I'm subscribing as soon as she gets a channel. "How to grow Flowers like a Florist while Growing Vegies for Yourself with Hannah Ross" - Make it happen!!!
You can't use rye grass u need 2 use winter rye grain in the fall. That stuff will grow in the back of your truck. Try it. It even grows in bad soil. Even easier to grow then buckwheat. Buckwheat is easier to crimp over and had more moisture in it's stalks
Thanks for the info. I have a new garden spot and I am a new gardener. My soil test came back really good but I have heavy clay soil so I am using a ton of leaves covered by compost I get from a municipal compost site and I get it free. Thanks for the confirmation that I at least started right. Great video, thanks again. Havagudun gal!
Great stuff! Yeah the worms really come in with good leaf mulches. One of my favorite mulches. I am working more and more toward cover cropping and enjoying some great results already!
Zinnias are my favorite!!! I love this kind of gardening, & I’ve always used alot if leaves too...i pick up the bagged leaves along the road sides😁& our earthworm friends sure make beautiful soil....👍🏼You definitely know what u r doing! Happy gardening 🌿🌱🌱
Good video, great looking garden and soil. I hardly rake leaves anymore. Using a leaf blower and a lawn mower with a grass catcher on it saves a ton of work and the leaves are chopped much finer when you lay them down for mulch. I found it interesting that she said there wasn't a lot of information out on no - till gardening. There is a ton of it and much of it is on you tube. If she searched for the right channels here, she would have found all the help she could have used. Looks great though, and she seems to have figured it all out and is making it pay off.........
Very helpful video; thanks!!! I'm making my own leaf compost. Also making vermicasting for feeding my soil. I'm wondering what compost does she purchase or do others purchase. It all seems to be humus. I'm concerned about using too much manure in my soil. Plz advise. Thanks
She is telling the truth about leaves. I don’t understand why people throw away leaves because I use leaf mulch in my lettuce broccoli bed and it really enriches the soil. I’m use leaves and woodchips on my flower bed with azaleas and they really took off this year
I don't like tarps. I do like rock dust from volcanic sources because they are paramagnetic meaning they receive energy and according to Arden Andersen MD who has a PhD in biophysics shorten the time it takes for the plants to mature. It is cheap in bulk but not at retail prices. It would be nice for someone who could buy 20 tons at a time to sell it for $5 per $100 to local gardeners. I would add rock dust, worms and some soil biology to that pile of leaves she gets from the city. Korean Natural Farming teaches us how to make starter soil biology for our compost piles. Also add eggshells to compost. If you wash and sterilize eggshells, the worms turn the chitin into the enzyme chitinase which eats the exoskeletons of aphids. Worms turn coffee grounds into amino acids which are far superior to Nitrogen amendments. Worms also turn the minerals into amino acid chelated forms which plants love. Worms reduce the amount of work your plants have to do so they can spend all that extra energy developing protection against pests and diseases. See this for details. Plant Health Pyramid ruclips.net/video/D1wJefaFrVI/видео.html
@@ayileenenga9670 I have been studying for 2 years on RUclips. Begin with that video I cited. Then go to their home page and go down one of the Playlists. Also Andersen seaagri.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/arden_anderson_interview.pdf I have taken lots notes. If I had money, I would build a Climate Battery greenhouse. With transplants, good soil and worms feeding on volcanic rock dust, coffee grounds and eggshells, I could produce 11 crops a year. Advancing Eco Agriculture says that superior nutrition will make crops reach maturity sooner. Andersen says the same of rock dust because it is paramagnetic (receives energy from magnetism). That energy shortens the growing season. Good for a gardener who wants to turn over his crop so he can make a profit. Also get his crop in before the frost kills it. Please feel free to ask more questions in the future. Want to see a beautiful garden in Canada? I wrote this: Gardens This Beautiful Can Inspire A Lost Generation youarereality.wordpress.com/2013/11/22/gardens-this-beautiful-can-inspire-a-lost-generation/
Horse237.....I’d say that why volcanic soil is so rich! My GrandMa used seaweed in her gardens & we also used some fish bones & potash & whatever we had to enrich soil....thx for the link!!!!
I'm subscribing as soon as she gets a channel. "How to grow Flowers like a Florist while Growing Vegies for Yourself with Hannah Ross" - Make it happen!!!
She should have her own channel 🙂
Instablaster...
This was so informative! She was so natural on camera too.
You can't use rye grass u need 2 use winter rye grain in the fall. That stuff will grow in the back of your truck. Try it. It even grows in bad soil. Even easier to grow then buckwheat. Buckwheat is easier to crimp over and had more moisture in it's stalks
I want her gardening dress 👗 The pouch for tools would be so handy! Leaves. Leaves and more leaves. Her garden is gorgeous !
Thanks for the info. I have a new garden spot and I am a new gardener. My soil test came back really good but I have heavy clay soil so I am using a ton of leaves covered by compost I get from a municipal compost site and I get it free. Thanks for the confirmation that I at least started right. Great video, thanks again. Havagudun gal!
You are a gift to ALL humanity.... Eyes mind heart and soul wide open no fear..... Love your SPRIT .
That was FANTASTIC!!! Thank you for validating several ideas I need to but firmly into practice 🙏🏾
Great stuff! Yeah the worms really come in with good leaf mulches. One of my favorite mulches. I am working more and more toward cover cropping and enjoying some great results already!
Zinnias are my favorite!!! I love this kind of gardening, & I’ve always used alot if leaves too...i pick up the bagged leaves along the road sides😁& our earthworm friends sure make beautiful soil....👍🏼You definitely know what u r doing! Happy gardening 🌿🌱🌱
Good video, great looking garden and soil. I hardly rake leaves anymore. Using a leaf blower and a lawn mower with a grass catcher on it saves a ton of work and the leaves are chopped much finer when you lay them down for mulch. I found it interesting that she said there wasn't a lot of information out on no - till gardening. There is a ton of it and much of it is on you tube. If she searched for the right channels here, she would have found all the help she could have used. Looks great though, and she seems to have figured it all out and is making it pay off.........
Very helpful video; thanks!!! I'm making my own leaf compost. Also making vermicasting for feeding my soil. I'm wondering what compost does she purchase or do others purchase. It all seems to be humus. I'm concerned about using too much manure in my soil. Plz advise. Thanks
Great information.
She is telling the truth about leaves. I don’t understand why people throw away leaves because I use leaf mulch in my lettuce broccoli bed and it really enriches the soil. I’m use leaves and woodchips on my flower bed with azaleas and they really took off this year
Great stuff!
Aweesome!!
Help her make her own RUclips channel
I don't like tarps. I do like rock dust from volcanic sources because they are paramagnetic meaning they receive energy and according to Arden Andersen MD who has a PhD in biophysics shorten the time it takes for the plants to mature. It is cheap in bulk but not at retail prices. It would be nice for someone who could buy 20 tons at a time to sell it for $5 per $100 to local gardeners.
I would add rock dust, worms and some soil biology to that pile of leaves she gets from the city. Korean Natural Farming teaches us how to make starter soil biology for our compost piles.
Also add eggshells to compost. If you wash and sterilize eggshells, the worms turn the chitin into the enzyme chitinase which eats the exoskeletons of aphids. Worms turn coffee grounds into amino acids which are far superior to Nitrogen amendments. Worms also turn the minerals into amino acid chelated forms which plants love. Worms reduce the amount of work your plants have to do so they can spend all that extra energy developing protection against pests and diseases. See this for details.
Plant Health Pyramid
ruclips.net/video/D1wJefaFrVI/видео.html
where did you learn all of it? its really mind blowing
@@ayileenenga9670 I have been studying for 2 years on RUclips. Begin with that video I cited. Then go to their home page and go down one of the Playlists. Also Andersen
seaagri.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/arden_anderson_interview.pdf
I have taken lots notes. If I had money, I would build a Climate Battery greenhouse.
With transplants, good soil and worms feeding on volcanic rock dust, coffee grounds and eggshells, I could produce 11 crops a year. Advancing Eco Agriculture says that superior nutrition will make crops reach maturity sooner. Andersen says the same of rock dust because it is paramagnetic (receives energy from magnetism). That energy shortens the growing season. Good for a gardener who wants to turn over his crop so he can make a profit. Also get his crop in before the frost kills it.
Please feel free to ask more questions in the future.
Want to see a beautiful garden in Canada? I wrote this:
Gardens This Beautiful Can Inspire A Lost Generation
youarereality.wordpress.com/2013/11/22/gardens-this-beautiful-can-inspire-a-lost-generation/
@@ayileenenga9670 I just looked at your YT homepage. Lots of Playlists. Very Good.
I would like to correspond with you. Do you have a garden or farm?
@@Horse237 it always good to meet great people who know so much about soil. . here is my gmail :
mbyambye@gmail.com
i will give you my number thru it.
Horse237.....I’d say that why volcanic soil is so rich! My GrandMa used seaweed in her gardens & we also used some fish bones & potash & whatever we had to enrich soil....thx for the link!!!!
Thanks men 👍😀