I installed underground sprinklers and drip irrigation last year to water my entire lawn, flower beds, and raised beds. My entire property can be watered now without me doing anything. It's one of the most satisfying things in the world. I can never go back. Once you experience it, you'd rather not even bother having a yard if it means there's no automated irrigation system. It was a lot of work (did it all on my own) and it was expensive, but man, now I literally just sit on the patio sipping my coffee while watching the sprinklers do their thing. I'm in paradise.
We installed drip irrigation-or rather, my husband did after I was sick one day and he took over the watering for me. He came inside after about and hour and said I’m never doing that again 😂👌🏻 Worth every darn penny and effort it took to install 🙌🏻
I LOVE THIS!!!! You guys are living my dream family life! Dad teaching kiddos...Mom partnering to help make everything gorgeous and grow! Dad with skills! Humor. Love. Home life thriving. I aspire to be you guys!
@@HAXMANwhere did you get the drip irrigation system from? I'd like to check into and use myself, it's a wonderful idea and my garden can use an upgrade.
You laugh about the sewage line but my stepfather hit ours with a backhoe when I was a kid. We would use the john and then run down the hill in the front of the house to try to watch "it" go by 🙂 Till they fixed it...
I'm making this but then as a smart-solution. Sensors in the soil will monitor my soil moisture 24/7, and then water if it gets below a certain level. Some call me lazy, some call me smart.
My wife and I just bought land and are planning out garden beds. I've convinced her to let me have a small vertical section and I told her that I had water all sorted out for the whole thing. Thanks for sorting that out for me! Now I don't need to spend hours trying to figure out how to NOT look like a noob.
Your video editing has improved significantly since I started watching over a year ago. It's incredibly impressive, this is definitely a channel going places
I would highly recommend covering the hoses with mulch to protect them from the sun and to lower the amount of plastic -(if any, don't know the material)- particles that would leech into the water. Avoiding UV light will drastically increase lifespan of several materials. Including UV resistant ones. _Blessed be water timers and their miraculous work!_
Haxman you’re probably one of my favorite RUclips folks. Handy, well edited, entertaining videos with fun but doesn’t take away from the main point or the educational aspect itself. And I typically don’t seek your videos out directly. You just always happen to have a video covering some DIY project my boneheaded self just so happens to want to punish myself by taking on. Hats off brother! Also enjoy the ones where you get the fam involved too. You have a beautiful family sir. Thank you again for the work and the info you spread. Keep it up! Be well. -Lance in Oklahoma 👊🏼
Tip for drip irrigation line. Get a 18v battery powered heat gun (I have the Ryobi one). A few seconds heat on the ends of either the main line or the 1/4" line will make it so, so, much easier to push onto the connectors. Also I've started using the vinyl 1/4" supply line up into the beds as it's more flexible than the poly line. We are on our 3rd year with the 1/4" dripline in a 2 zone system. You are so right about it being both a time saver, and also better for your plants as you can totally control when and how much water is applied. In the spring, I water one time at 4AM, but as the 90's and 100's kick in I up both the time water is applied and the number of waterings per day (twice a day for longer). Great video!!!!
I swear I love watching ur videos just to see the little one.. she always has her “RBF” face on and I love it!!! She does not looked amused at most of ur stuff.. I bet she’s a little firecracker
Finished my drip irrigation 2 weeks ago. Was spending over 2 hours a day watering. Now, it’s 100% automatic!!! I have it set up to a WiFi timer. Totally worth the money and time to set up. But, it took a lot more time to complete than I expected. Still worth it!
Oh man. I'm assuming that's your daughter. It's awesome seeing her do this stuff with you and ask questions and apply the knowledge you're providing her. I've only seen the first quarter of the video, but my wife is due in 3-4 weeks and I can't wait to teach my daughter how to do all this stuff. How to change the oil on our car, how to wood work, how to plumb, how to install a ceiling fan. I can't wait.
Drip irrigation is a Godsend. I've been doing it for years. You need to check your emitters once in a while, as they do get clogged. I usually get two years use and then have to replace them, due to crusty well water and Arizona sun.
So we have well water and are having horrible problems with our lines clogging up. The irrigation guy charged us thousands and within a week most of the lines were clogging.. He came out and replaced the lines AGAIN! What can we do to keep from clogging? In 1 year he replaced them 4 times charging us $800 each time. He said he put a filter in but sure didnt seem like it. The tops of our beds would be bone dry and water would be running out the bottom of the bed.
I collected already what I need to implement a drip irrigation beginning of next year. So ready to start near my flat. But you gave me the solution I can use in my other garden without the need to buy more stuff. Thanks for that and enjoy the free time you got with the installation.
It is so fantastic you are teaching your daughter these skills at such an early age. Have my own plant business now, and I wish my dad involved me more with DIY projects in the yard, especially where he was a carpenter. You can hear her curiosity and see her understanding of the process when she is doing the epoxy with the follow up question about the pipe. She is going places cause of you man! Keep being a great dad!!
My dad was a construction worker/contractor for around 20 years (he knows how to do everything construction wise, literally everything, he's an architect now), growing up he would teach me all these things and force me to help him with projects (while I was a young teen we renovated our house after stripping it down to its studs which is when I learned the most) or sometimes take me to work with him. To be honest, I hated it. Now that I'm an adult I love it. I am in nowhere near as skilled or knowledgeable as my dad (few people are to be fair), but I know enough to never need to hire anyone for anything home related. I'm confident I can build my own house as well with some extra help. Priceless skills to have.
Man, praying God blesses me and my kids with a knowledgeable man like you ! Your family is so beautiful and blessed, may God keep you all humble,kind, funny and prosperous!!
I have irrigation but temp so high there is no time for diseases to even start! Seriously by the time the fifth area has finished the first area is completely dry. I ran a line from the outflow of my A/C (water from the air) resulting in 13 gallons /day! This year Areas 7, 8 and 9 look fabulous. "Dry" plants getting moisture turns them into super plants.
I installed drip irrigation with a timer in our garden earlier this year and it has been awesome No more forgetting to water and having a half dead garden
Ha, I did this exact project last weekend ! Fun stuff. Keep up the good work. Given the size of your garden and only 2 spigots, you may upgrade to 3/4 " from dripworks.
I use drip and 360 degree emitters for my grow bag garden. It works really well. Say, have you ever tried growing your curcurbits vertically? That works really well too. Keeps the leaves off the ground and prevents disease. You should try it since you have taken the plunge and installed drip.
This is not an ad, I'm just extremely passionate about this - Afriq Water, the company that my father started and that the whole family, including 10 guys from the local community, work for, manufactures dripline in Southern Africa. Our prices are extremely competitive (not an ad), and we're extremely passionate about irrigation and the benefits of providing cost effective methods for farmers, when they need it most. In certain parts of South Africa and the countries surrounding us, water isn't just scarse, it's dangerous to find. Our mission is to allow farmers to feed their communities without having to worry about going to extremes. Our dripline is pre-installed with emitters, and where you used a blanco/blank line next to your bed, from which you adding dripline, we just cut that step out to save costs. People can buy PVC as you did, but preferably LDPE or HDPE, run that like your mainline, but up and over the side of the beds, and install dripline directly from that. Ours looks drastically different too, so it was so interestimg to see an American view of this. This is an ad. Even if you don't get dripline from us - get dripline from anywhere. Save water. Help the earth. Help your community water reservoirs. Feed your community, or simply just your family.
I did this for all my flowers in our back yard landscaping around the pool. Too much water is bad too, took a while to get the perfect amount so they did get root rot or not enough water.
I dug a trench from my garden to my spigot. Ran a commercial hose into PVC and buried it all the way to my garden and poked in back up. But my garden is only about 50 or 60' from the water source. I also have a 55 gallon drum collecting rain water for the garden that's garvity fed.
The speghetti line can break off if you accidentally catch it on a tool, your boot, the mower wheel, etc. Better to run the 1/2 line to the top rail of the bed. This also allows you to use a simple bend clamp to close the line, which also allows you to easily flush the system at each bed. Another helpful upgrade is an in-line shutoff for each bed to allow you to shut off a bed for repairs or in the case of damage allows you to continue to water the other bed automatically. Spot drippers are also better for bigger plants like squash and tomatoes than the inline, but do require yearly positioning and more labor to install.
The drip irrigation would be better coming up under the raised beds on the inside that way you won’t have any issues with the whipper snipper or your mower catching the irrigation lines . Im switching to raised beds myself and setting up some irritation lines on the outsides so it makes keeping the area tidy of weeds and long grass when using equipment
Awesome video Subscribed. I'm in a much smaller yard but I'm doing this myself this year. I already have the pex pipe buried. I went with pex because I know someone who has access to the tools i'll need to work with it. I really cannot wait to get this going.
Hey man ever think about using woodchips all around your fruit vines or trees? It will help with not having to mow around them and it will benefit you plants drastically. Give it a try, you’ll thank me.
I’ve been watching your videos for awhile now with my wife and we spotted that trampoline in the background a few times. It peaked our curiosity and led us to research the product and company. I would like to say thank you, if it wasn’t for your entertaining and sometimes informative we now own the same trampoline and our kids can be safer while jumping versus a standard trampoline.
Drip irrigation is great in most areas, but if you have water with high mineral content, the emitters get clogged up quickly. I’d love to use drip irrigation or even soaker hoses but they just don’t work long enough to make it worth the cost.
Very, very cool!! Love seeing your girls in with you learning every day situations and how you patiently teach them... awesome!! Hope your family had a great Thanksgiving and are saving a ton of cash on Black Friday! Take care, be safe and God bless!
I got. Good video, doa. Garden lighting project, itbun k that would e pretty cool to see the process of hope to do that, plus it would make your garden and flowerbeds look amazing at night
That was adorable AND useful! I'm pulling hoses whenever it dries out and thinking about same. Typically I don't like YT vids with "funny" inserts but yours was great.
I'm in my 30s and my dang back is becoming a bottleneck for the amount of work that gets done in the garden. Anything to work smarter than harder makes a big difference. I have all the pieces for a drip system but its sitting in the box until the daily high is back into the double digits so I can install it without dying in the process.
Bahaha, Adam, the look you got from Kim when you said, "to the trench wench" totally cracked me up (I had to replay that part several times). I plan on running drip tape to my raised garden beds in the fall, so wish me luck! I hope you and your sweet family have a wonderful week ahead! ~Margie😊🐝🦋💐
Omg. I just got your channel today. Alot of informative stuff. But you crack me up. " to the trench wench" 😂 and kims look. If it could kill. I look forward to more videos🇺🇸👍
For your mellon bed, take a cattle panel, sideways, and make an arbor in the veining plant bed. THEN, you can train the vines up the trellis you made and you can use, uh hmm, bras to hold the melons. Grow them vertically and they won't be in your grass. I have an example here: ruclips.net/video/RmlQRymgu5g/видео.html
Y’all crack me up seriously!!! Put your squash plants on a pig fence vertically or you know bent over and the fruit will grow instead of leaving it on the ground. As you see fruit appear tie a section of pantyhose to the pig or cattle fence with he fruit inside and that will better hold the fruit and keep it from dropping. Great job btw 👍🏻
Save more hours by throwing that shit away and buying some wobblers. Use pex and the plastic pex fittings to keep price down(outside). Normal hose pipe replacement end if you want to hook to garden hose.
I installed underground sprinklers and drip irrigation last year to water my entire lawn, flower beds, and raised beds. My entire property can be watered now without me doing anything. It's one of the most satisfying things in the world. I can never go back. Once you experience it, you'd rather not even bother having a yard if it means there's no automated irrigation system. It was a lot of work (did it all on my own) and it was expensive, but man, now I literally just sit on the patio sipping my coffee while watching the sprinklers do their thing. I'm in paradise.
That little helper you got is worth her weight in Gold. Bless her heart for always being so willing to learn and help.
We installed drip irrigation-or rather, my husband did after I was sick one day and he took over the watering for me. He came inside after about and hour and said I’m never doing that again 😂👌🏻
Worth every darn penny and effort it took to install 🙌🏻
😂 Definitely!
Hahahahhahahhahahahhahah
Even worth getting sick, eh!
How long do ya let it water? How often?
Whenever I see someone installing drip line for the first time I get so excited for them. 🥰
😄
I LOVE THIS!!!! You guys are living my dream family life! Dad teaching kiddos...Mom partnering to help make everything gorgeous and grow! Dad with skills! Humor. Love. Home life thriving. I aspire to be you guys!
You are so kind. Thank you!
@@HAXMANwhere did you get the drip irrigation system from? I'd like to check into and use myself, it's a wonderful idea and my garden can use an upgrade.
You laugh about the sewage line but my stepfather hit ours with a backhoe when I was a kid. We would use the john and then run down the hill in the front of the house to try to watch "it" go by 🙂 Till they fixed it...
😬😂
Oh.... kinda like a crappy version of luge racing. 🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haha 🤮 haha
Lol
I'm making this but then as a smart-solution. Sensors in the soil will monitor my soil moisture 24/7, and then water if it gets below a certain level. Some call me lazy, some call me smart.
Dude, I watch a ton of vegetable gardening / organic farming videos. Almost none has your quality of videos, humor, and drama. subscribed!
My wife and I just bought land and are planning out garden beds. I've convinced her to let me have a small vertical section and I told her that I had water all sorted out for the whole thing. Thanks for sorting that out for me! Now I don't need to spend hours trying to figure out how to NOT look like a noob.
Your video editing has improved significantly since I started watching over a year ago. It's incredibly impressive, this is definitely a channel going places
Thank you!
I would highly recommend covering the hoses with mulch to protect them from the sun and to lower the amount of plastic -(if any, don't know the material)- particles that would leech into the water. Avoiding UV light will drastically increase lifespan of several materials. Including UV resistant ones.
_Blessed be water timers and their miraculous work!_
Haxman you’re probably one of my favorite RUclips folks. Handy, well edited, entertaining videos with fun but doesn’t take away from the main point or the educational aspect itself. And I typically don’t seek your videos out directly. You just always happen to have a video covering some DIY project my boneheaded self just so happens to want to punish myself by taking on.
Hats off brother! Also enjoy the ones where you get the fam involved too. You have a beautiful family sir. Thank you again for the work and the info you spread. Keep it up!
Be well.
-Lance in Oklahoma 👊🏼
The editing and camera work on this channel is phenomenal
Tip for drip irrigation line. Get a 18v battery powered heat gun (I have the Ryobi one). A few seconds heat on the ends of either the main line or the 1/4" line will make it so, so, much easier to push onto the connectors. Also I've started using the vinyl 1/4" supply line up into the beds as it's more flexible than the poly line. We are on our 3rd year with the 1/4" dripline in a 2 zone system. You are so right about it being both a time saver, and also better for your plants as you can totally control when and how much water is applied. In the spring, I water one time at 4AM, but as the 90's and 100's kick in I up both the time water is applied and the number of waterings per day (twice a day for longer). Great video!!!!
Thanks David!
A tip with the hose pins. Bend then a bit. Not apart but front to back. So they look like legs walking. This helps them not to slowly come up.
Thanks for the tip!
Excellent Work 🎉 I subscribed to your channel 🙏
Lol what a good lesson on light refraction directing heat from the sun's rays to create FIRE!
Drip irrigation was a GAME CHANGER for my garden. 2nd year in use and never looking back!
Everyone we know that uses it loves it.
I swear I love watching ur videos just to see the little one.. she always has her “RBF” face on and I love it!!! She does not looked amused at most of ur stuff.. I bet she’s a little firecracker
Finished my drip irrigation 2 weeks ago. Was spending over 2 hours a day watering.
Now, it’s 100% automatic!!! I have it set up to a WiFi timer.
Totally worth the money and time to set up. But, it took a lot more time to complete than I expected. Still worth it!
I love that you have your daughter help you with most of your projects! Another great video with lots of helpful info and humor!
Oh man. I'm assuming that's your daughter. It's awesome seeing her do this stuff with you and ask questions and apply the knowledge you're providing her. I've only seen the first quarter of the video, but my wife is due in 3-4 weeks and I can't wait to teach my daughter how to do all this stuff. How to change the oil on our car, how to wood work, how to plumb, how to install a ceiling fan. I can't wait.
Drip irrigation is a Godsend. I've been doing it for years. You need to check your emitters once in a while, as they do get clogged. I usually get two years use and then have to replace them, due to crusty well water and Arizona sun.
So we have well water and are having horrible problems with our lines clogging up. The irrigation guy charged us thousands and within a week most of the lines were clogging.. He came out and replaced the lines AGAIN! What can we do to keep from clogging? In 1 year he replaced them 4 times charging us $800 each time. He said he put a filter in but sure didnt seem like it. The tops of our beds would be bone dry and water would be running out the bottom of the bed.
@@Elaine_S Sounds likke you need a real plumber. One that will do the job correctly the first time.
That was a great shot with the PVC pipe run.
Aside from the information you provide, your actual video skills, editing etc is awesome!!! Well done!
Thank you!
To get even water pressure you can loop the end of the irrigation line back onto itself near the water timer so that it’s one big loop.
I collected already what I need to implement a drip irrigation beginning of next year. So ready to start near my flat. But you gave me the solution I can use in my other garden without the need to buy more stuff. Thanks for that and enjoy the free time you got with the installation.
It is so fantastic you are teaching your daughter these skills at such an early age. Have my own plant business now, and I wish my dad involved me more with DIY projects in the yard, especially where he was a carpenter. You can hear her curiosity and see her understanding of the process when she is doing the epoxy with the follow up question about the pipe. She is going places cause of you man! Keep being a great dad!!
My dad was a construction worker/contractor for around 20 years (he knows how to do everything construction wise, literally everything, he's an architect now), growing up he would teach me all these things and force me to help him with projects (while I was a young teen we renovated our house after stripping it down to its studs which is when I learned the most) or sometimes take me to work with him. To be honest, I hated it. Now that I'm an adult I love it. I am in nowhere near as skilled or knowledgeable as my dad (few people are to be fair), but I know enough to never need to hire anyone for anything home related. I'm confident I can build my own house as well with some extra help. Priceless skills to have.
Man, praying God blesses me and my kids with a knowledgeable man like you ! Your family is so beautiful and blessed, may God keep you all humble,kind, funny and prosperous!!
Great video!
Why am I just now watching this?!
👍🌱
I use 50' soaker hoses / drip hoses in a S shape (3 rows) in 4' by 16' beds. On for one hour in the morning and one in the evening in NE Texas.
When I installed mine I kept a lighter with me and just warmed the hose tip for each for like 3secs. Basically I carried the sun with me 🌞
It's well worth the time to install.
I’ve been thinking about getting a soaker hose… this information about Leaf fungus is great to understand… seals the deal on the soaker.
I have irrigation but temp so high there is no time for diseases to even start! Seriously by the time the fifth area has finished the first area is completely dry. I ran a line from the outflow of my A/C (water from the air) resulting in 13 gallons /day! This year Areas 7, 8 and 9 look fabulous. "Dry" plants getting moisture turns them into super plants.
I installed drip irrigation with a timer in our garden earlier this year and it has been awesome
No more forgetting to water and having a half dead garden
That seems to be the general consensus. People love it.
Ha, I did this exact project last weekend ! Fun stuff. Keep up the good work. Given the size of your garden and only 2 spigots, you may upgrade to 3/4 " from dripworks.
I like how you showed your layout and plan over the drone shot. Good video overall too. We'll done, sir! Thank you for sharing.
Howdy, Brother! We love the way y'all keep makin' it happen. Drive on, cowboy!
Vines, vines everywhere the vines. Blocking up the scenery breaking my mind.....🎶🎶🎶🎶.... Well played sir!! Great vid as always!!
I’m no longer a long haired freaky person though. 😂 Thanks!
I use drip and 360 degree emitters for my grow bag garden. It works really well. Say, have you ever tried growing your curcurbits vertically? That works really well too. Keeps the leaves off the ground and prevents disease. You should try it since you have taken the plunge and installed drip.
We haven’t. Kim does grow some things on a trellis but we definitely need to.
This is not an ad, I'm just extremely passionate about this -
Afriq Water, the company that my father started and that the whole family, including 10 guys from the local community, work for, manufactures dripline in Southern Africa. Our prices are extremely competitive (not an ad), and we're extremely passionate about irrigation and the benefits of providing cost effective methods for farmers, when they need it most. In certain parts of South Africa and the countries surrounding us, water isn't just scarse, it's dangerous to find. Our mission is to allow farmers to feed their communities without having to worry about going to extremes.
Our dripline is pre-installed with emitters, and where you used a blanco/blank line next to your bed, from which you adding dripline, we just cut that step out to save costs. People can buy PVC as you did, but preferably LDPE or HDPE, run that like your mainline, but up and over the side of the beds, and install dripline directly from that. Ours looks drastically different too, so it was so interestimg to see an American view of this.
This is an ad. Even if you don't get dripline from us - get dripline from anywhere. Save water. Help the earth. Help your community water reservoirs. Feed your community, or simply just your family.
Should grow your squash plants vertically to avoid the mowing issues. And maximize growing space
Love that you keep the mistakes and moments of uncertainty in the video, can’t wait to try this my self
you can grow your squash plants and melons vertically. I use 6x6" cattle panels that are 16' long then arch them over between two raised beds.
I did this for all my flowers in our back yard landscaping around the pool. Too much water is bad too, took a while to get the perfect amount so they did get root rot or not enough water.
I dug a trench from my garden to my spigot. Ran a commercial hose into PVC and buried it all the way to my garden and poked in back up. But my garden is only about 50 or 60' from the water source. I also have a 55 gallon drum collecting rain water for the garden that's garvity fed.
Not only informative but also hilarious 😂 that heat index though
These do a good job, I had them at first and then I switched to a soaker hose system as I felt they did a better job.
Good to see your back. Need more videos lol
Thanks!
Can't wait to see the follow up. I'd be curious all these hold up over time.
Exactly what I was telling the husband the other day! Great video so I can show him your genius!
Love the editing haxman. Nice work!
Thanks so much! I've been working on it.
The vines, you can trellis the vines, thus saving space on the ground.
The speghetti line can break off if you accidentally catch it on a tool, your boot, the mower wheel, etc. Better to run the 1/2 line to the top rail of the bed. This also allows you to use a simple bend clamp to close the line, which also allows you to easily flush the system at each bed. Another helpful upgrade is an in-line shutoff for each bed to allow you to shut off a bed for repairs or in the case of damage allows you to continue to water the other bed automatically. Spot drippers are also better for bigger plants like squash and tomatoes than the inline, but do require yearly positioning and more labor to install.
what's a bend clamp?
@@TheRainHarvester you bend the hose and clamp down on the elbow to close the flow. you can clamp down with anything that will squeeze tight and hold
The drip irrigation would be better coming up under the raised beds on the inside that way you won’t have any issues with the whipper snipper or your mower catching the irrigation lines .
Im switching to raised beds myself and setting up some irritation lines on the outsides so it makes keeping the area tidy of weeds and long grass when using equipment
Awesome video Subscribed. I'm in a much smaller yard but I'm doing this myself this year. I already have the pex pipe buried. I went with pex because I know someone who has access to the tools i'll need to work with it. I really cannot wait to get this going.
Brilliant as always
Thank you!
Only thing I would have recommended is run the lines from your main into the box inside of the box wall that way you don't hit them when you weedeat
Hey man ever think about using woodchips all around your fruit vines or trees? It will help with not having to mow around them and it will benefit you plants drastically. Give it a try, you’ll thank me.
I’ve been watching your videos for awhile now with my wife and we spotted that trampoline in the background a few times. It peaked our curiosity and led us to research the product and company. I would like to say thank you, if it wasn’t for your entertaining and sometimes informative we now own the same trampoline and our kids can be safer while jumping versus a standard trampoline.
That’s awesome. Good eye!
Youre a great family man! Love your videos!
AWESOME video guys 👍❤🙏😇
Drip irrigation is great in most areas, but if you have water with high mineral content, the emitters get clogged up quickly. I’d love to use drip irrigation or even soaker hoses but they just don’t work long enough to make it worth the cost.
I would prefer a hub with a timer per bed, but that timer is an off timer I turn it on for the time I determine each bed needs and walk away.
About to do this myself, your vids are always timely! 👍
Awesome! Good luck
Very, very cool!! Love seeing your girls in with you learning every day situations and how you patiently teach them... awesome!! Hope your family had a great Thanksgiving and are saving a ton of cash on Black Friday! Take care, be safe and God bless!
If you have a tiller remove the outer tines and you get a narrow trencher. Your welcome
I got. Good video, doa. Garden lighting project, itbun k that would e pretty cool to see the process of hope to do that, plus it would make your garden and flowerbeds look amazing at night
You are hilarious! Thanks for your great realistic info.
That was adorable AND useful! I'm pulling hoses whenever it dries out and thinking about same. Typically I don't like YT vids with "funny" inserts but yours was great.
Thanks for this video! 👍
Oh my gosh! 2:39...I've said that same thing and my wife gave me the same look....and I looked just as sheepish! LOL Too funny! Another great video!
I just want a garden installed -- lol good tips and look forward to the harvest !
The gloves catching on fire in the metal bowl really shows how hot it is haha
Wow nice job HaxFamily!
Thanks!
very good!
Cheers for the upload and content
Jim
Thats amaz za zing!! I was just gather info to do this very thing. Thanks for taking the guess work out for us.
Thank you!
I'm in my 30s and my dang back is becoming a bottleneck for the amount of work that gets done in the garden. Anything to work smarter than harder makes a big difference. I have all the pieces for a drip system but its sitting in the box until the daily high is back into the double digits so I can install it without dying in the process.
Great video, and exactly what I’m doing now. Ugh watering is such a necessary waste a time
Awesome !
Glorious!!!!!!😁
Thank you!
Awesome personality
The first time a saw this video a tought that was Russell Crowe, doing gardening
"To the trench, wench!" The look was priceless, lol!
😂
Maximus Decimus Meridius's Garden. I am entertained. 👍 Haximus. Nice Video. Thanks.
😉 Thanks!
I like these videos very creative and super funny
Thanks! 😃
Bahaha, Adam, the look you got from Kim when you said, "to the trench wench" totally cracked me up (I had to replay that part several times). I plan on running drip tape to my raised garden beds in the fall, so wish me luck! I hope you and your sweet family have a wonderful week ahead! ~Margie😊🐝🦋💐
Thank you so much Margie! You too!
Omg. I just got your channel today. Alot of informative stuff. But you crack me up. " to the trench wench" 😂 and kims look. If it could kill. I look forward to more videos🇺🇸👍
Ah yes, the old scissor fingers technique. Very nice grasshopper.
For your mellon bed, take a cattle panel, sideways, and make an arbor in the veining plant bed. THEN, you can train the vines up the trellis you made and you can use, uh hmm, bras to hold the melons. Grow them vertically and they won't be in your grass. I have an example here: ruclips.net/video/RmlQRymgu5g/видео.html
Y’all crack me up seriously!!!
Put your squash plants on a pig fence vertically or you know bent over and the fruit will grow instead of leaving it on the ground. As you see fruit appear tie a section of pantyhose to the pig or cattle fence with he fruit inside and that will better hold the fruit and keep it from dropping. Great job btw 👍🏻
Save more hours by throwing that shit away and buying some wobblers. Use pex and the plastic pex fittings to keep price down(outside). Normal hose pipe replacement end if you want to hook to garden hose.
Very cool. On those ground vines I thought you installed those fence sections for them to grow vertically.
Well we did but then Kim planted them all over. 😂
great video , thank you
bloody hell! the burning glove!
Great video bro
I’m a well
Driller and
I’m going to tell
You right now that “we’ll witch” thing is a load of bobblecocky
My man.....russ crowe!
😉
Lobe your videos.
👂
You are hilarious 😂 enjoyed this video