Abundant Permaculture Kitchen Garden Tour | NO DIG Gardening in May
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- Опубликовано: 27 май 2022
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Today's video is a tour of my no dig permaculture kitchen garden, showing you all the things happening in late May just before the whole garden fills right up in June. I really hope you enjoy this and get some ideas about what you can do in your vegetable garden. May is definitely my favourite month of the year as we are just around the corner from huge homegrown harvests, and the first of those harvests start to trickle in from the kitchen garden.
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It doesn't seem like your garden ever has a hungry gap! So inspirational.
It’s well planned out, that’s for sure! Very impressive and inspiring:)
Love watching your experiment with using coffee grounds. Last fall I spread 40# of used coffee grounds with coffee filters on top of each 4'x8' raised bed, and then covered them with several inches of wheat straw to over winter. This spring when I removed the straw to start preparing the beds for planting, I could not find any evidence of the coffee grounds or filters. They either decomposed completely, or where pulled down into the soil by the earthworms. The beds are all planted now and growing beautifully.
Seeing this literally my soul healed
I love the combination of close up shots of plants and flowers, and the overhead drone footage of the entire garden! I am so inspired by your garden, Huw! Well done. Can't stick around to chat... gotta get out into my garden. :D
Huw … it’s so lovely watching you grow up surrounded by your passion 🌸 And just lately you seem to be giving off an air of absolute bliss!! Thank you for everything 🍓
Thanks for sharing this amazing video..I'm from Philippines and i do love gardening i used to worked in our sugarcane farm with my family since i was 6yrs old even now i still love playing with dirt gardening is my stress reliever and also i have to say you're such a great gardener. You're one of my inspiration I'm glad i found your channel.
Thank you, Huw, what a beautiful abundance!
Rust was everywhere in our pear trees and currants. I sprayed garden sulfur (dilluted in water) and it helped a lot.
What a beautiful, productive garden. Thank you for sharing
i tried the mulching with grass cut on my garden, it's crazy how quick they grow and how healthy they look
My garlic chives are more than 20 years old...I let them flower every year and they always come back in the spring. Lovely flavor!
I have (unbeknown to me) been 'Nutrient Harvesting' for Donkey's years.😄👍💞 Always a pleasure to listen to your wisdom.
The garden is looking fabulous Huw, I am always inspired by your videos.
Your garden always looks amazing Huw.
I got grow food for free last Christmas and it is so amazing and your garden is so so amazing
You are the best gardener ever
I used to do chop and drop on my allotment. I found it worked, but other gardeners seemed to think it causes more slugs and snails. I used to watch Patrick Nolan of ‘One Yard Revolution’ and he found over time he actually got less bug damage, although I don’t think Chicago get as many slugs and snails as we do. I might go back to trying it again in the veggie patches.
You and Charlie have done a great job. I just keep learning from your video. Thanks again, all the best from Ont. Can.
Hi Huw - my wife and I love watching your videos. We live in Australia. When you talk about Months in regards to planting, harvesting, etc, this means very little to us. Is it possible to refer to the season instead? Early, mid and late autumn for example. That way we can translate it easily to our months of the year here. I am sure there are plenty of people world wide who watch your content and would benefit from this. Keep up the good work. Really great to sit down after work and watch your videos.
what i'm most amazed by is how you never seem to get squirrels or birds eating anything. how do you keep all the animals away?
BTW, great production value on videos!
Looking fresh and green ❤️❤️ thank you so much for your sharing this video
Got my first rose of the year today.
My beans are under assault from squirrels and rabbits.
This is an absolute garden goal.
If you ever get a chance I would love to see a video on how you store your excess produce.
Always inspirational and we have great growing weather in Wales this year! We have a problem with our green bag collection in the Vale at the moment so I am collecting the grass cuttings from our neighbours and spreading them on our beds. thanks Huw.
Its so beautiful and healthy.
As per usual, you share another thorough and enjoyable video, Huw. I harvested a green garlic today as you suggested, and it made a delicious Asian pork dish. I also appreciate the kale pod idea to sauté in butter and garlic, as I have a bed overrun with the kale plants that have run to seed. 😊😋 Cheers friend!
Hello! Thank You for your FANTASTIC Gardening podcast! I find it is high quality, because of the vast amount of information and wisdom for any and all gardeners. Your plot is beautiful, and you give us the good news as well as the bad. Some podcasters seem to hide the failures, as though they don’t have them, but we all have varying grades of failures and how we acknowledge them is just how honest we really are! I find your photographer and editor does a bang-up job!
Kentucky here. I’m trying the compost pathways. So far so good. I have a small business so I have an abundance of cardboard which I use lasagna fashion in the garden. Seems to be working. I’m also doing in ground worm composting. And the weed and manure fermentation. I try to use the water before it becomes unbearably smelly. And then throw the rotting residue in the pathways and cover with cardboard or spoiled hay. Haven’t killed anything yet so fingers crossed it’s okay
This guy is just calming what is it with these gardening people Gaz Oakley is the same Charles Dowding same ❤
Just love the photo you have to highlight the video for your May kitchen garden. So inspirational. 👍
Thank you for another lovely video Huw :)
I've grown my potatoes in big buckets for years now. At the end of the season when the tops have died back we tip them upside down to protect from excess rain, they keep very well like that. We are going into winter now and I still have 4 big buckets outside. That will last me about 8 weeks. Last year's got too much rain and they blighted. One good thing about doing it this way is that if u have to shift, u can take them with u. I learnt a tip from a maori lady her in NZ, she said to keep potatoes in the fridge, they last a long time
I got so many ideas and inspirations from this video! I had to stop over and over to take notes and google plants I was unfamiliar with. Thank you so much for the wonderful videos you put out that help so many people all over the world to garden and make the world more beautiful and food more secure. 🌱
I had a super abundance of garlic chives which I made into a pesto with walnuts. it is a delight on green beans. Also found a Condiment made by chopping them fine, adding salt and pouring hot oil over them. It’s a recipe from Viet Nam which actually cooks them in a mason jar.
Hello ! Your garden is marvelous ! Thanks !
Beautiful! You are the best and could you show us a recording on thinning of vegetables that have been hand sown? Keep up the good work!
I love how you explain when things dont work quite the way you planned, the honesty is amazing! I LOVE LOVE LOVE your garden and your channel thank you for being so inspiring!
Thank you so much :)
Paradise ! You have created paradise ! 🌿🌿💚🌿🌿 Loving it !
Discovered your channel just now. I am inspired by your videos that I've watched so far, and encouraged with the comments. Binge-watching starts now. I hope to achieve in my garden the success that you've had with yours. 🌱
Love your videos Huw great content and gardens, Love it keep up the info.
You are so inspiring! The garden looks so lush and happy:) I love you're experiments!
Hi Hugh. This was fantastic to watch. I have just planted asparagus into my old strawberry bed but was worried as many strawberries are starting to poke through, having read repeatedly that asparagus don't like any competition. This was a heartening watch as I had always hoped the strawberries could be used for underplanting/weed suppression and now I am confident to just leave them to do their thing. Thank you.
Hello Brother Soo Beautiful Sharing 👌 Amaizing Garden I Hope to See You Around Greetings 😊 👍
Wonderful plants - great filming!
Greetings from northern germany
Love how lush the whole place looks! definitely gaining influence by this!
Your garden looks great Huw. I just pickup up your book, just started reading it. It's very well put together and is full of great information in it. I can't wait to finish it.
Inspiring and beautiful gardens! It's exciting to see the new garden bed changes. Happy gardening! ☺🐞🌻
May is one of my favourite times of year. I went on holiday for a week and everything had grown so fast.
My favourite time of year too! :)
Thank you for sharing your beautiful garden, it is so inspirational.
I am particularly interested to see how the coffee grind trial goes
Much love and appreciation for every morsel of guidance you give 🙏🏼
Wonderful garden Huw 🥕🥕🥕
I love your videos. Have you ever tried to figure out about how many square feet of growing area it would take to produce a complete diet for one person? (Plant foods plus maybe feed for small livestock like chickens and rabbits.)
I'm also quite curious on this!
Three to five acres including some bigger livestock and potentially work animals
🌼🐝🌻I’m Back for another update of your beautiful garden. It’s amazing to see the changes in your plants over time. I love watching my garden grow a little each day, that is my favorite part of gardening. I am making garden videos too on my own channel. It’s so fun to have the growth documented over the season. I still have so much to learn in this area. I hope we can learn more from each other! 🌻🌸👨🌾🐝🌼
Contagious enthusiasm 😎👍🏻
Wow. Just wow. Would be interesting to learn all your tricks för growing fennel😊🌱
So beautiful
WoW, all the way greenery, respect you Huw!
Keep a close eye on those garlic chives! They multiply every way possible, and can be extremely invasive. The homeowners before me planted a bed of them (ornamentally, for their white flowers that bloom in The fall), and it it has taken me *years* to get them under control.
My Chinese friend said it is impossible to have too many garlic chives! Still, I hack at mine so they don’t take over the herb garden. This year I made a pesto out of a bunch of them with some walnuts. That turned out to be a welcome addition to green beans that I cam clearing out of the freezer.
Absolutely beautiful garden 💚
Thank you! :)
Happy days! Guess who just put some asparagus in next to their strawberries because that was the only space left…😂
God bless you.
Thank you!
Your garden is so lush and beautiful. I am doing my potatoes in laundry baskets and grow bags this year. They look pretty good right now, but we will see when I harvest them what we get.
Thank you for this video, so inspirational!
You are so welcome! :)
Nutrient harvested haha. Definitely a complete brain hack that one, I was up happily harvesting plenty of nutrients yesterday. Love it!
Great job, good luck
I love organic garden
You have really inspired me to start growing this year. I have just one raised bed to experiment with but I have a feeling I will want more 😏 thanks!
Huw, if you like the kale seed pods, you should try radish seed pods. I almost like them better than the roots. You get the radish flavor without the hot kick caused by hot weather, or poor watering.
Brilliant Huw.
Diolch yn fawr, Huw. Thank you and I'm amazed by how much variety you have and how well they are going. In Monmouthshire, the current enemy is slugs and snails and I'm now doing a lot of bucket gardening on higher-level tables (trestles and old decking). Less bending over but s&s still get up there though they are easy to find and remove. Potatoes I'm using Tony O'Neill's tub method (80x, half Desiree, half Charlotte, a few earlies) plus under grass clippings as Liz Zorab. Brassica under Gardening Naturally square hoops. Woodchip paths and mulch, though now adding nitrogen as Robert Pavlis' advice. Tomatoes in halos and buckets coming well.
So neat and productive! I admire your garden, really~~
great tour
Your garden is amazing & beautiful your very inspiring 😇
Thank you for more one video!
Beautiful garden👍👍👍
Very talented gardener
Not sure how anyone suspicious of kale would not absolutely go nuts over kale roasted to a crisp with a bit of salt. It's really good!
I just fermented a jar of kale with a dose of pepper flakes. It’s worth eating!
I love your garden
Thanks
Amazing garden
I love your garden! Hopefully one day mine will be so full and beautiful! I would love to understand your local climate. I live in the SE USA and already in June we will have temperatures in the 90’s F / 30’s C. There is no way I know of that I could start brassicas and peas here in June with any success. Field peas (cow peas) and green beans, as well as summer squash and tomatoes, white potatoes and sweet potatoes will thrive in our heat and humidity in our climate (USDA zone 7b) and they’re great, but I would love to figure out how to successfully grow some of the crops that are so successful for you.
I have so many questions 😂😂 I love watching your videos, I get so inspired. I loved seeing you got some of the "rear" crops I'm trying this year like asturian tree cabbage, amaranth and vespa.
I'm having a go with coffee on a section of one of my raised beds too, I remember my grandmother mother's tips for gardening back in Costa Rica, she used to use coffee and kitchen scraps, some of her favourites were banana peels and egg shells too, so it's very interesting seeing your previous videos doing some a bit similar.
I wonder if you get any trouble with snails or slugs while using compost paths?
I have a question for you and your viewers, I'll try and make it brief, I would love to go home to England and find a small place to live, grow food,raise some livestock, is it still possible? I think not, but I still dream of it, every time I visit your channel it inspires me even more, sorry for the intrusion, but it seemed like a good place to ask, thanks, Clive.
Land is really expensive in england (especially post brexit and covid), you might have enough to grow food but it will get a lot more harder to have livestock.
That was a wonderful video. Your garden is looking stunning. Love the mixed planting in the beds and the compost pathways. Thought it was interesting when you said that you don't particularly like kale. Shredded finely, added to cabbage, dandelions, mint, coriander, grated carrot, onion tops makes a delicious salad. I eat a lot of amaranth leaves. If they have too much access to nitrogen, the leaves are overly bitter. I think I would keep the plants out of the raised beds and pick your worst soil/dirt. Grape leaves are also edible.
@@sherril.562 I'm not sure if you would classify it as improving the soil. I'm in Chihuahua Mexico drylands. I've still got lots of dirt. Amaranth grows after the rain. It's a first generation plant and prefers the most compacted hard clay. Once the area is mulched and is more fungally dominated, the seeds don't seem to germinate. The most common place to find amaranth is along train lines.
@@sherril.562 Mice, voles, squirrels are part of drylands. I'm pleased to see them even though my neighbours lay bait along our fence. They think the squirrels eat too many pecans. Very rarely do they come indoors (only when someone leaves the door open by accident). The mice feed the grass snakes and I want them around to advise me if a rattle snake has come too far away from the river. Mice also feed the hawks. The marks in the dust tells me what's happening. There is never a plague of anything except perhaps ants and they are ok as well.
@@sherril.562 If you want to catch mice, buy a tall garbage bin. Place some expanded mesh as a ladder on the outside of the bin. Inside the bin, place some sawdust, bit of dry grass, some large jars with bird seed inside and a jar lid with water and a carrot. The mice think they have found paradise but they can't jump high enough to get out. My son used to visit the neighbours and collect the mice for a pet store that sold snakes. It wasn't big business but nice pocket money.
I’m going to try the seed pods! Great idea. I already know I like daikon radish pods. Gosh your garden looks beautiful brimming with such a wide variety of crops. I love that you’ve mixed in some flowers and you let the crops flower. Some of my landscape plants have rust, but they always come back strong the following season. My lily of the valley seems particularly susceptible. 🌱🌱🌱🌱😃🌸
Two things: 1) Please tell more about what you do with green coriander seeds! 2) How many years in a row do you grow brassicas in same bed before rotating?
Ever thought of storing the methane from the liquid fertilizer instead of venting it?
Hello I see your onions tops are all over Do you trim the leaves to get bigger bulbs or doesn’t it make a difference? I love your garden and content
I love your updates and tours! Curious if coffee grounds might repel the voles too? I'm always trying new ways to repulse the moles in my garden here in Washington State. Thanks for all that you share Huw!
Also try tulle fabric (yes the stuff they make ballet costumes from). It is fine netting which wont hurt birds, but draped around or over plants and beds discourages all rodent type animals. They get their nails tangled in it and avoid it. It deters squirrels, rabbit, and even deer. It is not expensive. I buy it by the full bolt of cloth.
I’ve used coffee grounds extensively in my gardens and my experience is it does not discourage the moles, but it makes the earth works ecstatic!
Just wanted to say iv got all 3 of your books, they are brilliant. Thankyou!
Can I ask how self sufficient are you from your garden? Also as I'm interested in self sufficiency, could you do any trials regarding plants for alternative medicines, or plants focused in the home like washing clothes ect all organically obviously. I only ask as with the cost of living going up rapidly, I think it would be good idea for people who share that interest, and also can be grown at home.
Thankyou for your time
Mark from Shropshire
How do you preserve that many onions? Love love your videos. Im starting this year for the first time and your videos are a huge help. Thanks so much :D
Great video, thanks for sharing!
One question we have is does the compost on the paths and green manure on the beds attract slugs?
Dear Huw, your garden has always been an abundance of inpiration. I was watching What Vivi Did Next and she was an almost broken woman and yet still stay so strong. I was wondering if there is there a possible way to reach out and help that lovely lady? Love to hear your thoughts (or even a surprise)!! Thank you for all the lovely vlogs. Happy gardening.
What a wonderfull video about your garden, very inspiring I love it. What do you do with all the food??
Your dill looks great! I’m really struggling with keeping module sown dill going once planted out in my no-dig allotment. Any advice welcome! Thank you!
Fantastic video as always Huw.....I could listen to you talk till the cows come home, you have such a nice voice.
My husband brought home what he thought was compost from work but it looks more like composted wood chips with chicken bits so maybe blood and bone. Can I grow straight into it or do I need to mix with something else? Cheers in advance ❤🇦🇺🤗
Hello Huw - your approach to gardening and your explanations and ideas are very much appreciated....I was wondering if you've ever used hugelkultur in a raised bed? and had success? thinking of trying this out with an asparagus bed I am implementing this year. Thanks for all your videos! -Anne Marie
Traducción español gracias 🇦🇷👏👌👍 y
Good morning from East Texas!! Everything looks so lush and beautiful! I’m curious…what’s your weather like in late May? We’re hot and humid here… 90’s during the day and high 70’s at night… we’re getting to that time of year where we never cool down until Late October… 🥴🥴🥴
Was interested to see this as its late May here. I am in West Scotland, so a few hundred miles further north than you, and therefore mostly plants are smaller at the moment. I was surprised though to see that my beans and peas are bigger than yours(!) ( started them off inside utility room and in toilet roll inners to avoid problems with mice eating the seeds ( maybe works for voles too?)
I do edible flowers too, and was selling to a local place that does cocktails, but to continue I need insurance. Any idea where I start finding a suitable company? If it costs too much it may not be worth it. So frustrating !
you could look at personal liability insurance which is usually very reasonable..
Thank you, appeciate the tip. That sounds like what I need.
I would love to know more about the leeks flowering, do you have to keep them through the winter