Ever since I started watching your channel a year ago, I have grown things I never thought I could in 10a in Central FL. I have learned a TON and I am excited for another year of gardening!
I struggle with beets here in 9b central Fl. Also, cucumbers...any variety always get Powdery Mildew or infested with pickle worms no matter what I organically spray with or pick off. I have tried China Jade, Tromboncino and they all succumb. I will try this year with 2 varieties I bought from Eden seeds that claim to be powdery mildew resistant. Love your channel. Have learned so much from you.
Have you tried spraying with spinosad for the worms? Stuff works like a charm and I barely have any subsequent worm issues. Powdery mildew is a fungus. Spray with 1 cup of hydrogen peroxide per gallon of water every 3 to 5 days if it's really bad. Also consistent fertilizing to encourage rapid new healthy growth to outpace the diseased growth. When growing cucumbers and squash in FL, you're going to get powdery mildew no matter the variety. It is just so humid here. But it can be controlled to an extent so you're able to harvest something.
@@JerrasGarden Thank you very much. I have tried both but I cant lie to myself. Not very consistent with them. I will plan a schedule and see how it works. I did read H2O2 is not effective for more than a day so maybe I was using it wrong by saving the left over.
Thank you for this! Would you be interested in doing a "flowers to start/plant" video for each month (or season) for us central Florida/10a gardeners? Love your channel.
Good idea! I know I have to make more videos about growing flowers. Maybe not a monthly video, but at least a seasonal one. There are some flowers that grow best in spring versus summer etc...
Jerra, Love the video. thank you! one small correction to keep in mind. you reference your zone 10a/10b USDA zones, but reminder these have nothing to do with last frost date, nothing to do with the soring/summer temperatures, and are purely based on the absolute minimum cold only.. so some of us in the same zone as you (coastal San Diego) can grow peas all the way until July being in a zone with no frosts, yet also not hot weather until August. Us gardeners need a better alternative to the USDA zones to talk about garden varieties. The Sunset garden guide zones was quite sophisticated, taking into account factors like wind, humidity, frost dates and more. Sunset had about 25 garden zones, but I think has sadly fallen out of favor.
I agree that we need a better system. Lots of coastal areas have very unique climates that make them a little different compared the majority of gardeners in the same zone. Another example is the pacific northwest coastal areas that are also zones 8 and 9 because they don't get extremely cold, but they have a much longer period of cold compared to a Florida gardener in the same zone that just gets 2 or 3 nights of cold. In general, I do try to speak in terms of plant this X amount of weeks before a frost date. However, that doesn't apply to everyone exactly either. Some gardeners like yourself don't get frost. It can be hard and confusing, especially for new gardeners. The best thing is to learn your own microclimate.
Jerra, Knowing how big each plant gets is so important and I never see it mentioned anywhere. Editing a picture of your mature plants with you standing next to it would be so helpful
I have a ton of info on Thai butterfly pea. Here is my guide on growing this plant from seed all the way to harvest. And then I have a bunch of recipe videos with different ways to use it in the kitchen over on my other RUclips channel called Jerra's Fresh Kitchen. All the recipes are linked in the video description of the growing guide. ruclips.net/video/R1AeFCcNkfw/видео.html
I have replanted tomatoes the minute the floods left after the hurricane Milton in October in Daytona. The tomatoes are very full of tomatoes and flowers still. What do I do? Can I leave them and wait?
Leave them and wait. You're a little north of me, so it will get colder. I find that my tomatoes don't get any cold damage until temps fall at 35F or below. It is taking forever for green tomatoes to ripen up since it's so cold. Just have to be patient.
Happy New Year Jerra 😊 I live in Sarasota zone 10a I started my tomoteaos in October and they are almost ready to harvest. I have already picked a few. So I do think you an grow them sooner in zone10a. Thank you Jerra you are a wealth of knowledge. I will check out your other channel.
I'm Orlando zone 10A. I like to transplant my tomatoes into the garden the last week of August or 1st week of September. So that means I sow seeds indoors in July. I get tons of production before it gets too cold and my tomato plants slow down. This year was tough with all the hurricanes though. It definitely set my tomato plants back a few weeks so I lost some production. My tomatoes survive the winter and start producing again in spring.
Everyone's setup for indoor starting is different and people use different starting mixes and they use different fertilizing techniques. For instance I don't care about organic for seed starting, but growing outdoors I do. I want a sterile seed mix to cut down on the chances of fungus gnats, molds and fungus, etc........... I get a better result that way. When a seed packet says start indoors for 6 - 8 weeks that's when my plants are ready, such as tomatoes. Yes lighting is a factor. If you don't hit your plants early with enough light you're not getting the needed amount of photosynthesis and almost all garden plants need a lot of light even from the beginning, hence the "at least 8 hours of direct sunlight" on the package of most seed types. If you see that, then your grow lights need to set up to where the plants are getting good light. How much? I don't know because I haven't seen good studies using light meters (LUX or PAR) for different vegys. What I do know is if my seedlings out the outside aren't leaning in very much, as in just barely, then that tray is getting enough light. If anything is getting leggy there isn't enough light getting to the plants. And, it's not about always getting a new light setup, sometimes it's about getting the plants closer to the light source. What I KNOW though is for any light source, the middle tends to be the brightest simply because of the way light waves leave the bulbs, and the outside edges of that source have worse lighting, so whatever the source, it needs to be larger than starting trays, which betters the chances of more even light over the whole tray. I think most peppers say start indoors 8 - 12 weeks before planting outdoors, one of the longest indoor growing periods.
Thanks for the reminder for starting seeds indoors for later. I always miss that part. Going to get a head start this year. I didn't know about your recipe channel, going to check that out now.
Love watching every month. Can’t figure out how to get printable list. I signed up for email to get but the link in email just brings me to the same link to sign up instead of actual printable list.
What do you do with basil? It grows like a weed in my garden every year because I let them go to seed, but I run out of ideas on what to do with it. I’ve made pesto, tried basil tea and didn’t like it. I gift it to neighbors, friends and coworkers. Give me some ideas! I’m in South Florida, zone 10a.
Have you ever grown/tasted Madhu Ras Melons? If so, are they similar to the Kajari melons you recommend? Of all the melons I've grown Madhu Ras were the most pest & disease resistance, tasty and best smelling. Great tip about hitting the beets hard with K early, I never seem to get huge beets, abundant leafs but rather disappointing "bulbs". Thanks, coastal SoCal zone 10.
Depends on how cold it gets. I notice my tomato plants start getting cold damage when things drop below 35F. If the root system and main stem survive, it very well could put on new growth in spring and continue. Just depends where you're located and how cold it gets in your area.
Hello Jerra, I have a question(s) regarding the blue flowers. 2024 was my first year really amending my heavy clay soil in NE Louisiana. I used my 2023 soil test to bring up the PH and macros and got a decent fall crop, so excited about spring 2025. The garden is laid out like an American flag. Red and White clover should do nicely for my target of July 04, 2026. I am hoping to try your blue flowers for the field of stars, not ambitious enough to spot 50 white flowers...yet...maybe. Google Earth photos have been in June lately, so I am hoping to time the blooms for the clover and blue flowers for my fly over picture in June and, obviously my July, 04 250 year celebration. Do you have any advice regarding timing the bloom, or should I just buy and try?
I think you mean the Thai blue butterfly pea flowers? Not sure how your making the flag design, but it is a vining plant that requires something to grow up on. It will bloom in about 5-6 months from seed. If you would like to see what my plant looks like, I have a video tutorial all abut growing it: ruclips.net/video/R1AeFCcNkfw/видео.html
Jerra, help please. I'm below you in Fort Myers, zone 10a. I know you said you cut down your Asparagus in December. My Asparagus is green as heck. Should I also chop mine down in December? I've tried finding the answer with no luck. Once I read that we could do it winter or at least by Spring. I hate my fear and indecisiveness because it's my first time growing them. Thanks
Hello nice to meet you, Im starting my Garden, Im in Orlando Florida near the Airport, and wanted to know if you have any comfrey plants seems to be hard to get too. I'm willing to purchase seeds or plant.
I’m growing tomatoes atm I’ve had them planted since nov I think I started them in sept so hope they make it I’m in 10b SWFL, they’re pretty big too I think already almost 2 ft and the other variety a little under 2ft
I grow lots of different varieties, it just depends what I'm in the mood for LOL. Usually in spring I grow sweet corn, summer the flints/dents/popcorns. Early fall I try to squeeze in some more sweet corn. Can check out the corn seed section of my website to see what I grow:jerrasgarden.myshopify.com/collections/corn
I do have a garden snake that likes to make appearences LOL. But what you see is the wind pushing my black weed blocker material in a horizontal direction.
@@JerrasGarden I don’t live far from you and my husband came running when I screamed lol I backed it up and he said sure nuh lol we have black racers in our yard they keep me moving but I love my garden so as long as they mind their business I’m kool. I love your channel and shop best wishes.
@@JerrasGarden that’s crazy but as long as it’s harmless it’s cool as I’m sure it does its job by eating it’s fair share of garden pests I had a rogue frog in my garden and I just let it do its thing unfortunately he’s gone now..
I'm in Orlando Florida USA, sub tropical climate. Your growing seasons are probably opposite of mine. January is technically winter for the USA, but here in my garden, the coldest it gets is 30F/-1C with no snow. So right now is actually one of my best growing seasons.
Yes, the aphids do bother them but I find I still get production anyways. Yardlong beans are tough plants and if you look closely, you will probably find lots of ladybugs or their larvae eating the aphids so I leave it be.
I'm located in Florida so cater a lot to hot climate gardeners. I did mention some very cold tolerant crops in this guide though. Also, in 2 weeks I'm uploading a video all about the best veggies to grow in cold conditions, so more to come 😀
Im so glad you do as there are a million northern based gardening channels that rarely if never reference southern gardeners but hardly any Florida specific channels. Thank you! @JerrasGarden
I'm 10A central FL and dill grows for me. Try planting it in a spot that gets afternoon shade. It does not like high heat so grow it now in winter/early spring.
Ever since I started watching your channel a year ago, I have grown things I never thought I could in 10a in Central FL. I have learned a TON and I am excited for another year of gardening!
I am so glad you found my channel helpful!
I struggle with beets here in 9b central Fl. Also, cucumbers...any variety always get Powdery Mildew or infested with pickle worms no matter what I organically spray with or pick off. I have tried China Jade, Tromboncino and they all succumb. I will try this year with 2 varieties I bought from Eden seeds that claim to be powdery mildew resistant. Love your channel. Have learned so much from you.
Have you tried spraying with spinosad for the worms? Stuff works like a charm and I barely have any subsequent worm issues. Powdery mildew is a fungus. Spray with 1 cup of hydrogen peroxide per gallon of water every 3 to 5 days if it's really bad. Also consistent fertilizing to encourage rapid new healthy growth to outpace the diseased growth. When growing cucumbers and squash in FL, you're going to get powdery mildew no matter the variety. It is just so humid here. But it can be controlled to an extent so you're able to harvest something.
@@JerrasGarden Thank you very much. I have tried both but I cant lie to myself. Not very consistent with them. I will plan a schedule and see how it works. I did read H2O2 is not effective for more than a day so maybe I was using it wrong by saving the left over.
Thank you for this! Would you be interested in doing a "flowers to start/plant" video for each month (or season) for us central Florida/10a gardeners? Love your channel.
Most definitely, I love it all. Zone 9A 🦋
Good idea! I know I have to make more videos about growing flowers. Maybe not a monthly video, but at least a seasonal one. There are some flowers that grow best in spring versus summer etc...
In January I love this lol 😊
I like that you describe the flavor and give cooking ideas for the harvest.
Thanks, I hope it gives you some ideas!
Can't wait for spring!
It's basically here for me in FL 😂
Same! 🪴
Hey Jerra! Thank you!
Great video😊. I’m in Florida too zone 9A. Gave me some ideas on what to start in January
Nice! I'm a few weeks ahead of you so you can see what I am doing and plan ahead.
@@JerrasGarden Definitely will be watching
A lot of great info here ! Subbed!
Glad you found it helpful!
Lifesaver for Florida gardeners! Thank you for your dedication
You're very welcome! I'm happy it helped you out.
I did not know about your cooking channel so thanks for saying that!
Yup! Just started it. Thought it would be better if my recipes had their own space or channel.
Thank you for this video. Do you have list of flower seeds I could plant in January?
So glad i found you. Need to get started!
Hello and welcome 😊
Do it! Girl,😃get started👍, you’ve got a head start, now.
👍happy gardening.
❤❤❤ I love the video!👍🏽
Thank you! Glad you liked it!
Jerra, Love the video. thank you! one small correction to keep in mind. you reference your zone 10a/10b USDA zones, but reminder these have nothing to do with last frost date, nothing to do with the soring/summer temperatures, and are purely based on the absolute minimum cold only.. so some of us in the same zone as you (coastal San Diego) can grow peas all the way until July being in a zone with no frosts, yet also not hot weather until August. Us gardeners need a better alternative to the USDA zones to talk about garden varieties. The Sunset garden guide zones was quite sophisticated, taking into account factors like wind, humidity, frost dates and more. Sunset had about 25 garden zones, but I think has sadly fallen out of favor.
I agree that we need a better system. Lots of coastal areas have very unique climates that make them a little different compared the majority of gardeners in the same zone. Another example is the pacific northwest coastal areas that are also zones 8 and 9 because they don't get extremely cold, but they have a much longer period of cold compared to a Florida gardener in the same zone that just gets 2 or 3 nights of cold. In general, I do try to speak in terms of plant this X amount of weeks before a frost date. However, that doesn't apply to everyone exactly either. Some gardeners like yourself don't get frost. It can be hard and confusing, especially for new gardeners. The best thing is to learn your own microclimate.
Did our gardening zone in Central Florida changed to 10? I thought it changed cause the climate change. Thanks 😊
@@JerrasGarden Jerra, I love your encouraging delivery & helpful support❤️👍.
I just now subscribed👋, 😃
Thank you so mcuh for the red solo cup advice! never thought of that and alsoso much more information!!
You are very welcome! It's all about finding ways to make gardening easier, cheaper, and more fun.
Jerra, Knowing how big each plant gets is so important and I never see it mentioned anywhere. Editing a picture of your mature plants with you standing next to it would be so helpful
Thank you for another great video. Melons and cucumbers are a struggle for me. I cold pressed juice, I would love to a great harvest of cucumbers.
They are hard for me too. It takes a lot of staying on top of spraying with treatments and fertilizing to keep them going.
Thank you for sharing!
Great video!! Came to the comments to find your butterfly pea tips video and don’t see it, but love your content! Thanks :)
I have a ton of info on Thai butterfly pea. Here is my guide on growing this plant from seed all the way to harvest. And then I have a bunch of recipe videos with different ways to use it in the kitchen over on my other RUclips channel called Jerra's Fresh Kitchen. All the recipes are linked in the video description of the growing guide. ruclips.net/video/R1AeFCcNkfw/видео.html
Love your video... always walk away with new ideas
That's awesome! I love helping people find inspiration for their gardens.
I have replanted tomatoes the minute the floods left after the hurricane Milton in October in Daytona. The tomatoes are very full of tomatoes and flowers still. What do I do? Can I leave them and wait?
Leave them and wait. You're a little north of me, so it will get colder. I find that my tomatoes don't get any cold damage until temps fall at 35F or below. It is taking forever for green tomatoes to ripen up since it's so cold. Just have to be patient.
Great video,Jerra!
I'm happy you enjoyed it!
Happy New Year Jerra 😊 I live in Sarasota zone 10a I started my tomoteaos in October and they are almost ready to harvest. I have already picked a few. So I do think you an grow them sooner in zone10a. Thank you Jerra you are a wealth of knowledge. I will check out your other channel.
I'm Orlando zone 10A. I like to transplant my tomatoes into the garden the last week of August or 1st week of September. So that means I sow seeds indoors in July. I get tons of production before it gets too cold and my tomato plants slow down. This year was tough with all the hurricanes though. It definitely set my tomato plants back a few weeks so I lost some production. My tomatoes survive the winter and start producing again in spring.
Great post, just subscribed. Is that lilikoi behind you ?
Yes 😀 It is a variety called Giant Yellow Brazilian. I love it.
Everyone's setup for indoor starting is different and people use different starting mixes and they use different fertilizing techniques. For instance I don't care about organic for seed starting, but growing outdoors I do. I want a sterile seed mix to cut down on the chances of fungus gnats, molds and fungus, etc........... I get a better result that way.
When a seed packet says start indoors for 6 - 8 weeks that's when my plants are ready, such as tomatoes. Yes lighting is a factor. If you don't hit your plants early with enough light you're not getting the needed amount of photosynthesis and almost all garden plants need a lot of light even from the beginning, hence the "at least 8 hours of direct sunlight" on the package of most seed types. If you see that, then your grow lights need to set up to where the plants are getting good light. How much? I don't know because I haven't seen good studies using light meters (LUX or PAR) for different vegys. What I do know is if my seedlings out the outside aren't leaning in very much, as in just barely, then that tray is getting enough light. If anything is getting leggy there isn't enough light getting to the plants. And, it's not about always getting a new light setup, sometimes it's about getting the plants closer to the light source. What I KNOW though is for any light source, the middle tends to be the brightest simply because of the way light waves leave the bulbs, and the outside edges of that source have worse lighting, so whatever the source, it needs to be larger than starting trays, which betters the chances of more even light over the whole tray.
I think most peppers say start indoors 8 - 12 weeks before planting outdoors, one of the longest indoor growing periods.
Great points, you're right, everyone's setup is different! Do what works best for you.
Thank you Jerra! Happy New Year🎉
Happy New Year to you too!
Thanks for the reminder for starting seeds indoors for later. I always miss that part. Going to get a head start this year. I didn't know about your recipe channel, going to check that out now.
Thats what these guides are for, to remind people to help keep gardens on track 😀
Love watching every month. Can’t figure out how to get printable list. I signed up for email to get but the link in email just brings me to the same link to sign up instead of actual printable list.
wow so much!!!
Great tips, thank you. I am in zone 9a, Tucson, Arizona. Going to order new varieties you’ve mentioned.🌵👩🌾🎅🎄🐓
Thanks!
Great video Jerra TY
Glad you enjoyed it
Hi Jerra, How big of a grow bag do you use for your seed potatoes and how many do you put in one grow bag? I’m in SW Florida.
Other Chanels use 20 to 25 for 3 slips
@ Thank you.
I have a RUclips tutorial that explains all of that in detail. Check it out here: ruclips.net/video/AY7NCQM0Cok/видео.html
@ Thank you!
Thank you ❤
You're very welcome!
Thanks for the reminder about your recipe focused channel. I meant to subscribe last time and forgot🤦🏼♀️
I have some great recipes coming up!
What do you do with basil? It grows like a weed in my garden every year because I let them go to seed, but I run out of ideas on what to do with it. I’ve made pesto, tried basil tea and didn’t like it. I gift it to neighbors, friends and coworkers. Give me some ideas! I’m in South Florida, zone 10a.
Make bruschetta, add it into tomato sauce, bake it into focaccia, infuse it into oil, dry and blend with salt to make a seasoning.
Have you ever grown/tasted Madhu Ras Melons? If so, are they similar to the Kajari melons you recommend? Of all the melons I've grown Madhu Ras were the most pest & disease resistance, tasty and best smelling. Great tip about hitting the beets hard with K early, I never seem to get huge beets, abundant leafs but rather disappointing "bulbs". Thanks, coastal SoCal zone 10.
I have not grown them yet but am looking into it. Would be interesting to see how well they grow in my very hot and rainy summer.
My tomatoes have soo much green tomatoes on them. I'm hoping they make it . Through the cool weather.
Depends on how cold it gets. I notice my tomato plants start getting cold damage when things drop below 35F. If the root system and main stem survive, it very well could put on new growth in spring and continue. Just depends where you're located and how cold it gets in your area.
Hello Jerra, I have a question(s) regarding the blue flowers.
2024 was my first year really amending my heavy clay soil in NE Louisiana. I used my 2023 soil test to bring up the PH and macros and got a decent fall crop, so excited about spring 2025. The garden is laid out like an American flag. Red and White clover should do nicely for my target of July 04, 2026. I am hoping to try your blue flowers for the field of stars, not ambitious enough to spot 50 white flowers...yet...maybe.
Google Earth photos have been in June lately, so I am hoping to time the blooms for the clover and blue flowers for my fly over picture in June and, obviously my July, 04 250 year celebration.
Do you have any advice regarding timing the bloom, or should I just buy and try?
I think you mean the Thai blue butterfly pea flowers? Not sure how your making the flag design, but it is a vining plant that requires something to grow up on. It will bloom in about 5-6 months from seed. If you would like to see what my plant looks like, I have a video tutorial all abut growing it: ruclips.net/video/R1AeFCcNkfw/видео.html
Jerra, help please. I'm below you in Fort Myers, zone 10a. I know you said you cut down your Asparagus in December. My Asparagus is green as heck. Should I also chop mine down in December? I've tried finding the answer with no luck. Once I read that we could do it winter or at least by Spring. I hate my fear and indecisiveness because it's my first time growing them. Thanks
If it is a mature plant, then yes cut it down in December. If it is small then dont worry about cutting it down just yet.
Amazing, Jerra! I just love your videos! 💜🪴💜
Thank you! Glad you like them!
Hardest thing is waiting to start for spring. Just biting at the ropes. In NW Florida zone 8B/9A near Pensacola
I'm loving the season right now! By the time it's officially spring (March 20th), it's way too hot and I start transitioning to summer gardening.
Hello nice to meet you, Im starting my Garden, Im in Orlando Florida near the Airport, and wanted to know if you have any comfrey plants seems to be hard to get too. I'm willing to purchase seeds or plant.
At the moment I dont have comfrey plants but it does grow well here in Florida during the spring or fall. It is pretty easy to grow from seed.
Thanks
You're welcome!
What do you mean “if the ground is workable?”
I'm in Roseville California CA
and I'm in zone 9B in Roseville California CA
Nice, I am about 2 weeks ahead of you.
Do lemon trees need to be cross-contaminated to grow lemons?
Lemon trees are self-fertile, meaning they can produce fruit without pollen from another tree.
Hello Jerra. I feel silly but how do I access your garden guide? I do not see a link! Thanks. I'm a 78 yr old new gardener.
Hi and wlcome! To get the checklist submit your email address when you follow this link so I can email you back with the file: tinyurl.com/32u4ptee
I’m growing tomatoes atm I’ve had them planted since nov I think I started them in sept so hope they make it I’m in 10b SWFL, they’re pretty big too I think already almost 2 ft and the other variety a little under 2ft
They will survive winter in zone 10B.
@ good to hear!!! Thank you! 🥰🫶🏾
I haven't been able to grow lemon balm yet. Maybe a second pack/second season of seeds will have me having a happy accident.
Thank you
You're welcome
What variety of sweet corn do you use.
I grow lots of different varieties, it just depends what I'm in the mood for LOL. Usually in spring I grow sweet corn, summer the flints/dents/popcorns. Early fall I try to squeeze in some more sweet corn. Can check out the corn seed section of my website to see what I grow:jerrasgarden.myshopify.com/collections/corn
Do you have lilikoi /passion fruit seeds available? Mahalo !
Yes, I have seeds for a giant yellow Brazilian passion fruit on my website: tinyurl.com/69tvse27
Snake behind you at 16:33 had me screaming.
Where??
@ 16:33 when she is talking about celery look behind her.
I do have a garden snake that likes to make appearences LOL. But what you see is the wind pushing my black weed blocker material in a horizontal direction.
@@JerrasGarden I don’t live far from you and my husband came running when I screamed lol I backed it up and he said sure nuh lol we have black racers in our yard they keep me moving but I love my garden so as long as they mind their business I’m kool. I love your channel and shop best wishes.
@@JerrasGarden that’s crazy but as long as it’s harmless it’s cool as I’m sure it does its job by eating it’s fair share of garden pests I had a rogue frog in my garden and I just let it do its thing unfortunately he’s gone now..
New sub here. Well done.
I am so glad you subscribed! I hope you find my channel helpful.
@JerrasGarden I did thank you
Where are you from? I'm from Australia, pretty hot in January haha, not sure it applies there..
I'm in Orlando Florida USA, sub tropical climate. Your growing seasons are probably opposite of mine. January is technically winter for the USA, but here in my garden, the coldest it gets is 30F/-1C with no snow. So right now is actually one of my best growing seasons.
You’re on Florida
yes
I'm in zone 5
There is also a yellow tomatillos.
I didnt know! I will have to grow this now 😊
1/22/25 5:40am
❤❤❤❤❤
I'm zone 7b Clarksville Tn
My yard long beans keep growing back just ripped more out because the aphids love them 🤦♀️
Yes, the aphids do bother them but I find I still get production anyways. Yardlong beans are tough plants and if you look closely, you will probably find lots of ladybugs or their larvae eating the aphids so I leave it be.
What zone?
10A
👍🏾❤️
Would be great to address northern planting suggestions. Very disappointed to hear mostly about southern warm climates.
I'm located in Florida so cater a lot to hot climate gardeners. I did mention some very cold tolerant crops in this guide though. Also, in 2 weeks I'm uploading a video all about the best veggies to grow in cold conditions, so more to come 😀
Im so glad you do as there are a million northern based gardening channels that rarely if never reference southern gardeners but hardly any Florida specific channels. Thank you! @JerrasGarden
@@JoyAdele68 agreed!
:)
😊
A lot of great information. However, I would love it if you were to speak slower.
I'm always trying to improve, so I'll keep that in mind for the next one.
@Mijejo11 you can slow it down yourself. In the settings.
Talking too fast for a newbie to understand.
Why you speak so fast
I'm a fast talker. You c an slow down the speed in the settings.
👍
My experience is my basal is prolific dumps.seeds every year only bought 1 years ago. Dill, on the other hand, forget it. Won't grow for me. 10a swfl
I'm 10A central FL and dill grows for me. Try planting it in a spot that gets afternoon shade. It does not like high heat so grow it now in winter/early spring.
Thank you