Thank you for the tour. I am currently in the dead of winter. So this is just filling the soul. Can't wait for spring to come so the garden can come alive again.
Wow, thanks for watching 👀 I'm sure you will be back into your garden year very soon. We have another 44°c day predicted here so I am kinda dreaming of cooler weather right now 🤣
Oh my god Steph that’s warm 🥵🥵, it’s super cold here at 5c in the morning and cloudy. Everything looks amazing and lush. Have an awesome weekend ahead and enjoy the beautiful weather, Ali 🌦️🥶🇨🇦
Thanks Ali, wow that is cold 🥶 I'm happy that things are holding up well, however if it could just cool down a little and sit around high 30s to 40 I would be happy haha
Hi. Come across your channel and appreciated your tour. It's cold and wet here in northwest WA st as the USA. I was interested in your pepper.. It looks like a miniature tree and here they are seasonal. I also liked your water bowl. You'll have an amazing yield at harvest. Congratulations!
Thank you, yes I have gardening friends that tell me about how cold it is in the USA at the moment and I'm glad I can share some of our sunshine with you. I'm sure you will be back into your gardens soon. Our "peppers" (we call them chillies) have perennialised because the garden has not gotten cold enough to kill them, these past couple of years. Thanks for your comment 🌱☀️
Thanks Heidi yes it's so hot and we are breaking all sorts of records here in Western Australia this month, some places getting to 49.9° this month, many days above 45°. Thanks for subscribing, hopefully the March tour still shows a lush garden and not a fried one 🥵🌡🥵🌱
Oh well done 👏 Hasn't this week been a killer and there's no end in sight yet 😢 How much water is your corn drinking every day? It's so impressive!!! I can't remember if you have wicking beds in these brick beds or not 😊
Hi I know it's tough, corn is getting a drink on those 40plus days first thing in the morning. It's on drip irrigation which is very slow and just at the roots, I'm finding the beds that are on this irrigation responds so much better than a hand water. Plus over packing with plants to help keep the soil cool. Don't worry plenty of crispy, dry plants here to that recieve nothing and hopefully will bounce back one we get the rains again...
They sure did, we did all the footings but we had a brick layer and his friend come and build the beds, was a massive job that they did within a few days 🌱🌱🌻🌻
Thanks for sharing! I love your beautiful garden. I need to put some seeds or seedlings in, I have an empty bed but not sure what to put in as I’ve been avoiding it in this heat. What would you recommend? I’m near to you location wise.
Hi, thanks for your comment I would put seeds in and not seedlings because the seedlings will just fry in this heat. And then hand water the seeds until they start to pop up if you usually use drip irrigation. I just heard on the news tonight that it's going to be a warm autumn so I would pop in, cucumber Armenian, corn, sunflowers, small sugar pumpkins, zucchinis, maybe even some tomato seedlings if you just wait for a cooler day and don't have parrots that like to snack on them like I do 🤣🌱👍
I've just found you , hi. Are you using the Clive blazey raised bed book as a guide still? I've written it all out , adapted it to my needs and spliced in the Linda Woodrow mandala gardening method with it. My beds are half built and half filled using a hugalkulter core (I think I'm spelling that wrong) and I've been pottering at using it. We had some watering issues and a lot failed so far but were sorting it out. My current kitchen gardening is in the spot that will eventually be my perennials and herbs including medicinal garden. Everything is taking me a long time to potter at but it's fun and fulfilling while I do it. My cucamelons self seeded and ate taking over the trellis at the moment, while my favourite, the Armenian didn't come up so I'm risking a late summer planting and see how I go . I didn't realise the melons may cross with them. No melons are fruiting here this year , very disappointing as last year they were fantastic as was the tomatoes but parrots are really pestering me this year. Its bugs and grubs that keep eating my cape gooseberries to the ground here. Last season I taught myself a lot about seed saving and put in a lot of practice, so far they've been true to type . Very exciting to have that skill. Your gardens look amazing. I am sub tropical or so they say but we are actually near the arid and warm temperate zones too. Depending on what each year brings , I try to plant what should do well but I'm definitely still learning. Thank you for the tour , I loved it ❤
Hello, I haven't used Clive blazey however I have also done some hugelkulture initially in these beds as well. Sounds like you have an incredible set up, and I agree saving seeds is a great skill to have. Makes sense to because over time those plants will acclimatise to your growing conditions. Thanks for the kind words and look forward to showing you around next month. 🌱
Steph you have done so well with your garden in this heat! - Jodie
Thanks Jodie, it's starting to really push it now though... we definitely need that cool change....
You have a great set up there and an amazing garden that I'm a little jealous of, thanks for the tour and looking forward to March.💚
Thank you, there was a lot of dreaming, and waiting, and planning that went into this garden. Look forward to sharing with you in March 🌱🍅
Thank you for the tour. I am currently in the dead of winter. So this is just filling the soul. Can't wait for spring to come so the garden can come alive again.
Amazing work with the heat wave!
Thank you, I know the harvests will be worth it soon 🌱🌱
Wonderful vegetable garden!
Watching from the frozen north of Alaska. Thanks for sharing your lush garden 🌱
Wow, thanks for watching 👀 I'm sure you will be back into your garden year very soon. We have another 44°c day predicted here so I am kinda dreaming of cooler weather right now 🤣
Oh my god Steph that’s warm 🥵🥵, it’s super cold here at 5c in the morning and cloudy. Everything looks amazing and lush. Have an awesome weekend ahead and enjoy the beautiful weather, Ali 🌦️🥶🇨🇦
Thanks Ali, wow that is cold 🥶 I'm happy that things are holding up well, however if it could just cool down a little and sit around high 30s to 40 I would be happy haha
Hi. Come across your channel and appreciated your tour. It's cold and wet here in northwest WA st as the USA. I was interested in your pepper.. It looks like a miniature tree and here they are seasonal. I also liked your water bowl. You'll have an amazing yield at harvest. Congratulations!
Thank you, yes I have gardening friends that tell me about how cold it is in the USA at the moment and I'm glad I can share some of our sunshine with you. I'm sure you will be back into your gardens soon. Our "peppers" (we call them chillies) have perennialised because the garden has not gotten cold enough to kill them, these past couple of years. Thanks for your comment 🌱☀️
Your garden is spectacular ❤ awesome video Steph
Thanks so much Mel 🌱 hope yours is going well too 😊
@@indarafarms not at all, I'm struggling here and have to start from scratch, building soil because it is so depleted
Sounds like your on the right track though, hopefully we get some nice opening rains soon and that will help 🌱🌱🌱
46C is really hot. For these extreme temperatures your garden looks amazing 👍 Just discovered your channel and subscribed to it. Greetings Heidi 👩🌾💕
Thanks Heidi yes it's so hot and we are breaking all sorts of records here in Western Australia this month, some places getting to 49.9° this month, many days above 45°. Thanks for subscribing, hopefully the March tour still shows a lush garden and not a fried one 🥵🌡🥵🌱
You have a really nice garden. New friend here. Showing you support. Thanks for the beautiful tour
Thanks so much for the message and support 😀 🌱
Wonderful vegetable garden...thanks for the tour..new friend here😊
Thank you and welcome new friend 😊 🌱
Oh well done 👏 Hasn't this week been a killer and there's no end in sight yet 😢 How much water is your corn drinking every day? It's so impressive!!! I can't remember if you have wicking beds in these brick beds or not 😊
Hi I know it's tough, corn is getting a drink on those 40plus days first thing in the morning. It's on drip irrigation which is very slow and just at the roots, I'm finding the beds that are on this irrigation responds so much better than a hand water. Plus over packing with plants to help keep the soil cool. Don't worry plenty of crispy, dry plants here to that recieve nothing and hopefully will bounce back one we get the rains again...
@@indarafarms thank you so much 😊
Beautiful garden! Someone put in a lot of hours building your beautiful beds!
They sure did, we did all the footings but we had a brick layer and his friend come and build the beds, was a massive job that they did within a few days 🌱🌱🌻🌻
@@indarafarms That's really impressive!
Thanks for sharing! I love your beautiful garden. I need to put some seeds or seedlings in, I have an empty bed but not sure what to put in as I’ve been avoiding it in this heat. What would you recommend?
I’m near to you location wise.
Hi, thanks for your comment I would put seeds in and not seedlings because the seedlings will just fry in this heat. And then hand water the seeds until they start to pop up if you usually use drip irrigation. I just heard on the news tonight that it's going to be a warm autumn so I would pop in, cucumber Armenian, corn, sunflowers, small sugar pumpkins, zucchinis, maybe even some tomato seedlings if you just wait for a cooler day and don't have parrots that like to snack on them like I do 🤣🌱👍
Those red and green plant you can cook it with soup. It would have red color soup and taste like beet.
Thank you, that sounds really interesting, will give it a go 🌱🌱🌱
I've just found you , hi. Are you using the Clive blazey raised bed book as a guide still? I've written it all out , adapted it to my needs and spliced in the Linda Woodrow mandala gardening method with it. My beds are half built and half filled using a hugalkulter core (I think I'm spelling that wrong) and I've been pottering at using it. We had some watering issues and a lot failed so far but were sorting it out. My current kitchen gardening is in the spot that will eventually be my perennials and herbs including medicinal garden. Everything is taking me a long time to potter at but it's fun and fulfilling while I do it. My cucamelons self seeded and ate taking over the trellis at the moment, while my favourite, the Armenian didn't come up so I'm risking a late summer planting and see how I go . I didn't realise the melons may cross with them. No melons are fruiting here this year , very disappointing as last year they were fantastic as was the tomatoes but parrots are really pestering me this year. Its bugs and grubs that keep eating my cape gooseberries to the ground here. Last season I taught myself a lot about seed saving and put in a lot of practice, so far they've been true to type . Very exciting to have that skill. Your gardens look amazing. I am sub tropical or so they say but we are actually near the arid and warm temperate zones too. Depending on what each year brings , I try to plant what should do well but I'm definitely still learning. Thank you for the tour , I loved it ❤
Hello, I haven't used Clive blazey however I have also done some hugelkulture initially in these beds as well. Sounds like you have an incredible set up, and I agree saving seeds is a great skill to have. Makes sense to because over time those plants will acclimatise to your growing conditions. Thanks for the kind words and look forward to showing you around next month. 🌱
👌🌻👌🌷👌🥰
🥰❤🥬🍅🍉