The way you adapt your attitude to the garden shows one of the greatest aspects of gardening to me. It is not about getting it perfect and then doing the same thing year after year, but the fun is all about growing, adapting, changes things up a bit, exploring. As the garden grows, so does the gardener
Totally agree with this! Some years things work out, some they don't. If there is something you want to grow go for it, there is a lesson to be learned in everything, especially failure.
Totally makes sense. Grow what you love to eat and what you can't get or is most expensive at the market. Also, crazy beautiful food forest works for me, so I do plant for the wild animals, my chickens and bunnies.
Wow, you’re so ahead of the game! I’m still in seedling stage. We had several late frosts but also, I’m still learning + had to travel. Thankfully a dear friend is keeping tabs on them. 3 more days and I’ll see my garden babies!
I'm glad you said that! I think next year I have a better idea of when to start my seedlings. I'm also discovering what is best to direct grow here. I'm not at the ' what I love to eat' stage as I'm growing anything I can get my hands on so my planning is still in the experiment stage. I didn't think I would enjoy this as much as I am...like a kid in a Lollie shop🤭
@HuwRichards I hear ya! Our springs are notoriously short where I am; we had snow just over a week ago, about 30cm of it, now all of a sudden we're hitting temps in the mid-20's! The bottleneck is real.
May I suggest a variation of "perennial" where seeds are not bought, but grown. For many crops, a particular variety is not needed - just similar leaves. For example, most people don't care what lettuce variety they have, just that it is lettuce. Same with rocket, mizuna, mibuna, etc. So let them go to seed, and then use the seeds later. Of course, even with broccoli going to seed you can still use the leave as cabbage substitute.
Just paused the video to say THANK YOU for not making me sit through the blurb about the gizmo that I don't need and have no interest in. VERY considerate. And, now, back to the show. . . . :)
Fantastic. I love your self-sufficiency book - step by step, month by month, producing as much 'traditional' food as possible. This new phase of using that experience as a basis from which to produce a personal, customised version is perfect. 'Efficiency' (growing as much as possible) is important to commercial growers, the more they grown the more money they make -- but when growing for yourself, you simply need 'enough', it doesn't have to be acres of spuds just because they are energy dense etc...
It's my first year growing anything this year so I've started small just to learn some basics but I'm hoping next year to focus on perenials for fruit and growing salads so I can be self sufficient in the things that I love and are the most expensive first.
Look into the fruits you want now. The sooner you can get them in the better! I'm in my 5th year now and always planned for lots of fruits and other perennials, but was too intimidated to start right away. If I ever have to start a garden from scratch again, getting my fruit trees and bushes in will be a priority. Even if it's just the one thing (choose self fertile if that's the case)
I have been trying to establish my perrenial veg garden in Sweden. I have asparagus, rhubarb, chives, fruit trees and varipus berry bushes, I found sourcing other type of veg plants is difficult. Eg. I cannot local nursrous that carry perrenial kale plants. The selection of seeds is also limited, and more difficult to germinate. .. I look forward to see the new chapter of your new garden and the audiences to get new inspiration!
I am so behind this year it feels overwhelming, it was too wet to get anything out early or keep on top of the weeds and they have gone mad (the entrance to the allotments where I am gets so water logged where we are that it is impossible to walk up it to get to my plot which meant I wasn’t able to bring in some of the compost/manure I needed in autumn, my compost area is a work in progress, and it’s delayed so much) and in order to get plants out I have so much to do. Telling myself it’s okay but have had to revisit my plans and compost some plants that would normally have gone in, now weeding one bed at a time and doing what I can and focusing on beans/peas, tomatoes, squash, potatoes, herbs and a few onions for the summer with a view to putting in some brassicas here and there as I can and for overwintering (luckily the garlic I planted before it got really bad is doing really well). Not ideal but I am grateful for anything I can get that is home grown especially with such a difficult start to the season. Very interested in perennials so excited to see where you go with this and may help me chose some plants that could help fill in the gaps in difficult years 🌱
I have a half perennial garden! My top producers are seakale for cabbage and spring broccolis. I grow green garlic, scallions and elephant garlic (for leeks) by planting a clove or bulb and harvesting them all except for the largest one which i plant again for next year in the same spot. Hablitzia and good king henry for potherbs. Aswell as handfull of perennial salad leaf plants. Im growing crambe cordifolia as a cabbage to try this year as the seakale doesnt go bitter in my lukewarm rainy climate but i hear its not always tasty.
Such a cool project! I really like where you are going with it. I love the idea of growing only on what I really want to eat, but it seems I keep adding more explorations and trials!
Huw, I really have to admit, I hate your garden because it's not in my yard, however I am really inspired by it. Just have to allow my wind break to hurry up and grow, as whatever I create will be torn apart.
When I saw you burning leeks I thought that’s strange but I think you were cooking them? There’s so much to do after the long rains that I am gardening with a broken leg! My asparagus and artichokes are producing and can’t buy these anywhere near as fresh.Welsh onions have been great and I used these as spring onions with purple sprouting broccoli in stir fries. Great garden you are doing I am getting the book and buying a tunnel this autumn.
I think my original reply went as you edited a comment but regarding the leeks if you roast them on embers until outside is brunt, peel off that outer layer and you have perfectly cooked leeks inside. Can work for so many vegetables! Have a great growing season and hope your leg is okay🌿
Great video, thank you. I'm also growing way more than I need now. I give away a lot, and have sold excess at my local market. All the extra cash goes back into the garden, so it pays for itself finally (after 7 years!).
Glad to hear that I am not the only one who does not care lettuce because everyone recommends them. I really like the concept of having the garden work as hard for you as you work for it and year round gardening is great for that!!
Thanks for another informative video.🙂I only have four 1 metre square raised beds in my back garden, plus fruit trees in pots. This year I'm growing as many perennial fruit and veg as possible, and removing some of the ornamentals in my front garden. That way I can plant fruit and veg amongst the bushes and flowers, making the garden both pretty and productive. I've just finished last year's runner beans from the freezer, so am growing again. However, if my dwarf french beans get destroyed by slugs again, I will ditch them. As you say, it's what you like, along with what works for you.
This is very expensive project to do. I am doing something similar. Cost of beds and bark and soil if you don't have good soil. If you need chemicals or seeds there's another cost. Cost of water if you don't have butts. Time and space. WOW it adds up.
Hi from California. Preordered your book months ago & it arrived today, only got to quickly flip through it so far & it looks fantastic. Excited to see how things change as you move towards perennials in this garden.
Just got my book and am very happy with its contents. Its like it cleared a road block I was having with my space. I’m very excited for the weekend to make my first raised beds.
Your new garden space is about the same size as what we are currently growing in, so I am super excited to watch as you grow different crops in it so I can get new ideas! I have been slow in adding perennials so I am also super excited to see what you plant so I can gain some inspiration for my own garden ❤
This video exactly describes my dream for the coming years and I recognize so many of the feelings you talk about Huw! Thanks once more for putting it all into an overview
Got your book through Amazon yesterday. Love how it's laid out and presented, very easy to learn from and follow. Our weather here in my part of Canada has been the same, cool and wet so far. Really hoping for warmer weather soon, it's been too cool to put my tomatoes and peppers out so far.
last year was my first time seriously growing pepper, long beans and especially the tomatoes was so productive and healthy without any fertilizers i could pick matured but unripe tomatoes and eat them raw and they tasted like apples i never knew tomatoes tasted so good until i planted mine, this year the weather been brutally hot until may it started raining so we go again this time hot peppers and tomatoes with cassava
Brilliant! So productive and great to have a goal for the year. I think flavour is such and important benefit of homegrown, plus the nutritional content compared to conventionally farmed produce 🙂
Pre-order book came today from Amazon. I am so excited that I took both old dogs outside with me to read. NOPE! Now I am trying to talk myself into following my plan to weed or throwing that out to read your book!! Nk
get thornless blackberry plants, they grow like a weed in a drought. Peach tree's do great in droughts too. I love not having to plant every year when having perennials
just relaxing inside as it gets hot in my garden at mid day. may is always playing catch up because suddenly every weed has decided to grow over night. but a lot of them will feed my rabbits and they will feed me. I like my fruit the best. strwberries and raspberries are firm favorites. I have more luck with flowers (which I sell) but trying hard for my greens. I will only eat peas sitting next to the plants. corn is inedible unles you grow them yourself!
I’m new to the channel and preordered your book a few days ago, I had a successful garden for a few years now but excited to learn more and step my game up!!
Idea for showing the entirety of what you grow/harvest in the pace in a year You should have a position up high you can attach a camera, looking down at a field / lawn /space etc. Then every time you harvest lay the food out in that space starting from left to right, and as the year goes on you can comp all the images footage together and display the entire years haul in one shot.
@@HuwRichards Forgot to say, please tell Sam thank you, too. This book is a wonderful resource. Watching your video made me go out and plant herbs and tomatoes, even in the rain that's coming and going today 🙂
I just have rhubarb, fruit bushes and trees as my perennial fruit and veg. Had bought lots of asparagus crowns to be planted last year but they went to loss as never got to plant them but just bought 2 crowns few days ago (would have bought more but they all looked dead) and want to get them planted up this week! But have loads of things to get planted out, my leeks are not doing well unfortunately, dont know whats up and i changed to all organic/heirloom seeds so lots of seed saving for me 😊
I really enjoy your videos. I only wish you were in a similar climate to mine. I am in the south eastern U.S. where it gets hot and humid and there aren't any decent permaculture practitioners in a similar setting. Really impressed with your videos.
I purchased your book and watched old videos on raised beds, where in book or anywhere, to confirm best wood source/size for the beds itself, I’m in UK. As the hoop beds, youve described of course suit current board used in your book and videos, maybe I missed this but I’ve checked no luck. Also you have older videos, in your opinion what other options cheaper, as I am starting out.
I can't wait to see how you develop this space over the next couple of years Huw and after your recommendations I'm excited to try globe artichoke & amaranth this year, viewing, eating & growing! Hoping Sam will have some recipes for us as they come into season too 😋 I'm currently faffing around with hawthorne blossoms & will be onto chives next week 😁 I plan on using amaranth to give salads & brassicas a little midday/early afternoon shade & as a backdrop for gladioli 🤞🏻so delighted to find different varieties have come out such different colours, for some reason Love-Lies-Bleeding is the only one with 0% germination 🤔 I was considering putting artichokes towards the back of a flower patch, they seem particularly tasty to slugs & snails though 🐌 Can't wait for your next newsletter for your crop list, I'd be interested to know of/if your flowers play any other roles than beauty & pollination in the garden? I've been wondering if I might be able to use achillea, foxglove, artichoke, lupines & verbascum leaves as mulch (with comfrey/nettles/grass), are any of those a bad idea/must be chopped as opposed to just dropped? Almost ready to do my last sowing of winter crops this week 🌿💚
I've come to the conclusion this year that I am only growing things I really like to eat. I love growing everything ,but don't eat it all. Reseeding plants and perennials are being added slowly.
Interesting idea to turn towards personal needs. I’m living in the northwest peninsula in Spain, and I’m wondering what would be the minimum temperature that would force me to build a hotbed?
Ah, even half a tennis court space seems nice, compared to our garden in the UK! We are already pushing it to its limits, and coming up with ideas to squeeze every single inch of growing space 😅
Have you tried vertical gardening? Or look up green stalks (american name) they're stackable containers so only take up a small amount of space 😊 I got some from lidl last year
Hi, lovely video! Could you go over your ‘ sliding door ‘ on your high tunnel? The metal frame is different from any ‘barn door’ system I’ve seen before. Thank you😊USA.
I think this is a lovely idea for new gardeners, even if it's therapy gardening, or even to young couples trying to save a bob or two.... and how to get food for free The average size garden can vary but as #Huw Richards has given is a half tennis course which is a great workable size for any age..... just trying to grow things twice a year can be a challenge and how to eat all year vegetables ...... bring out the stew vide #Huw Richards
Hi Huw and thanks for another great video. Please can you tell me how to estimate the potential amount of harvests from a plot? I have 2x 1.2m x 2.4m raised beds and would like to know how much I should be aiming for. Thank you 🙏 and I look forward to your next video
Hey Huw, question about your planting plan. On the drawing the lower side was the north side right? I see raspberries and sunchokes on that side, which are quite sun loving. Do you get enough sun through the fens for this? Would I still be able to do this even if i had a neighbouring yard blocking sun? Thanks so much for all the inspiring videos. Im on my first growing year❤
Love your style Huw - great stuff and super inspiring thanks .... New Home and currently designing a new Organic Gardens atm .... Quick question regarding raised beds - Would you recommend Recycled plastic or untreated wood from local Sawmill - I'm a little bit skeptical about the plastic leaching although I'm told it's certified as fit for Organic use (?) Cheers ....
Huw what lumber are these raise beds made from? I’ve watched all of your older videos on building raised beds but can’t see reference to these new ones, they look smart and strong.
Thanks to fluoridated water and bad dentistry that ruined my teeth, I can only eat mush and smooth soup, despite the fact I used to eat loads of natural foods with crunch. I'm sick of soup, lol! So it's very demoralising that I cannot pick fruit or veg in a garden and eat it there and then. Consequently, I struggle with motivation especially as my health isn't good so energy is at a premium: growing stuff you know you can't eat (most of what people usually eat) is not much fun! . I'm trying to get enthusiastic about potatoes as I can eat mash!
I’m looking to increase my perennials also so I was surprised to hear you mention perennial Nasturtiums? The only ones I’ve found are perennial in zone 9-11 only. Is there another variety?
It’s a bit of pressure now to get everything planted up on the allotment, but Rome wasn’t built in a day, it’s best to take the time and do a really good job initially adding well rotted compost in the planting hole with a mulch around and have beautiful veggies rather than have the plants struggle and attacked by pests, your growing area looks well organised but I’m afraid all those paths and raised beds would be a tripping hazard for me and also the paths can’t be used in the following years rotation, the cost of the wood too is also a consideration, financial and to the environment, poor trees eh? Best wishes, Lisa
Some great advice. Yet again. Grow what you like. Remember, that you are in control. P.s sad to hear you live by yourself. You would make an excellent partner for someone.
I grew globe artichokes on my allotment - impossible to get rid of once you've grown them once. My family called them "fartichokes" for obvious reasons. They taste ok but the side-effects are embarassing
The way you adapt your attitude to the garden shows one of the greatest aspects of gardening to me. It is not about getting it perfect and then doing the same thing year after year, but the fun is all about growing, adapting, changes things up a bit, exploring. As the garden grows, so does the gardener
Exactly this! And the good thing is, is that if something doesn't quite work out, there's always next year haha!
Totally agree with this! Some years things work out, some they don't. If there is something you want to grow go for it, there is a lesson to be learned in everything, especially failure.
Totally makes sense.
Grow what you love to eat and what you can't get or is most expensive at the market.
Also, crazy beautiful food forest works for me, so I do plant for the wild animals, my chickens and bunnies.
Wow, you’re so ahead of the game! I’m still in seedling stage. We had several late frosts but also, I’m still learning + had to travel. Thankfully a dear friend is keeping tabs on them. 3 more days and I’ll see my garden babies!
I feel very behind compared to last year, weather has been awful (way too wet) so that bottlenecked everything and now I'm trying to catch up🤣
Same here in USA on East Coast.☹️
I'm glad you said that! I think next year I have a better idea of when to start my seedlings. I'm also discovering what is best to direct grow here. I'm not at the ' what I love to eat' stage as I'm growing anything I can get my hands on so my planning is still in the experiment stage. I didn't think I would enjoy this as much as I am...like a kid in a Lollie shop🤭
@HuwRichards I hear ya! Our springs are notoriously short where I am; we had snow just over a week ago, about 30cm of it, now all of a sudden we're hitting temps in the mid-20's! The bottleneck is real.
Bay Area Cali is perfect! Tomatoes are 2 feet tall! Sorry guys! 😂
"Excitement" and experimenting with new plants makes gardening an adventure 🌱👍
And a fantastic adventure too!
May I suggest a variation of "perennial" where seeds are not bought, but grown. For many crops, a particular variety is not needed - just similar leaves. For example, most people don't care what lettuce variety they have, just that it is lettuce. Same with rocket, mizuna, mibuna, etc. So let them go to seed, and then use the seeds later. Of course, even with broccoli going to seed you can still use the leave as cabbage substitute.
You have created a charming and productive palace in a lush landscape, very beautiful Hew!
Thank you very much!
Just paused the video to say THANK YOU for not making me sit through the blurb about the gizmo that I don't need and have no interest in. VERY considerate. And, now, back to the show. . . . :)
Fantastic. I love your self-sufficiency book - step by step, month by month, producing as much 'traditional' food as possible.
This new phase of using that experience as a basis from which to produce a personal, customised version is perfect.
'Efficiency' (growing as much as possible) is important to commercial growers, the more they grown the more money they make -- but when growing for yourself, you simply need 'enough', it doesn't have to be acres of spuds just because they are energy dense etc...
It's my first year growing anything this year so I've started small just to learn some basics but I'm hoping next year to focus on perenials for fruit and growing salads so I can be self sufficient in the things that I love and are the most expensive first.
Look into the fruits you want now. The sooner you can get them in the better! I'm in my 5th year now and always planned for lots of fruits and other perennials, but was too intimidated to start right away. If I ever have to start a garden from scratch again, getting my fruit trees and bushes in will be a priority. Even if it's just the one thing (choose self fertile if that's the case)
@@sinkintostillness thanks! I'm moving soon so once I have and know what the garden situation is, I'm going to plan properly around it! Very exciting!
@@Miss_Lexisaurus how exciting! A new start. Good luck with your move and your garden project!
I have been trying to establish my perrenial veg garden in Sweden.
I have asparagus, rhubarb, chives, fruit trees and varipus berry bushes, I found sourcing other type of veg plants is difficult. Eg. I cannot local nursrous that carry perrenial kale plants. The selection of seeds is also limited, and more difficult to germinate. ..
I look forward to see the new chapter of your new garden and the audiences to get new inspiration!
Jordärtskocka är perenn! Men den sprider sig - och kan ge gaser. ☺️
You should grow Belgium endave they are exotic and grow very well in your country
I am so behind this year it feels overwhelming, it was too wet to get anything out early or keep on top of the weeds and they have gone mad (the entrance to the allotments where I am gets so water logged where we are that it is impossible to walk up it to get to my plot which meant I wasn’t able to bring in some of the compost/manure I needed in autumn, my compost area is a work in progress, and it’s delayed so much) and in order to get plants out I have so much to do. Telling myself it’s okay but have had to revisit my plans and compost some plants that would normally have gone in, now weeding one bed at a time and doing what I can and focusing on beans/peas, tomatoes, squash, potatoes, herbs and a few onions for the summer with a view to putting in some brassicas here and there as I can and for overwintering (luckily the garlic I planted before it got really bad is doing really well). Not ideal but I am grateful for anything I can get that is home grown especially with such a difficult start to the season. Very interested in perennials so excited to see where you go with this and may help me chose some plants that could help fill in the gaps in difficult years 🌱
I have a half perennial garden! My top producers are seakale for cabbage and spring broccolis. I grow green garlic, scallions and elephant garlic (for leeks) by planting a clove or bulb and harvesting them all except for the largest one which i plant again for next year in the same spot. Hablitzia and good king henry for potherbs. Aswell as handfull of perennial salad leaf plants. Im growing crambe cordifolia as a cabbage to try this year as the seakale doesnt go bitter in my lukewarm rainy climate but i hear its not always tasty.
If you like green onions, there's quite a few perennial ones like Welsh onions, walking onions, victory onions.
Thank you! I didn't know there were perennial spring onions. I need these!!!
Yes! I love Welsh onions and grow those, and have walking onions and nodding onions currently growing as seedlings :D
Such a cool project! I really like where you are going with it. I love the idea of growing only on what I really want to eat, but it seems I keep adding more explorations and trials!
Huw, I really have to admit, I hate your garden because it's not in my yard, however I am really inspired by it. Just have to allow my wind break to hurry up and grow, as whatever I create will be torn apart.
When I saw you burning leeks I thought that’s strange but I think you were cooking them?
There’s so much to do after the long rains that I am gardening with a broken leg!
My asparagus and artichokes are producing and can’t buy these anywhere near as fresh.Welsh onions have been great and I used these as spring onions with purple sprouting broccoli in stir fries.
Great garden you are doing I am getting the book and buying a tunnel this autumn.
I think my original reply went as you edited a comment but regarding the leeks if you roast them on embers until outside is brunt, peel off that outer layer and you have perfectly cooked leeks inside. Can work for so many vegetables! Have a great growing season and hope your leg is okay🌿
I love your garden Huw! And I love that you focus on things you actually *eat* - plus lots of flowers! 🌼
Thank you so much!!
Great video, thank you. I'm also growing way more than I need now. I give away a lot, and have sold excess at my local market. All the extra cash goes back into the garden, so it pays for itself finally (after 7 years!).
Needed to hear that perspective on May. It’s such an exciting, daunting, challenging, and rewarding time.
Glad to hear that I am not the only one who does not care lettuce because everyone recommends them. I really like the concept of having the garden work as hard for you as you work for it and year round gardening is great for that!!
Thanks for another informative video.🙂I only have four 1 metre square raised beds in my back garden, plus fruit trees in pots. This year I'm growing as many perennial fruit and veg as possible, and removing some of the ornamentals in my front garden. That way I can plant fruit and veg amongst the bushes and flowers, making the garden both pretty and productive. I've just finished last year's runner beans from the freezer, so am growing again. However, if my dwarf french beans get destroyed by slugs again, I will ditch them. As you say, it's what you like, along with what works for you.
tree collard is a nice perennial, which you can make some tasty collard greens.
It makes so much sense! I can’t wait to watch the progression of phase 2!
Me neither😆
This is very expensive project to do. I am doing something similar. Cost of beds and bark and soil if you don't have good soil. If you need chemicals or seeds there's another cost. Cost of water if you don't have butts. Time and space. WOW it adds up.
Still cheaper and more rewarding than paying Walmart or other grocery stores 💯 great investment for your pockets and health 😁
Good King Henry is my all time favourite perennial, plus perennial onions, sea spinach, and biennials like kales.
Hi from California. Preordered your book months ago & it arrived today, only got to quickly flip through it so far & it looks fantastic. Excited to see how things change as you move towards perennials in this garden.
Just got my book and am very happy with its contents. Its like it cleared a road block I was having with my space. I’m very excited for the weekend to make my first raised beds.
After watching this I've decided to give up and hand the plot back!!!!!!
Absolutely unreal! Amazing 👏
Your new garden space is about the same size as what we are currently growing in, so I am super excited to watch as you grow different crops in it so I can get new ideas! I have been slow in adding perennials so I am also super excited to see what you plant so I can gain some inspiration for my own garden ❤
This video exactly describes my dream for the coming years and I recognize so many of the feelings you talk about Huw! Thanks once more for putting it all into an overview
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ I Love the work you do in the garden 😍 🎉🎉🎉 it looks so beautiful.
Got your book through Amazon yesterday. Love how it's laid out and presented, very easy to learn from and follow. Our weather here in my part of Canada has been the same, cool and wet so far. Really hoping for warmer weather soon, it's been too cool to put my tomatoes and peppers out so far.
Hi Huw, this sounds interesting. It will be good to see how it all goes. Thanks for sharing and take care 😊
Thank you Christine!
Love all your videos- thanks for sharing your knowledge Huw
Thank you Andrew, much appreciated!!
last year was my first time seriously growing pepper, long beans and especially the tomatoes was so productive and healthy without any fertilizers i could pick matured but unripe tomatoes and eat them raw and they tasted like apples i never knew tomatoes tasted so good until i planted mine, this year the weather been brutally hot until may it started raining so we go again this time hot peppers and tomatoes with cassava
Brilliant! So productive and great to have a goal for the year. I think flavour is such and important benefit of homegrown, plus the nutritional content compared to conventionally farmed produce 🙂
Pre-order book came today from Amazon. I am so excited that I took both old dogs outside with me to read. NOPE! Now I am trying to talk myself into following my plan to weed or throwing that out to read your book!! Nk
Nice arrangement... You should try growing safflower lits eaves are so flavorful you make salad too
get thornless blackberry plants, they grow like a weed in a drought. Peach tree's do great in droughts too. I love not having to plant every year when having perennials
I must try get my hands on some of them, love blackberries, my children and I go picking them but thornless would be great!
yes also in north of Italy, it's been raining a lot in the last 3 months!! the growing is very slow, we are way back ...
Episode 2: Return Of The Huw
I enjoy your videos very much. Thank you for inspiring us.
Thank you Huw, you are very organised. 👍🌞
just relaxing inside as it gets hot in my garden at mid day. may is always playing catch up because suddenly every weed has decided to grow over night. but a lot of them will feed my rabbits and they will feed me. I like my fruit the best. strwberries and raspberries are firm favorites. I have more luck with flowers (which I sell) but trying hard for my greens. I will only eat peas sitting next to the plants. corn is inedible unles you grow them yourself!
I’m new to the channel and preordered your book a few days ago, I had a successful garden for a few years now but excited to learn more and step my game up!!
Great watch! Do you have a list of the perennials you want to plant as an inspiration?
Idea for showing the entirety of what you grow/harvest in the pace in a year
You should have a position up high you can attach a camera, looking down at a field / lawn /space etc. Then every time you harvest lay the food out in that space starting from left to right, and as the year goes on you can comp all the images footage together and display the entire years haul in one shot.
I got my book yesterday in the states. It looks like a really well done book so far.
Beautiful and inspiring garden Huw! And I'm loving your book, which just arrived a few days ago ❤
Yay, thank you!!!
@@HuwRichards Forgot to say, please tell Sam thank you, too. This book is a wonderful resource. Watching your video made me go out and plant herbs and tomatoes, even in the rain that's coming and going today 🙂
I just have rhubarb, fruit bushes and trees as my perennial fruit and veg. Had bought lots of asparagus crowns to be planted last year but they went to loss as never got to plant them but just bought 2 crowns few days ago (would have bought more but they all looked dead) and want to get them planted up this week! But have loads of things to get planted out, my leeks are not doing well unfortunately, dont know whats up and i changed to all organic/heirloom seeds so lots of seed saving for me 😊
Thank you, emotional connection , experimentation and joy- that’s my kind of gardening but it never fit the standard garden profile.
The Huw man doing the garden upright. are you going to do pumpkins this year? I am a fan of table pumpkins.
I really enjoy your videos. I only wish you were in a similar climate to mine. I am in the south eastern U.S. where it gets hot and humid and there aren't any decent permaculture practitioners in a similar setting. Really impressed with your videos.
Thank you, sincerely, for the advertisement relevancy warning and timestamp. Very considerate of you.
Absolutely amazing work!!! X
Thank you!
I purchased your book and watched old videos on raised beds, where in book or anywhere, to confirm best wood source/size for the beds itself, I’m in UK. As the hoop beds, youve described of course suit current board used in your book and videos, maybe I missed this but I’ve checked no luck. Also you have older videos, in your opinion what other options cheaper, as I am starting out.
I can't wait to see how you develop this space over the next couple of years Huw and after your recommendations I'm excited to try globe artichoke & amaranth this year, viewing, eating & growing! Hoping Sam will have some recipes for us as they come into season too 😋 I'm currently faffing around with hawthorne blossoms & will be onto chives next week 😁
I plan on using amaranth to give salads & brassicas a little midday/early afternoon shade & as a backdrop for gladioli 🤞🏻so delighted to find different varieties have come out such different colours, for some reason Love-Lies-Bleeding is the only one with 0% germination 🤔
I was considering putting artichokes towards the back of a flower patch, they seem particularly tasty to slugs & snails though 🐌
Can't wait for your next newsletter for your crop list, I'd be interested to know of/if your flowers play any other roles than beauty & pollination in the garden?
I've been wondering if I might be able to use achillea, foxglove, artichoke, lupines & verbascum leaves as mulch (with comfrey/nettles/grass), are any of those a bad idea/must be chopped as opposed to just dropped?
Almost ready to do my last sowing of winter crops this week 🌿💚
I've come to the conclusion this year that I am only growing things I really like to eat. I love growing everything ,but don't eat it all. Reseeding plants and perennials are being added slowly.
Interesting idea to turn towards personal needs. I’m living in the northwest peninsula in Spain, and I’m wondering what would be the minimum temperature that would force me to build a hotbed?
How large is your kitchen garden in square meters? Very interesting approach!
Ah, even half a tennis court space seems nice, compared to our garden in the UK! We are already pushing it to its limits, and coming up with ideas to squeeze every single inch of growing space 😅
Have you tried vertical gardening? Or look up green stalks (american name) they're stackable containers so only take up a small amount of space 😊 I got some from lidl last year
Hi, lovely video! Could you go over your ‘ sliding door ‘ on your high tunnel? The metal frame is different from any ‘barn door’ system I’ve seen before. Thank you😊USA.
*fewer* ha ha! I loved that!
My copy of the book in the states will be here Tuesday!!
I think this is a lovely idea for new gardeners, even if it's therapy gardening, or even to young couples trying to save a bob or two.... and how to get food for free
The average size garden can vary but as #Huw Richards has given is a half tennis course which is a great workable size for any age..... just trying to grow things twice a year can be a challenge and how to eat all year vegetables ...... bring out the stew vide #Huw Richards
have you ever heard of sonic bloom and electroculture?
Hi Huw and thanks for another great video.
Please can you tell me how to estimate the potential amount of harvests from a plot? I have 2x 1.2m x 2.4m raised beds and would like to know how much I should be aiming for. Thank you 🙏 and I look forward to your next video
If just growing annual crops and succession planting expect anything from 40-60kg between now and early spring next year ☺️
Hey Hugh, where did you get those new raiesd beds from?
Can’t wait to read the books!❤️🙌🏻🙏🏻✝️
Hey Huw, question about your planting plan. On the drawing the lower side was the north side right? I see raspberries and sunchokes on that side, which are quite sun loving. Do you get enough sun through the fens for this? Would I still be able to do this even if i had a neighbouring yard blocking sun?
Thanks so much for all the inspiring videos. Im on my first growing year❤
🇨🇦 I’m loving your book.
I just ordered the north American version of your book 😁
How do you deal w pests? I have 2 beds and overnight something decimated my crops - disheartening.
Netting or hooped lids and woodchip the paths .Stops the majority of plant loving pests
What a shame! I net brassicas over hoops made with blue water pipe. It needs supporting but keeps most of the pigeons and butterflies out.
Grow fennel you can make almost anything to everything from fennel bulbs and fennel leaves, fennel seeds are edible ,fennel buds is expensive spice😊
Love your style Huw - great stuff and super inspiring thanks .... New Home and currently designing a new Organic Gardens atm .... Quick question regarding raised beds - Would you recommend Recycled plastic or untreated wood from local Sawmill - I'm a little bit skeptical about the plastic leaching although I'm told it's certified as fit for Organic use (?) Cheers ....
Hi Huw I would like to make a fence for my kitchen garden like yours, what did you use to make it?😊
I’m only one person, I eat all veggies, what would u suggest for a first time Gardner?( in a very very tight budget)
Hi Huw…Where did you get you raised plant beds from please?
My husband is in the process of making me lots of beds, 6 done so far but we got wood from local builder suppliers
Huw what lumber are these raise beds made from? I’ve watched all of your older videos on building raised beds but can’t see reference to these new ones, they look smart and strong.
Thank you a great video
My pleasure!
What is the new metal raised bed please? I didn’t catch the brand name.
Where is the poly tunnel from?
Thanks to fluoridated water and bad dentistry that ruined my teeth, I can only eat mush and smooth soup, despite the fact I used to eat loads of natural foods with crunch. I'm sick of soup, lol! So it's very demoralising that I cannot pick fruit or veg in a garden and eat it there and then. Consequently, I struggle with motivation especially as my health isn't good so energy is at a premium: growing stuff you know you can't eat (most of what people usually eat) is not much fun! . I'm trying to get enthusiastic about potatoes as I can eat mash!
I just bought your book. What height are your raised beds?
I’m looking to increase my perennials also so I was surprised to hear you mention perennial Nasturtiums? The only ones I’ve found are perennial in zone 9-11 only. Is there another variety?
Where do you sign up to Huw's newsletter please?
It’s a bit of pressure now to get everything planted up on the allotment, but Rome wasn’t built in a day, it’s best to take the time and do a really good job initially adding well rotted compost in the planting hole with a mulch around and have beautiful veggies rather than have the plants struggle and attacked by pests, your growing area looks well organised but I’m afraid all those paths and raised beds would be a tripping hazard for me and also the paths can’t be used in the following years rotation, the cost of the wood too is also a consideration, financial and to the environment, poor trees eh?
Best wishes, Lisa
🐝thanks for the great video🌻
Wow fantastico
Will your new book be in other languages too like the previous one?
Yes! German coming first, with I thin French and Dutch in pipeline too
@@HuwRichards Some chance for Italian?
What width beds do you find best? Thanks
There is never excess its for the neighbours... Mind you, cauliflowers are lovely 😂
How big are your raised beds?
My garden often becomes a groundhog sufficiency garden 😂
That's great amazing 😊
Some great advice. Yet again. Grow what you like. Remember, that you are in control.
P.s sad to hear you live by yourself. You would make an excellent partner for someone.
Good stuff
What camera do you use?
How do you grow brassica without netting? Mine get attacked by pigeons, cabbage white and flea beetles. I would love not to use netting….
I grew globe artichokes on my allotment - impossible to get rid of once you've grown them once.
My family called them "fartichokes" for obvious reasons. They taste ok but the side-effects are embarassing