I absolutely love that we're getting long-term start-to-result videos from you on a regular basis. One of the big limitations of a number of gardening channels is they show you a moment in time, and if you're lucky perhaps you'll get an update months later - but often not.
I love journal articles that undertake experiments that span months and years. I'd like to get to a point where I can provide that detail of information, whilst also liberate the process into an easy to digest and entertaining video format. The balance of information density coupled with audio-visual plus inventive and experimental science... That's what I want to watch. I want to make the videos I want to watch. Makes me happy you want to watch them too! 😊
Just by accident came upon you at 2:30 am while I drank a cup of tea to go to sleep! Wow! You are fascinating! Now I want to stay up and binge ALL your videos! You explain things well
5 minutes into the video I hit the Subscribe button in case I accidentally lost track of the video. I've watched enough of these types of videos to know that he knows what he's talking about. Nothing looks easy until you know how. And he knows how. Thank you Hoocho.
82.3 Pounds of ginger?! I just bought a couple pieces at the grocery a couple of weeks ago specially for a few recipes, so I knew he was sitting on a gold mine. *WOW.*
I dried my turmeric last year and it made the most fragrant spice I have ever met! So different to supermarket stuff. Just ready to harvest this year's crop and do it again. Hope you kept some!
I watched this with no clue what was happening and I LOVED IT. This is so innovative and just amazing to see the simplicity in some of this and the ingenuity!
Im ready to become a ginger farmer!!!!!👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾 just by watching this video...love love love it...we can all see how much you love what your doing...its becoming contagious🎉🎉🎉
I am seeing your video for the first time. I am from Kerala, India the original land of ginger and turmeric In my school days my family used to grow ginger and turmeric in tons , on soil. But your way of growing is very productive. 👍
I live in Samoa, and this seems to be a very positive and productive way to grow vegetables. I will need to learn a bit more about your Rain Gutter Grow System and how effective it is in the tropics. Thank you for your very educational videos!
I love innovations being a creative person here, I truly admire stepping out on a limb as well creatively applying other resources to uses other than intended! It’s all around us! Our brains get stuck in a trap of this was designed for this and that and fail to look at other uses. Great video Hoocho
I am absolutely blow away by your results! Also, harvesting just before a big rain storm combines with your cleaning table would make cleaning really easy.
Not only great information, but it is delivered is such an entertaining way. Before, after, during, time lapse, what went wrong, what went right, doggy interruptions, future plans, and most of all unending exuberance over the process and the results your videos really do deliver.
I've been watching tons of videos as I'm starting my ginger growing journey, I found myself zoning out but that King Gizz song brought me right back😂 fantastic video, very well explained process and I'm hoping to try this in the upcoming season!
A grower from qld told me you yield 20 times weight, yours is way more! In 10" pots I got 20* in our nursery 25 odd years ago, only using slow release fertilizer. This is excellent, thanks 👍
Soo satisfying to watch the harvest.. Kindly post how much money was spent for cocopeat, meds for plants, hydrophonic setup, power cost, time spent for full growth... 🙏🏼🙏🏼that will help people round the world🙏🏼🙂
Thank you so much for sharing this great growing approach. For an idea on using bulk turmeric: my dad drinks a mixture of (turmeric, warm water, honey) every morning, and it has been helping him a lot with his digestive system.
Hi brother… am from India… and I love the way your harvest through hydroponics method… usually for ginger it tooks 7-8 months through traditional method… but I wonder it took only 2 months for you… kudos brother…
so much to learn now that I opened a business and so many sources to watch and read from but definitely this channel is top of my list because of it goes deep in knowledge, presented with a user-friendly style, is fun and the channel facilitator gives a positive vibration
You could use a clean concrete mixer machine as a tumbler for the dirty turmeric, and spray water into it. That could save you some time and effort cleaning off so much at once.
First video I watch on your channel, and already massively impressed with the thorough breakdown of the process and long-term results. Keep up the good work Hoocho!
As someone who makes my own ginger ale/beer, this is definitely how I want to grow my own ginger in the future! Great episode. Edit: Had not actually come to the part where you said what you wanted to do with the ginger! Great thinking indeed.
Amazing insights being relatively new to this entire industry. Thank you. Amazing stuff going on here at this channel. Your attention to detail is important. Located in Japan I know how the Japanese master their environment by their intense uninterrupted focus on detail, so I appreciate very much your insights.
My mother grows tumeric and ginger on the soil. As Indians we use them daily in our cuisine. I have never seen such growth of tumeric or ginger like u ve done on the grow bags. Ill tell my mom to do so. Thanks from India.
To clean it, get a big tub and an aerator/air stone and fill the tub with water. Once you have a vigorous bubbling from the air stone, start rinsing the root in the bubbling water. The bubbles will get into every little crevice.
Very sound method! It might be worth attempting this with Galangal root also, if you can get a fresh piece at an Asian grocery. The flowers from these plants are an excellent flavor enhancement when placed fresh in a jar of tea leaves.
Congrats on a much better turmeric/ginger harvest than some of your earlier attempts. Kudos! You have mentioned the bulbous nodes at the end of some of the finer (non-rhizomatic) roots. You mentioned that you were looking to replant these. I would be fascinated by the outcome - my understanding is that the bulbous growths are called ‘nodules roots’ whose sole purpose is to store up nutrition/energy in the good times and release it back to the plant when resources are lean. They would not normally carry the right tissue(s) for rhizome development or vegetative growth - just the nutrients/energy. I would not normally expect them to give rise to new plants if replanted, that role falls to the ‘mothers’ and rhizome fingers. But, what the heck - give it a shot and keep us all posted. LOVING the creative approach you take to tweaking, tuning and generally exploring hydroponics! Have at it I say.
I was expecting to see turmeric being dehydrated and powderized. While ginger bear is nice, candied ginger is great. Really interesting video. Turmeric is a beautiful plant just for the foliage alone.
Great video with all details covered. Would like to know more regarding what type of nutrients you get into that take and also how many times can be cocopet can be recycled ♻️...
I definitely want to try this one out. For cleaning, I would suggest a "kitchen hanging rinse sprayer" so your arms don't tire out. Maybe make one once you see it. That's a LOT. For the rope spikes, You can heat the cut end of a piece of pvc pipe enough to make it flat using a hot air gun. So it might go like: Drill the holes, heat the pipe, and mash the end flat then cut a length. I might even run the rope out of the pipe before I smash it. Did this attract snakes?
Bro how serendipitous! I have bee soil growing and mushroom growing, have a shed slowing the mushroom to buckets outside less intensive/cost. Sooo had the space and saw one your vids about kratky and absolutely loved how you did not convey in anyway your preconceptions and so starting getting the gear for a small nft in the mushroom space and experimenting with kratky and so are my wife (a teacher at school with a gardening program) and daughter as a student in a flat. Than today your ginger and tumeric, I just planted a how lot for this summer! Peace and love from Dunedin. Need to be resilient. The 3d printer is screaming. Why tf have I not already got one? I love your mix of science bro! attitude with a slightly bro science! delivery, its understated and relaxing. (if your can't giggle at your self ...) thanks
For the No Gear No Idea front, I got a couple of 2L glass cider bottles from Dan Murphy's. They are great for making 2 soda stream bottles worth of cider or ginger beer.
What can I say? WOW! Very interesting video, that just showed up without me typing ginger or turmeric. I have some turmeric that is growing well in a pot and some ginger that I am planting in the next few days. (Tiny amount of both, compared.) I have a lot of adapting to do, but this video should help. I don't exactly live in a warm area and by next month it will be below zero degrees and snow all over, which means growing it indoors. Will be checking other videos and the other channel.
I came for the Ginger and Turmeric, and stayed (and subbed) for the passive hydro! Kratky grower here, and so intrigued at finding this passive variation (and win-win, for rhizome crops!). Bernie (Kratky) has modified his systems along the way to incorporate float valve systems in his various set ups. My current set up is generally for individual tubs, and a more chained system (with float valve) or even this system would be the goal for the future on my own property. Totally with you on the ginger beer, that would be the dream, but for the time being, more culinary pursuits. Like you, I did do the mistake of buying some starter ginger at the wrong time, and hopefully it will make the distance being over wintered in a cool dry place. I like your recycling of the coir, and your discovered method of bags on a roll, because I was wondering about the outlay for coir or coir/perlite for each season. Given the material is wicked with hydro nutrients, that should last pretty much indefinitely, good job. That you are aussie makes it easier to source these things (many videos US or other, usually hard to track down these novel items, at sane prices at least). Anyway, so glad I stumbled across your channel on the feed. Thanks so much.
Wow! I’m so glad I found your channel…that’s really impressive, Omg what a huge harvest of ginger and turmeric…I subscribe and hit like too…😊 God bless
Thanks! Great info. the leaves and stalk are very usable for eating and tea,and maybe cause of that beer?would like to see you trying ginger tea/brew from leaves/stems,best wishes to you.
@Hoocho for the black bags I commented its difficult to find the lay flat tubing, I had a brainwave and remembered "Barista Coffee Waste Bags" come in packs of 25ish and approx 330 x 900ish for around $12-$20 at Office/Industrial supply stores with plenty in stock 😁
really cool method, just wanted to point out you can experiment with longer bags because you make your own. I don't know how far the moisture will wick, but it's probably longer than the bags you had originally going by the results you got. Just a thought, glad it worked out as well as it did!
That's incredible! I love ginger and ginger beer. I tried growing one small rhizome but it didn't amount to much. I'm in growing zone 2b and have terrible soil, so maybe I should try just one bag of coco. Watching this I would love just one clump of what you produced. Really impressive.
An alternate grow media that I have been using for the last 7 years is 60 percent perlite and 40 percent vermiculite. I have found this mixture to be have good moisture retention and for us here in the USA is cheaper. Vermiculite is used for insulation in concrete blocks so whoever sells the blocks should have it. I use this mix over again every year.
Hay Hoocho I'm not a patreon member but i would really love to purchase some of your wick wedges and spikes. I could not find them in your store, do you sell them?
Thanks for inspiring and informative video. My brain spends 30 % of the time thinking: what is the location? or climate type? what time of the year? I think every garden video should start with location and time-of-year info.
awesome video brilliant idea ;, i was kind of wondering how come you left such a tall stand of leaves on the rhizome when planting, even before you told us you started in autumn.
@@HoochoThe fact that they come up with names like "polygondawanaland" confirms my suspicion that they're from my home dimension. Thanks and holy crap that's a lot of ginger.
As an Australian who loves ginger beer, I've always enjoyed growing my own ginger to craft homemade ginger beer. I was considering aquaponics for growing ginger, but your hydroponic rain gutter system seems to be the perfect solution for me. I wonder if you could use a similar system vertically.
I absolutely love that we're getting long-term start-to-result videos from you on a regular basis. One of the big limitations of a number of gardening channels is they show you a moment in time, and if you're lucky perhaps you'll get an update months later - but often not.
I love journal articles that undertake experiments that span months and years. I'd like to get to a point where I can provide that detail of information, whilst also liberate the process into an easy to digest and entertaining video format.
The balance of information density coupled with audio-visual plus inventive and experimental science... That's what I want to watch.
I want to make the videos I want to watch.
Makes me happy you want to watch them too! 😊
@@Hoocho This is currently your niche. Run with it as long as you can before others take notice and start copying you.
Just by accident came upon you at 2:30 am while I drank a cup of tea to go to sleep! Wow! You are fascinating! Now I want to stay up and binge ALL your videos! You explain things well
5 minutes into the video I hit the Subscribe button in case I accidentally lost track of the video. I've watched enough of these types of videos to know that he knows what he's talking about. Nothing looks easy until you know how. And he knows how. Thank you Hoocho.
82.3 Pounds of ginger?! I just bought a couple pieces at the grocery a couple of weeks ago specially for a few recipes, so I knew he was sitting on a gold mine. *WOW.*
I dried my turmeric last year and it made the most fragrant spice I have ever met! So different to supermarket stuff. Just ready to harvest this year's crop and do it again. Hope you kept some!
My father used to do the same. He used to boil them after harvest, dry it and then powder them.
@@akhilchalil1585why boiling before drying?
The beauty is that no fake talks, everything with proofs and time lapse.
I watched this with no clue what was happening and I LOVED IT. This is so innovative and just amazing to see the simplicity in some of this and the ingenuity!
Im ready to become a ginger farmer!!!!!👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾👩🌾 just by watching this video...love love love it...we can all see how much you love what your doing...its becoming contagious🎉🎉🎉
I can never get enough of your videos. I like all of the advice and sharing of information, mistakes and all. You are a great teacher. Excellent!
I have been growing ginger in pots but have always struggled with keeping them moist. This is the perfect solution. Beautiful harvest!
My God!!! Now I just have to figure out how to adapt this for a small scale kitchen garden of herbs, greens and 2 each tomatoes and peppers!
Incredible work/ research. You are literally revolutionizing the industry.
I am seeing your video for the first time. I am from Kerala, India the original land of ginger and turmeric
In my school days my family used to grow ginger and turmeric in tons , on soil. But your way of growing is very productive. 👍
I live in Samoa, and this seems to be a very positive and productive way to grow vegetables. I will need to learn a bit more about your Rain Gutter Grow System and how effective it is in the tropics.
Thank you for your very educational videos!
WOW!!! That’s massive!! What an incredible result! Congratulations on your incredible harvest!!! God bless! 🥰❤️🙏🏻🇨🇦
I love innovations being a creative person here, I truly admire stepping out on a limb as well creatively applying other resources to uses other than intended! It’s all around us! Our brains get stuck in a trap of this was designed for this and that and fail to look at other uses. Great video Hoocho
I am absolutely blow away by your results!
Also, harvesting just before a big rain storm combines with your cleaning table would make cleaning really easy.
One of the best video on ginger and turmeric man... i addicted to the channel ...
When I get my own garden I will definetly run the gutter system. Amazing harvest!
Not only great information, but it is delivered is such an entertaining way. Before, after, during, time lapse, what went wrong, what went right, doggy interruptions, future plans, and most of all unending exuberance over the process and the results your videos really do deliver.
Cheers mate! Appreciate it
I've been watching tons of videos as I'm starting my ginger growing journey, I found myself zoning out but that King Gizz song brought me right back😂 fantastic video, very well explained process and I'm hoping to try this in the upcoming season!
A grower from qld told me you yield 20 times weight, yours is way more! In 10" pots I got 20* in our nursery 25 odd years ago, only using slow release fertilizer. This is excellent, thanks 👍
Soo satisfying to watch the harvest..
Kindly post how much money was spent for cocopeat, meds for plants, hydrophonic setup, power cost, time spent for full growth... 🙏🏼🙏🏼that will help people round the world🙏🏼🙂
Excellent work with the bench, I have a wheelbarrow that I cut the bottom out of and put a metal mesh in, that works fantastically.
Thank you so much for sharing this great growing approach. For an idea on using bulk turmeric: my dad drinks a mixture of (turmeric, warm water, honey) every morning, and it has been helping him a lot with his digestive system.
Dude, your videos are a master-class in planning and development. I love your stuff, brother
Wow,,, I never thought that the plants can get the water like that. Extremely creative. I would definnitely try it in next year.
Hi brother… am from India… and I love the way your harvest through hydroponics method… usually for ginger it tooks 7-8 months through traditional method… but I wonder it took only 2 months for you… kudos brother…
so much to learn now that I opened a business and so many sources to watch and read from but definitely this channel is top of my list because of it goes deep in knowledge, presented with a user-friendly style, is fun and the channel facilitator gives a positive vibration
🌈 The world & the people in it🌈
are amazing
🙏❤️ Love from Scotland ❤️🙏
I never thought you'd be able to grow so much from so few bags, verry impressive stuff.
To give you motivation, I subscribed specifically to All the Gear for the ginger beer epidsode.
What a great harvest! I'm thinking I have to try my hand at some ginger next spring.
You could use a clean concrete mixer machine as a tumbler for the dirty turmeric, and spray water into it. That could save you some time and effort cleaning off so much at once.
Amazing harvest! Too much is always the better problem to have than, not enough. So going to set up a row of those gutters in the next garden section.
First video I watch on your channel, and already massively impressed with the thorough breakdown of the process and long-term results. Keep up the good work Hoocho!
You are a gift for universe thank you for watching love u always❤❤❤
Someone is going to give you an honorary doctorate if you keep this up, Hoocho.
Would be nice 😂
Dr Hooch has a nice ring to it.
Dr. Kraty needs to be the presenter of course.
The fact that they didn't yet is the many mystery of this world
@@Hoocho did the math organic ginger is ~$50 a kilo meaning you’ve got over $1800 worth of just ginger😮
Don't think so....... That's not how Dr. degrees work 😅
Wonderful contribution, you're a legend mate!! Just wondered if you can do potatoes using this method. Keep up the good work.
As someone who makes my own ginger ale/beer, this is definitely how I want to grow my own ginger in the future! Great episode. Edit: Had not actually come to the part where you said what you wanted to do with the ginger! Great thinking indeed.
Great minds!
@@Hoocho Any recipe on Ginger cider? Thanks 🙏🕊️🌟
quite nice!
I want growing ginger and turmeric to come this easy for me, too; I love ginger and ginger beer!
Amazing insights being relatively new to this entire industry. Thank you. Amazing stuff going on here at this channel. Your attention to detail is important. Located in Japan I know how the Japanese master their environment by their intense uninterrupted focus on detail, so I appreciate very much your insights.
time lapses are to die for!
Nice 1 Mr Hoocho. Excellent work and love the downside being it produces too much.
My mother grows tumeric and ginger on the soil. As Indians we use them daily in our cuisine. I have never seen such growth of tumeric or ginger like u ve done on the grow bags. Ill tell my mom to do so. Thanks from India.
Amazing!! I know it’s lengthy and hard work to film. But these start to end videos are timeless and really fun and useful!
To clean it, get a big tub and an aerator/air stone and fill the tub with water. Once you have a vigorous bubbling from the air stone, start rinsing the root in the bubbling water. The bubbles will get into every little crevice.
You've given me so much to think about for next years growing season. 🥰👍
Definitely gonna try to grow ginger at my house now.
the coir being so easy to clean is clever. good video
Very sound method! It might be worth attempting this with Galangal root also, if you can get a fresh piece at an Asian grocery.
The flowers from these plants are an excellent flavor enhancement when placed fresh in a jar of tea leaves.
First I saw your video subscribed straight away. Thanks for the amazing video and the crops looks wonderful 👍
Excellent .... the world is indeed abundant...if well cared for and managed. Thanks for setting the example.
Congrats on a much better turmeric/ginger harvest than some of your earlier attempts. Kudos! You have mentioned the bulbous nodes at the end of some of the finer (non-rhizomatic) roots. You mentioned that you were looking to replant these. I would be fascinated by the outcome - my understanding is that the bulbous growths are called ‘nodules roots’ whose sole purpose is to store up nutrition/energy in the good times and release it back to the plant when resources are lean. They would not normally carry the right tissue(s) for rhizome development or vegetative growth - just the nutrients/energy. I would not normally expect them to give rise to new plants if replanted, that role falls to the ‘mothers’ and rhizome fingers. But, what the heck - give it a shot and keep us all posted.
LOVING the creative approach you take to tweaking, tuning and generally exploring hydroponics! Have at it I say.
I was expecting to see turmeric being dehydrated and powderized. While ginger bear is nice, candied ginger is great. Really interesting video. Turmeric is a beautiful plant just for the foliage alone.
Thank you for sharing information about ginger farming, it is very useful and adds to my knowledge
Soon as the time-lapse with the Giz kicked in I was clicking that subscribe button.
Great video with all details covered. Would like to know more regarding what type of nutrients you get into that take and also how many times can be cocopet can be recycled ♻️...
I really wish someday can afford a garden, until then thank you for your great content.
I definitely want to try this one out. For cleaning, I would suggest a "kitchen hanging rinse sprayer" so your arms don't tire out. Maybe make one once you see it. That's a LOT.
For the rope spikes, You can heat the cut end of a piece of pvc pipe enough to make it flat using a hot air gun. So it might go like: Drill the holes, heat the pipe, and mash the end flat then cut a length. I might even run the rope out of the pipe before I smash it.
Did this attract snakes?
Bro how serendipitous! I have bee soil growing and mushroom growing, have a shed slowing the mushroom to buckets outside less intensive/cost. Sooo had the space and saw one your vids about kratky and absolutely loved how you did not convey in anyway your preconceptions and so starting getting the gear for a small nft in the mushroom space and experimenting with kratky and so are my wife (a teacher at school with a gardening program) and daughter as a student in a flat. Than today your ginger and tumeric, I just planted a how lot for this summer! Peace and love from Dunedin. Need to be resilient. The 3d printer is screaming. Why tf have I not already got one? I love your mix of science bro! attitude with a slightly bro science! delivery, its understated and relaxing. (if your can't giggle at your self ...) thanks
Oh no way and a spearo...
For the No Gear No Idea front, I got a couple of 2L glass cider bottles from Dan Murphy's. They are great for making 2 soda stream bottles worth of cider or ginger beer.
You only mentioned that you are feeding but no details or information on what it is. What do you feed the plants with and how much and how often?
❤This was nice! Any recommendations on how to grow plastic-free?
Its so lucky you happened to have a hydro setup, AND a bag sealer. Who'dve thought those would ever be useful together.
Amazing results, thanks for sharing. I'm definitely going to try this system in a smaller scale.
What can I say? WOW! Very interesting video, that just showed up without me typing ginger or turmeric. I have some turmeric that is growing well in a pot and some ginger that I am planting in the next few days. (Tiny amount of both, compared.) I have a lot of adapting to do, but this video should help. I don't exactly live in a warm area and by next month it will be below zero degrees and snow all over, which means growing it indoors. Will be checking other videos and the other channel.
Spectacular results and a strong start to finish video
I came for the Ginger and Turmeric, and stayed (and subbed) for the passive hydro!
Kratky grower here, and so intrigued at finding this passive variation (and win-win, for rhizome crops!).
Bernie (Kratky) has modified his systems along the way to incorporate float valve systems in his various set ups. My current set up is generally for individual tubs, and a more chained system (with float valve) or even this system would be the goal for the future on my own property. Totally with you on the ginger beer, that would be the dream, but for the time being, more culinary pursuits. Like you, I did do the mistake of buying some starter ginger at the wrong time, and hopefully it will make the distance being over wintered in a cool dry place.
I like your recycling of the coir, and your discovered method of bags on a roll, because I was wondering about the outlay for coir or coir/perlite for each season. Given the material is wicked with hydro nutrients, that should last pretty much indefinitely, good job. That you are aussie makes it easier to source these things (many videos US or other, usually hard to track down these novel items, at sane prices at least).
Anyway, so glad I stumbled across your channel on the feed. Thanks so much.
That was an awesome video. Love the time lapse and your very creative. Ginger beer? Yeah, that sounds like it will be great to see made.
Good ol Larry. RIP. I miss him saying, “THIS IS LARRY UP IN BRAINERD MINNESOTA!”
Superb system. I had great interest to watch your video, because i am hobby gardener.would like see more videos. Thanks a lot
Excellent! I thoroughly enjoyed the video. This method could and should be adapted for many other crops. Congratulations on a project well done!
Wow! I’m so glad I found your channel…that’s really impressive, Omg what a huge harvest of ginger and turmeric…I subscribe and hit like too…😊 God bless
One of the big limitations of a number of gardening channels is they show you a moment in time
that slide in the beginning was immaculate
You are the bomb! Thank you so much for sharing your stuff for the world to see! We learn sooo much from you!
I am watching in your video from Bangladesh. your videos information is so helpfully. Thank you very much for everything.
Thanks! Great info.
the leaves and stalk are very usable for eating and tea,and maybe cause of that beer?would like to see you trying ginger tea/brew from leaves/stems,best wishes to you.
@Hoocho for the black bags I commented its difficult to find the lay flat tubing, I had a brainwave and remembered "Barista Coffee Waste Bags" come in packs of 25ish and approx 330 x 900ish for around $12-$20 at Office/Industrial supply stores with plenty in stock 😁
WOW 😲respect! 🙌 You could collect that water efter cleaning & reuse it❗👍 Blessings 🙏🕊️🌟
really cool method, just wanted to point out you can experiment with longer bags because you make your own. I don't know how far the moisture will wick, but it's probably longer than the bags you had originally going by the results you got. Just a thought, glad it worked out as well as it did!
Not bad. A combination of the UK growbag system coupled with hydroponics for the Australian climate
I'm drunk right now but glad I found this and subscribed! This will be a blast! Thanks!
OMG 😂 amazing harvest. I'm impressed 🎉
Very inspiring. Thank you for sharing. Big heart from Thailand
A fantastic result indeed!
That's incredible! I love ginger and ginger beer. I tried growing one small rhizome but it didn't amount to much. I'm in growing zone 2b and have terrible soil, so maybe I should try just one bag of coco. Watching this I would love just one clump of what you produced. Really impressive.
An alternate grow media that I have been using for the last 7 years is 60 percent perlite and 40 percent vermiculite. I have found this mixture to be have good moisture retention and for us here in the USA is cheaper. Vermiculite is used for insulation in concrete blocks so whoever sells the blocks should have it. I use this mix over again every year.
I love your videos, you have given me so many ideas for my own growing plans. Love the dog to, she is so precious.
Her name is Fern 🌿
She’s a sweetheart!
@@Hoocho That's a beautiful name, I have a kitty named Calypso. I love animals and nature they are so pure and true.
@@lorettastinnett6848 I've never had a love as pure as my love for my dogs.
Hay Hoocho I'm not a patreon member but i would really love to purchase some of your wick wedges and spikes. I could not find them in your store, do you sell them?
Thanks for inspiring and informative video. My brain spends 30 % of the time thinking: what is the location? or climate type? what time of the year?
I think every garden video should start with location and time-of-year info.
awesome video brilliant idea
;, i was kind of wondering how come you left such a tall stand of leaves on the rhizome when planting, even before you told us you started in autumn.
Ingenious way for providing nutrients!
I'm new and I'm here for the hydro but...... omg the MUSIC! Is that you? It's fantastic.
Welcome to King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard my friend.
Inner cell, from their album polygondawanaland
@@HoochoThe fact that they come up with names like "polygondawanaland" confirms my suspicion that they're from my home dimension. Thanks and holy crap that's a lot of ginger.
@@davebullard seems we are from the same dimension, fellow traveller.
@@Hoocho The older I get the more of us I meet. Thanks for what you do.
For the turmeric, after you harvest it, why not let it soak in a tote for a bit to make the soil easier to remove?
As an Australian who loves ginger beer, I've always enjoyed growing my own ginger to craft homemade ginger beer. I was considering aquaponics for growing ginger, but your hydroponic rain gutter system seems to be the perfect solution for me. I wonder if you could use a similar system vertically.
Also I am a new fan so subscribed :)
Truly incredible video. Lots to learn from it.
24:07 is just absolutely stupendous.
holy shiet mate! Turmeric and Ginger both absolutely healthy especially from your own garden!
Duude the editing with the song going day and night was PERFECT! lol great job
Thankyou mate!