Transplanting Corn?! ~ Garden Experiment to Grow MORE FOOD

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 96

  • @PlowAndPantryHomestead
    @PlowAndPantryHomestead 4 года назад +24

    My husband can't eat carrots from the store, even organic ones. But he has no problem with the carrots I grow at home.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 4 года назад +1

      You might be doing a much better job with the organic part of the growing vegetables.

    • @ninij9692
      @ninij9692 2 года назад +2

      Because even organic food has pesticides on them. Your homegrown food can grow without pesticides and you can also choose some plants or trees that are bug resistant. But even the bug resistant ones can end up with things like Japanese beetles. Lol
      My point is, you have control over what goes on your food when you grow your own.
      Happy growing!
      💜🌱🌳🌾

    • @CapnCoconuts
      @CapnCoconuts Год назад

      Even organic farming allows for some pesticides like permethrin and neem oil.

    • @Mms-MMS
      @Mms-MMS Год назад

      ​@@heidimisfeldt5685 😊😊

  • @lorraineshobajo7648
    @lorraineshobajo7648 4 года назад +7

    I transplant my corn all the time. You are going to have an abundance of corn . Good for you!

  • @royalicing8603
    @royalicing8603 3 года назад +3

    Go ahead and transplant the corn starts that had their tap roots broken off...they recover just fine! Nature is amazing! Life always finds a way!

    • @juliemcgugan1244
      @juliemcgugan1244 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, I left my seedlings too long, because I’ve been very busy in work, so didn’t get out into the garden the last two weekends as planned. Had to tease apart the roots and some got broken, but they are now in the ground and doing well.

  • @99thmonkeyresonance66
    @99thmonkeyresonance66 3 года назад +13

    May I ask how this turned out? I went through your channel videos and I couldn't find a follow up video- maybe I passed right by it.. idk- but I'm interested if it DID- "work out", or not so that I know, whether or not I can attempt it!
    Thank you for responding in advance! ❤

    • @nickhancock4337
      @nickhancock4337 2 года назад

      I don't think it worked out well because it is more difficult then you think to transplant corn. The roots she had on the saplings were way to short. Meaning she cut or ripped them off.

    • @99thmonkeyresonance66
      @99thmonkeyresonance66 2 года назад +1

      @@harddocs Your choosing to TRY & attempting to transplant corn anyways- regardless of what you've been told/taught/shown, is what made the diff tho.
      This is why/how so many people end up, "stuck". (Well, that and "suppressing social conditioning" via the "institutionally biased/institutionally invested", who have the MOST "to lose"- IF we didn't all "play along *and* participate".)
      It's the "trying/attempting" [action] in general, that people avoid *OR* Pass off- especially right now. Gardens / plants, as we "believe/trust"- have no "judgement towards us".
      If you didn't think there was a chance that the "status quo", (this case- in regards to transplanting corn) was "wrong", then you wouldn't have even attempted to transplant them at all.
      [Its the "spark" / intuition / "gut feelings", inside each of us- that "drives" this.]

    • @cody481
      @cody481 2 года назад +1

      2022 missouri spring floods instantly changed to drought.
      Corn for miles ended when armpit high.
      My garden had 2 rows 70' long planted by church kids using the toss whatever method.
      I finally had about 15 sprouts in a whatever pattern taking up the entire garden.
      I transplanted them about 6" deep.
      I did use a hand shovel to loosen a 6" circle and move it all to one tiny end row of about 12?-15? Foot long just to satisfy my curiosity.
      They looked very sad for 24 hours.
      They looked mediocre for 24 hours.
      By day 3 I was stunned.
      Very green healthy looking.
      Turns out the plow and harrow had dried the soil 6" deep and as soon as I deep planted them they really took off.
      I only water soaked the 2 days after transplanting.
      I will end up with 10-12 ears from 10 surviving plants.
      SEED CORN!!!
      Next year I will deep plant 4"-6" Corn SPROUTS in a square block of my garden.
      I will extreme water for 3 days then walk away.
      I think I have underground water seeping through my garden.
      I will save seedstock each year.
      Fingers crossed.
      I will also collect and blend in grass clippings for moisture retention.

    • @RRaucina
      @RRaucina 5 месяцев назад

      @@cody481 What is wrong with a sprinkler or 3?

  • @pookiehoney
    @pookiehoney 4 года назад +10

    When I was a kid hardly anyone had food allergies. There was one kid in the whole school and everyone knew he couldn't eat certain things. Other than that most of us were fine. We didn't have tons of pesticides and GMO foods back then. By the time my kids were in school tons of kids had food allergies and now I know a lot of adults even who are sensitive to certain foods. I have always had a theory it's because of the pesticides and GMO food. My daughter has allergies and if she eats organic it's fine. I think most people could do what you're doing and just grow what they can't eat and find it doesn't bother them grown right.

    • @charlesroberts3910
      @charlesroberts3910 3 года назад

      When my grandson was in a certain school
      A student had a severe reaction and it was traced to axe deodorant products so everyone was told not to use that product in school for this persons safety . But someone wore that product to school for unknown reasons and the affected student almost died . So the made stiff penalties for anyone who didn’t comply

    • @charlesroberts3910
      @charlesroberts3910 3 года назад

      One time my daughter made kale chips and my oldest grandson had a severe reaction to that

  • @charlesroberts3910
    @charlesroberts3910 3 года назад +4

    Instead of yanking them up use a big spoon and get under the roots to loosen soil to minimize root damage

  • @FayleeJames
    @FayleeJames 4 года назад +4

    You will love the peaches and cream corn, it's the best.

  • @candicecannon5164
    @candicecannon5164 4 года назад +7

    My whole corn patch was grown in pots first and transplanted in late June. I was a bit overwhelmed with other things that needed to be done and didn't have a bed for them until then. They are doing beautifully. Were about 6 inches when transplanted and now tower over me..although when I say 'tower' it doesn't take much to tower over me because I am only 5'2. Hahaha.

    • @franciscomorales8102
      @franciscomorales8102 Год назад

      Thanks for the info! I'm about to transplant my from pot to ground! let's see how they do!!

  • @kennethrobertson5428
    @kennethrobertson5428 4 года назад +3

    Don't forget to water transplants once moved!

  • @charlescoker7752
    @charlescoker7752 4 года назад +1

    I used this last year to keep the weeds from germinating in my garden. Must be done after the seeds you plant have germinated. CORN GLUTEN MEAL PRE-EMERGENT

    The timing for applying corn gluten meal for pre-emergent weed control is just before the weeds start to germinate. We usually guess that to be February 15 to March 15 in the South.
    Liquid corn gluten meal spray - a listener/farmer recommendation that's a great idea.
    The way we use corn gluten on our fields - we make a tea out of it and spray on the fields once a month from Autumn to May. Works very well. We use 2 to 6 cups of corn gluten to 100 gallons of water and spray it on with a pull behind sprayer. We just put the corn gluten meal in panty hose and suspend it in the sprayer when we fill it up, then swish the panty hose, remove and stir. Use at about 35 gallons per acre. Simple, economical and effective. ****** This was coped from the Dirt Doctor website library. He is using it to control weeds in a lawn. But can be used to prevent weeds in a garden.

  • @jemmiestone5731
    @jemmiestone5731 4 года назад

    Hiya Amanda. It is good to see you today. We used to grow a lot of corn, but I don't know if my Step Dad tried transplanting it or not. But, I say, you never know till you try. I am praying that it works for you all. Enjoy the rest of your day. You three stay safe and healthy. God Bless Y'all.

  • @bobpratt5625
    @bobpratt5625 3 года назад

    not only are we blessed with corn to eat but the good LORD gave us sweet corn to boot.. yumm

  • @sandywilkerson8525
    @sandywilkerson8525 4 года назад +1

    I love Peaches and Cream corn! Your garden is looking Awesome!😊

  • @carmenrosas4281
    @carmenrosas4281 4 года назад

    That is a labor of 💕. How is our beautiful Sunshine doing? Miss her bunches. Stay safe and God bless.

  • @valeriesanchez3074
    @valeriesanchez3074 4 года назад +1

    I'm sorry you're allergic to corn. I love to fry it in oil until crunchy. It makes a great snack. I've grown a corn from a popcorn kernel. It made me happy

  • @trishiatripp8871
    @trishiatripp8871 2 года назад

    I have allergies. so I am seed starting my peaches and cream. Then we will plant it in my daughters yard. So excited to find this solution.

  • @cat3rgrl917
    @cat3rgrl917 4 года назад

    i have never transplanted corn but i have started them inside and then moved them out side with great results but i did use small un waxed dixie cups to start them in then planted cup and plant into the ground had sweet corn a month earlier than anyone around

  • @rebeccawallace4240
    @rebeccawallace4240 4 года назад

    Yes we just harvested our peaches and cream and we didn't make a lot but it was delicious we plan on planting more next year

  • @wendyweddell2782
    @wendyweddell2782 4 года назад +1

    Anything can be transplanted if your careful enough about doing it. Ive transplanted corn ...startef in vegetable beds & moved it to in ground bed

  • @matthewstein9257
    @matthewstein9257 2 года назад +2

    Did the transplants survive??????

  • @MimsysGarden
    @MimsysGarden 4 года назад

    Beautiful garden!! Praying you’re able to enjoy the fruits of your labors without reaction! Otherwise Paul & “Sunshine” will have a lot of corn to eat by themselves! Lol 💚Mims

  • @inharmonywithearth9982
    @inharmonywithearth9982 2 года назад

    Field corn usually pollinates at a later time from sweet corn. It should be fine to grow them both togethet for pure seed especially since your sweet corn was planted so early and transplanted before the field corn.

  • @heidimisfeldt5685
    @heidimisfeldt5685 4 года назад

    I would be growing a double row of corn where you are doing this. If you see the corn fields here in Canada, they plant them pretty tide. Pollination is said to be better if the plants are standing close. And yes, peaches and cream corn here is very popular indeed. 😍

  • @brianodonnell6372
    @brianodonnell6372 4 года назад +2

    Peaches and Cream corn is very popular here in eastern Canada

  • @dova_prod.8462
    @dova_prod.8462 10 месяцев назад

    I learned something new everytime I search how to transplant

  • @bobpratt5625
    @bobpratt5625 3 года назад

    you are a beautiful person . and you seem happy not a bad mood bad mouth kinda video. glad i found it

  • @nickhancock4337
    @nickhancock4337 2 года назад

    Peaches and cream is the best sweet corn in my opinion. It grows so easily here in western Illinois. You do have to support your stalks for strong storm winds if you don't have a tight field though.

  • @lyndabuchholz1216
    @lyndabuchholz1216 4 года назад

    I have never thinned my corn so that is a surprise to me. You are wise not to waste a good plant. I did try starting corn inside and then transplanting and that didn't work at all. But my climate is much different than yours I hope it works for you!

  • @Sharonwhite24
    @Sharonwhite24 4 года назад +1

    You will love that corn.

  • @creinicke1000
    @creinicke1000 4 года назад

    For fun I think saving a couple of hybrid corn to plant in some corner spot would be interesting.

  • @lisarogers1036
    @lisarogers1036 4 года назад

    You are going to love peaches and cream ! That’s the only kind we grow. Good job

  • @damarispickin649
    @damarispickin649 4 года назад

    Your videos are so informative! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!

  • @PopleBackyardFarm
    @PopleBackyardFarm 4 года назад

    Nice job on all that corn

  • @JW-es5un
    @JW-es5un 4 года назад

    Here in West-Central INDIANA Peaches & Cream is one of the top selling corn varieties.( Worked in a plant farm for many years) This is what we have grown for many years. GOD'S BLESSINGS

  • @claireisacamel
    @claireisacamel 4 года назад

    I love peaches & cream! I don’t always get the most amount of ears per stalk, but they get nice and big, so it makes up for it!

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 4 года назад

      Save seed from any plant that grows two whole cobs of corn, they tend to repeat this double blessing. In that case leave it in the field u til the whole plant looks dry, then take the corn cobs inside, and let dry some more for a couple of weeks, then keep all seeds in a humidity proof ,bug plant proof, rodent proof, hard container, in a cool or cold, dry and dark location. Most properly stored seeds will last a long time.

  • @SueLD
    @SueLD 4 года назад +1

    Hope this works. Your camera man is doing a great job.

  • @AAHomeGardening
    @AAHomeGardening 2 года назад

    Looks so healthy

  • @cody481
    @cody481 4 месяца назад

    Thank you

  • @drcowan3468
    @drcowan3468 2 года назад

    The corn will cross-pollinate and the resulting corn(seeds) will be a cross between the both. The sweet corn will not be as sweet. And the other will be sweeter. If you had an ornamental variety, the kernels in both plants would be a combination of colored kernels and sweet kernels. Though mjany of the kernels in both will be the result of self-pollination.

  • @sgibau
    @sgibau 2 года назад

    I really would love to know if the transplanting worked or not. Thank you in advance!

  • @TheSwaffordHomestead
    @TheSwaffordHomestead 4 года назад

    Great Video! I try to plant a few extra seeds at the ends of my corn rolls to transplant into bad or blank spots.

  • @ck3561
    @ck3561 2 года назад

    Good video I’m going to be doing this in about 3 weeks. My tractor attachment failed and was dropping seeds way to close and out of row. Trying to see if they survived after you did this and did they produce?

  • @Sirabun-qd6nu
    @Sirabun-qd6nu Год назад

    Beautiful🌽

  • @juliangonzalez3749
    @juliangonzalez3749 Год назад

    If anyone is watching I’m pretty sure you do want to separate corn verities it’s true cross pollination only effects the seeds but it’s just so happens that with corn that’s the only part of the plant we eat so it does effect the taste, texture ect ect

  • @paigegough6929
    @paigegough6929 4 года назад

    It never hurts to try new things because we learn from trying. 😁🐞
    Maybe you grew out of your corn allergy, when I was 13 i was allergic to almost every nut but 18 months later i had grown out of it I haven't had a reaction since.

  • @AAHomeGardening
    @AAHomeGardening 2 года назад

    Sweet corns transplant well

  • @claireisacamel
    @claireisacamel 4 года назад +1

    I have always transplanted corn, and never had any issues?

  • @222mmax
    @222mmax 6 месяцев назад

    WONDER IF THE TRANSPLANTED CORNS GREW OK? THANK YOU GOD BLESS YOU MARANATHA

  • @believeliveloveandlaugh3844
    @believeliveloveandlaugh3844 4 года назад

    Good work! Happy Easter!

  • @jquiz94
    @jquiz94 5 месяцев назад

    Hello! Did it work?

  • @RRaucina
    @RRaucina 5 месяцев назад

    For gods sake, get yourself a masons trowel or a knife or a sharp stick to make a hole with! Or duct tape a short fork to your finger. Both for removal and transplant. Try planting some jimmy red, look it up - amazing corn.

  • @Suchnsuchhomesteadja
    @Suchnsuchhomesteadja 2 года назад

    Did they grow … I know am late but am also on this same topic?

  • @yahuahyahusha2462
    @yahuahyahusha2462 2 года назад

    did they do well?

  • @brandonmonroe7050
    @brandonmonroe7050 3 года назад +1

    Did the transplants grow well and produce ears?

  • @emdeejay7432
    @emdeejay7432 Год назад +1

    You were pulling them out like you would pluck a weed or if you were thinning them to throw them. If you're transplanting don't do it like that, use a little hand shovel to help them out of the soil. I'm sure that is the reason one of them was missing its tap root. Don't pull something out of the ground by the stem when you're going to transplant it. That's hard on the plant

  • @ericlondonrocks
    @ericlondonrocks 3 месяца назад

    What happened to the transplants? Did they grow? Where is the follow up video? thanks

  • @ksmill09
    @ksmill09 Год назад

    Peaches and cream is the best..

  • @charlescoker7752
    @charlescoker7752 4 года назад

    If you thin your corn next year. Water the corn plant. It will pull up without breaking as many roots.

  • @rachealrumbo4441
    @rachealrumbo4441 4 года назад

    Good job!

  • @19sam45
    @19sam45 4 года назад

    Amanda are you and Sunshine safe, I'm praying for your safety....

  • @TheRugghead
    @TheRugghead 3 месяца назад

    The birds have xray vision and stole most my seed a couple days after I planted. Now I'm trying to space out what made it😅

  • @dellrand3628
    @dellrand3628 4 года назад

    Hi peaches and cream is good but you should try funks g90 sweet corn.

  • @johnnym6748
    @johnnym6748 4 года назад +1

    So did it work?

  • @marilynmcclintock2974
    @marilynmcclintock2974 4 года назад

    Peaches and cream is good.
    Grandma Sue in central Indiana and Izzi Too

  • @courtni6916
    @courtni6916 4 года назад

    Hey Amanda are you growing any things like purslane or plantain? Hope you are doing well

  • @misst1586
    @misst1586 4 года назад

    New subscriber. I'm trying the same thing this year.

  • @courtni6916
    @courtni6916 4 года назад

    Can you do a video on your favorite educational resources, please? :)

  • @debbie2663
    @debbie2663 4 года назад

    🙏🏻❤️🙏🏻

  • @edsondantas7179
    @edsondantas7179 4 года назад

    Parabéns pelos lindos cabelos maraviloso

  • @onskosbos
    @onskosbos 2 года назад

    With corn, cross-pollination IS unfortunately a valid issue for the current harvest, not just for saving seeds (that too). Reason being your actual harvest IS the seed, not a fruit containing seeds. It might not be such a big problem if you're growing varieties within the same corn types, i.e. field corn, popping corn, sweetcorn, etc. But if you're growing, say, one popcorn and one sweetcorn, you're going to potentially get some weird mixed corn cobs that taste neither good for popping or fresh cob eating.

  • @shantapersaud2417
    @shantapersaud2417 Год назад

    The main root do grow back

  • @linda-mariestephens3719
    @linda-mariestephens3719 4 года назад

    Charlotte from Ky. 😀

  • @ksmill09
    @ksmill09 Год назад

    The crows ate our corn this time. Transplanting may be the way to keep the crows away.

  • @janissilvers6824
    @janissilvers6824 4 года назад

    I think all these pesticides they put on growing food is bad for you. I haven't had a garden for quite a few years but when i did i only used chicken manure and
    sawdust when we cleaned out chicken house. Never had trouble with bugs or animals. Sure do miss gtowing my food.

  • @ManpreetSingh-vy2jq
    @ManpreetSingh-vy2jq 3 года назад

    You are so beautiful and sweet voice also

  • @guykenniker9498
    @guykenniker9498 4 года назад

    I need non gmo organic

  • @ericjohnson1008
    @ericjohnson1008 4 года назад

    Playing in the dirt again, I see.

  • @ecocentrichomestead6783
    @ecocentrichomestead6783 4 года назад

    Yes, avoid pesticides, herbicides, and preservatives when you grow your own.
    Another thing is the variety. You may be allergic to one variety and not to another. Buying at the local store, you have no choice of variety.

  • @didine256
    @didine256 4 года назад +3

    Hey, hope you have a strong relationship with your boyfriend. Because you're basically working for free on his property, like free labor. If ever your relationship comes to an end and you have to leave his property, you'll have nothing in your name. Everything is not always sunshine and rainbows you know

    • @netflixandpopcorn5306
      @netflixandpopcorn5306 6 месяцев назад +1

      Who peed in your cheerios and why did you decide to be weird to this person for it?

  • @kennethsobczak6272
    @kennethsobczak6272 Год назад

    Full of errors.