Growing Elderberry! What you need to know!

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • Unlock the mysteries of elderberries and their many benefits. Dive deeper into related articles on the Alvarado Community Farm blog after we venture further into this topic: alvaradocommunityfarm.com/blog Elderberries, a divine gift from nature, are particularly valuable during flu and cold seasons.
    Yet, while they're celebrated as a medicinal herb, it's vital to exercise caution. Always do your due diligence before processing your elderberries and avoid consuming them straight from the plant.
    Ready to learn more about growing and harnessing the power of elderberries? Let's dive in!

Комментарии • 100

  • @charmainemontgomery582
    @charmainemontgomery582 Год назад +22

    I never knew they were toxic before processing 😳 Super glad you cleared that up!

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      Yes ma’am do not eat them berries until you process them

    • @PhoenixTide69
      @PhoenixTide69 Год назад +1

      Looks like nightshade?

    • @kimberlyfernandez2629
      @kimberlyfernandez2629 9 месяцев назад +1

      Black elderberries are not toxic. Other varieties are.

    • @CountryTesla
      @CountryTesla 3 месяца назад +3

      European varieties are. US varieties are good to go

    • @govols1995
      @govols1995 3 месяца назад +4

      For the American kind it's kind of like apple seeds. Yeah they have cyanide but you'd have to eat like 4.5 pounds in one sitting before it started affecting you.

  • @checle4499
    @checle4499 Год назад +7

    My stepmom made the BEST elderberry pies every time we would visit. And once processed they keep very well in the freezer.

  • @cjsasek8972
    @cjsasek8972 Год назад +9

    It's worthwhile to research Elderberry varieties; European elder varieties are higher in cyanide. American varieties are far less in regard to cyanide and also possess different levels of beneficial nutrients, as I understand. Terry Durham with River Hills Harvest in Missouri is a helpful resource.

  • @laurab8547
    @laurab8547 Год назад +5

    I see those things growing all over the place around here on the sides of the roads and highways. Didn’t know they were Elderberries. I look forward to seeing your harvest video!

  • @PhoenixTide69
    @PhoenixTide69 Год назад +4

    Love how you posted this just before I searched! Good timing. I live in fort worth and wanted to know about growing elderberry in texas

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      ❤️❤️❤️

  • @robertbird3086
    @robertbird3086 Год назад +4

    Love your video on growing Elderberry Plants, They grew everywhere in California and hubby and I made wine , jams and syrups. They are also a protected plant in California. I am now here in My Texas property a proud owner of two Plants and two varities, that have blossoms already. I almost the great tea from the Flowers that I use to help keep my High Blood in Check..By the way some elderberries need a co0mpanion to produce. . Ninette Bird- The Caribbean Wife - Cameron - Tx

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +1

      Love you, Gal

  • @sheraldtaylor1297
    @sheraldtaylor1297 Год назад +4

    I do have 2 Elderberry bushes. They get morning sun and dappled sun in the afternoon. One did have a small amount of berries last year. This year it is loaded with blooms. I do plan to harvest them this year.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      ❤️❤️❤️

  • @jtharp9265
    @jtharp9265 Год назад +3

    Thank you Jill,
    My oldest son has been drinking the syrup from a driver friend in Okl. he is gonna be 39 and We have lived here in Montgomery County, Texas for almost 16 years - He told me about getting the juice or even jams , etc...during our issues the past years,
    Thank you for teaching thousands of people they are toxic if not processed right .
    Ive looked at Montgomery Farmers Market and now I know why they want $35 this year over past years for a quart for the syrup.
    Good stuff tho.
    God bless you
    Mrs josette
    Montgomery County, Texas 🙏 ❤

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      Thank you, Miss Josette

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj Год назад

      I have had very little success with my plant in Western Washington state, but I bought freeze dried berries online and they made great syrup, and at a great price compared to buying it at the store.

  • @livingwellfarmtx
    @livingwellfarmtx Год назад +3

    I thought I lost mine in the heat and drought last year but thankfully they came back. I hope to get berries this year.

  • @Thetimecapsuletx
    @Thetimecapsuletx Год назад +4

    I use to make elderberry fritters with the flower heads. Dip in a batter and deep fry. Yummy! I am sure the recipe is online.

  • @centraltexashomestead-mike4956
    @centraltexashomestead-mike4956 Год назад +4

    Hey Jill very interesting. We've never have grown them. Had no idea they were toxic. Thanks for sharing this. God bless.

  • @beverlyboyce1041
    @beverlyboyce1041 Год назад +4

    I've got 4 starts going. Supposed to be good for chickens in preventing avian flu

  • @kellyb7153
    @kellyb7153 8 месяцев назад +3

    Have you made the video on how to process them? I was looking for it. Thanks!

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  8 месяцев назад

      They burned up sister

  • @witchychiqunique
    @witchychiqunique 3 месяца назад

    I want to thank you for this video, I've just started herbalism and making medicinal products. I've been wanting to get an Elderberry bush, from boyfriends family farm. I was told as a child those plants were poisioness but did not know until recently that they were in fact Elderberry plant, so knowing you can not pop one in your mouth is excellent advice, I really appreciate your video. Thanks from Davidsonville MD. 😊😊

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  3 месяца назад

      Thank you sister!

  • @tas6847
    @tas6847 Месяц назад

    Thanks for this very informative video!

  • @karenchapman932
    @karenchapman932 Год назад

    Looking forward to your elderberry syrup video in the future. I got a juicer.

  • @conniedavidson1807
    @conniedavidson1807 Год назад +1

    I've tried growing elderberries but with no luck. Yours look beautiful. My dad always grew them to make elderberry wine.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      😘😘

  • @deborahjennings4119
    @deborahjennings4119 Год назад +3

    We have some awesome elderberries going here. We started taking the syrup during the big "C" and never got the virus. We harvested 2 gallons last year and looks to be twice as many this year!

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      So great!

    • @JennySimon206
      @JennySimon206 Год назад

      Fantastic. Don't push your luck though. I'm worried that the virus is behaving like HIV, going latent in reservoirs in the central nervous system, an immune privileged area. It also kills T Cells. I imagine they are playing the stock market and getting a head start on their grant applications before they announce it. Can't keep a lid on it forever.
      So if you want to be a Guinea pig and dependent on Pharma to stay alive, keep exposing yourself to their lab monster.

  • @rwally3able
    @rwally3able 2 месяца назад

    Thankyou!!!!!!!

  • @carpenterpilot487
    @carpenterpilot487 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing you should be doing a video shortly

  • @jenniearnold2349
    @jenniearnold2349 Год назад

    I just put my ripe elderberries in the dehydrator, then into jars to save up for cooking the syrup! We have trees about 15' tall and they are only 4-5 years old! Tons of elderberry on them this year so I'll have many more jars of dehydrated berries for my syrup. I take it daily for immunity!

  • @Sabbathissaturday
    @Sabbathissaturday Год назад +6

    I don’t grow them, but I’m just here for the community. ❤
    God bless y’all.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      😘❤️

  • @davidcoley8500
    @davidcoley8500 4 месяца назад

    Great info as always! Was there a follow up? I'm seeing this 9 months later.

  • @lisaf7688
    @lisaf7688 9 месяцев назад

    Love it 💚👍🏻

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you! Cheers!

  • @susanv1535
    @susanv1535 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this video. Would love to know the spray mix your husband uses. I am just learning.

  • @safeenaslivingworld1904
    @safeenaslivingworld1904 Месяц назад

    Elderberries is a superfood👍

  • @kimberlyfernandez2629
    @kimberlyfernandez2629 9 месяцев назад +2

    Black elderberries are not toxic. It’s ok to taste.

  • @theresekirkpatrick3337
    @theresekirkpatrick3337 11 месяцев назад

    Ty ty i got a cutting from someone it grew and died back grew this second year but no fruit so far

  • @littleduckfarmers
    @littleduckfarmers 9 месяцев назад

    You might have just saved my life. I would have 100% picked and taken a bite next year when I get them to finally produce 😅

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  9 месяцев назад +1

      OH MY....Well I don't think I saved your life but now you knnow LDF!

    • @kimberlyfernandez2629
      @kimberlyfernandez2629 9 месяцев назад

      You will not die from eating black elderberries raw. My daughter ate a table spoon full. The black elderberries are not toxic.

  • @1RodeoMom
    @1RodeoMom Год назад

    I could use some of that now. After flying FIL to see Mom's grave and marker up north, hubby and I came down with a respiratory crud. We are both healing now and are on the upside of it.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      Oh, rodeo, mom, that respiratory’s been going around. Greg and I had it for several weeks and it took a while to get over.

  • @joviv6340
    @joviv6340 Год назад +1

    i always thought it was a weed , i grow em as a privacy hedge. The flowes give a nice scent in the yard.
    the bees love the flowers and once the black berries ripen from the elderberry flowers , the birds go to town .
    the birds then spread the seeds in their poop .
    Very fast growers an tolerate the heat here in SE texas

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      ❤️❤️

  • @rebeccasanford8607
    @rebeccasanford8607 Год назад +2

    Morning Jill! I have looked everywhere for elderberry growing so I can take some cuttings. Only place I’ve seen that MAY be Elderberry is in an area I can’t access ☹️. I’ve had to settle for packaged Elderberry

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +3

      Awe! I’ll try to propagate some for you

    • @rebeccasanford8607
      @rebeccasanford8607 Год назад +1

      @@ntxg Oh Jill! I would appreciate that so much! 🥰 Maybe I can drive down and get them

  • @WinkTartanBelle
    @WinkTartanBelle Год назад

    Hi sweet Jill! Got any recommendations on which steam juicer to get? I've been looking at them for a while and just never pulled the trigger. Next year I might have enough elderberries to make it worth fooling with, so probably need to get one for processing. Thanks for reminding folks about the need to process those berries. Seems like every year I hear about someone not knowing this and getting sick. Hugs!

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +1

      Hi sweet Wink! I think we got the cook n home and it works great!!!! Love you lady

  • @theresekirkpatrick3337
    @theresekirkpatrick3337 11 месяцев назад

    Northern arizon where i am hasn’t had hardly any monsoons this year. 😢

  • @roxeyserckie5414
    @roxeyserckie5414 Год назад +1

    Thanks for caution on berries being toxic from the bush. I don't grow them in apt living.

  • @PreppingAngel
    @PreppingAngel Год назад

    I wish you would give the directions for the spray. So far I go out and after the blooms I attach fine mesh hair nets

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      He will be doing a class on his sprays ❤️

  • @echandler673
    @echandler673 6 месяцев назад

    Great video! How many bushes do you have?

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  6 месяцев назад

      12-15

  • @ArtFlowersBeeze8815
    @ArtFlowersBeeze8815 18 дней назад

    Plant breeders have made new varieties that are not toxic.

  • @sandrarichardson2713
    @sandrarichardson2713 Год назад

    Super interesting information. Is there something that you could grow in between them that is tall and fluffy that would give them some shade? I'm thinking okra---but I don't think that would be enough shade.
    And birds? Do birds like the berries? Thanks again for a very interesting topic, ma'am. Jesus bless.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад

      Hi Sandra, the birds love them, but I think the built-in protection is that the blooms tip over making it hard for the birds to get to once they start to ripen. I’m hoping that they get big enough to shade themselves lol.

  • @humbledsparrows4687
    @humbledsparrows4687 Год назад

    Can you share your husband's plant spray? We live in East Texas and are constantly battling insects. We don't like using pesticides and stay as organic as possible. Thank you

  • @Athomeinthemountains
    @Athomeinthemountains Год назад +2

    What organic spray do you use on elderberries? I need to get a spray for mine.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +1

      EM-1, organic fish emulsion, bone meal.

  • @lotus....
    @lotus.... Год назад +1

    Do elderberries bloom on new or old wood? The farm we moved to in North FL has a big stand of them. They dont really freeze back much here in the winter. They didnt really bloom much last spring when we first got here and they arent really blooming again this year. We get plenty of rain here. I am wondering if I need to cut them back or something. I have a smaller one that I bought from a cutting, in a pot, that had lots of new growth and it is putting out lots of flowers.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      Hidy Ld! They do need pruning. Looks like they are flowering out from the new growth. I’ve seen folks prune all the way down to a single stock at the end of the season.

    • @lotus....
      @lotus.... Год назад

      @@ntxg Thank you for your help. Ok that makes sense! No wonder lol. This place had been empty for a year before we bought it so who knows how long its been since they were cut back. We are still discovering things around here.

  • @CrystalHotSauce1
    @CrystalHotSauce1 4 месяца назад

    Idk where you are, but here in Louisiana, it was the worst in my several decades of life when it comes to growing anything, we were severely droughted and suffered.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  4 месяца назад

      I know y’all have had a terrible time. I’m so sorry!

  • @ekklesiajoy
    @ekklesiajoy 3 месяца назад

    What about fertilizing. Pruning?

  • @monikas5125
    @monikas5125 Год назад

    My elderberry bushes doing really good I make more elderberry syrup

  • @KimmieAbbasServantHomestead
    @KimmieAbbasServantHomestead Год назад +3

    Guys please pray for me I have a really really bad kidney infection

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +2

      I sure will!!! Water water water!

  • @jennifercoats3800
    @jennifercoats3800 Год назад

    I'm trying so hard with my elderberry plants, but I am barely keeping them alive. The leaves started turning yellow ... they live under shade cloth at this point and I give them good water. Do you have any tips for me?

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +1

      We are having difficulty as well Jennifer the berries are dropping in this heat. I think you’ve done the right thing is to put them in shade and keep them heavily watered.

  • @JRCHomesteadTexas
    @JRCHomesteadTexas Год назад

    Hi Jill. Our chickens free range. Do you know if their toxic?
    Remember ya'll to Pray, Plan, Prep

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Год назад +1

      I know it’s a favorite for birds. I don’t know if it’s toxic to chickens because it doesn’t seem to be too normal. Flying birds.

    • @racheledwards6497
      @racheledwards6497 4 месяца назад +1

      Chickens are pretty good at knowing what they can and can't eat. I've tried giving mine potatoes, tomatoes and onions but they won't touch them. They have eaten the berries on poke salad and they are supposedly toxic but my chickens are still alive.

  • @jewels4028
    @jewels4028 Месяц назад

    🤔 Good to know. I thought it was just to avoid berries while still green.

  • @athhelle
    @athhelle 2 месяца назад

    Ciao ti scrivo dall'Italia. Zona a nord di Milano. Ieri ho prelevato 20 talee da un sambuco selvatico, e le ho messe in acqua, oggi stanno già bene. Penso faranno le radici tra 4-6 settimane, cosa mi consigli di fare poi? Visto che a giugno avremo il caldo torrido, pensi sia meglio tenerle riparate in vaso? Potrò trapiantarle a settembre o dovrò aspettare la prossima primavera? Come potarli in futuro per mantenerli come arbusto ed evitare una pianta di 10metri? Grazie 🙂
    ----
    Hello, I'm writing to you from Italy. Area north of Milan. Yesterday I took 20 cuttings from a wild elderberry, and I put them in the water, today they are already fine. I think they will root in 4-6 weeks, what do you recommend I do then? Since we will have the scorching heat in June, do you think it is better to keep them sheltered in pots? Will I be able to transplant them in September or will I have to wait until next spring? How to prune them in the future to keep them as a shrub and avoid a 10-meter plant? Thank you 🙂

  • @ignor6581
    @ignor6581 3 месяца назад

    What you mean you can't eat them in till they are processed ? I ate olderberry from the bush all the time in Europe. They are toxic in till they ripen. An less there are diffrent varieties I don't know about. I was never sick an I are them strait from the bush .

  • @alhambra119
    @alhambra119 Месяц назад

    I planted 5 elderberries last year. 2 trees bloomed. However, something is eating up most of the leaves. What should I do to control this? thank you very much in advance!

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  Месяц назад

      I really don’t know other than maybe grasshoppers

    • @alhambra119
      @alhambra119 Месяц назад

      @@ntxg I saw similar to grasshoppers. I thought they are beneficial to plant. Maybe not. thank you for the reply!!

  • @CVetteMan1111
    @CVetteMan1111 4 месяца назад

    I've always wondered how birds and other animals can eat elderberries by the pound and not be affected by the chemicals in the berries But apparently, we can't. Interesting.

    • @EnliveningJustice
      @EnliveningJustice Месяц назад +1

      Because birds eat clay afterwards😉
      look into bentonite clay (safe for human consumption)

  • @txbulldog30jp
    @txbulldog30jp Месяц назад

    Toxic? 😱 I've been trying to grow 2 plants and ive been anxious to see berries so i could try them out. Luckily it hasn't had berries yet. 😂

  • @dns_error
    @dns_error 2 месяца назад

    So you either make the medicine or a poison?
    Damn! 😮

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  2 месяца назад

      lol meds!

  • @PhilippeFernandez
    @PhilippeFernandez 29 дней назад +1

    Yeah, they don’t have to be cooked or steamed. Lol.. I freeze dry mine. Make them into a powder with a fine mesh colander this will remove all the seeds. Don’t believe everything you hear.

  • @blahdeblaaah9445
    @blahdeblaaah9445 4 месяца назад

    This doesn’t do what the title of the video says.

    • @ntxg
      @ntxg  4 месяца назад

      I welcome suggestions going forward! 😀