5 things I did not know when I started a nursery in my backyard// 🌲💧

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 75

  • @emptynestgardens9057
    @emptynestgardens9057 3 года назад +17

    I'd so love to see a day in your life video. What daily routines for watering etc look like. Newly retired and considering a small backyard nursery on our countryside acre zone 5 Canada.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +9

      A day in the life of my nursery is pretty bland... watering, weeding, potting, etc. But, really... most days, I just water. Takes 15-20 minutes. Sometimes the wife does it. Sometimes kid does it. Sometimes rain does it. But MOST days... it's just water.

  • @BornFreeFilms
    @BornFreeFilms Год назад +2

    You are so informative!

  • @glyndwrgardens3318
    @glyndwrgardens3318 3 года назад +10

    I really appreciate you doing these videos
    I would rather learn from someone that’s done the thing than through the school of hard knocks

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +3

      Smart people learn from their mistakes. Smarter people learn from someone else’s.

  • @Theweeze100
    @Theweeze100 Год назад +1

    I may never start a backyard nursery, but I am definitely going down the rabbit hole with my garden these days. Thank you so much for the information you provided. I love your channel!

  • @Inferno1988
    @Inferno1988 3 года назад +9

    When it comes to blooming perennials I can recommend that you give Agastache a try - this year I’ve grown it from seed, it bloomed early in the summer and it’s still blooming now! I’ve sold most of what I had (and it’s a micro backyard nursery) but kept one of each in my garden. The varieties were Agastache Korean Zest and Agastache Arcado Pink. They are absolutely trouble free and even more - thrive on neglect! Also Salvia “Caradonna” is a drop dead gorgeous blooming perennial that will usually flower at least twice if pruned 😍 the weather over here - and I’m in continental Europe - was horrible throughout the year, we pretty much had no spring and what seemed like everlasting winter jumped straight into a hot, extremely dry summer, and yet these perennials performed outstandingly well in pots, given the harsh conditions. I also had great success and no trouble with growing Verbena Bonariensis from seed, this one took awhile but it’s still in full bloom and have I had any potted ones left they would be sold in a heartbeat. I am already anticipating next season, I have hundreds of coral bells waiting to be potted up, all grown from seed so each one was a surprise, but some of them turned out extremely unique looking so I think I will have no problem finding new homes for them ❤️

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +1

      Thanks so much for this! I've done very well with coral bells myself. The others you mentioned? I would really like to learn to grow perennials from seed, but haven't tried at all yet... thanks for those suggestions though. And, I have tried a couple of varieties of Salvia. They did... OK.

    • @SeededGarden
      @SeededGarden Год назад +1

      I'm starting out heavily growing perennials from seeds that I harvest from my own plants. All from seed: 1. Milkweeds, the Monarch butterflies NEED them. 95% or better sprouting and growing success. Not picky about soil quality. Will grow to 4' tall the second year, pollinators love them. 2. Anise Hyssop, lovely lavender colored flowers atop beautiful light green foliage. 3. Mexican Sunflowers. Two of mine, their first year, 3' tall, plus, more than a dozen vibrant orange blossoms. 4. Marigolds, annuals, but their blooms last ALL SUMMER. 5. Dianthus (Sweet William) Another that will not quit. Vibrant pink flowers that reseed themselves, long bloom time. HARDY. 6. Gaillardia or Blanket Flower perennials with bright orange flowers, kinda like Coneflowers, but closer to the ground, and they bloom ALL SUMMER, and they thrive on neglect. Drought tolerant. I've neglected mine for 4 years, just started harvesting their seed and they grow.
      One thing about perennial seeds: you have to cold stratify them before sowing. They need to feel a cold season before their seeds will ready to germinate. You can sow them in the fall, or refrigerate the seeds at least 30 days before you want to germinate them. SeededGarden.com @@savvydirtfarmer Thanks!!!

    • @DeeGeeDeFi
      @DeeGeeDeFi Год назад

      Thumbs up to Agastache and Savia

  • @annacoventry5054
    @annacoventry5054 2 года назад +4

    I had some successful plant sales over the past few years so this year I got a business loan and am going for it on a larger scale. Your videos have really helped and have motivated me when I felt a bit doubtful or overwhelmed. Thank you so much 😃

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +4

      Just get started. You can't figure everything out first. You have to learn as you go. Can certainly be overwhelming, but step by step you can do it too.

  • @anitahouse3600
    @anitahouse3600 3 года назад +3

    Thank you! I always get something from your videos. I look forward to them!

  • @christopherroach1968
    @christopherroach1968 2 года назад +3

    I really enjoy watching your videos. I needed to thin out my hostas and irisis/lilies this spring. Instead of giving away like normal every few years, we potted and placed a small ad on Facebook. We did almost 800.00 in just a few days. It has made me want to possibly start a small backyard nursery. This week is the first time I have ever tried to propergate plants. I've learned this from you. Anyways just wanted to say thank you for your knowledge and sharing it on videos. I'll be watching

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      Great!! Thanks for watching

    • @Jennifr1966
      @Jennifr1966 2 года назад

      I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE Hostas! They're so beautiful!

  • @mlissgay5054
    @mlissgay5054 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this ❤I'm starting a nursery in Hawaii tomorrow ❤ really aloha from big island 🏝️

  • @nel6211
    @nel6211 2 года назад

    It's been said that 20% of your customers are responsible for 80% of your business. It is true for any business. Liking the videos.

  • @msher479
    @msher479 Год назад +1

    Thanks I'm learning a lot from you! How do you store your plants in the winter time? Would appreciate a tour of your winter green house or just any info on winterizing and care of nursery plants

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад +2

      I don't have a greenhouse at all, and my plants just sit outside through the winter.

  • @ourcoupleofacres8859
    @ourcoupleofacres8859 2 года назад +1

    Savvy Dirt Farmer, I have learned so much from you about small nursery operations from you! Thank you for your youtube efforts. Could you please do a video about how you package and ship your plants?
    Thanks again,
    Clayton
    Townsend, DE

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the kind words! I really don't ship many plants at all, and never do it when it's hot - just too risky with my limited ability. If I do ship any plants, I'll do a video on how I package them.

  • @nativegardenangel
    @nativegardenangel 3 года назад +1

    Great tips, yes they are all hurdles that we jump. I do have a lot experience buying from wholesalers-so that was the easy part! How about a video on getting ready for winter?

  • @justsayin5609
    @justsayin5609 Год назад

    Just found you this week but already subbed, and am so inspired by your positivity and encouragement for hopeful backyard growers! Wondering what planting zone you are in? Love your accent, from zone 6b a bit north.

  • @herbertinniss9109
    @herbertinniss9109 2 года назад

    Always so informative. Thank you. God Bless.

  • @youtubeisajoke2546
    @youtubeisajoke2546 2 года назад

    There will be no limit! I want thousands of juniper trees ready to sell!! Let’s goooo!!!

  • @jamesgaffney7480
    @jamesgaffney7480 3 года назад +1

    Phenomenal video.

  • @brokenempath
    @brokenempath 2 года назад +1

    I’d love to see the top 20 plants to start video ☺️

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      That's more varieties than I typically even have!! Pretty small nursery here. 😀

  • @johnliberty3647
    @johnliberty3647 Год назад

    5 things I did not know. That coarse sand is the best bulk rooting medium. Chickens will break down carbon materials fast as they drop scratch and drop nitrogen pellets. Squirrels will plant pecans in your pots and sometimes you just kill whatever was growing in the pot and keep the pecan tree that grew up along side it. Ever green hedging plant disappear fast at the right price. And when food becomes scarce it is easy to convert to food plants because the infrastructure is in place as I learned in 2020

  • @ticktock2383
    @ticktock2383 2 года назад

    You are lucky that your neighbors are not complaining about your backyard business. Sad that such a venture would not fly in many areas of our country.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +4

      I help my neighbors... cut their grass, give them plants, and keep my nursery looking nice. And yes, I have good neighbors all around and try to be a good one myself.

  • @KevinSmith-dq9tz
    @KevinSmith-dq9tz Год назад

    Haha. Indeed whatever you think you need, just double it right out of the gate. Within the first 12 months you'll see you need it all, plus more, lol.

  • @WiseTailsArt
    @WiseTailsArt Год назад

    OMG the dog in the background lol.

  • @kerrytoby7041
    @kerrytoby7041 2 года назад +1

    I do plastics part time now as a sole proprietor in BC Canada. I love plants and would like to transition to that and then do my shop time and sales at my leisure. I have close to 1\2 acre property my house is on. When you do driveway sales I would guess one would need two people at least? If I needed to fetch more plants from the back property another person would need to be present at the driveway. Do you have any comments on how that works for you?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      I can do a driveway sale by myself, but usually my kids are helping me, and my wife. I try to not generate so much traffic at a time that it becomes a problem with being too busy to manage. I bring about 150 (+ or -) plants to the driveway and bring wagon loads from the back to front 28 at a time if I need to reload or if I have enough to reload. With my setup, it's pretty easy to keep up with it.

    • @kerrytoby7041
      @kerrytoby7041 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer Thank you. I don't have a lot of family to be involved in propagating but I do have a couple people who could help with a driveway sale. Do you ever have people come by appointment? I feel it's simpler and more efficient and less intrusive to keep it to a driveway sale. Do you have any comments on that? My wife would be happier if I wasn't touring people through my back yard.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      @@kerrytoby7041 yes! We sell more via appointments than from the driveway. There's a bit f an art to it because people love to make appointments and not show up. But if you set everything up right, it's very doable.

    • @kerrytoby7041
      @kerrytoby7041 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer Your replies are so helpful. I am ok with appointments. I could try to organize appointments to say one day out of three in general perhaps to be more efficient? Be around for appointments on changing days of the week? Or simply set more than one appointment for a given day so that it's more likely some will come? Also not too many on a given day? I think I know the answers lol just do it and adjust as I learn🙂

  • @teresaholland4790
    @teresaholland4790 Год назад

    I appreciate that you say “men and women when you refer to someone 😉😎

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      Depends on what I'm talking about, but, OK. thanks

  • @Jennifr1966
    @Jennifr1966 2 года назад

    Thank you so very much for sharing all this information. I VERY much want to do this. I have a few questions.
    1) is it illegal to sell plants propagated from ones I simply bought from the store? I read that there could be like a copyright.
    2) can I do Some of these indoors? I have a UV light, like they use for African violets.
    3) are there plants that can thrive in SC in mostly SHADE? Because that's all I get.
    4) most importantly: are there ones I can do right now (mid July) and sell in September?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      1) some plants are protected from propagation by patents; some plants's names are protected by copyrights.
      2) Sure. Indoor plants are in huge demand; I just dont know anything about them.
      3) Shade plants? Hostas, ferns, astilbes, bleeding hearts, some hydrangeas for starters.
      4) If you can find a wholesale nursery in your area with sale ready plants, you can buy and resale them.

  • @johnking6504
    @johnking6504 2 года назад

    you talked about buying plugs for daisy's and cone flowers from? just starting out and finding wholesalers that are viable is very confusing?

  • @fabricdragon
    @fabricdragon Год назад

    if you can find a *native* plant that works well for you? the native plant buyers are hard core

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      Sure. There are hard core plant buyers of ALL TYPES of plants.

  • @nevonthedaily
    @nevonthedaily Год назад

    Where do you buy your seeds?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад +1

      I don't propagate by seed. I propagate most things by cuttings or divisions.

    • @nevonthedaily
      @nevonthedaily Год назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer wow!! Do you have a video tutorial on how you do it?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад +1

      @@nevonthedaily well, that's pretty much what my channel is... how I grow plants in my nursery. Numerous propagation videos on dividing hostas, rooting green giants, crapemyrtles, hydrangeas, etc. Just look around. thanks!!

    • @nevonthedaily
      @nevonthedaily Год назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer I will thank you

  • @pandorasgarden3369
    @pandorasgarden3369 2 года назад

    Repeat customers are called regulars. Atleast that’s what we called them when I worked Spinx during HS.

  • @savvydirtfarmer
    @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад

    What did you NOT know when you started your nursery? What do you wish you knew before you get started?

    • @laneyelkins6970
      @laneyelkins6970 3 года назад +4

      So many pots!! I ordered what I thought was a TON of them from Greenhouse Megastore and went through them sooo quickly! Pots, pots, pots!! I always need more pots than I think I do!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +2

      @@laneyelkins6970 YES!! Pots of all sizes. For me, I use way more trade gallons than anything else, but I always need 3 inch pots, 2 gallons, 3 gallons, etc. ALWAYS MORE!!

    • @christinastoltz2688
      @christinastoltz2688 2 года назад

      I don't know what sizes to get?

    • @KevinSmith-dq9tz
      @KevinSmith-dq9tz Год назад

      @Christina Stoltz Depends on size of plants. Work your way up as needed.

  • @shanetitus3791
    @shanetitus3791 2 года назад +5

    What the dog doin!?

  • @dn744
    @dn744 3 года назад

    Cheers

  • @SeededGarden
    @SeededGarden Год назад

    Business tidbit: BEWARE if you get a Reseller's Certificate with your business, it allows you to buy plants and flowers without paying taxes. HOWEVER, supplies like soil, cups, trays, etc. are NOT eligible for buying tax-free. From Washington State department of revenue: "Plants and flowers are all eligible for purchase with a reseller permit. However, tools, equipment, supplies and any other items used in the ordinary course of business are not eligible for purchase with a reseller permit." Be careful of how your state classifies supplies regarding taxes.

  • @rustyshields7190
    @rustyshields7190 2 года назад

    Is there a video on how to determine the price/value of plants?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      I don't think I have a video on that, specifically. Best thing to do is know exactly how much it cost you to produce the plant, and double it, at least. Go to your local nursery and find out what they are selling them for to get some idea - if you have no idea at all. Most of my plants sell for $7 and I have $3 or less in all of them. If I propagate them myself, I have maybe $.50 in them.

  • @redwoodsgal
    @redwoodsgal 2 года назад

    Slugs and snails eat any Hostas or Bearded Iris here