10 Permaculture Projects For Your Backyard

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • We are a diversified fruit, vegetable, and livestock farm in USDA zone 6b in Central Kentucky, USA. In this video we take a look at 10 common components often seen in Permaculture Designs that would make great projects to create in your own backyard. In permaculture the overall design is more than the sum of its parts, but here are some of the parts that can help you move toward sustainable food systems on your own property.
    music credits: www.bensounds.com
    0:00 Introduction
    0:38 Herb Bed
    1:27 Swale
    2:45 Hugelmound
    4:09 Guild Planting
    5:22 Hedgerow
    6:10 Pollinator Garden
    6:54 Raised Bed
    7:56 Water Catchment
    9:04 Compost Pile
    11:33 Greenhouse

Комментарии • 370

  • @jabohabo8158
    @jabohabo8158 Год назад +48

    lambs quarters is actually more nutrient dense than normal spinach is for those who were wondering. wash the white powder off the leaves and cook em up. taste is almost identicle to spinach but better.

    • @AprilSeamand-xe8ug
      @AprilSeamand-xe8ug 3 месяца назад +3

      Have you tried canning them or drying? I have so many here in Minnesota. I was thinking of drying for my chickens this year.

    • @carolhartley5982
      @carolhartley5982 2 месяца назад +7

      Take care not to overeat them tho. I LOVE lambs' quarters salad and really pigged out on it one time with big servings day after day. I developed symptoms of oxalic acid poisoning, an unpleasant gut reaction. I treated as I would diarrhoea or dysentery; I went on a fast, drank clear fluids, introduced easily digested foods when things calmed down, and was OK a few days later. I still eat LQ salad, but in a self-controlled way. I don't offer it to young children. BTW, you can taste oxalic acid in rhubarb whose leaves contain much more than the stems do, which is the reason we don't eat rhubarb leaves.

    • @molliefofollie
      @molliefofollie 2 месяца назад +7

      We love lambs quarters, we just saute it first, which removes most of the oxalic acid!

    • @jackiekjono
      @jackiekjono Месяц назад +2

      @@molliefofollie That is a good tip! A Friend of mine ha to be on a low oxalate diet but, there are certain foods that he loves and will eat anyway. It's good to know that that reduces it a little.

    • @jturtle5318
      @jturtle5318 28 дней назад

      ​@@carolhartley5982do you mean sheep sorrel, that looks like shamrock? I'm alarmed about the oxalic acid. I've tried kidney stones and I rate it 0/10, do not recommend.

  • @lesliekendall5668
    @lesliekendall5668 Год назад +8

    I'm on a flat 1/2 acre in a city that doesn't get much rain so to make a swale I made my main path by digging down 2-3 inches and planted it in clover. New sub.

  • @jetsett1986
    @jetsett1986 Год назад +29

    Rabbits are the perfect zero-waste animals. Their poop is great, meat is great, fur is great, reproduces like mad, their organs can be eaten (by us or our pets), their bones can be ground up for the garden. Truly no waste!

    • @joyjournal6157
      @joyjournal6157 11 месяцев назад +10

      I've been thinking about keeping rabbits. Just not confident about the killing...

    • @jetsett1986
      @jetsett1986 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@joyjournal6157 i understans. it's not a favorite part, but death is a necessary part of life, whether a plant dies or an animal. I have come to learn the death is not in vain if I am truly making good use of what I raise/grow/harvest/use. That then started changing my selections for everything, but it started incrementally. you kinda get used to the killing. because it is for our sustenance rather than for sales/capital that enrich some corporate fuck paying worker poor wages. but i digres haha

    • @joyjournal6157
      @joyjournal6157 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@jetsett1986 I get afraid I will do it wrong and cause more suffering than is necessary.
      I agree. The fact we are giving them a good life up to that point counts for a lot.

    • @jetsett1986
      @jetsett1986 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@joyjournal6157 yeah, and it's probable that could happen in the beginning. But that is what drives perfecting the skill; to ensure it is as painless and swift as possible. And that means learning yourself and making ways to help yourself. For example, when I had ducks I made/sewed a sort of hood to cover their face to help them remain more calm, it was an improvisation that helped a lot. Again, Im not saying its easy and it's my least fav part, but the benefits do outweigh the cost, I believe...for food and warmth especially

    • @joyjournal6157
      @joyjournal6157 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@jetsett1986 I really appreciate your advice 👍🏼

  • @carmenortiz5294
    @carmenortiz5294 Год назад +393

    I tried a hugel mound, decided to pile some dead black raspberries branches on top since I needed to dispose of them, temporarily. Turned out a bunny decide to move in and made an entrance in front. That was about 10 years ago, still have rabbits living there because I can't get myself to evict them. One problem, they are great at finding my beans and peas no matter where in the yard they are. (Last very cold winter, they decided to gnaw some of my fruit tree trunks. Still can't get myself to get rid of them.) I guess it's a hugel mound fail. I like most of the projects and plan to try them out next year.

    • @juliarroberts1621
      @juliarroberts1621 Год назад +27

      Can you pen in the area to keep them contained then you feed them? 🤷🏼‍♀️🤷🏼‍♀️

    • @juliarroberts1621
      @juliarroberts1621 Год назад +4

      @@carmenortiz5294 😂

    • @janinebean4276
      @janinebean4276 Год назад +62

      Or a bunny home win! :P you’re supporting wildlife!

    • @kategonzalez3198
      @kategonzalez3198 Год назад +54

      @@janinebean4276 wildlife that makes great fertilizer... and you don't even have to manage them!

    • @livefreedom1776
      @livefreedom1776 Год назад

      They would’ve caught a bullet in my yard

  • @saal0
    @saal0 Год назад +49

    6 out of 10 so far! A tiny greenhouse, a compost bin and a herb garden I added this month. We don’t have a lot of space here, about 30m2, and terribly dense clay soil, but we’re making it work!

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад +5

      Keep up the good work!

    • @FemaleMatters
      @FemaleMatters Год назад +8

      Clay is wonderful, mine was so thick I could make pots but over time, about five years, of adding compost, grit and manure I have wonderful nutrient rich healthy soil that makes plants thrive!

    • @gillianmckirdy337
      @gillianmckirdy337 Год назад +5

      7 out of 10- pollinator and herb garden, hugelmound, compost bin, raised beds for vegetables, water catchment and fruit tree with nasturtiums and spinach. I want to find a rue plant to sit next to my fig tree.😊

  • @jackiekjono
    @jackiekjono Месяц назад +2

    I really appreciated the guild segment. I have been trying to squeeze guilds in my tiny front yard and have gotten confusing advice about how to space them. It was very nice to see the actual space.

  • @ScottStevenErickson
    @ScottStevenErickson Год назад +34

    I still consider myself to be an amateur gardener, but it is validating to see that I’m already doing most of these! 😊

  • @christineelsey3104
    @christineelsey3104 3 месяца назад +22

    😊.. I understand why you said about "if you can handle eating guinea pigs".. but believe me, raising a calf from days old & then having it be your winter beef is just as hard to handle.. lol..
    Especially at 15 (I'm now early 60s) .. mind you, he was pretty tasty, lol.
    Learned many Good lessons on our small farm, in my teens.
    Great ideas... 😊

    • @bobrinson9940
      @bobrinson9940 2 месяца назад +1

      Mine was named Herman, I was 10, I realized I was eating him when my brother asked me if I like my "herm-burger"? Lol

  • @Ace-1525
    @Ace-1525 Год назад +24

    Currently renting a small place out in the country, so sadly can't implement these ideas just yet. But I do remember doing a lot of these with my gramma on her farm! She didn't have any names for them- There was just "the wood pile"- her hugel mound, "the grapes"- her unexpected, effortless hedgerow, and her swale was where a bunch of lilac bushes have taken over now. Can't wait till I can finally afford my own place and do some of these things from the ground up. thank you!

  • @gwenjohnston-petrarch5071
    @gwenjohnston-petrarch5071 Год назад +117

    I just discovered your channel and I really have to thank you for the comprehensive (yet digestible) knowledge. I am a long time gardener (in the traditional sense - garden patch, miracle gro yadda yadda). A number of years ago I decided I didn't want to garden that way anymore. In fact, I wanted to jump feet first into the 21st century (I'm pushing 70 so this was a big step). I tried, and was amazingly successful at hydroponics. After lots of research I set up a system in a basement room that was 20x30. I started modestly - I wasn't going to tackle growing fruits or veggies I'd never grown before but the ones I did grow (the ubiquitous tomato, cuke, kale, lettuces etc) did really well and I fed two adults, 27 chickens and one pet pig with that garden. It was also my sanctuary (which every gardener big or small understands). Now I have jumped in feet first again and have ditched city/suburban life for 70+ acres in planting zone 7. I have been setting my intentions for permaculture gardens and swales. I had no idea how to implement these things and would look out over my meadow (still just dirt and rock) and wonder, "how the heck...??" But your video pointed out the smaller versions of most of things I am planning and, although it made perfect sense and I should have figured it out (I was just letting myself get overwhelmed) I could take such projects in smaller bites! As I looked upon your small medicinal herb garden and listened to you talk of it, it occurred to me where, on my own property I could put the same! As you moved on to the swale I thought about an area along the right side of our home where I already have certain components for a swale set up (quite accidentally) and with a little planning and elbow grease can start my permaculture garden! Wow! So thank you so much for opening my eyes to the beauty and utility I already possess but didn't see until now. God bless! G

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад +8

      Thanks for sharing and God Bless you on your journey as well! Glad you got some inspiration. You figured out a key point--small steps are often better and it keeps you from getting overwhelmed!

    • @Mar.y.Luz111
      @Mar.y.Luz111 Год назад +2

      Nice

    • @marialaing7130
      @marialaing7130 Год назад +2

      First time viewer and then subscribed!
      Thank you for teaching me these simple steps to honoring Mother Earth and gardening. I’m a city dweller and hoping to integrate these principles as well as I can, given size limitations. Blessings to you! I’ll soon be 77 but gardening, plants, and renewable practices are my joy. 🤗🌎

    • @jackiemcdonell1737
      @jackiemcdonell1737 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'm 46 and you inspire me😊

  • @conniewojahn6445
    @conniewojahn6445 Год назад +9

    Black Soldier Fly larvae drive me crazy! Yes, I know they're great composters, voraciously eating just about every veggie and fruit scrap in my bushel size kitchen scrap bin. However, I can't stand looking at the squirmy maggots. After years of trying to exclude adult flies from laying eggs, and hours and hours of picking and sorting maggots out to try and keep adult flies from coming back, I finally gave up. Now I have three chickens who pick the larvae out for me. Remove the lid from the scrap bin and they fight over who gets to go in first. During the larvae season, the Ladies are in "hog heaven" eating all the larvae they want, which is thousands. The Soldier Fly have taken over the bin and there aren't many worms in the bin, so I don't worry about the Ladies eating what few worms there are. Probably wouldn't work for others, but it's worth thinking about.

  • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
    @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад +26

    Nice overview. I appreciate you helping to make it clear that all these ideas can be scaled down a great deal, so that people who only have a small yard or even just a patio to work with can do something positive for themselves and their immediate environment.

  • @extraincomesuz
    @extraincomesuz 8 месяцев назад +5

    Great video! It's just me working in my yard, a retiree, so I find some work difficult to do. But this gives me mini project ideas, especially the worms and herb garden. Thank u🎉

  • @Shaman1
    @Shaman1 11 месяцев назад +3

    Im only 4 mins in and im already happy, so many things we intuitively do right in our garden and lots of inspiration!

  • @astridexplorer5096
    @astridexplorer5096 10 месяцев назад +4

    As someone who has only ever had this heavenly treat from commercial sellers in grocery stores, I cannot wait to make this. While I'm sure buttering all the layers would make for a more authentic version, this fresh from the oven quick version will still taste better than anything I've had. Thank you!

  • @l.l.2463
    @l.l.2463 Год назад +10

    New subscriber here. I had a beautiful pile of light brush from various sources breaking down slowly and I periodically invited people to add to it. It had been there for 5 years or so. One day I went out and it was gone! My bro-in-law had hauled it off to the neighboring municipal yard waste program because it was "in the way". Didn't even ask first. When he explained what he had done I had a very hard time politely asking him to ask first next time. Since he had done a lot of the "adding to the pile" I didn't feel like I could let him have it with both proverbial barrels. Also he is my main source of muscle when something needs doing that I can't do myself. But it was a blow. And I will never be able to explain it to his manicured, formal landscaping mind. Believe me, I've tried.

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад +2

      Oh no! We have been there as well. It is always tough to shift that manicured mindset!

    • @l.l.2463
      @l.l.2463 Год назад

      @@TheGoodEarthFarmChannel Yeah. In this case "tough" might be an understatement. Thanks for the sympathy!

    • @enatp6448
      @enatp6448 Год назад +1

      I feel your pain!

    • @helenebennie3961
      @helenebennie3961 Год назад

      Poor bro-in-law. He just didn't get it. He thought he was helping. At least you still love him enough to call him "bro."

    • @l.l.2463
      @l.l.2463 Год назад +1

      @@helenebennie3961 Well, yeah -- love and family come first. Otherwise all the permaculture in the world is of no use to me. But I still shed a tear when I walk by the beautiful spot that it left.🥲😂

  • @emmelia-6068
    @emmelia-6068 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much! This is just the type of garden video that helps -- you show how we can implement some of the principles in our own yards -- so encouraging ❤

  • @alinakrohn7726
    @alinakrohn7726 Год назад +18

    I love this! Thanks for all the great tips and reignited energy in this backyard farmer😍

  • @nancee9101
    @nancee9101 Год назад +7

    This was incredibly helpful! Thank you for making this video.

  • @oliviablomquist9408
    @oliviablomquist9408 Год назад +7

    Great video! Very "to-the-point", clear and concise

  • @joannewolfe5688
    @joannewolfe5688 Год назад +11

    A really nice roundup of small-scale sustainable practices. Only surprise is that you didn't mention poultry and quail as food sources. But otherwise, you covered all the bases. Enjoyable presentation style as well.

  • @jcharris6557
    @jcharris6557 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the info and encouragement! I’m new to this permaculture thing, but everything you describe seems pretty easy to integrate.

  • @painfree.yourself
    @painfree.yourself Год назад +1

    Inspiration pure! I am just starting a garden. Thank you for this information.

  • @capicuaaa
    @capicuaaa Год назад +2

    This is a fabulous video! I especially love n. 6. So necessary.

  • @ppetal1
    @ppetal1 Год назад +2

    Thankyou from UK.

  • @rominaadimari8723
    @rominaadimari8723 Год назад +4

    Muchas gracias por compartir sus conocimientos!!!! Saludos desde Argentina, hemisferio sur!

  • @gardeningforfunandlongevit6076
    @gardeningforfunandlongevit6076 Год назад +2

    Great ideas for my garden, thanks.

  • @JackPitmanNica
    @JackPitmanNica Год назад +5

    I loved this video, thankyou for making it. Permaculture is such a fascinating thing to study on youtube... really shows you that there are lots of great people out there

  • @Wiseacreish
    @Wiseacreish Год назад +2

    Excellent! Thank you!

  • @mrkemmett
    @mrkemmett Год назад +4

    Thanks for the compact video. A lot of common things but very concise and was very validating for a youngster like me.

  • @haydenlw
    @haydenlw Год назад +2

    This is a great resource, thanks for sharing.

  • @rickderwitsch
    @rickderwitsch 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for the video. Great over -view with just enough information to be useful.

  • @gracie2375
    @gracie2375 Год назад +1

    Fantastic channel, the real deal, all substance- thank you for sharing.

  • @suemar63
    @suemar63 Год назад +2

    Such great info. Thank you!

  • @annekern2829
    @annekern2829 Год назад

    Wonderful overview of permaculture!

  • @CherylLynnColwell
    @CherylLynnColwell Год назад +1

    Inspiring ideas! Thank you.

  • @susanmyer1
    @susanmyer1 Год назад +1

    I just found your channel and am loving what I see. I will be trying many of the projects you talked about. Thanks

  • @juanaction2715
    @juanaction2715 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the great info and inspiration!

  • @LianeSpicer
    @LianeSpicer Год назад +2

    So glad I found your channel!

  • @nutran5534
    @nutran5534 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for your ideas
    we are starting a small stead and this is so good to know😀

  • @juwenijojo2669
    @juwenijojo2669 Год назад +2

    Thank you for the video. It is great inspiration n very helpful

  • @twooldcrowshomestead
    @twooldcrowshomestead Год назад +9

    Love this video. We are located in KY as well and using permaculture to develop our small farm. Thanks for sharing your ideas.

  • @charlesbale8376
    @charlesbale8376 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed the video, thanks for sharing.

  • @andyhafellpermaculture8982
    @andyhafellpermaculture8982 Год назад +12

    Amazing video, love all your 10 projects, wish to get there one day

  • @B30pt87
    @B30pt87 Год назад +1

    Yes, I did get some good ideas! Thank you. That was very helpful, as I am just starting out in permaculture and seeing a permaculture farm that is established and running well is exactly what I'm looking for.

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  11 месяцев назад +1

      Good luck with your journey, it takes time but we always need more folks to get involved!

  • @banerjeeassociates3643
    @banerjeeassociates3643 Год назад +8

    I have always had a herb garden. But I learned long ago, if I grow my herbs in one bed-spiral the mint and the basil take over, in Houston, TX

    • @stephaniefrancis6080
      @stephaniefrancis6080 8 месяцев назад

      Wish my Basil would make a takeover bid. I've had trouble getting it established.

    • @aurograce2983
      @aurograce2983 2 месяца назад +3

      That's why I keep mint and basil in their own pots. I made the mistake of planting mint in the ground. Never again😂

    • @banerjeeassociates3643
      @banerjeeassociates3643 2 месяца назад

      @@stephaniefrancis6080 depends on where you live.I'm in Houston, and have problems with cilantro/parsley, because we are not cold enough.

    • @lydiaahubbell8545
      @lydiaahubbell8545 Месяц назад

      @@aurograce2983mine escaped a pot and i enjoy walking on it, plus I pick it snd feed it to my chickens

  • @mphil8433
    @mphil8433 Год назад +2

    Very educational, appreciate it.

  • @EstherCervantes-hk4pz
    @EstherCervantes-hk4pz Год назад +1

    very useful and inspiring video. thumbs up

  • @pongop
    @pongop Год назад +1

    Thanks for this helpful video!

  • @jamiegaudet6008
    @jamiegaudet6008 Год назад

    Love the ideas here!

  • @chantalrochon3566
    @chantalrochon3566 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video 😊

  • @violetaionescu9511
    @violetaionescu9511 Год назад +2

    Thank you!

  • @Lalaithlen
    @Lalaithlen Год назад +2

    Apreciate how you are not shy on talking that the animals can be part of the system and eaten. Good tips!

  • @marking-time-gardens
    @marking-time-gardens Год назад +5

    Just found your channel and subscribed. Thank you for the great permaculture outline. Simple, streight forward, and easy to remember. Great video content. Blessings on your day Sir 🌻🐛

  • @hippieacresnv
    @hippieacresnv 6 месяцев назад

    This was a great video! We have already done alot of that but you gave me some new ideas! Thanks!!

  • @Sofiarivassculptor
    @Sofiarivassculptor 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love your video, really good, lots of information thanks

  • @grumpyken9151
    @grumpyken9151 Год назад +1

    great video! lots of usable information. subbed

  • @simplehomesteadliving
    @simplehomesteadliving 9 месяцев назад +3

    Of course I love the herb bed! Love the keyhole round that you've planted herbs in. I just put in a small tree on a slight slope and was wondering how to build up the low side. With the keyhole bed I can make it bigger. Thanks! Looking forward to seeing you at Indianna Homesteader Fest again this year. ~ Suzanne & Hank

  • @bevsurbangarden
    @bevsurbangarden Год назад +2

    Loved this and you have guinea pigs! Thinking of getting some for our backyard.

  • @StayPrimal
    @StayPrimal Год назад

    Cool ideas man ! Thank you for sharing

  • @victorsr6708
    @victorsr6708 7 месяцев назад

    Great video! Very genuine

  • @Lmmixs
    @Lmmixs 3 месяца назад

    Pond project must there on permaculture

  • @awaltt
    @awaltt Месяц назад

    I just now noticed your hat and realized we live in the same state. Which will be useful to see which plants thrive or not.

  • @nancynesytofreske
    @nancynesytofreske 3 месяца назад

    Great way to present permaculture for backyard gardeners. Good explanations and examples. Would really like to see more on making a small swale. I don't really understand how to make one. Something on a small scale would be perfect to experiment with.

  • @summerhill_homestead
    @summerhill_homestead Год назад +1

    Great video!

  • @brandonroberto1018
    @brandonroberto1018 7 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @JK-jf7xq
    @JK-jf7xq Год назад +12

    Creating a Micro Climate is another permaculture method. You can use various features and areas of your property to provide higher or lower temperatures for growing certain plants you normally wouldn't.

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад +4

      Great point. We do that to a certain extent, but there is always room to do more!

    • @ziya5952
      @ziya5952 Год назад

      What that could be? Thank you

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад +3

      @@ziya5952 In our climate it means placing rock/brick walls facing south in an arch to collect the solar radiation and block northern winds, creating a warmer microclimate for more tender plants

    • @ziya5952
      @ziya5952 Год назад

      @@TheGoodEarthFarmChannel oh I see ❤, in this regards i 🤔 should be able to do something better. Thank you 🙏

  • @samch5358
    @samch5358 Год назад +4

    great concepts, thanks for the info. Feeling very inspired! Thank you for your effort to improve your local ecosystem

    • @user-vt1xy5ts6h
      @user-vt1xy5ts6h Год назад

      Permaculture use dangerous methods so it's not really help ecosystem.

  • @seangillespie4601
    @seangillespie4601 Год назад +3

    Some solid ideas.
    FYI:
    talking volume level: 3
    music volume level: 9

  • @positiveworld-view8677
    @positiveworld-view8677 Год назад +5

    Thank you for educating us 🇺🇸

  • @pennysimpson4707
    @pennysimpson4707 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @MalkiZee
    @MalkiZee Год назад +1

    Paints the house green. Greenhouse.

  • @bizzybits1918
    @bizzybits1918 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’m installing a 3000 gal rain tank. I’ll use it for drip irrigation and occasional landscape watering. I’m not sure if I need a pump. I might, but hope it doesn’t have to be one of the ½ hp, pressure tank, run-dry protection type, which run about 500 bucks. Also, those 300 gallon totes are great for rain collection, but need to be painted or covered to keep algae from growing in them. Great video, thanks. Zone 8b central tx here.

  • @lalahaha5313
    @lalahaha5313 11 месяцев назад

    It's all common sense which is not so common anymore and must be taught...thanks for teaching us and helping reverse that trend!

  • @diannerichard2509
    @diannerichard2509 Год назад +3

    I have never watched your channel and I think these ideas are great! I have always wanted to plant a herb bed and I think I will this spring.

  • @MeganHurst
    @MeganHurst Год назад +4

    These are great projects! My list is now even longer 😂

  • @sethstoots15
    @sethstoots15 6 месяцев назад +1

    Brushpiles are great wind breaks for deer to lay behind

  • @curtisloftis6003
    @curtisloftis6003 Год назад +1

    Thanks

  • @lmclrain
    @lmclrain Год назад

    Thanks for the video, these ideas are great. Just subbed and I will keep autoliking future videos.

  • @doraw7766
    @doraw7766 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you . I will benefit from the mini swale. I will start that project where I have some built up areas of soil. My house plot is normal size but I have a reserve in back yard for my fruit tree forest. Thanks.

  • @surgeinc1
    @surgeinc1 11 месяцев назад

    5 out of 10 so far.
    However the green house is a tropical jungle with a fountain, to hide out and just relax in.

  • @tesspulido
    @tesspulido Год назад

    This is awesome thanks! 11 projects even ^_^

  • @Kate98755
    @Kate98755 Год назад +3

    I would love to have enough water to “storage”, SW Idaho, dessert with mountains….very little rain, some in April, May and June, and when it does rain, it’s so little 😂 sidewalk barely gets wet. Yes we do have the times where it rains alot, but only a few days a year.
    our irrigation relies on snow run off from the mountains. Some years we have lots of snow, some years barely any.

    • @lesliekendall5668
      @lesliekendall5668 Год назад

      I'm in Boise on flat ground. Same drought issue. I made a swale by making my main path by digging down 2-3" and planted it in clover.

  • @deborahharvey854
    @deborahharvey854 Месяц назад

    Guinea pigs-- Romans had special pots in the garden where a guinea pig type critter was raised for food

  • @freewillchoice8052
    @freewillchoice8052 Год назад +1

    Nice video 👍

  • @williamluckett9133
    @williamluckett9133 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for sharing, just discovering your channel. Go Cats!

  • @NudePostingConspiracyTheories
    @NudePostingConspiracyTheories 8 месяцев назад +1

    Ive inly just bought my first house. Its in the country. (Been living fir twenty four years up three floors, in a city apartment!). Im clueless. And like your video. Im on a real small scale compared to you, but still, this gave me some tips i can use -especially the compost, worms, and the ‘guild planting’. Oh -and the fact i ought to get some animals. Thanks very much.

  • @patriciacole8773
    @patriciacole8773 Год назад +2

    I’m happy to meet you in your video. I’m a new subscriber today.

  • @LifeonHeltonCreekFarm
    @LifeonHeltonCreekFarm Год назад +1

    Hey there! Just found you and hit that subscribe button! We live on a farm and our perma-culture is becoming more purposeful. There's so much to learn and you're doing a great job teaching! Keep up the good work!

  • @pamelamattz3761
    @pamelamattz3761 11 месяцев назад

    Nice

  • @KevinMTierney
    @KevinMTierney 9 месяцев назад +1

    Cool video with great tips. I suggest getting a better mic and sound mixing. The end was incredibly loud compared to the volume of your voice

  • @lukeweaver9287
    @lukeweaver9287 Год назад +4

    Great ideas. Hoping to get a nice herb garden going for the spring here in Florida. By the way, those (275 gallon?) IBC water tanks will last years longer if you protect them from the sun/weather.

    • @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel
      @TheGoodEarthFarmChannel  Год назад

      Thanks for the input, I have plans to cover them from the sun, but oh time gets by!

  • @johnkowall2629
    @johnkowall2629 9 месяцев назад

    Ty

  • @fuxleo
    @fuxleo Год назад +2

    grt vid!i subed✌️

  • @amyjones2490
    @amyjones2490 Год назад +2

    Love these ideas. It would be helpful to know what zone you are in. I realize the ideas can be implemented in individual zones but I would still like to know.

  • @sedaniels8701
    @sedaniels8701 10 месяцев назад

    love your straight-forward approach and how simple you keep these explanations for us newbs. Thanks.

  • @arrowprinted9909
    @arrowprinted9909 2 месяца назад +1

    Daaaaaamn, it’s a thin line between a rabbit and guinea pig, but an important line nonetheless 😂

  • @SAGECREW
    @SAGECREW 11 месяцев назад

    i might have to get some guinea pigs and make a pasture pen to clear some top grass for my guild gardens

  • @3lijahv
    @3lijahv 11 месяцев назад

    As cute as the bunnies are, I’d have to save some of the lambs quarters for myself! 😂

  • @aantaryafilmandtheatrehous9342
    @aantaryafilmandtheatrehous9342 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the video!
    I think what has been referred to as the Hugel mound is actually the Holzer method
    Please do check