Aren't we supposed to SAVE MONEY on gardening??? YES! Don't get stuck in complicated systems! Don't get sold a bill of goods! Learn to make a simple garden and grow food the old-fashioned way. Seriously. You barely have to buy anything to grow food. But if you like what I'm doing, you can buy my books - I won't stop you! amzn.to/3kUD1dd
Good Evening guys. I recently finished reading your grocery row gardening book! Excellent concept and I've been following your channel for years now. I've enjoyed the honesty of your gardening. I will be starting my grocery row garden in the Virgin Islands. I'm curious if currants or muscadine hrape would thrive there?!
I recently found out I could get free pots. There is a new apartment complex going up near my house and I saw a lot of used pots from where they had taken out the plants and trees to landscape the community. I stopped and asked them what they do with them, and he said they threw them away. I asked if I could I have some and he said, yes, as long they are empty, take what you want. It helped me tremendously this year with the propagation of my trees and starting new seeds. I got over 100 pots for free! It never hurts to ask!
I've got crazy chickens... long pants, sweatshirt and rubber boots. Hens are so afraid of the 2 roosters, they swarm around me, and a couple have flown onto my back! 🤣🤣🤣
I feel like a millionaire when I harvest golden berries or raspberries, asparagus or artichoke, weird asian greens and potatoes of all colors... We grow in raised beds, in little rows, in bags and buckets. I can't grow in rows because we are on the side of a mountain, but we are working on terraces with a biointensive method, composting everything with the help of worms, making our stinky liquid fertlizer and going crazy with chop and drop. It works! Oh, and the chickens and bunnies help (And we composted the dog poop for the pumpkins!). Anybody can grow something... Even little tomatoes on the kitchen's windowsills.
This is exactly why I'm giving away starts this year... No selling, no pressure, no chemicals just me planting, carrying them out to the front yard and hopefully help people to get the garden bug without the seed intimidation or the cost. I posted to my Freesteading account and will post signs around my lil town as it starts to warm up a bit more 💜. People are nonstop trying to sell "Gardening" , do it this way, you gotta have this, you need to add these, etc. NO, no you don't!
I love this and am really happy to see this. I'm just getting my gardening going again and have a similar goal once I have some stuff worth sharing. Sharing is caring dang it! 🌱❤️
In SW FL and this year, we self-drilled a well! Yes, we had to buy a pump but it's not going to take long to recoup our investment and be watering for FREE. And we have 5 50-gal rain barrels, too. Can't tell you what a thrill it is to water with FREE water!!
@@davidthegood It wasn't hard -- our soil is basically sand and the water table is at 25ft. We used PVC pipe and water pressure from our garden hose to "drill" the well. There are good videos online. No need to drill with a 4" pipe--easier to use a 2" and then slide your wellpoint and 1 1/4" down that. The main thing to keep in mind is that you have to do all your drilling and in-ground pipe placement the same day.
Great video David and you are so right. I got hooked on gardening when I was 5 or 6 (I'm 58 now). My mom gave me some radish seeds and I can remember being so excited when they came up 4 days later. Turn off the news and plant a garden!
Me too! My kindergarten teacher gave me a packet of radish seeds and told me to plant them. 3 weeks later, I remember bursting with pride as I ate them. Knowing that I had grown them. It was miraculous. (And I don't even like radishes!)
I was literally just ranting about this this morning! I’m so sick of being sold crap everywhere I go! I can’t even take a poo without being sold something!
I make my own NPK... Most are liquid fertilizers. I use them once a week. Been doing it for 3 years now. No outside fertilizers. Once you have the tools and get going. It's virtually free if you work at it. $20 a month for seeds, gloves and a few odds and ends. I produce 60% of my own veg/fruit and just barter what we can't eat which almost covers all our produce needs. Still end up giving loads away. Cheapest "hobby" ever if you don't count the labor. If I can manage to double my harvest next year for virtually free hopefully I can cut my 9 to 5 to a 12-4. Got the land just need to give nature time to work things out 4 me. With a little luck and elbow grease in 5 years I can garden full-time.
Thank you again, for more encouragement, support & excellent information! My garden brings joy to the family, it's a magical place.....the miracle of plants is lost on many, it's nice to see you teaching people about the benefit of a garden, healthy for the body AND mind! Brightest Blessings to you and your family.😇
I'm tired of ads that are stupid, which makes me think that they think we are stupid!!!!! P.S. Thanks to you ,I am propagating blueberries and elderberries this spring----Hey everyone out in your gardens---Buy David's book, FREE PLANTS FOR EVERYONE!!!!!!! That's my ad!
I really dig these inspirational videos! When I first started planning out my garden at my current homestead, it was a mess of brambles, thorns, thistles, etc. There was no way I could dream of walking around out there barefoot, but a few years later and here I am wondering where I left my shoes. I've got tomatoes coming up that I never planted. I saw some type of organic squash I'd never seen before in the store the other day and bought it not just to try it out, but to plant the seeds. There's some company that sells organic butter lettuce that is grown hydroponically and sells their lettuce with the roots intact. After cutting off the leaves, I plant the roots and in less than two weeks I've got another big bunch of butter lettuce leaves.
I do a little of all of the gardening techniques , my soil is not fantastic but I am growing stuff. I thank you for your videos and I have 3 of your books. It is very helpful. I have 5 gallon bucket with "stinky water" in it.
David the Good, I initially thought your audio books were recorded by a professional voice over artist. I now know they are read by a delirious digging fanatic.
Tip I found by chance is I used a small square of plywood as my cover for my 5 gallon bucket of stinky water, the piece of plywood had a small hole from a knot that acted as a ventilation source I guess but my stinky water never could be smelt without lifting the lid.
Buried under snow. But in a couple of months I will be doing a cheap garden. We used pigs to till up New ground the last two summers and then fed ourselves and others with our tillers! Can't wait to see spring and get seeds in the ground. I bought seeds last fall when they went on sale at season end. Thanks for the encouragement!
I am having the most productive garden I have ever had thanks to you! I did a lasagne garden of cardboard, leaves, chicken manure and mushroom compost, top soil and peat moss mixed to get her and put on top. I prepared most of my garden bed’s before hurricane Ian hit us and right after he departed I planted my seedlings. My tomatoes are just now finishing up and I’d say I probably got 75 pounds of tomatoes and they were cherries. I am now getting ready for warm weather crops and I’m lasagna gardening again. My black eyed peas are huge and lush, my new tomatoes look awesome. I just can’t get over it! And all this in zone 10a! Thank you soooooo much.
Love the simplicity of this ! And it's all so very true!!!!! I bought a pack of cabbage seed for 1.89. Saw a cabbage start ... so ONE CABBAGE start for 3.99!!!!???!!! What?!!!!!? For one cabbage start !!!!!????!!! One head of cabbage at the grocery is like 99 cents! U pay so much for starts 😩 so 1.89 for a pack of cabbage seed and now I got tons of heads going yayyyyy!!!!!🎉
You taught me to me resourceful and ultrafrugal with my garden. I have about 40 baby apple, pear, and plum tree starts all by asking people in my town if I could have some of their fruit that had fallen off their trees.
Last season was my biggest seed save of all time. I have saved Calendula for years and years, but last season I saved even more. Even from wild plants I want for myself. I'm SO excited to see what comes up once I get going. Norway zone 4. This is my first ever garden I can do what I like with. I'm going to put one bed in the ground and have some raised beds and grow bags too. I'll also add some berries and fruits. I also started my first-ever compost heap and now have a Bokashi system going. I'm putting in a rainwater barrel too. Argh, I'm so excited!
Starting from scratch on a new property. 3 acres of field grass that used to feed cattle. I have a ton of work to do with this soil. But I am looking forward to it. Glad I found your channel DTG!!
I have 2 comments. I can't garden without raised beds. We did invest in some beds because my back is so bad that I must sit on a stool and work in the raised beds. Plus our soil is just rock as we live in the Ozark mountains. I sure wish I didn't have to spend that money. We do get some great mulch, compost for almost free from our city. Filled the bottom of the beds with branches and used that really cheap compost, etc. We are now making our own compost. It has taken us a year to get some incredibly rich soil. We are hoping for our best harvest this.
First comment I've left, and first off I'm loving your videos and your message, but second. People should check with their local library, many systems have free seed libraries where you can take as many seeds as you want/will use (don't clean them out to resell, basically). I've gotten probably $100 worth of seeds from my local library this year, though I'm very fortunate in that our librarian is a dedicated organic vegetable gardener
@@davidthegood I only learned about it recently, and have since had friends around the country check their library systems and more have come up, to all our surprise, with seed libraries than not! It seems to just depend on if any given branch has a librarian who's into gardening and willing to take on the task
If you can't afford any water containment, dig a trench or little pond. You can dip into it to water a smaller garden. Might not work in all soil types but I have a lot of clay. My yard is always either water logged or parched. I tried this my first year gardening and it's been a few years and now I have frogs which came almost right away and I dig up the bottom when I need compost, then I planted cattails. By seed I bought on ebay and after a couple actually came up, the entire ditch thing is full of them now. I love it.
David, thank you so much, really, for talking on us beeing sold on; us - the consumerized people, it´s really too much. Back to understanding how to run the basics. Can´t wait to hear you talk some more about this. TIP! We give away our surplus for free, whatever it can be, as an extra tool we don´t need - in that way we in the community get what we need, without any money exchanged. Give and you will be given - as one of the core messages in the Bible...
Wow! First of your videos that I saw and already a huge fan! we wanted to start the garden this year because we recently moved to a house with the yard! I know exactly what I will do tomorrow, start building lasagna in the yard :)
I'm going to experiment with making rabbit poo tea this year. I rent and can't have my own rabbits, so I bought some (for a good price) from someone who does have them.
Great manure to add, experiment 👍. Don't be too disappointed if the tea is not that great though... I am guessing, but rabbit manure is cold. Basically, releases nutrient slowly. Good luck 👍
Went to the county and got compost today. That last storm wiped out what I'd planned and washed the seeds in a pooled area. Brooke a rotorua tine today in these weed roots. Wish I wasn't disabled.... but won't Give up! Need more card board.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thanks for always encouraging our efforts. Big or small. Justin said he feels a little called out by his 8x4 bougie garden beds. 🤣
"But wait! There's more!" LOL Don't need more; you had me the first time I saw the fountain with 'You are watching David the Good'. Since I spent last year getting over the fear of killing plants, THIS year, I am going to work that cost angle. Thanks for all you do.
Great video! I've been gardening most of my life and the majority of it on the cheap. Now that I'm older and the kids are all grown I spend more on my garden. I have started some containers. I'm using old cattle mineral tubs I get for free. I've also bought some concrete blocks to make a couple of raised beds this year as I'm beginning to feel my age. But I still try to use what I have first. I picked up seeds really cheap last fall at Dollar General. They were 90 % off. Then I was able to get some specialty seed recently. I took advantage of a sale and free shipping. The farm store had some bare root trees on sale today so I picked a few up as I'm wanting to try permaculture. I'm also going to try to start some mulberry trees from cuttings. I really appreciate your videos! Thank you!
Sure you are getting your gardens ready to rock. Mine are doing good so far. So much work to be done though. Labor of love. Couldn't imagine not gardening.
So glad your soil is workable! Mine was filled with scruff and is hard clay. So raised beds were needed this year. Some soil area is workable but most was not. NOW for the remark of getting cheap tools. NO ABSOLUTLUTLY NOT! If you want to succeed as a gardener as in any trade invest in the best tool you can afford. It will save you money in the long run by not having to replace cheep tools later. and the frustration of them breaking mid project. I recommend fiberglass handled tools. Start with a spade ,garden rake and a well made hoe. Use free cardboard to smother weeds and grass. If you can get compost even if at first planting buy it. Then use your garden cuttings and kitchen scraps for compost later. Just bury it in your garden at seasons end. I'm 67 have gardened all my life and this is how I built my garden this year in an rural apartment complex. BTW raised beds or containers are efficient also for city dwellers. This guy isn't addressing those folks.
If you just want to grab calorie crops I'm gonna say you can do it for under 30. Go to the grocery store buy a butternut squash, buy an acorn squash and buy a bag of popcorn. Figure you'll get 30-50 seeds per squash and probably a 1200 to 1500 corn seeds and we should be under 10 dollars. I have a cheapo stirrup how from Walmart that has been a workhorse, it just needs a new handle because mushrooms ate the handle lol. Add to that a basic pointed spade and a spading fork, much much cheaper than a broad fork though the broad fork is worth it if you can afford it but that one tool can be over a hundred dollars.
I tried planting some tomatoes without any fertilizer last year, and I barely noticed any difference between those with and without. Sometimes, you just gotta get plants into the ground. The ground is usually nice enough to give you something in return.
I got 2 rabbits who create a powerful, perfect fertilizer... and more rabbits ;) Their diluted urine deters pests. When I eat the rabbits, I turn the bones and blood back into the earth. I make your awesome swamp water in my rain barrels and my plants are happy and free of all chemicals. I don't buy anything but new seed varieties and tools. I live in a trailer park in a city and garden in containers on top of a gravel space the size of 3 parking spots. If I can do it, anyone can do it! Seriously.
This is so refreshing. I've learned a lot from you over the years, but one of the big takeaways was to stop having an adversarial relationship with the weeds. They're just free plant food.
Yes, seeds are expensive. I went to dollar store and was shocked to find Burpee seeds and one variety of tomato I just bought for 3xs as much. MI Gardener offers $2/pack and free shipping on $12 order and he has a point system for money off next order. I’m not sure how long he will be able to maintain that price, we will see. Yes, MI Gardener even suggested saving seeds as we never know what catastrophe could wipe out supply.
You are the best David. I hope that Steve mentions in his book which plants grow well when spaced out. You are so right. I look at many gardening books and they make it too complicated and too expensive. Thanks for all your great tips!
Thank you for these reminders. I need to go back to your books again. Been fighting with my all sand yard for too long, gave up! and started container gardening which is costing me too much now.
Yes we have 2 varieties of Mulberry trees/bushes - 4 right now but will take cuttings to produce more. Just ordered some Blueberry plants once I learned we could grow them here in SW Arizona (zone 9b). Starting our heirloom seeds now for the garden & some will be grown inside (lettuce, spinach, etc.) Thank you for the tips. Judi
Every year there are Seedy Saturday. Look up your town and area to find the date and lots of seed are free. Then the next year you can donate seeds for others.ours is in March this year.
I haven't bought seedlings from the store in a long while--this video made me check local prices and realize I've got several hundred dollars worth of plants. I'm seeing prices as high as $8.00 per plant. If I've got about twenty tomatoes, and another twenty peppers, that's over three hundred dollars worth of seedlings right there! Makes me feel a little better about how much I spent on seeds from Baker Creek.
Dave… Are you still in Florida? We’ve always watched you because you are in Florida like we are. We are in citrus County… Can you share approximately what zone you are in here in Florida? Or did you move out of state by any chance? Thank you, Dave… We love watching you. 🌿🕊️👍🏽❤️
We are one hour north of Pensacola now. A couple miles north of the Florida border, in Lower Alabama. Zone 8b. I also maintain a food forest in Ft. Lauderdale, zone 11.
Thanks for posting a new video! I’m going to invest in some hydrangeas… they’re not only pretty but the color of their blooms tell you the pH of the where they’re planted 🤗 I wonder what other plants have tricks like that.
David, you are my favorite gardener, always giving out abundant information and making us laugh. Raising six children, I am all about frugal practices. Now living in Florida, I own all your books. Thank you, Thank you, thank you!
Thank you. I have been collecting seeds and practicing this past year and I have been thinking about giving up and lasagna gardening. I needed this badly
I just bought a piece of property with a well on it. That's why I bought the house. I use worm tea as my fertilizer. I feed my worm scraps and crushed eggshells. Awesome video. You speak the truth David. You said what needed to be said. Have a wonderful day.
We have a very high water table so in ground rows weren’t the best option. I tried building most of my raised beds, But did buy a couple. If I did it over again and wanted to do it a lot cheaper I probably would have built Hugelkulture mound rows
This is some great advice! I am currently trying to buy a small farm, which means establishing a new garden again, and I've been listening to a lot of webinars by Dale Strickler over at green cover seed here on RUclips. His thing is more about pasture and cropland, but most of the big picture ideas are the same for vegetables. Diversity and soil health. Also, the more I think about diversity, the more I want to just dump every seed packet I have into a pail and fling the whole thing onto the ground and see what comes up.
Hi David, been a long time follower of your videos, newsletter, books and it's great stuff man! You have been a great inspiration for my own gardening. I loved this video, very useful, practical and its always great to debunk these preconceived notions that we often have. I was surprised though by your comment about leaving more space between plants as a way of conserving water and that placing them closer together requires more water. I've been using the biointensive gardening method for a few years with decent success compared to previous attempts at vegetable gardening, and in this method the idea is to place the plants closer together to create a microclimate which reduces water necessity and allows less weeds to come up, in theory. So I'm curious to pick your brain on this, as these concepts seems to disagree with each other. Thanks again for all you do!
Many libraries across the country have Seed Banks where you can get seeds others have saved & donated (for free). There are inexpensive sites online where seeds are a buck or less. Post on social media you are looking for anyone’s leftover or expired seed (they usually last a few years after expiration).
I love you David T. G. !!!!! You are "la creme de la creme". Thank you from a faithful follower in SoFlo🙏🥰❤️💜🧡🌻🦋 Do you have a video about how to deal with Mice? They are eating my garden!
David the Good I just subscribed to you and then saw you are bama/florida line ! I’m a baker and trying to get my hands on some tonka beans to grow my own plant. Could you kindly give us an update on your plant please 🙏. Love your contents and giving heart ♥️
Its been snowing for days. The secret trick to free food is extremely difficult. Every time you cook anything with nothing but opposable thumbs take the seeds out before you cook them and throw them in soil. Like magic they sprout and food grows. kinda seems like Plants have been growing for millions of years without needing money and still don't.
I can’t even GET organic berries! For the last two years in my area. I only get them when I travel about an hour and a half out of town. So we are going to grow some! 1 strawberry per plant this year. But next year we will have a bumper crop hopefully! That was the EASIEST THING EVER - other than all the manual labor😂. Labor is definitely worth the time/work and savings when you can’t get (healthy) food!
Aren't we supposed to SAVE MONEY on gardening??? YES!
Don't get stuck in complicated systems! Don't get sold a bill of goods! Learn to make a simple garden and grow food the old-fashioned way.
Seriously. You barely have to buy anything to grow food.
But if you like what I'm doing, you can buy my books - I won't stop you! amzn.to/3kUD1dd
Good Evening guys. I recently finished reading your grocery row gardening book! Excellent concept and I've been following your channel for years now. I've enjoyed the honesty of your gardening. I will be starting my grocery row garden in the Virgin Islands. I'm curious if currants or muscadine hrape would thrive there?!
Until you're dealing with clay..
Youre cutting down grass like an aminal in Abalama.
@@krystalchristopher8541 Muscadines should grow there, but currants probably won't.
@@dustinallen1658 I made mounded beds in clay, too. It's high effort, but they work. We also used Lasagna gardening on rocky clay with good results.
I am the gardener I am because of this mans knowledge. His wisdom can save your life and wallet. God bless DTG and his family.
Thank you
Ditto.
ditto
Couldn't have said it better. I've been watching David since his first Florida house. By far the best gardening channel on RUclips.
Same
You are relentless with your message that gardening doesn’t have to cost a lot - I can’t express how much I appreciate you.
I recently found out I could get free pots. There is a new apartment complex going up near my house and I saw a lot of used pots from where they had taken out the plants and trees to landscape the community. I stopped and asked them what they do with them, and he said they threw them away. I asked if I could I have some and he said, yes, as long they are empty, take what you want. It helped me tremendously this year with the propagation of my trees and starting new seeds. I got over 100 pots for free! It never hurts to ask!
Score!
The most important thing I learned from David is that it is acceptable to garden in bare feet.
I have to use boots, long sleeves, long pants and the bugs still attack me! I wish I could be bare footed :(
I wish my wife was on board as well. I would never wear shoes 😩😂
Sometimes the fire ants get me.
I've got crazy chickens... long pants, sweatshirt and rubber boots. Hens are so afraid of the 2 roosters, they swarm around me, and a couple have flown onto my back! 🤣🤣🤣
The science behind it is amazing! Theres a cool documentary out about the health benefits.
I feel like a millionaire when I harvest golden berries or raspberries, asparagus or artichoke, weird asian greens and potatoes of all colors... We grow in raised beds, in little rows, in bags and buckets. I can't grow in rows because we are on the side of a mountain, but we are working on terraces with a biointensive method, composting everything with the help of worms, making our stinky liquid fertlizer and going crazy with chop and drop. It works! Oh, and the chickens and bunnies help (And we composted the dog poop for the pumpkins!).
Anybody can grow something... Even little tomatoes on the kitchen's windowsills.
This is exactly why I'm giving away starts this year... No selling, no pressure, no chemicals just me planting, carrying them out to the front yard and hopefully help people to get the garden bug without the seed intimidation or the cost. I posted to my Freesteading account and will post signs around my lil town as it starts to warm up a bit more 💜. People are nonstop trying to sell "Gardening" , do it this way, you gotta have this, you need to add these, etc. NO, no you don't!
I love this and am really happy to see this. I'm just getting my gardening going again and have a similar goal once I have some stuff worth sharing. Sharing is caring dang it! 🌱❤️
Nice!
That is awesome!!
What state do you live in?
@@catherinelander3555 Indiana, the very southern part. I am on the Freesteading site by the same name and have posted a bit more detail 😉
In SW FL and this year, we self-drilled a well! Yes, we had to buy a pump but it's not going to take long to recoup our investment and be watering for FREE. And we have 5 50-gal rain barrels, too. Can't tell you what a thrill it is to water with FREE water!!
I want to do that!
@@davidthegood It wasn't hard -- our soil is basically sand and the water table is at 25ft. We used PVC pipe and water pressure from our garden hose to "drill" the well. There are good videos online. No need to drill with a 4" pipe--easier to use a 2" and then slide your wellpoint and 1 1/4" down that. The main thing to keep in mind is that you have to do all your drilling and in-ground pipe placement the same day.
That opening scene is hilarious 😂🤙
Good food costs a lot of money. Great food doesn’t have to. I need this on a tshirt lol ❤
Like, stencil it on your own t-shirt, man. And always remember, Nature is a Mother...😃
Out here in NE Arizona, I am experimenting with sunken gardens. They are basically deep-dish lasagna 😋
Great video David and you are so right. I got hooked on gardening when I was 5 or 6 (I'm 58 now). My mom gave me some radish seeds and I can remember being so excited when they came up 4 days later. Turn off the news and plant a garden!
That's very similar to how I started. What a blessing.
Me too! My kindergarten teacher gave me a packet of radish seeds and told me to plant them. 3 weeks later, I remember bursting with pride as I ate them. Knowing that I had grown them.
It was miraculous.
(And I don't even like radishes!)
I was literally just ranting about this this morning! I’m so sick of being sold crap everywhere I go! I can’t even take a poo without being sold something!
I make my own NPK... Most are liquid fertilizers. I use them once a week. Been doing it for 3 years now. No outside fertilizers. Once you have the tools and get going. It's virtually free if you work at it. $20 a month for seeds, gloves and a few odds and ends. I produce 60% of my own veg/fruit and just barter what we can't eat which almost covers all our produce needs. Still end up giving loads away. Cheapest "hobby" ever if you don't count the labor. If I can manage to double my harvest next year for virtually free hopefully I can cut my 9 to 5 to a 12-4. Got the land just need to give nature time to work things out 4 me. With a little luck and elbow grease in 5 years I can garden full-time.
That is fantastic - quite inspiring. Good work.
@@davidthegood your knowledge has helped me leaps and bounds. Thanks for everything.
My dream
Thank you again, for more encouragement, support & excellent information! My garden brings joy to the family, it's a magical place.....the miracle of plants is lost on many, it's nice to see you teaching people about the benefit of a garden, healthy for the body AND mind! Brightest Blessings to you and your family.😇
Some say David the good is a fun guy. If you garden don't kill the fun guy. Because Fun Guy makes building soil a real party.
I'm tired of ads that are stupid, which makes me think that they think we are stupid!!!!! P.S. Thanks to you ,I am propagating blueberries and elderberries this spring----Hey everyone out in your gardens---Buy David's book, FREE PLANTS FOR EVERYONE!!!!!!! That's my ad!
Thank you, Nancy.
This is the type of video that is making you famous....easy, cheap, delicious, healthful food from your backyard. Well done, David the GREAT!
Thank you, good to see you again.
I really dig these inspirational videos!
When I first started planning out my garden at my current homestead, it was a mess of brambles, thorns, thistles, etc. There was no way I could dream of walking around out there barefoot, but a few years later and here I am wondering where I left my shoes.
I've got tomatoes coming up that I never planted. I saw some type of organic squash I'd never seen before in the store the other day and bought it not just to try it out, but to plant the seeds.
There's some company that sells organic butter lettuce that is grown hydroponically and sells their lettuce with the roots intact. After cutting off the leaves, I plant the roots and in less than two weeks I've got another big bunch of butter lettuce leaves.
I do a little of all of the gardening techniques , my soil is not fantastic but I am growing stuff. I thank you for your videos and I have 3 of your books. It is very helpful. I have 5 gallon bucket with "stinky water" in it.
Thank you.
Stinky water works fantastic
David the Good, I initially thought your audio books were recorded by a professional voice over artist. I now know they are read by a delirious digging fanatic.
Tip I found by chance is I used a small square of plywood as my cover for my 5 gallon bucket of stinky water, the piece of plywood had a small hole from a knot that acted as a ventilation source I guess but my stinky water never could be smelt without lifting the lid.
@@Organicagain Glad they sounded decent!
Buried under snow. But in a couple of months I will be doing a cheap garden. We used pigs to till up New ground the last two summers and then fed ourselves and others with our tillers! Can't wait to see spring and get seeds in the ground. I bought seeds last fall when they went on sale at season end. Thanks for the encouragement!
Thanks David! I really love ur content ur awesome
I am having the most productive garden I have ever had thanks to you! I did a lasagne garden of cardboard, leaves, chicken manure and mushroom compost, top soil and peat moss mixed to get her and put on top. I prepared most of my garden bed’s before hurricane Ian hit us and right after he departed I planted my seedlings. My tomatoes are just now finishing up and I’d say I probably got 75 pounds of tomatoes and they were cherries. I am now getting ready for warm weather crops and I’m lasagna gardening again. My black eyed peas are huge and lush, my new tomatoes look awesome. I just can’t get over it! And all this in zone 10a! Thank you soooooo much.
Congratulations! Thank you!
Love the simplicity of this ! And it's all so very true!!!!! I bought a pack of cabbage seed for 1.89. Saw a cabbage start ... so ONE CABBAGE start for 3.99!!!!???!!! What?!!!!!? For one cabbage start !!!!!????!!! One head of cabbage at the grocery is like 99 cents! U pay so much for starts 😩 so 1.89 for a pack of cabbage seed and now I got tons of heads going yayyyyy!!!!!🎉
You taught me to me resourceful and ultrafrugal with my garden. I have about 40 baby apple, pear, and plum tree starts all by asking people in my town if I could have some of their fruit that had fallen off their trees.
I frequently question garden purchases, ideas that I've seen, and different garde methods and then I just think to myself WWDTGD?
Last season was my biggest seed save of all time. I have saved Calendula for years and years, but last season I saved even more. Even from wild plants I want for myself. I'm SO excited to see what comes up once I get going. Norway zone 4. This is my first ever garden I can do what I like with. I'm going to put one bed in the ground and have some raised beds and grow bags too. I'll also add some berries and fruits. I also started my first-ever compost heap and now have a Bokashi system going. I'm putting in a rainwater barrel too. Argh, I'm so excited!
That is awesome
Greetings from Romania!
Prepped area three months before planting butternut squashes. Got >100 lbs. produce for winter canning!
Starting from scratch on a new property. 3 acres of field grass that used to feed cattle. I have a ton of work to do with this soil. But I am looking forward to it. Glad I found your channel DTG!!
Thank you. Good luck!
I have 2 comments. I can't garden without raised beds. We did invest in some beds because my back is so bad that I must sit on a stool and work in the raised beds. Plus our soil is just rock as we live in the Ozark mountains. I sure wish I didn't have to spend that money.
We do get some great mulch, compost for almost free from our city. Filled the bottom of the beds with branches and used that really cheap compost, etc. We are now making our own compost. It has taken us a year to get some incredibly rich soil. We are hoping for our best harvest this.
I bet you do great.
First comment I've left, and first off I'm loving your videos and your message, but second. People should check with their local library, many systems have free seed libraries where you can take as many seeds as you want/will use (don't clean them out to resell, basically). I've gotten probably $100 worth of seeds from my local library this year, though I'm very fortunate in that our librarian is a dedicated organic vegetable gardener
That is really cool - I've never seen that before.
@@davidthegood I only learned about it recently, and have since had friends around the country check their library systems and more have come up, to all our surprise, with seed libraries than not! It seems to just depend on if any given branch has a librarian who's into gardening and willing to take on the task
If you can't afford any water containment, dig a trench or little pond. You can dip into it to water a smaller garden. Might not work in all soil types but I have a lot of clay. My yard is always either water logged or parched. I tried this my first year gardening and it's been a few years and now I have frogs which came almost right away and I dig up the bottom when I need compost, then I planted cattails. By seed I bought on ebay and after a couple actually came up, the entire ditch thing is full of them now. I love it.
David, thank you so much, really, for talking on us beeing sold on; us - the consumerized people, it´s really too much. Back to understanding how to run the basics. Can´t wait to hear you talk some more about this. TIP! We give away our surplus for free, whatever it can be, as an extra tool we don´t need - in that way we in the community get what we need, without any money exchanged. Give and you will be given - as one of the core messages in the Bible...
For sure.
Yep. Still buried under snow but if you compost everything you can do hotbeds so what you said still applies.
Wow! First of your videos that I saw and already a huge fan! we wanted to start the garden this year because we recently moved to a house with the yard! I know exactly what I will do tomorrow, start building lasagna in the yard :)
You are in for a real treat! He’s great.
Welcome.
I'm going to experiment with making rabbit poo tea this year. I rent and can't have my own rabbits, so I bought some (for a good price) from someone who does have them.
Great manure to add, experiment 👍. Don't be too disappointed if the tea is not that great though... I am guessing, but rabbit manure is cold. Basically, releases nutrient slowly. Good luck 👍
@@shannonsexton8921 (I'm kidding)
Not supposed to drink the tea!
Went to the county and got compost today. That last storm wiped out what I'd planned and washed the seeds in a pooled area. Brooke a rotorua tine today in these weed roots. Wish I wasn't disabled.... but won't Give up! Need more card board.
Keep going, every little bit adds up and leaves it a little better than yesterday.
Bless you, Gypsy.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thanks for always encouraging our efforts. Big or small. Justin said he feels a little called out by his 8x4 bougie garden beds. 🤣
Keep doing what you do. The meek shall inherit the earth, and with the seeds of life we shall prosper. Thank you
About the garden beds. My mom had a 8x4 foot shed. I be attacked it with a electric saw and sliced it into 3 layers that’s 3 raised garden beds !
Cheap beds!
"But wait! There's more!" LOL Don't need more; you had me the first time I saw the fountain with 'You are watching David the Good'.
Since I spent last year getting over the fear of killing plants, THIS year, I am going to work that cost angle. Thanks for all you do.
Great video! I've been gardening most of my life and the majority of it on the cheap. Now that I'm older and the kids are all grown I spend more on my garden. I have started some containers. I'm using old cattle mineral tubs I get for free. I've also bought some concrete blocks to make a couple of raised beds this year as I'm beginning to feel my age. But I still try to use what I have first. I picked up seeds really cheap last fall at Dollar General. They were 90 % off. Then I was able to get some specialty seed recently. I took advantage of a sale and free shipping. The farm store had some bare root trees on sale today so I picked a few up as I'm wanting to try permaculture. I'm also going to try to start some mulberry trees from cuttings. I really appreciate your videos! Thank you!
I found a plant swap group on Facebook. We meet and trade what we have a few times a year. Everyone is so generous!
Those are fun.
Sure you are getting your gardens ready to rock. Mine are doing good so far. So much work to be done though. Labor of love. Couldn't imagine not gardening.
So glad your soil is workable! Mine was filled with scruff and is hard clay. So raised beds were needed this year. Some soil area is workable but most was not. NOW for the remark of getting cheap tools. NO ABSOLUTLUTLY NOT! If you want to succeed as a gardener as in any trade invest in the best tool you can afford. It will save you money in the long run by not having to replace cheep tools later. and the frustration of them breaking mid project. I recommend fiberglass handled tools. Start with a spade ,garden rake and a well made hoe. Use free cardboard to smother weeds and grass. If you can get compost even if at first planting buy it. Then use your garden cuttings and kitchen scraps for compost later. Just bury it in your garden at seasons end. I'm 67 have gardened all my life and this is how I built my garden this year in an rural apartment complex. BTW raised beds or containers are efficient also for city dwellers. This guy isn't addressing those folks.
If you just want to grab calorie crops I'm gonna say you can do it for under 30. Go to the grocery store buy a butternut squash, buy an acorn squash and buy a bag of popcorn. Figure you'll get 30-50 seeds per squash and probably a 1200 to 1500 corn seeds and we should be under 10 dollars. I have a cheapo stirrup how from Walmart that has been a workhorse, it just needs a new handle because mushrooms ate the handle lol. Add to that a basic pointed spade and a spading fork, much much cheaper than a broad fork though the broad fork is worth it if you can afford it but that one tool can be over a hundred dollars.
Yes, for sure.
I started taking my produce to the farmers market too..$$ !!!!!!
Good work.
"Unless you're buried under snow. Then I can't help you." - Yep, that's me.
I tried planting some tomatoes without any fertilizer last year, and I barely noticed any difference between those with and without.
Sometimes, you just gotta get plants into the ground. The ground is usually nice enough to give you something in return.
I got 2 rabbits who create a powerful, perfect fertilizer... and more rabbits ;) Their diluted urine deters pests. When I eat the rabbits, I turn the bones and blood back into the earth. I make your awesome swamp water in my rain barrels and my plants are happy and free of all chemicals. I don't buy anything but new seed varieties and tools.
I live in a trailer park in a city and garden in containers on top of a gravel space the size of 3 parking spots. If I can do it, anyone can do it! Seriously.
This is so refreshing. I've learned a lot from you over the years, but one of the big takeaways was to stop having an adversarial relationship with the weeds. They're just free plant food.
Thank you.
8 packs of seed cost me $15 at Walmart a couple weeks ago. Definitely learn to save seeds.
For heirloom (organic, non gmo) they're $5-6 per packet! Ooof!!
Yes, seeds are expensive. I went to dollar store and was shocked to find Burpee seeds and one variety of tomato I just bought for 3xs as much. MI Gardener offers $2/pack and free shipping on $12 order and he has a point system for money off next order. I’m not sure how long he will be able to maintain that price, we will see.
Yes, MI Gardener even suggested saving seeds as we never know what catastrophe could wipe out supply.
Check out dollar seeds online. They have a great variety, hybrid & OP, non-GMO (of course). They are my source for most of my seeds.
Thank you for being the first to tell people about getting stuck in the commercial trap! If that was the case my ancestors would have never made it! 😂
The most expensive part of gardening besides the labor is knowledge and experience. If only you could get those for free somewhere...
David, thank you for keeping it simple! Love your channel.
I grew a garden for the first time this year. Have literally done nothing to it besides the occasional weeding and its kicking ass.
You are the best David. I hope that Steve mentions in his book which plants grow well when spaced out.
You are so right. I look at many gardening books and they make it too complicated and too expensive.
Thanks for all your great tips!
Yes .. The simplicity of gardening, thanks once more for this wonderful video.
Much respect.
Thanks, Dan. Good to see you.
Thank you for these reminders. I need to go back to your books again. Been fighting with my all sand yard for too long, gave up! and started container gardening which is costing me too much now.
I got your book compost every thing and it’s incredible and I love the little jokes! RIP dinky worm…
Thank you. #RIP
Yes we have 2 varieties of Mulberry trees/bushes - 4 right now but will take cuttings to produce more. Just ordered some Blueberry plants once I learned we could grow them here in SW Arizona (zone 9b). Starting our heirloom seeds now for the garden & some will be grown inside (lettuce, spinach, etc.) Thank you for the tips. Judi
You bet, Judi
Your gardening approach has already helped me save hundreds of dollars. Thank you!!!!
Every year there are Seedy Saturday. Look up your town and area to find the date and lots of seed are free. Then the next year you can donate seeds for others.ours is in March this year.
@@janew5351 this is awesome! Thank you!
Definitely spent some money to build my garden infrastructure. I hope this year I can just focus on the growing and getting back to basics.
Great video, here in Colorado under 2 feet of Snow still
I haven't bought seedlings from the store in a long while--this video made me check local prices and realize I've got several hundred dollars worth of plants. I'm seeing prices as high as $8.00 per plant. If I've got about twenty tomatoes, and another twenty peppers, that's over three hundred dollars worth of seedlings right there!
Makes me feel a little better about how much I spent on seeds from Baker Creek.
Dave… Are you still in Florida? We’ve always watched you because you are in Florida like we are. We are in citrus County… Can you share approximately what zone you are in here in Florida? Or did you move out of state by any chance? Thank you, Dave… We love watching you. 🌿🕊️👍🏽❤️
We are one hour north of Pensacola now. A couple miles north of the Florida border, in Lower Alabama. Zone 8b. I also maintain a food forest in Ft. Lauderdale, zone 11.
Thanks for posting a new video! I’m going to invest in some hydrangeas… they’re not only pretty but the color of their blooms tell you the pH of the where they’re planted 🤗 I wonder what other plants have tricks like that.
That's a fun idea.
Love it!!! FIGHT THE POWER WITH FOOD 🙌🙌 woo 💪
David, you are my favorite gardener, always
giving out abundant information and making us laugh. Raising six children, I am all about frugal practices. Now living in Florida, I own all your books. Thank you, Thank you, thank you!
Thank you. I have been collecting seeds and practicing this past year and I have been thinking about giving up and lasagna gardening. I needed this badly
I love all of your videos. You also have a very calming voice. I could listen to you all day
Thank you
I just bought a piece of property with a well on it. That's why I bought the house. I use worm tea as my fertilizer. I feed my worm scraps and crushed eggshells. Awesome video. You speak the truth David. You said what needed to be said. Have a wonderful day.
Yes!! That's whats it's about
We have a very high water table so in ground rows weren’t the best option. I tried building most of my raised beds, But did buy a couple. If I did it over again and wanted to do it a lot cheaper I probably would have built Hugelkulture mound rows
Thank you such great tips n ideas Your gardens looking Awesome David may God bless you n your family n land 😊 🙏 🇺🇸
You, my friend, are amazing 👏. Keep up the good work!
Thank you Dave for your valuable help. God bless you guys.
This is some great advice! I am currently trying to buy a small farm, which means establishing a new garden again, and I've been listening to a lot of webinars by Dale Strickler over at green cover seed here on RUclips. His thing is more about pasture and cropland, but most of the big picture ideas are the same for vegetables. Diversity and soil health.
Also, the more I think about diversity, the more I want to just dump every seed packet I have into a pail and fling the whole thing onto the ground and see what comes up.
I agree. And Dale is excellent.
Me too😅
I just snagged a garden tool from Home Depot.. husky retail 33 I bought it for 8 dollars
Score!
Hi David, been a long time follower of your videos, newsletter, books and it's great stuff man! You have been a great inspiration for my own gardening. I loved this video, very useful, practical and its always great to debunk these preconceived notions that we often have. I was surprised though by your comment about leaving more space between plants as a way of conserving water and that placing them closer together requires more water. I've been using the biointensive gardening method for a few years with decent success compared to previous attempts at vegetable gardening, and in this method the idea is to place the plants closer together to create a microclimate which reduces water necessity and allows less weeds to come up, in theory. So I'm curious to pick your brain on this, as these concepts seems to disagree with each other. Thanks again for all you do!
i love how david the good makes all the gardening affordable to everyone.
LOL I was gonna say 3:54 what a NO-DIG garden!? 👏😁
Many libraries across the country have Seed Banks where you can get seeds others have saved & donated (for free). There are inexpensive sites online where seeds are a buck or less. Post on social media you are looking for anyone’s leftover or expired seed (they usually last a few years after expiration).
So glad i found your channel. Amazing.
Is that a bit of Marshall Tucker's "Can't You See" @9:18 ? Nice.
I love you David T. G. !!!!! You are "la creme de la creme". Thank you from a faithful follower in SoFlo🙏🥰❤️💜🧡🌻🦋 Do you have a video about how to deal with Mice? They are eating my garden!
I do not have a video, but they are pests. Try Shawn Woods channel.
David the Good I just subscribed to you and then saw you are bama/florida line ! I’m a baker and trying to get my hands on some tonka beans to grow my own plant. Could you kindly give us an update on your plant please 🙏. Love your contents and giving heart ♥️
David, I so appreciate your videos, books and swag. Thank you to you and your family for all y'all create.
Its been snowing for days. The secret trick to free food is extremely difficult. Every time you cook anything with nothing but opposable thumbs take the seeds out before you cook them and throw them in soil. Like magic they sprout and food grows. kinda seems like Plants have been growing for millions of years without needing money and still don't.
another treasure trove of knowledge throw at us
thanks DTG
I've learned a lot from you
Thank you.
Great video! Lots of good info and humour :) Thank you and God bless!
One of the best channels on RUclips! Great video! Lots of information. Be well.
I can’t even GET organic berries! For the last two years in my area. I only get them when I travel about an hour and a half out of town. So we are going to grow some! 1 strawberry per plant this year. But next year we will have a bumper crop hopefully! That was the EASIEST THING EVER - other than all the manual labor😂. Labor is definitely worth the time/work and savings when you can’t get (healthy) food!
Love the used carsalesman bit!
David the Good is the BOMB!!!
Thank you so much for sharing this ❤️ wonderful 🙏 garden tips and information 😀
Good reminder, thanks.
1 4in tomato plant is 6.47 at my local feed store. $6.47 cents!
Wow
Thanks for the encouragement, but without a rabbit and deer fence we are eating nothing. Also need hose.
Some situations will be different. Ironically, those in the city sometimes have it easier!
Fantastic video as always. Just finished my combination lasagna/row garden this weekend. I love the simple gardening philosophy
Rock on!!