EASY to Grow Vegetables for FAIL SAFE Harvests 🙌

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  • Опубликовано: 8 авг 2024
  • These are my top ten crops that are easy to grow, suffer little from pests, and can tough it out in challenging weather. They include a few perennials, an unusual green vegetable, tubers, my favorite berry, and many more! Grow these crops, and you'll be sure to get a harvest, no matter what pests and the weather gets thrown at you.
    💚Please like, comment, and subscribe
    00:00 Introduction
    01:10 Tree spinach
    02:04 Jerusalem artichoke
    02:42 Welsh onions
    03:35 Early potatoes
    04:39 Swiss chard
    05:36 Rhubarb
    06:19 Beans
    07:14 Zucchini/courgettes
    08:15 Autumn raspberries
    09:07 Garlic
    09:57 Perennial vegetables
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    #garden #vegetablegarden #gardening
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Комментарии • 101

  • @maryobrien5568
    @maryobrien5568 Год назад +5

    With the climate changing and becoming unpredictable I am trying to focus on my garden being as resilient as possible. This is very useful. Your plants are all looking so strong and healthy!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +4

      I'm doing the same, though I'll always try my luck at growing things that are a bit more sensitive to climate and pests. Having fail safe crops is insurance, though :)

    • @juliemcgugan1244
      @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад

      @@LovelygreensThere's a certain satisfaction from 'beating the odds.' But you are right, having fail safe crops, too is just common sense.

  • @loyalbadams
    @loyalbadams 11 месяцев назад

    You are a most beautiful teacher. Your husband is one Lucky Guy... Love your vids. Keep 'um coming.

  • @oliwka7677
    @oliwka7677 11 месяцев назад +2

    Dobrze, że jesteś. Oglądam Ciebie i sprawiasz,że świat jest lepszy. Dziękuję.

  • @LizZorab
    @LizZorab Год назад +1

    This is a great list of veg Tanya, I was nodding frantically with each suggestion!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      I'm sure you grow most, if not all, too 🙂

  • @Pixieworksstudio
    @Pixieworksstudio Год назад +5

    Thank you! I love Jerusalem artichokes. But I also find Oca really easy, and Yacon. Just amazing to grow

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      Agree! Almost too easy, all three 💚

    • @Happy-tc2jt
      @Happy-tc2jt 11 месяцев назад

      Hello lovely green!!!,for me it would be wild Rocket,the same as rubarbe,once you have it in the ground,it keeps coming,it has lovely yellow flowers which the bees adore,they are also delicious....it goes dormant during the coldest winter months .

    • @Pixieworksstudio
      @Pixieworksstudio 11 месяцев назад

      @@LovelygreensSo true, Tanya. I can't wait to harvest them. It's those underground secrets I find pretty exciting.

  • @juliemcgugan1244
    @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад +2

    Beets are something I will have to try again. Some years ago, when I was living in the tropics, I had a plot in a community garden and tried out some different beets of many colours (bull’s blood, chioggia, golden.) Despite it being monsoon season, when it was cooler than the rest of the year, only one survived (bull’s blood,) and even that was micro-sized, because of the heat! Now I am living in the Med region, where we have winter, so am going to try again. I got turnips (Falco F1) last year and those were lovely, so will have to try the beets again! Can’t wait to see how they turn out, even though I do not even eat beets! I do like the greens, though and I get an immense satisfaction from growing my own produce from seed that I don’t find when buy plant starts from my local nursery.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      Good luck! But I'd recommend buying fresh beets first and experimenting with recipes. There's no point growing veg that you won't eat. As for liking beet greens, you can grow ruby chard instead and get many more harvests from a single plant 🙂

    • @juliemcgugan1244
      @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад

      @@LovelygreensYep, already got my rhubarb chard ready to transplant into the garden. My Mum loves beetroot and so do my Aunt and Uncle who will be visiting, when they are ready. So I'll only put in a few in. Last year, I made the mistake of bringing rhubarb chard to the zoo where I worked. We fed it to the lemurs and the next day the people who paid for the lemur experience, so they could play with them, got red poop stains all over them! OOPS! Lesson learned!

  • @itsmewende
    @itsmewende 11 месяцев назад +3

    I'll be sharing this with my Granddaughter...17 and this spring into growing food, she's even talking about what to plant now. Your place looks amazing in the short time you guys have been there.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      That's amazing! You must be such an inspiration for her 💚

  • @letsdoitgull2478
    @letsdoitgull2478 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the video 💞🌺

  • @charlesbale8376
    @charlesbale8376 Год назад

    Excellent information, enjoyed the video.

  • @janetleeharrison
    @janetleeharrison Год назад +2

    Thanks for the Welsh onion tip! Great video. 👍

  • @bobwilliams5506
    @bobwilliams5506 Год назад

    I had my best garden ever here in Missouri, USA.

  • @catwoman7462
    @catwoman7462 Год назад +4

    I've tried spring onions and they never germinate. I sowed some Welsh onions this year and they're doing great. The Isle of Man seems to be plagued with slugs and snails - I'm down in Port Erin and all my pak choi was eaten overnight, all my brassicas have been snaffled, they've even climbed up my sunflowers and destroyed most of them! The best thing I've grown this year is bambino pumpkin - it went mad and if I hadn't broken off the growing tips it would have taken over the entire lawn by now! I'm looking forward to harvesting them later this year.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +2

      It's been a very wet summer, and wet = slugs! They can be voracious

    • @catwoman7462
      @catwoman7462 Год назад +2

      @@Lovelygreens It's a pity they don't like eating weeds.

    • @juliemcgugan1244
      @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад

      I watched a video on RUclips where a gardener (I think he was Welsh,) trapped lots of snails and slugs, let them mingle with each other in a bucket for a few days, then put water in the bucket to drown them. Then used all of that nasty water to water around his garden beds. Turned out that some snails carry nematodes that kill them, so letting them mingle meant that some infected snails and slugs passed the nematodes onto others, drowning them let out those now-numerous nematodes into the water and then watering with the water inoculated the soil around the plants. So the exercise served to control the population of the snails and slugs in the long-run. I can see how doing this yearly would help minimized the population in your garden and if your neighbours did it too, say if you were part of a community garden, then it would have a protective effect for everybody.

  • @lisagoldberg5178
    @lisagoldberg5178 Год назад +2

    I am trying a few new (new to me, as I haven't grown them before) fall crops this year. Copenhagen Market Cabbage, Italian Red of Florence bunching onion and Golden Beets. I don't know if I will like the Golden Beets, but if I grow it I know I will try it. I am looking forward to seeing how your Borlotti beans do. I have tried them before at a friends house, but they weren't home grown. Thank you and congratulations on your 200k subscribers! It won't be long before you are at 300k.😀 ♥🐝

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      Thanks so much, Lisa! As for golden beets - they are delicious. I grow a type called Burpee's Golden and it's sweet and mild and doesn't stain your hands pink when preparing it :)

  • @petersavage5885
    @petersavage5885 11 месяцев назад

    Recently moved and I have a large garden again. Looking forward to trying a few of your suggestions. Thanks Tanya 👍

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      My pleasure - happy planting!

  • @sallygiles132
    @sallygiles132 Год назад +1

    Great video Tanya, loved all the extra info re cooking, bolting etc. thank you. I’m growing veg this year but haven’t a clue how to cook some of it such as Chard 🤪🤪 fennel, beets, turnips. So when seasoned growers tell me how to cook it, I give it it a go. Thanks for sharing your knowledge

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      Chard is great chopped up into 1" pieces, stem and all, and sautéed. I love it with garlic. Beets, roasted - check my Instagram Stories from today. When it comes to growing veg, grow what you like to eat, though. Best buy it first, experiment with recipes, then decide to grow it or not.

  • @jackparton3198
    @jackparton3198 11 месяцев назад

    Another amazing video thanks for sharing your experience with your fantastic garden 🪴.

  • @habibrehman3737
    @habibrehman3737 Год назад

    Wonderful vegetables .
    You too looking so pretty in blue.

  • @stevendowden2579
    @stevendowden2579 Год назад

    lovely video tanya

  • @joanfargo4922
    @joanfargo4922 11 месяцев назад

    Shallots, I plant them at the same time as garlic. I always get a great harvest. 5 bulbs produced 74 more. Save bulbs for seed next fall. Stores for a year, after curing in produce bin in frig. Always makes me smile.😊

  • @santiagosatori
    @santiagosatori Месяц назад

    Okra is my nearly fail-proof crops. I love to eat them when they are small right from the plant.

  • @veganwinter
    @veganwinter 11 месяцев назад

    Okay we will totally trying the silverbeet because oh man my greens get smashed by insects and I'm currently just going to buy netting . We learned a lot as always! Thank you!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      You're welcome! They still get a little nibbled by slugs but bounce back so easily once the plant is mature.

  • @BubbleTeaKristin
    @BubbleTeaKristin 11 месяцев назад

    This was a fabulous video!!! I really learned a ton. Thank you so much 😇.

    • @BubbleTeaKristin
      @BubbleTeaKristin 11 месяцев назад

      P.s. Your garden is looking amazing! Wow! So much healthy growth!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @stevemchugh1374
    @stevemchugh1374 24 дня назад

    Hi Tanya. I will just say that while rhubarb is usually a very fail-safe plant(my mum had it growing in her garden in England for over 40 years). Where I am in County Kerry, S.W. Ireland, I have twice tried to grow rhubarb from either 1 yr old plants or via an established divided crown and on both occasions they have died eventually within a year, yielding no pickable stalks due to an insect called a dock bug which you won't find any mention of being a pest in any garden growing book I've come across. These bugs have both fed off the stalks and leaves along with laying their eggs in and around the plant and in spite of using an organic pyrethrum spray on the plants it had no effect on stopping their demise.
    I don't know if this is at all a problem in the isle of Man or UK yet, but just thought I'd forewarn you that growing rhubarb isn't completely cast iron problem free. Oh and if by any chance you've heard of this dock bug problem and know of an organic solution to combat it please do let me know as I love rhubarb. Cheers!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  16 дней назад

      I've never heard of it, but thanks for drawing my attention to it!

  • @gawain8000
    @gawain8000 Год назад

    Nice

  • @ufoman4468
    @ufoman4468 Год назад +1

    Hello Tanya Lovely Greens. Great video as always . I had some Red Cabbages growing in a big planter though i covered them in netting those pesky butterfly catterpillers still managed to get in there and ate the lot just about . Do you know anybody who wants to buy two jars of Sarsons pickling vinegar. LOL😆

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      They can be so sneaky and lay their eggs through the netting! I had that happen this year too.

  • @alpinereid5265
    @alpinereid5265 Год назад +3

    Hello Tanya! Wondering how your Dyer's Woad faired and would love to see how you process it for use with dying fabric or wool. In my garden, on the east coast of Canada, the cabbage white butterflies decided it was a favorite of theirs as well!

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +3

      The indigo video will be coming out in a few weeks 🙌 😊

    • @alpinereid5265
      @alpinereid5265 11 месяцев назад

      @@Lovelygreens Thank you!

  • @ninemoonplanet
    @ninemoonplanet Год назад

    Boysenberries. They're perennials and once the plants get started the berries are prolific.
    What is definitely not welcome are blackberry canes, they're a scourge here taking over acres/hectares of productive land. (Pacific Northwest area).
    Mint, it's easy, doesn't create problems if grown in containers. Spearmint is the favourite.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      I've not had boysenberries in years 😍 Bramble (blackberries) are a problem here on abandoned land, too. So invasive

  • @auntiepam5649
    @auntiepam5649 Год назад +1

    Are the welsh onions similar to Egyptian onions? I have those and love them.
    I see they are on your next video of perennial crops. Thank You Tania

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      They don't create top set onions, but you can use them in a similar way :)

  • @jons5898
    @jons5898 Год назад

    A major pest I have is white tail deer. They definitely like my Jerusalem artichoke leaves and this year have taken a liking to rhubarb, they’ve eaten a few leaves off of mine but left the stalks but they ate my neighbor’s mature rhubarb right to the ground 😳 ! Last year the potato plants were on their menu 🤦🏻‍♂️.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      Those deer must be really hungry - Rhubarb leaves are toxic/poisonous for both people and deer. Wow.

    • @jons5898
      @jons5898 11 месяцев назад

      @@Lovelygreens , They must be part goat judging by their eating habits ! 😂

    • @SamStone1964
      @SamStone1964 11 месяцев назад

      The feral deer even eat the new growth on my fig trees. The sap doesn't put them off.

  • @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho
    @BlessingsfromNorthIdaho Год назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @lindsaycrook3183
    @lindsaycrook3183 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for your tips, I was surprised to see rhubarb on your list as my garden can’t grow it, I’ve tried it all over my garden and it lasts for 2 years max then dies. I grow on very heavy clay, I used to have a very healthy patch in my last garden so I’m flummoxed as why it won’t grow here ?.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад

      What are the symptoms of it failing to thrive, and at what time of the year does it die?

  • @robinmiller1783
    @robinmiller1783 11 месяцев назад

    My fail proof is thornless blackberries.

  • @divyamuvva4999
    @divyamuvva4999 11 месяцев назад

    For me Egyptian walking onions and alpine strawberries have been indestructible

  • @divyamuvva4999
    @divyamuvva4999 11 месяцев назад

    Need a list of foolproof perennial flowers please. I have killed quite a few plants now.

  • @solidstart9042
    @solidstart9042 11 месяцев назад

    Great video Tanya. I have a courgette plant in a tub and I haven't had any edible fruits yet. The flowers develop in to fruits but instead of getting bigger they wither at one end and turn yellow. What am I doing wrong?! I'm in Ireland. Thanks

    • @SamStone1964
      @SamStone1964 11 месяцев назад

      Sounds like the female flowers aren't being pollinated. Try dusting a little paintbrush on the male flower and then the female.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад +1

      I agree with Sam - they need help with pollination.

  • @LisaMay_HomeAndAway
    @LisaMay_HomeAndAway Год назад +1

    Can I plant my garlic between my winter cabbage?

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      I don't see why not, as long as you harvest the cabbage before spring and don't disturb the garlic when harvesting. The green sprouts will need at least some light over winter, too, so keep that in mind in regards to the cabbage leaves potentially covering them.

  • @aname5267
    @aname5267 Год назад +1

    Knee high beans are still a struggle for me with slugs 😢

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +2

      One thing that can help is creating a barrier around the base of the plant. A 2L plastic drinks bottle works well if you cut off the top and bottom. Push it into the ground at the base of your plants, and it can help repel slugs long enough for the plant to grow taller.

  • @rachelmurray270
    @rachelmurray270 11 месяцев назад

    What type of garlic would you recommend pls?

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад +1

      Any! Though it's best to plant garlic that does better in your climate, for example, hardneck varieties in colder climates.

  • @juliemcgugan1244
    @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад

    Is that tree spinach Cnidoscolus aconitifolius or Chenopodium giganteum? I grow chenopodium giganteum, it has the same purple on the younger leaves, but does not grown any more than half a foot, where I am. It is a nice tasting alternative to spinach, but the leaves do not get very big at all, so I’d have to grow lots of it in order to get a meal out of it. It self seeds as well, but I think the heat here, which is a problem for most of the year, keeps it small and stunted. The slugs and snails also love it, so spinach of either variety seems to struggle to become established and do well. I found the same when I used to grow New Zealand spinach, which did not taste like spinach, in my opinion it was nowhere near as nice as regular spinach. I am looking for amaranth seeds, to see if I can grow red and white amaranth. When I used to grow that in the tropics, though, it was really hard to keep under control, as it really did self-seed! Maybe in a climate that is more arid like Cyprus is, it would be harder for them to take over?

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  11 месяцев назад +1

      Hi Julie, mine is Chenopodium giganteum, the same as yours. I've grown both of my large plants individually and in very rich soil. The tall one outdoors was actually started off in the Polycrub in spring before I planted it out. Maybe those tips help? I also get metre tall lambs quarters (a weedy relative of tree spinach).

    • @juliemcgugan1244
      @juliemcgugan1244 11 месяцев назад

      @@LovelygreensThat's cool. I'll try it in my shade house. It stays cooler than outside in the summer (had the tree spinach outdoors in full sun, since I thought it would grow tall) and stays a few degrees warmer in there than the outside, during winter. Never tried it during winter, actually. We don't get any frost or snow, so it might be okay. I'll make sure to provide it with very rich soil! Thanks!

  • @markshomeandgarden6674
    @markshomeandgarden6674 Год назад

    If you happen to have any spare red Jerusalem Artichokes I would gladly buy some from you .

    • @Pixieworksstudio
      @Pixieworksstudio Год назад +1

      You can easily plant the ones you can find in shops, just like potatoes and garlic. I remember them being in the shops around November in the UK.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      Amanda is right and that's exactly where I got mine to grow :)

    • @Pixieworksstudio
      @Pixieworksstudio Год назад

      @@Lovelygreens Me too :) 2 different kinds as well.

    • @markshomeandgarden6674
      @markshomeandgarden6674 11 месяцев назад

      only reason i asked is we don't see many of the reds around hear for some reason @@Lovelygreens

  • @user-vi4zw8ps1c
    @user-vi4zw8ps1c Год назад

    Where do you get the seeds?

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      Various places. Which ones are you after?

  • @SenorGonzo
    @SenorGonzo Год назад

    Is there a crops that is the opposite for you? Something that you really really want to grow but that gives you (too) much problems?

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      I'd love to grow tropical fruit, but that's not realistic here. Everything else that's suited for my climate grows well - it's just understanding what each plant needs.

  • @melissab8500
    @melissab8500 Год назад +1

    I tried them, but i think it's too dry here. They did not come back :/

    • @melissab8500
      @melissab8500 Год назад

      Jerusalem artichokes, that is

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад +1

      Ha! You must be in a pretty arid place for them not to take over. You need irrigation, I think.

    • @melissab8500
      @melissab8500 Год назад

      @@Lovelygreens Central Florida. 100°/37° today. 48 % humidity. We water daily. I'm in my 4th year of woodchips now so things are looking up, maybe it's time to try them again

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      @@melissab8500 I've just read that Jerusalem artichokes prefer to grow between 65-90F. It may be best to focus on crops that will love your sub-tropical climate instead!

    • @melissab8500
      @melissab8500 Год назад

      @@Lovelygreens I plant everything-if it dies it dies. There have been some surprises

  • @alexandraathay
    @alexandraathay 11 месяцев назад +1

    Another great video! Thank you...please can we stop calling it climate change and start calling it 'climate intervention' 😏

  • @arkendubanerjee5218
    @arkendubanerjee5218 Год назад

    i tried growing swiss chard from seeds in my indoor garden under really bright LED grow lights but haven't found success yet. The seedlings grow around 2 inches tall and then fail to live on. Any tips for swiss chards?

    • @arkendubanerjee5218
      @arkendubanerjee5218 Год назад

      Other crops such as tomatoes grow amazing under the same lights though.

    • @Lovelygreens
      @Lovelygreens  Год назад

      Swiss chard is a reliable grower with few problems. Try direct sowing it where it is to grow. Keep moist, protect from slugs, and you can't go wrong.

    • @flyfishdr
      @flyfishdr 11 месяцев назад

      Swiss Chard is easy grow direct seeding into soil
      Growing indoors was difficult