an idea how to start, your survival foods and the bundle leap will help so much in my journey, knowledge and growth.. this front property I have needs to be used as a resource, I will be watching again and again. Your greens looked so delicious 😋
I recently relocated to Europe from Canada and love what you , glad I found your videos I am searching for someone in the Algarve to connect with that does what you do. You can't probably ship to Europe will see what I can find here to start my food forest Thank you
This awesome video - very direct and informative!! Thanks!! Didn't realize there is a spineless variety of Nopales.... wow! Definitely planting this...
Hi this is wicked ....thankyou thankyou...somehow need find easy to grow plants for uk ....but anything is possible !!!! Thankyou for the inspiration !!!!
Thank you very much for this information, it helps a lot. Acoding with my food habits, I need maybe 200m2 of beens, more 200m2 of wheat or amarant or another cereal and olive trees to produce olive oil for a year. I think fruits are very important, banana I completly agree, and the acid and semi-acid fruits like berrys and cherys, but we need also the fatty fruits like avocado and coconut
Very convincing as soon as he said Cassava at the start of the video. The 4 children who survived 40 days after the plane crash on the Amazon mostly relied on Cassava flour they had! Apparently it's a very important survival food.
Wow! That's great to know. Thank you!
Not everyone lives in Florida
@@ellisprescott1415 I know but most live in similar weather
Cassava and sweet potatoes are the survival food during Japanese occupation in Asia.
@@ellisprescott1415Florida is the hardest state to grow food in that there is. Our soil is sand, our temps are too high, and the sun is brutal….lots of bugs too.
This video has absolutely blown my mind! Almost half of your featured plants are growing in my surroundings (in the Philippines), of which either I thought had no use, or had no clear idea how to use or eat them. I was in my garden just yesterday, chopping down lots of bidens alba, thinking they were just weeds. I was so wrong! I can't wait to go back into my garden and find the survivors and say sorry lol.
I am so proud of myself .. I am growing 20 out of the 30 he mentioned in this video. I also have beauty berries, mangos, avocados, guava, blueberries, 4 types of bananas & plantains, yam , etc etc 😅so happy.
This is an awesome video. Thank you so much! I recognized my oregano in here (in Nayarit, Mexico), or a very close cousin more round leaved).
I was surprised your list didn't include purslane, as it is so edible and common, but maybe not so much in Florida?
I found and identified a soft edible thistle here, very wonderful and mild, like soft lettuce.
But, you made my day with the Cuban Oregano. I love it more than regular oregano.
The first youtuber that has pronounced it properly, Yu-kah and not yuck-a. Amazing video, gonna try planting some here in Malaysia!
I'm so grateful to have found this video and your channel! I have such limited space, but have just started growing rosemary, everglade tomatoes, dandelions, and lamsquarter spinach. Can't wait to plant some of the incredible plants you've described here! Thank you!
He should raise rabbits. They would love his plants
In Jamaica 🇯🇲 we call pigeon peas, 'gungo peas' 😁. It is indeed one of our staple peas that we enjoy cooked in rice with coconut milk and seasoned with scallions, thyme, pimento seed, and a scotch bonnet pepper 😋
Pimento seeds?
Thank you for sharing about gungo peas with me Dear Friend!
How do you start the plants?
@@odaliabalbi5541 pigeon peas are like chickpeas I think????? Garbanzo beans??? Great blessings everyone everywhere.
@@gogogardener peas or beans are direct sown here (northern NY USA) presoaking makes them sprout faster but peas might fall apart if not very careful. Many blessings everyone.
I feel like you should do this video for each area of the us to help people
OMG that is heaven on earth.Unfortunately in can’t grow all of tropical fruits and vegetables that you have in Europe. I miss having papaya, banana, jackfruit, mango, cassava , moringa tree and many more in my garden😢
The channel Arktopia shows how he is growing tropical food in snowy Canada using solar greenhouse. Not easy or cheap I imagine lol! Pretty impressive to follow him and see him do it though! I live in hot weather too but not as humid so we could do sugar cane but would have to really add a lot of water bc it is sooo dry in SoCal. People do manage papaya and mango and other tropicals here though!
I sent my payment in for the food forest starter, can't wait to get started!
what is the suggested price?
Where do you get this from?? I can't find a link
@@ElizabethHarrell-t1zunder the sgow description are all the inks
You're able to be one in perfect harmony with this beautiful garden, I mean You give voice to all these green plants 😊
I love learning about all the different edible stuff that can go in a food forest!
Hey brother. It's been a while since I've last seen one of your videos. What a beautiful life you live. I love that you strive to do better and learn each day. Love you!
get growing peeps
I've been looking for a video like this for so long!! Trying to plan a food forest in Central America and this is just what I needed! Thank you so much!
Wow once again proving Rob that we can all get off the shopping trolley system of waste. We cant rely on governments but it is just crazy that we are not educated to know this-why and earth is food traveling hundreds of miles, arriving in cellophane packets when we could all be eating really fresh free produce!! Super fan of your educational blogs-thank you so much!
Saying so is easy, start a community garden. Grand Blessings everyone.
We were taught to be dependent not to be survivalist or thriving. Because they want to control us.
Excellent information!!
With the coming food shortages and crisis this information is FAR MORE THAN JUST HELPFUL!! THANK YOU!!
Thanks for a great video. l am from Florida but now in Mexico. Tropical high desert so same things grow here. Had a permaculture food forest in my back yard in Miami. l would add 2 others to your list. My favorite green, Malabar spinach (a vine) and Florida native Soapberry tree. You pay a lot of money for those and they are better than detergents.
Thanks so much. I've been following you for a few years but my being a senior citizen has led to much local resistance. The HOA generally restricts us growing things beyond the pattern book.. Neighbors argue it's easier just to go to the grocery store. I'm still going to try small and get motivated. This video encouraged me to get outside more often.
mix flowers in with your vegetables! helps with pollination.
It's not right that they try to restrict you from growing food! I am always shocked to remember that this is a thing in the US, as I am from Australia. It's easier to go to the grocery store if you ignore the environmental, physical and mental health benefits to growing your own food. Good luck with your garden and I hope you find a way despite these unfair restrictions!
@oakleys I get told the same things!! Many blessings everyone.
Current Florida law gives property owners the right to grow vegetables in their front yard or any part of their yard. HOA's cannot forbid.
Plant ornamental corn and ornamental peppers! To start weakening their stand. Also sorrel is good for greens and very beautiful. Also a perennial. Micro tomatoes are less than 12 inches high and can sit on a porch step. No body can tell us we can't have a potted plant outside, especially when it's tiny and beautiful. Lol. Parsley or other herbs are as pretty as any flower and edible. Also lots and lots of edible flowers. Many blessings everyone everywhere.
Okinawa spinach is one of my favorites. Very easy to grow and propagate. Stick a cutting in the ground and you got a new plant.
One other good thing about rosemary is that you can use it around the garden as a pest deterrent.
It was so nice to see you back in Florida, Robin
Can eat daikon radish leaves too! Great in a stir-fry
When the joy and passion are palpable, how could you not be excited to try your own garden
We here in the tropics need more gardening videos. Thank you from central Florida ❤
You are the reason why I started gardening! Thanks for sharing your talent and knowledge with us. I plan on supporting your cause as well, but was wondering why the bundle does not include clippings as shared in the video. Also, when will you get the pumpkin seeds and the cranberry hibiscus seeds? Thanks so much!
Robin, your enthusiasm and knowledge are phenomenal! So inspirational. Thank you so much.
I would love love love if you could do this for more northern regions (I’m in Ontario)
Same, which part of Ontario?
You probably want someone who lives there to do that. Floridians don't necessarily understand northern climates and northerners certainly don't understand the climates of the American Deep South (let alone FL) or the Southwest either. Yankee riffraff moves south and try to recreate England, failing miserably. I would look at regional foraging books to expand your list of "stealth edibles," but there is *a lot* written about conventional, cold climate, vegetable and fruit cultivation. That would be most English language gardening channels.
amazing tropical and subtropical fruits and veggies
Thank you for caring and sharing ❤️
ABSOLUYELY BRILLIANT 😊😅😅❤😂MIND BLOWING..WOULD LOVE TO KNOW HOW EXACTLY U MAKE THE SAURKRAUT FROM THOSE PLANTS..THANKS😊😊😅❤😂
Amazing guide to survival gardening. I'm going to try a number of these this fall.
Love the “commercial “ for the Toilet Paper Plant.
Are you ever going to do a similar list for other areas of the country? Many blessings everyone.
Yeah. I’m zone 7b. Just outside of many of these. 😢
I'm in 5b Ontario!, how would i adapt this list?
@@janew5351 I would definitely see what temperature zone you are in for starters. We have zoned in America with our first and last start dates. Look for what you can plant and when I’m your zone. For sure you could use a similar zone if the frost first and last normal dates are similar from some zone in the US. Might have to back up a week or two for that zone unless your close.
@@Grayson4life I'm fairly certain these growing zones are for US and Canada. Blessings everyone
@@janew5351 there are some survival foods listed for lower zones. Let me look them up. Brb.
From Mauritius 🇲🇺. Keep it up.
This is an awesome resource 👏🏼👏🏼
Just discovered your Channel Robin. Really dig your Enthusiasm and Knowledge of Edible Plants! Also the World Really needs all these Videos you make now so people can live Healthier lives!! Good job bro!!
Yay top 7 comments and top 20 likes. Love this channel. Best to you and your family.
Love these but I wish you would make more versatile content on this topic for more regions all over but nonetheless thank you for this information GOD BLESS! Peaceful growing and abundant harvest be to all! One love
Beautiful!!!
Can’t wait to get going.
Also,Thank you Robin so much for inspiring and teaching us how to grow food. My granddaughter and I want to grow and share, with others. Keep up the good work, you and your organization are a tremendous blessing.
Thank you so much for all this information. I was going to write down all the plants to buy then somehow. Im glad I waited to the end . Im going to read every line on the description and I will order “
“the bon-del ASAP”! Thank you.
Hello Dear Friend!
You can learn about the Food Forest Starter Bundle and place an order on the website:
robingreenfield.org/foodforest
Health and happiness to you,
Robin
This Seed sharing is very important today. I hope there will be thousands involve in every country. AURAPHIL thanks for sharing. GOD bless!
You are an awesome human being. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, I love the way you are so natural and did your research to teach others the good news you test from your own experience.
Love this! 30 great plants. Thanks! 🌿💚
I grew up eating this food including the young seed pod. It’s great with the leaves sautéed together.
I'm happy to see kales, sweet potatoes, cassava, the toilet paper plant, and many more familiar plants that we use in East Africa, Kenya.Thank you.
I’m here in central Florida and have some in my possession for when we move into our house🙏🏽 Keep up the great work folks!
Awesome Video Tutorial!!!👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾🪶🪶🪶
thank u robin!! i started planting veges and fruits and herbs i have 8 plants lready and i do composting too for soil!
Thank you so much for all the information! :)
Doing what i love!!
Thank you so much for this very informative video! I live in a condo but would love to find a space to grow all this wonderful food!
Ask town/city for space. Or start community garden. I had only to ask and had wheelchair accessible garden in less than a year. Many blessings everyone.
Thanks so much for sharing this. I absolutely love the content given. I’m excitedly looking forward to getting my mine to start. Pammie from Chicago Illinois 🎉
Have you tried Asian Water Spinach and Malabar Spinach?, both can grow in Fl. weather.
Water spinach (Ipomoea [sp?] aquatica) is *illegal* in the state of Florida because it is seen as a looming aquatic weed. After water hyacinths, the state is paranoid about that. Malabar spinach is good, if you like it and are willing to trellis it.
😂😂the TP plant with a minty smell!!!👍👍🤣🤣❤️
Hola hello beautiful world God Almighty bless all ❤️ Thank you beyond words u are awesome keep shining your brightest light on us hopefully for God as well i wish i could do this have lots of health issues's not able to i eat gluten free and i only eat turkey and chicken,fish and still keep getting health issues's God Almighty bless you ❤️🌈🌟✨🌈❤️
this was awesome!!!
Wait, must pause so I can go Subscribe... Okay done.
This is awesome. Thank you.
Bro….this video is rad. Thank you. 🙏🏼
Would love to see the equivalent for western Washington. Annuals in an urban lot have not priven to be time or cost effective but i would love to get edible perennials and self seeders adapted to our special climate where plants do well in spring and soils dry up by early July and all the way through sept right when you are trying to get annuals maturing
Asparagus, dandelion, fiddlehead ferns, purslane, sunchokes, apples, pears, berries, rhubarb,
❤❤❤all the FL gardening tips!!! Tired of trying to make things grow in this climate and having to babysit plants!!🥰🙏🙏
Rob all the things you know are actually know in the Philippines we used to planted our own foods😊
Listening from Oregon.
Great video, I'm starting to grow some of these here on St. Croix
Yuca is the plants we always have in borneo.. We cook the leaves stir fried or curry, and then the roots to make cakes, boiled, steam or fermented.. Same goes to sweet potatoes.. The leaves are my favorites
Love the video. I live in south east kansas zone 6 there are several plants i am growing here. I would love to know which ones will grow here. Thank you
amazing list here nice work
Thanks, my friend. God bless you . 2023 24 October
Peagon pea is staple in India
Such a good list❤
I live in Southern Canada and rosemary is so wonderful to smell and eat
Aloha! Such good info. Big ups for doing Jah works and stewarding our sweet Mother Earth and giving and receiving of the abundance! Quick question, can you ship the "food forest starter bundle" to Hawaii?
Grandma use to have those tomato by tne kitchen side they are so flavourful
you have a great program your very knowledgeable. our soil is very sandy but we will give it a go
God Bless you Robin! What a wonderful, outstanding idea to offer the survival bundle. I'm sure you are busy, but can I suggest another video idea? Many of the foods you mentioned are growing here in my zone 6b Illinois garden very well, but you know if you are just starting out you have no idea that you can grow these things and many midwesterners will never check out your video because they will assume it's all stuff they can't grow. I think if you made a Midwest Survival garden video it would help A LOT of people. I have Egyptian Spinach and it's still producing in my north/east garden on my 1/10th of an acre city lot. I only have two rows of it, and it's covered with row covering now, but here it is Jan 2nd and I'm still harvesting and making salads from it. I also have mulberries, gooseberries, elderberries, basically every berry that will grow here. I can't say enough about the Japanese white yam. THAT is serious amounts of food. I adore the daikon radish and I've started to make flour from my Jerusalem Artichokes aka sunchokes. That right there is a serious no brainer. You can't fail with sunchokes. They are literally plant them and forget them and just come back to harvest.
You can make cassava cake or pudding, too. Very delicious. Yes, we survived on cassava when we were little back in the Philippines.
Amazing garden tips💚👌
I have been watching RUclips to get an idea how to start, your survival foods and the bundle leap will help so much in my journey, knowledge and growth.. this front property I have needs to be used as a resource, I will be watching again and again.
Your greens looked so delicious 😋
Thank you for great video..wish you success and be healthy always
dear Robin, thank you so much for this video. could you share some more about how to storage?
all praise to our creator.. 🎉
Watching from Zone 3 Canada, some of these make me very jealous 😢
Great presentation my friend, I will be contacting you next week. I have seen a lot of Philippine plants in there.
Hello from Trinidad. Great video bro. Great mission. Top marks. A÷÷
I recently relocated to Europe from Canada and love what you , glad I found your videos I am searching for someone in the Algarve to connect with that does what you do. You can't probably ship to Europe will see what I can find here to start my food forest Thank you
This awesome video - very direct and informative!! Thanks!!
Didn't realize there is a spineless variety of Nopales.... wow! Definitely planting this...
ThankYOU
Thank you so much for this wonderful video🤍
incredible anthology. thankyou
Interesting. I'd like to learn more about how to grow pigeon.peas.
This year I discovered Siam Queen Basil. The red shoots make excellent tea.
Love the info. Just to clarify though, the first photo for yaupon holly is nandina.
Sweet potato leaves is good to make sallad, with lemon ,ginger onion and tomatoeL bland it first
Hi this is wicked ....thankyou thankyou...somehow need find easy to grow plants for uk ....but anything is possible !!!! Thankyou for the inspiration !!!!
Thank you very much for this information, it helps a lot. Acoding with my food habits, I need maybe 200m2 of beens, more 200m2 of wheat or amarant or another cereal and olive trees to produce olive oil for a year. I think fruits are very important, banana I completly agree, and the acid and semi-acid fruits like berrys and cherys, but we need also the fatty fruits like avocado and coconut
WOW you made my shopping to set up my 5 Acres so easy, thank you for this wonderful video and all the information you provided.
I live backed to a canal. I love Spanish needle. It's my chickens primary forage.
Can you tell us more about the passion fruit behind you at 13:19
The lizard was a paid actor
Amazing video with tons of useful content! Thank you for sharing with us :D