My garden provides more than food for me. It provides therapy from the every day worries of the world. The value of my garden = priceless. Thanks for the video.
I am trying to grow a garden for the first time on my new property. Only tomatoes, paprika and strawberry. Not that much, but its nice to know that it is organic and I have created it.
I couldn't agree more with what you said to Pete,it's amazing exercise-gardening,so you have a gym and a nutritional therapy centre all in that veg patch when ya think of it😉👍☺️.we wouldn't have half the problems we have health wise if we ate healthy like this.
I really don't care how much it costs for me to grow my own food... I enjoy it, I feel great doing it, I love the taste of fresh veggies, and I'm learning so much. Makes me slow down and appreciate what I have and gives me purpose as I approach retirement. Keep it going, Pete! Great vid!
@@patrickboyle6727 I agree with you Patrick. And I find that it’s also an art or a science…gardening, knowing when and how…to produce more and better fruit and vegetables. A lost or dying art, unfortunately. But an excellent and beautiful one. There is nothing like harvesting or tasting produce from the earth, purely organic. Patrick I believe we’re in a much better position learning this art while we still have time.
@@patrickboyle6727 Patrick the way I see things is that even if there isn’t a drastic food shortage in the near future, the cost of food will increase more so, as farmers are also getting hit with rising costs. We are also spending more money on food and less on non-essential goods. It’s a grim and spiraling 🌀 situation.
I will teach that hard work to anybody that thinks store bought produce is good! I grew 21 different vegetables over the winter in my raised beds in north Texas. Thank you pete for educating the uneducated.
Thanks Pete for sharing, I couldn't agree with you more. We are what we eat and we, as a people of plenty, need to be very selective of what we put into our bodies. As the old saying goes, "you only live once", so lets make it as good as possible. Kudos to your hard work... God bless TEXAS and long live the Republic!!!!
The funny thing is that the produce area is always full when there something goes wrong. During the run on the stores during he beginning of Covid and the recent snowstorm the stores were empty of all convenience junk foods, however the produce area was untouched. I live in a small town and am probably the only one on my street with a garden. It is sad.
As a whole -food plant based vegan, I agree about growing your own produce. If a food has more than two or three ingredients, leave it at the store. I grow veg for a living, 1,000 tomato plants in seven high tunnels, four acres of sweetcorn and over an acre of greens and other veg. Let food be thy medicine!
Growing your own food is a lot of work no doubt; however, it’s worth the effort. There’s tremendous satisfaction that comes from growing your own food not to mention the taste of fresh nutritious food.
Great show today I got up to 660 now I am at 400 it’s been a long time coming and you are right you are what you eat! And thanks for this it hit home and no hard feelings for a still overweight 52 year old man but you give me hope ! Thanks my east Texas friend
This past two days storms hit hard in our area. 5-1/2 inches at last tally. Our garden was flooded. It’s receding now. Still muddy. My point is all I thought when it was storming is there goes my garden. It means so much to my husband and myself. It tastes better. It’s better for me, it’s not easy to grow in Texas. You have to learn how. It isn’t easy. So I’m learning now before the system falls apart. It helps me in more ways than nutrition. It’s therapeutic. I call it dirt therapy.
Pete these are the videos I missed while you took a long break. You're a straight talk guy with kindness and willing to show the path rather than ridicule people. If we can lead the nation back to gardens so many problems will go away. Keep on the path !
I love this video I work a 9 to 5 making less than $17 an hour and the money I put into growing my own food has been financially stressful but at the end of the day I believe it would all be worth it! I will be starting a RUclips channel here soon to show all of my garden beds and how I am mended them and what vegetables I have growing and I’ll be cooking them I am a chef of a years and I can’t wait for this growing season!
I agree that gardening is absolutely worth the effort and investment of time and $$$. What people don’t realize is that you get 10x more from every dollar you spend on your garden than you do from the grocery store. I love late spring and summer when we get to start eating fresh out of the garden, it’s amazing. I do use the microwave to reheat leftovers, 😉😂.
Enjoyed watching. In order to reduce complexities I grow ( specialize ) only in a few items. Garlic 20 varieties, Japanese eggplant 10 varieties, some cherry tomatoes and cucumbers. I barter with other gardeners for items I don't grow. It easier that way. I gave away the sofa and television to make time for the garden. No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, I'm devoted to the garden. Third president wrote.
I agree with you 100%. I'm "gardening" in a smaller urban setting. For me it so peaceful and the reward is a variety of healthy food w/ a sense of self sufficiency.
The very same people who comment that you're wasting your time and money in the garden are the ones who spend hours on a treadmill and spend money for the gym to exercise. when you have your own garden you might be spending money for soil amendments and products to grow our food but the exercise, fresh air and delicious food you get is worth it. keep growing on and enjoy every minute of every day doing what you love to do.
Yes and they spend thousands of dollars just keeping their lawns perfect..when these plots could be used for growing their own food...and a lot are in HOA.. nonsciens..can't have no vegetable gardens, only well manicured lawns, living most HOA's... so sorry for these people....
Thanks Pete for the info. I just said to my son (42) that same thing the other day--we hardly ever saw overweight people growing up. Saw a WW11 clip of the day the war ended and people celebrating in Hawaii. I kept thinking while watching it, something was different with the people. They were so happy (of course) and yelling etc, but I looked and looked and to my amazement, everyone was slim and trim. They were eating good hardy meals as my Mom told me the diet during those days. No preservatives! Fresh fresh --my Grandfather & Grandmother lived in San Francisco during the war, and he raised a garden, always, and rabbits. Italian, and knew his stuff, I might add! Later moved to the country, had a acre of garden--hard work, but he loved it and shared with all of us and neighbors. Good memories to share and begin your own, for your families. A good life, as I myself, a woman 73 years young, still growing in containers and whatever I can do to grow my veggies!! Now moved out of town, small lot, but room to GROW, and stay healthy and teach the grand kids and great grand kids. Like you said--delicious and the work is keeping our bodies working and healthy. The sunshine and fresh air, and the joy of taking care of living things growing. Fantastic. No where can you get more satisfaction, God knows what we need, we just need to do it. Keep up the helpful, great work, it helps us to keep on keeping on! Blessings!
I absolutely love my garden. We are not on the grand scale that you are but i love the exercise, plus i love growing our own.... and the reward of going into my backyard and gathering food to eat!!!! The food in the grocery stores is no good...we will continue to grow our own and expand as much as we can so we don't have to go to the store for anything...we eat so much better and our food does not go bad as quick as the food in the store...
Im so glad I found your channel! I'm out in between Emory and Point! You got this! I seriously need to think about removing some of our trees down so I can have a bigger growing area!
Even living in the city you can grow food. There's a whole movement called Food over Lawns. there's a lady in Germany who grew food on her 82 square foot terrace. No matter where you are you can garden.
East Texas land of my birth and love of my heart. My grandparents had a farm with fruit trees and homegrown vegetables. The store bought doesn't taste anywhere near as good as what I ate as a kid.
Love your videos. Gardening is very hard work, but so worth it. We probably don't save money by gardening, but love the results. We appreciate your recent chicken videos, because we're about to get chickens.
Great point, we should all strive to know where our food is coming from, and what goes into producing what we eat, I completely support your thoughts and vision
In addition to all the things you've already mentioned oh, I have noticed an amazing connection to the Earth and everything around me just try sitting down to eat food that I grew myself. I started gardening more than 20 years ago because of concerns about the chemicals and garbage they were putting in our food already and because of the cost of certain vegetables like bell peppers when I lived in Florida. So glad I did
Pete a lot of the negative comments you get are from people who are too lazy to garden, it is hard work. Very rewarding work..Nothing tastes as good as the food you raise on your own land using your own hands. good videos. Thank you.
Not to mention the fact that growing your own food has another advantage besides the obvious benefit of eating right, you also get tons of exercise with all the physical work you have to put into it
Excellent video man! I was getting hungry when you showed the veggies on the grill. You should do more videos like this... pro health / coaching and healthy cooking/grilling.
So I’ve checked out Farmer Dre channel, and what he dose and I think is a great idea, is he takes a small vegetable can stuck a handle on it and use that as a guide to burn holes in his weed barrier. Also I think one can wield a measuring stick on it and everything will be the same distance apart.
Charles Dowding has been at gardening a long time and a big proponent of no dig gardening. I would estimate he does about a quarter to a max of a half of what tiller gardeners do and his results are stellar. His biggest tasks are adding to the compost, spreading the compost twice a year, planting and harvesting.
Do you have a beginner video? Which vegetables are easier to grow and which are harder? What materials do you start out with, to make a small garden? Which require more work and which require less work?
Pete, you are an inspiration. We are moving to WA state this year and getting a couple of acres. You eluded to it, that the other advantage of growing your own food is variety of foods, you have a very limited selection at the market and many foods are engineered for reasons other than taste and nutrition.
I worked on an industrial sized strawberry farm when I was in high school. Do not buy strawberries from farmers. You have no idea how many pesticides, fungicides, and herbicides we used. This is what woke me up young. I grow mostly all of my own food now and sell at farmers markets. I pay essentially ZERO for all my food, save meat, which I trade for with meat farmers. It is really worse than most people think it is (corporate farming).
Total Wisdom... agreed 100%. We are working 9n our Homestead now, Greenhouse up, Garden going in now... sharing a pig with family in a few weeks, as well as sharing a beef cow with a neighbor he raised and we paid 1/2 ... will get the meet in Mid-April ... canned our own food, we've not wanted for anything even when all the stores locally had little to no food.. ignorance isn't always bliss... thanks for sharing & Blessings
Pete B: You don't need to justify ANYTHING you do to anyone. So what if you work harder than most, to provide whole, nourishing food for you and your family? If it makes you feel good and gives you pleasure, that's all the justification you need. You're right. There's nothing more satisfying than eating foods that you grew yourself. You hinted at the coming food insecurity that became apparent at the beginning of this pandemic. There will come a time when growing our own food is not just a hobby but a necessity. You're way ahead of the curve! People are going to hate no matter what. It says more about them than the ones their criticizing. You do what's right for you and if it makes you healthier, and doesn't hurt anyone, more power to you!
yes! it is so hard! our 2nd year into growing. man that 1st wave of mistakes and errors. the bugs! the lack of composting and fertilizing. oh man, it was so discouraging at first but I am getting back into it. built a greenhouse and going to till my ground this weekend for our corn and potatoes. I do feel the same at times to just go get something to quick-fix our meals but I am breaking free one seedling at a time. great chat and video on how I can work the tiller into the ground.
You should try the No Till method. Make some raised beds. Saves a lot of time and the soil is way more healthy and full of what you need to make your food full of vitamins. Every time you use the tiller you destroy the mitochondrial life in the soil.
You are so right. People don't know how delicious home grown vegetables are. Nothing compares to the fresh taste. Its been a very cool wet summer where I live in Australia, 2 nights ago I finally baked my first eggplant and ripe pepper along with freshly picked tomatoes, zucchini and herbs. It was a taste I had been looking forward to since last years growing season and it was like heaven. I would put all the hard work into growing my own food all year for just that 1 meal alone! But you cannot make a person understand until they taste the difference. Next time someone asks me this question I won't answer in words....I will simply invite them over for a BBQ! 😂😂 great topic of discussion, thanks 😊
Great video sir! Thanks for taking your time to educate. I'm in your area and in the process of building out our garden/orchard. If you have time, we'd love to see a quick video of when you're planting and what you're planting this year.
Very interesting. I'd like to know more about that black cover...burning holes in it? Good idea. Also, how does that watering device work? Hopefully I'll come across these things in a different video.
#growyourown I retired my tiller this year and bought a 60" pto tiller for my small tractor. Last year I hurt for 3 days after tilling the gardens. We tilled the potato patch in minutes today. :)
I just retired in January from over a 30-year career and health care. I've told people for years if we do not take care of ourselves somebody else will have to. It really is physical exercise and what you eat oh, there is no magic pill. We need to get back to basics. My family and I enjoy your videos so much. Definitely praying for all y'all down there in Texas.
I was in my garden last week trying to work the ground the farmer in the back yard came by and sprayed me with the chemicals he was putting on his field. I’m still going to have a garden but I’m wonder if the chemicals he sprayed will ruin it. I really don’t know if I can do anything to stop him from spraying my yard.
Pete, stick to your guns. Keeping planting and enjoying and benefiting from your home grown fruits & vegetables. And the eggs your chickens provide. You've inspired me! Be well & keep safe.
The garden and greenhouse is just for my wife and I and friends and family but we are also freeze drying what is extra and anything that has gone bad will go to our chickens.
Just wondering, why do you not attach a tiller to your tractor and put the weed barrier cloth on after? The smaller tiller looks like it's so much more work. I also always feel satisfied when I eat something I grew instead of something I bought, and I love growing things you can't find in the stores those people love.
I don't have that much room in my orchard/garden to move or turn my tractor around Plus I can't justify buying a cheap $2800 tiller implement for my tractor just to do my corn and potato areas. ☹️
Those who think you spend too much time and money have obviously never reaped the rewards of sitting down to eat the food that you've worked so hard to grow. I live in the mountains of CO so growing a garden is so hard because of the rocky soil lacking in nutrients. I was at the grocery store yesterday and I was behind a woman who probably weighs 300+ lbs and her basket was loaded. I overhead her talking to a man and she told him that she was "stocking up" in preparation for the snowstorm expected to hit the mountains this weekend. I thought good Lord woman are you expecting to be snowed in for a month?
There is nothing like growing your own. Yes, it is hard work . The reason I have my garden it to get away from pesticides on food. Trying to eat better for health. If it makes you happy, do it. I so agree with what you are saying.
You certainly could try. I am in zone 8B, near Houston. Beans grow really quickly. And if it is too cold or wet,, for some reason they fail, just begin again with another round. This is called succession planting. As bean plants usually lose production after harvesting 3 or 3 weeks, you can keep them coming this way!
We've had a farm for well over 20 years, but have only been in East Texas for a year and a half. Any tips on the best types of veggies that grow here and where you but those seeds? I'm in the experimenting phase here. There's an organic farm locally I buy from sometimes and she said whatever I'd grow in summer up north is what I should grow in fall here. I'm not sure what schedule to follow
We just moved in Orange Grove Texas. Can you give us tips on gardening, what fruit trees to plant and what vegetables we is good in Texas soil. We are in Jim wells county. Thanks brother. Had been watching some of your posts.
Your in zone 9a which is close to sub tropical, when it comes to fruit trees, stay away from apples and pear trees because they need more chill hours during the winter. You can do most stone fruit trees like peaches, nectarines, and apricots. You could even do some sub tropical fruit trees like citrus trees, tangerines, or apricots but you might get some frost in you area during the winter that might kill it. For vegetables you can grow all the night shades like tomatoes, egg plants, peppers they love the heat. Here's a planting guide for your area garden.org/apps/calendar/?q=78372
What you have done, I am striving to do right now. I am looking to get out of the city and buy my own dirt and work the land hard just like you do. You may work hard, but it’s for your own good, I am going to do it too ! Forget about the naysayers.
To be fair to those people, it isn't if your not physically or financially capable of keeping it up. Even 'Farmers' RETIRE! If you don't have the physicality to plant more than one or two 'containers' of something then you need to PREP using Grocery Store items. One Homesteader I watch put it very honestly in that *she said, "My family is not going to starve over a CAN of beans!"* She has some regular Grocery Store items in her Prep too because they LAST longer than FRESH (even when canned). Some people really don't have the room nor THE MONEY to get the room they would need to become a legit 'Homesteader'! Some don't have the money for the things you will need to either START or MAINTAIN even a 'backyard' garden. *But everyone can grow SOMETHING!* Know HOW to grow food for yourself by growing different things in your 'limited' space with your 'limited' funds and in the INTERIUM put your PREPPER PANTRY TOGETHER NOW!
I agree with you Pete 100% I can’t wait to be back in Texas and grow our own foods. Currently we live overseas because my husband is an expat but he’s going to retire this year although he’s still younger and we gonna start growing our own foods. Being an expat we travel a lot all over Europe and people there grow vegetables even in there little balcony have pots with grown vegetables they even rent small lot to grow there foods. European grow foods in there yard unlike the US where they’re big into beautiful landscaping in there front yard.😀
I grow my on food in the summer and freeze a lot of it. Yes it is hard work and good exercise. I love it. The food is soooo much better than store bought.
Liked the pictures of you from Bodybuilding. That explains a lot. You understand discipline and hard work, and it comes through on your videos. I always like your videos. Good common sense and practical advice. You might try Hoss Tools drip tape.
Mathew 24 say famines are coming, it time to be prepare for the endtimes---Things are changing fast. It's still cold in Alberta, i am excited to start planting.
just curious where you get your compost from , i am worried about persistent herbeside left in manure from ruminants fed hay that has been sprayed, i cant find organic hay to feed my goats and chickens, i have had problems in past with it. it causes leafs on plants to curl upward and also stunts plants if not outright kills them .thanks for what you do
You have to be very careful that is for certain. I purchased 3 cubic yards of "garden mix" to top off my raised beds last year, that was contaminated with an herbicide,, and my garden was decimated! It was so depressing. I have tried many thing to overcome this, still left wondering if it worked.. and if I will get a good crop this year, or not. I may end up growing in bags this season.
@@Katydidit I had same problem from a bag of store bought compost and we have had problems with tomatoes in the past and finally realized it was these persistent herbicides in manure and compost I have heard you can grow corn in the affected areas and then dispose of it, they say it will take up the poison
Yes you are making me hungry! But I have to ask are the Goliath as good as Marconi? My husband doesn't even like vegetables, but once we started drilling them he can't get enough.
The Marconi peppers are sweet and have a unique flavor and the goliath grillers are spicy with that same unique flavor. I could eat them both all the time straight off the grill.
My mother-in-law got cancer years ago and was ready to die. But a switch went off and she totally changed her diet. Cancer been in remission going on 8 years now. Her sister got cancer too. Sadly, we buried her this past Christmas. Can't help but wonder had she changed her diet too, maybe she could have lived a bit longer.
My garden provides more than food for me. It provides therapy from the every day worries of the world. The value of my garden = priceless. Thanks for the video.
Well said 👍
Yes and the fresh vegetables tastes a lot better too.... putting ur hands and feet in the dirt keeps depression away
This is so true!
I am trying to grow a garden for the first time on my new property. Only tomatoes, paprika and strawberry. Not that much, but its nice to know that it is organic and I have created it.
Hey Pete, good talk. I feel the same way. Its not just the good food you grow but the hard work itself pays off in better physical fitness. Thanks!
I couldn't agree more with what you said to Pete,it's amazing exercise-gardening,so you have a gym and a nutritional therapy centre all in that veg patch when ya think of it😉👍☺️.we wouldn't have half the problems we have health wise if we ate healthy like this.
I'm agree with all you say !
The best enjoyment is to work in the garden )
I really don't care how much it costs for me to grow my own food... I enjoy it, I feel great doing it, I love the taste of fresh veggies, and I'm learning so much. Makes me slow down and appreciate what I have and gives me purpose as I approach retirement. Keep it going, Pete! Great vid!
Good points. Here’s to Pete and all of those who will make an effort to grow their own food. I will make another effort this season.
If everyone did this how healthy would we be?!☺️👍.
@@patrickboyle6727 I agree with you Patrick. And I find that it’s also an art or a science…gardening, knowing when and how…to produce more and better fruit and vegetables. A lost or dying art, unfortunately. But an excellent and beautiful one. There is nothing like harvesting or tasting produce from the earth, purely organic. Patrick I believe we’re in a much better position learning this art while we still have time.
@@richtofenillingroth641 yes rich,always good to be ahead of things alright,you reckon there will be food shortages?
@@patrickboyle6727 Patrick the way I see things is that even if there isn’t a drastic food shortage in the near future, the cost of food will increase more so, as farmers are also getting hit with rising costs. We are also spending more money on food and less on non-essential goods. It’s a grim and spiraling 🌀 situation.
I will teach that hard work to anybody that thinks store bought produce is good! I grew 21 different vegetables over the winter in my raised beds in north Texas. Thank you pete for educating the uneducated.
That is awesome!
Thanks Pete for sharing, I couldn't agree with you more. We are what we eat and we, as a people of plenty, need to be very selective of what we put into our bodies. As the old saying goes, "you only live once", so lets make it as good as possible. Kudos to your hard work... God bless TEXAS and long live the Republic!!!!
The funny thing is that the produce area is always full when there something goes wrong. During the run on the stores during he beginning of Covid and the recent snowstorm the stores were empty of all convenience junk foods, however the produce area was untouched. I live in a small town and am probably the only one on my street with a garden. It is sad.
As a whole -food plant based vegan, I agree about growing your own produce. If a food has more than two or three ingredients, leave it at the store. I grow veg for a living, 1,000 tomato plants in seven high tunnels, four acres of sweetcorn and over an acre of greens and other veg. Let food be thy medicine!
Growing your own food is a lot of work no doubt; however, it’s worth the effort. There’s tremendous satisfaction that comes from growing your own food not to mention the taste of fresh nutritious food.
Great show today I got up to 660 now I am at 400 it’s been a long time coming and you are right you are what you eat! And thanks for this it hit home and no hard feelings for a still overweight 52 year old man but you give me hope ! Thanks my east Texas friend
Great job!
This past two days storms hit hard in our area. 5-1/2 inches at last tally. Our garden was flooded. It’s receding now. Still muddy. My point is all I thought when it was storming is there goes my garden. It means so much to my husband and myself. It tastes better. It’s better for me, it’s not easy to grow in Texas. You have to learn how. It isn’t easy. So I’m learning now before the system falls apart. It helps me in more ways than nutrition. It’s therapeutic. I call it dirt therapy.
Pete these are the videos I missed while you took a long break. You're a straight talk guy with kindness and willing to show the path rather than ridicule people. If we can lead the nation back to gardens so many problems will go away. Keep on the path !
I love this video I work a 9 to 5 making less than $17 an hour and the money I put into growing my own food has been financially stressful but at the end of the day I believe it would all be worth it!
I will be starting a RUclips channel here soon to show all of my garden beds and how I am mended them and what vegetables I have growing and I’ll be cooking them I am a chef of a years and I can’t wait for this growing season!
Awesome, get that channels going and get your video editing skills down. 👍
I agree that gardening is absolutely worth the effort and investment of time and $$$. What people don’t realize is that you get 10x more from every dollar you spend on your garden than you do from the grocery store. I love late spring and summer when we get to start eating fresh out of the garden, it’s amazing. I do use the microwave to reheat leftovers, 😉😂.
Enjoyed watching. In order to reduce complexities I grow ( specialize ) only in a few items. Garlic 20 varieties, Japanese eggplant 10 varieties, some cherry tomatoes and cucumbers. I barter with other gardeners for items I don't grow. It easier that way. I gave away the sofa and television to make time for the garden. No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, I'm devoted to the garden. Third president wrote.
I agree with you 100%. I'm "gardening" in a smaller urban setting. For me it so peaceful and the reward is a variety of healthy food w/ a sense of self sufficiency.
The very same people who comment that you're wasting your time and money in the garden are the ones who spend hours on a treadmill and spend money for the gym to exercise. when you have your own garden you might be spending money for soil amendments and products to grow our food but the exercise, fresh air and delicious food you get is worth it. keep growing on and enjoy every minute of every day doing what you love to do.
Yes and they spend thousands of dollars just keeping their lawns perfect..when these plots could be used for growing their own food...and a lot are in HOA.. nonsciens..can't have no vegetable gardens, only well manicured lawns, living most HOA's... so sorry for these people....
Starting my first garden this year. Mostly peppers, and other compatable veggies. Next year I'll expand
Thanks Pete for the info. I just said to my son (42) that same thing the other day--we hardly ever saw overweight people growing up. Saw a WW11 clip of the day the war ended and people celebrating in Hawaii. I kept thinking while watching it, something was different with the people. They were so happy (of course) and yelling etc, but I looked and looked and to my amazement, everyone was slim and trim. They were eating good hardy meals as my Mom told me the diet during those days. No preservatives! Fresh fresh --my Grandfather & Grandmother lived in San Francisco during the war, and he raised a garden, always, and rabbits. Italian, and knew his stuff, I might add! Later moved to the country, had a acre of garden--hard work, but he loved it and shared with all of us and neighbors. Good memories to share and begin your own, for your families. A good life, as I myself, a woman 73 years young, still growing in containers and whatever I can do to grow my veggies!! Now moved out of town, small lot, but room to GROW, and stay healthy and teach the grand kids and great grand kids. Like you said--delicious and the work is keeping our bodies working and healthy. The sunshine and fresh air, and the joy of taking care of living things growing. Fantastic. No where can you get more satisfaction, God knows what we need, we just need to do it. Keep up the helpful, great work, it helps us to keep on keeping on! Blessings!
Thank you, yes I always notice the old movies that people were slim, this modern western diet is killing everyone slowly.
Love your channel my good man! Funny how now a days people are upset someone else is working hard!😂
The fresh air the sights and sounds of thangs in nature.
I would whether be outside then sitting on my ass watching tv.
Where on the same page friend
I absolutely love my garden. We are not on the grand scale that you are but i love the exercise, plus i love growing our own.... and the reward of going into my backyard and gathering food to eat!!!! The food in the grocery stores is no good...we will continue to grow our own and expand as much as we can so we don't have to go to the store for anything...we eat so much better and our food does not go bad as quick as the food in the store...
Im so glad I found your channel! I'm out in between Emory and Point! You got this!
I seriously need to think about removing some of our trees down so I can have a bigger growing area!
Awesome, glade you found my channel too. Yes make your growing area as big as you can handle, it's good to have too much food.
really like these points! its taken a few years here but this year weve gone all in on gardening beekeeping and tree planting ♥️
Even living in the city you can grow food. There's a whole movement called Food over Lawns. there's a lady in Germany who grew food on her 82 square foot terrace. No matter where you are you can garden.
I believe that the people who commented that it's not worth it are not regular subscribers of your channel or maybe this channel is not for them.
Making the holes with a torch.....freaking brilliant
East Texas land of my birth and love of my heart.
My grandparents had a farm with fruit trees and homegrown vegetables. The store bought doesn't taste anywhere near as good as what I ate as a kid.
Pete...you are rockin’ it!🥕🥬🍉🍓🌶🍆 my brother from another mother
It's a lot of work for sure. We really enjoy our urban farm. Great work Pete.
Thanks 👍
Love your videos. Gardening is very hard work, but so worth it. We probably don't save money by gardening, but love the results. We appreciate your recent chicken videos, because we're about to get chickens.
Awesome thank you
Great point, we should all strive to know where our food is coming from, and what goes into producing what we eat, I completely support your thoughts and vision
Great video. The exercise you get from preparing your garden pays for itself. No Gym dues needed.
PEOPLE, BLESS Y'ALL! Keep up the good hard work! Thank you!
Well said Pete, growing your own food and being self reliant and efficient is what its all about.
Great video!!! Thanks for sharing. Country living is real living ♥️
In addition to all the things you've already mentioned oh, I have noticed an amazing connection to the Earth and everything around me just try sitting down to eat food that I grew myself. I started gardening more than 20 years ago because of concerns about the chemicals and garbage they were putting in our food already and because of the cost of certain vegetables like bell peppers when I lived in Florida. So glad I did
people now a days don't know what a fresh home grown food taste like most live in the fast food stores grab and go
Pete a lot of the negative comments you get are from people who are too lazy to garden, it is hard work. Very rewarding work..Nothing tastes as good as the food you raise on your own land using your own hands. good videos. Thank you.
Not to mention the fact that growing your own food has another advantage besides the obvious benefit of eating right, you also get tons of exercise with all the physical work you have to put into it
Excellent video man! I was getting hungry when you showed the veggies on the grill. You should do more videos like this... pro health / coaching and healthy cooking/grilling.
So I’ve checked out Farmer Dre channel, and what he dose and I think is a great idea, is he takes a small vegetable can stuck a handle on it and use that as a guide to burn holes in his weed barrier. Also I think one can wield a measuring stick on it and everything will be the same distance apart.
Charles Dowding has been at gardening a long time and a big proponent of no dig gardening. I would estimate he does about a quarter to a max of a half of what tiller gardeners do and his results are stellar. His biggest tasks are adding to the compost, spreading the compost twice a year, planting and harvesting.
People with great soil are so lucky to not have to till!!
There are definitely a lot of great channels to watch on it. Its crummy that we can't no till here because of the clay soil.
You work hard because you value your independence, just like any other self-respecting person would
Thanks Pete. We have been encouraged to try and buy a homestead. Will update on our progress. Very motivating your videos. Thanks again
Awesome 👍
Do you have a beginner video? Which vegetables are easier to grow and which are harder? What materials do you start out with, to make a small garden? Which require more work and which require less work?
Pete, you are an inspiration. We are moving to WA state this year and getting a couple of acres. You eluded to it, that the other advantage of growing your own food is variety of foods, you have a very limited selection at the market and many foods are engineered for reasons other than taste and nutrition.
Thank you
I worked on an industrial sized strawberry farm when I was in high school. Do not buy strawberries from farmers. You have no idea how many pesticides, fungicides, and herbicides we used. This is what woke me up young. I grow mostly all of my own food now and sell at farmers markets. I pay essentially ZERO for all my food, save meat, which I trade for with meat farmers.
It is really worse than most people think it is (corporate farming).
This is a great video and full of good information for the ones that want to listen. Sorry I don’t comment on more of your videos.
I live in east Texas and wanted to know how you are doing yours just getting started love the torch idea lol wow
I salute you, you are a great person, serious, diligent and meticulous.. God bless you🌸🌿🌸🌿🌸👍
I appreciate that.
Same amount of hours in the day today as there was in 1960. People just need to realize how to manage their time.
Total Wisdom... agreed 100%. We are working 9n our Homestead now, Greenhouse up, Garden going in now... sharing a pig with family in a few weeks, as well as sharing a beef cow with a neighbor he raised and we paid 1/2 ... will get the meet in Mid-April ... canned our own food, we've not wanted for anything even when all the stores locally had little to no food.. ignorance isn't always bliss... thanks for sharing & Blessings
I have to say all your hard work has paid off that ground is beautiful.
I am 59 yo and may I offer a suggestion? Roofer's knee pads for gardening. Save your joints
Pete B: You don't need to justify ANYTHING you do to anyone. So what if you work harder than most, to provide whole, nourishing food for you and your family? If it makes you feel good and gives you pleasure, that's all the justification you need. You're right. There's nothing more satisfying than eating foods that you grew yourself. You hinted at the coming food insecurity that became apparent at the beginning of this pandemic. There will come a time when growing our own food is not just a hobby but a necessity. You're way ahead of the curve! People are going to hate no matter what. It says more about them than the ones their criticizing. You do what's right for you and if it makes you healthier, and doesn't hurt anyone, more power to you!
yes! it is so hard! our 2nd year into growing. man that 1st wave of mistakes and errors. the bugs! the lack of composting and fertilizing. oh man, it was so discouraging at first but I am getting back into it. built a greenhouse and going to till my ground this weekend for our corn and potatoes. I do feel the same at times to just go get something to quick-fix our meals but I am breaking free one seedling at a time. great chat and video on how I can work the tiller into the ground.
Awesome 👍
Im 48, just bought a farm because of everything you are talkin about. Everyone should learn how to do it but only a few will do so.
You should try the No Till method. Make some raised beds. Saves a lot of time and the soil is way more healthy and full of what you need to make your food full of vitamins. Every time you use the tiller you destroy the mitochondrial life in the soil.
You are so right. People don't know how delicious home grown vegetables are. Nothing compares to the fresh taste. Its been a very cool wet summer where I live in Australia, 2 nights ago I finally baked my first eggplant and ripe pepper along with freshly picked tomatoes, zucchini and herbs. It was a taste I had been looking forward to since last years growing season and it was like heaven. I would put all the hard work into growing my own food all year for just that 1 meal alone! But you cannot make a person understand until they taste the difference. Next time someone asks me this question I won't answer in words....I will simply invite them over for a BBQ! 😂😂 great topic of discussion, thanks 😊
Great video sir! Thanks for taking your time to educate. I'm in your area and in the process of building out our garden/orchard. If you have time, we'd love to see a quick video of when you're planting and what you're planting this year.
Thank you, I'll be doing videos of our planting soon.
You got a nice huge land! I would grow everything too!! I would 100% grow my own.
Very interesting. I'd like to know more about that black cover...burning holes in it? Good idea. Also, how does that watering device work? Hopefully I'll come across these things in a different video.
Right on Pete another great tutorial.. I appreciate your hard work and knowledge. Keep them coming bro!!!
#growyourown I retired my tiller this year and bought a 60" pto tiller for my small tractor. Last year I hurt for 3 days after tilling the gardens. We tilled the potato patch in minutes today. :)
I just retired in January from over a 30-year career and health care. I've told people for years if we do not take care of ourselves somebody else will have to. It really is physical exercise and what you eat oh, there is no magic pill. We need to get back to basics. My family and I enjoy your videos so much. Definitely praying for all y'all down there in Texas.
Thank you
Beside the G90 and KandyKorn, bodacious and peaches n cream do outstanding here in etx. Very sweet as long as thoroughly irrigated!
Nice I wish I was 20 years younger and didn't have arthritis so bad. I plant but no way I could handle that big tiller.
I was in my garden last week trying to work the ground the farmer in the back yard came by and sprayed me with the chemicals he was putting on his field. I’m still going to have a garden but I’m wonder if the chemicals he sprayed will ruin it. I really don’t know if I can do anything to stop him from spraying my yard.
You need to talk to him and find out what he sprayed and to please not spray too close to your property.
Call your county extension agent for advice. Depending on what was sprayed there are definite laws and guidelines set in place regarding this.
Some herbicides can drift on the wind up to 2 miles!
So many people in the city will never hear the frogs in your background. Country life is great.
Pete, stick to your guns. Keeping planting and enjoying and benefiting from your home grown fruits & vegetables. And the eggs your chickens provide. You've inspired me! Be well & keep safe.
Thank you 🙂
Not to mention the supply chain shortage problems during a shtf dilemma!
It’s therapeutic, a labor of love
You have certainly perfected your rototiller technique.
Great video Pete. Gardening is wonderful, relaxing and fun.
I love gardening. Like watching it grow if nothing else. Thats a big garden who all are you trying to feed?
The garden and greenhouse is just for my wife and I and friends and family but we are also freeze drying what is extra and anything that has gone bad will go to our chickens.
Just wondering, why do you not attach a tiller to your tractor and put the weed barrier cloth on after? The smaller tiller looks like it's so much more work. I also always feel satisfied when I eat something I grew instead of something I bought, and I love growing things you can't find in the stores those people love.
I don't have that much room in my orchard/garden to move or turn my tractor around Plus I can't justify buying a cheap $2800 tiller implement for my tractor just to do my corn and potato areas. ☹️
The EROI of a 10x10 raised bed of annual veggies = 300 fruit tree food forest on 1/8 of an acre.
Thanks for the video.
Those who think you spend too much time and money have obviously never reaped the rewards of sitting down to eat the food that you've worked so hard to grow. I live in the mountains of CO so growing a garden is so hard because of the rocky soil lacking in nutrients.
I was at the grocery store yesterday and I was behind a woman who probably weighs 300+ lbs and her basket was loaded. I overhead her talking to a man and she told him that she was "stocking up" in preparation for the snowstorm expected to hit the mountains this weekend. I thought good Lord woman are you expecting to be snowed in for a month?
There is nothing like growing your own. Yes, it is hard work . The reason I have my garden it to get away from pesticides on food. Trying to eat better for health. If it makes you happy, do it. I so agree with what you are saying.
Do u think I'd be able to plant my bush beans right now or should I wait til April. I don't have row covers like you do
You certainly could try. I am in zone 8B, near Houston. Beans grow really quickly. And if it is too cold or wet,, for some reason they fail, just begin again with another round. This is called succession planting. As bean plants usually lose production after harvesting 3 or 3 weeks, you can keep them coming this way!
If you're in zone 8, you can start now just watch the 10 day weather forecast and make sure the night time lows don't get to close to freezing.
We've had a farm for well over 20 years, but have only been in East Texas for a year and a half. Any tips on the best types of veggies that grow here and where you but those seeds? I'm in the experimenting phase here. There's an organic farm locally I buy from sometimes and she said whatever I'd grow in summer up north is what I should grow in fall here. I'm not sure what schedule to follow
great video! I cant wait to buy some land. About to start driving around Texas to find my perfect spot!
We just moved in Orange Grove Texas. Can you give us tips on gardening, what fruit trees to plant and what vegetables we is good in Texas soil. We are in Jim wells county. Thanks brother. Had been watching some of your posts.
Your in zone 9a which is close to sub tropical, when it comes to fruit trees, stay away from apples and pear trees because they need more chill hours during the winter. You can do most stone fruit trees like peaches, nectarines, and apricots. You could even do some sub tropical fruit trees like citrus trees, tangerines, or apricots but you might get some frost in you area during the winter that might kill it. For vegetables you can grow all the night shades like tomatoes, egg plants, peppers they love the heat. Here's a planting guide for your area garden.org/apps/calendar/?q=78372
Great video enjoyed it Beautiful garden Be safe God Bless
Thank you and God bless you too.
Good Job Pete Keep up the good work I agree with you 100% Buddy,
What you have done, I am striving to do right now. I am looking to get out of the city and buy my own dirt and work the land hard just like you do. You may work hard, but it’s for your own good, I am going to do it too !
Forget about the naysayers.
Awesome 👍
To be fair to those people, it isn't if your not physically or financially capable of keeping it up. Even 'Farmers' RETIRE! If you don't have the physicality to plant more than one or two 'containers' of something then you need to PREP using Grocery Store items.
One Homesteader I watch put it very honestly in that *she said, "My family is not going to starve over a CAN of beans!"* She has some regular Grocery Store items in her Prep too because they LAST longer than FRESH (even when canned). Some people really don't have the room nor THE MONEY to get the room they would need to become a legit 'Homesteader'! Some don't have the money for the things you will need to either START or MAINTAIN even a 'backyard' garden.
*But everyone can grow SOMETHING!* Know HOW to grow food for yourself by growing different things in your 'limited' space with your 'limited' funds and in the INTERIUM put your PREPPER PANTRY TOGETHER NOW!
I agree with you Pete 100% I can’t wait to be back in Texas and grow our own foods. Currently we live overseas because my husband is an expat but he’s going to retire this year although he’s still younger and we gonna start growing our own foods. Being an expat we travel a lot all over Europe and people there grow vegetables even in there little balcony have pots with grown vegetables they even rent small lot to grow there foods. European grow foods in there yard unlike the US where they’re big into beautiful landscaping in there front yard.😀
I grow my on food in the summer and freeze a lot of it. Yes it is hard work and good exercise. I love it. The food is soooo much better than store bought.
Liked the pictures of you from Bodybuilding. That explains a lot. You understand discipline and hard work, and it comes through on your videos. I always like your videos. Good common sense and practical advice. You might try Hoss Tools drip tape.
I appreciate that!
Mathew 24 say famines are coming, it time to be prepare for the endtimes---Things are changing fast. It's still cold in Alberta, i am excited to start planting.
Well said 👍
just curious where you get your compost from , i am worried about persistent herbeside left in manure from ruminants fed hay that has been sprayed, i cant find organic hay to feed my goats and chickens, i have had problems in past with it. it causes leafs on plants to curl upward and also stunts plants if not outright kills them .thanks for what you do
You have to be very careful that is for certain. I purchased 3 cubic yards of "garden mix" to top off my raised beds last year, that was contaminated with an herbicide,, and my garden was decimated! It was so depressing. I have tried many thing to overcome this, still left wondering if it worked.. and if I will get a good crop this year, or not. I may end up growing in bags this season.
@@Katydidit I had same problem from a bag of store bought compost and we have had problems with tomatoes in the past and finally realized it was these persistent herbicides in manure and compost
I have heard you can grow corn in the affected areas and then dispose of it, they say it will take up the poison
Yes you are making me hungry! But I have to ask are the Goliath as good as Marconi? My husband doesn't even like vegetables, but once we started drilling them he can't get enough.
The Marconi peppers are sweet and have a unique flavor and the goliath grillers are spicy with that same unique flavor. I could eat them
both all the time straight off the grill.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts Pete, keep them coming when u can.
You are right. My family was brought up on garden foods. My mom always cooked fresh foods, and I do too.
My mother-in-law got cancer years ago and was ready to die. But a switch went off and she totally changed her diet. Cancer been in remission going on 8 years now. Her sister got cancer too. Sadly, we buried her this past Christmas. Can't help but wonder had she changed her diet too, maybe she could have lived a bit longer.
I really enjoy your videos and great ideas!