11 Easy Edible Perennials - Plant Once and Harvest Every Year

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 50

  • @iseriver3982
    @iseriver3982 Год назад +25

    'you can eat from them, the caterpillars can eat from them, it's ok'
    How refreshing to hear.

  • @georgejennings9959
    @georgejennings9959 9 месяцев назад +8

    Thank you for making this. I planted 30 feet of asparagus and it all died, including all my egyptian walking onion. Because they were planted at the forest edge and got less than 5 hours of direct sunlight. So lesson learned, I will try planting them in full sun. And strawberries + asparagus is a great idea. The chipmunks and birds eat up the strawberries though, so we have to share the food source, the bounty with the furry animals our brethren. Yeah caterpillars and insects are prevalent but the frogs and harmless insect eating ribbon snakes abound in and around my garden. So when we help nature we help ourselves, for nature provides back in return for our time, effort and labor. Nature pays us back in edible fruit, tubers and greens.

  • @jamiepaszek
    @jamiepaszek 2 года назад +6

    I get so happy whenever I see you post a video! It's so satisfying to see the progress of things you've invested in over time.

  • @JCC_1975
    @JCC_1975 5 месяцев назад +2

    I absolutely love my perrinal garden plants. There are so many different plants that are perrinals that you can enjoy year after year. I have all of these plus tons more. You should really check into perrinal spinach. So many varieties. Plus, most people don't seem to understand that pepper plants are perrinal. They just need protection from the cold. Beautiful garden 💜 Happy growing 💜

  • @gudgengrebe
    @gudgengrebe Год назад +1

    Walking onions! I subscribed to your channel just for that! I’d never heard of them- I’ve been gardening since about 2000, so quite a while. I also didn’t know we can grow kiwi fruit here in the uk ( my wife’s ears just pricked up) and I’m experimenting with no dig, so your channel is a lucky find. Thanks for sharing such interesting info. We enjoy your presentation style, which is straight to the point and without waffle or distracting music. We love discovering new plants and methods. Thanks for the great video!

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun Год назад +4

    First place I heard mention Strawberry Spinach. Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @judithnzogi2128
    @judithnzogi2128 3 месяца назад

    I love the way the vegetables are fresh

  • @carola.h.5689
    @carola.h.5689 2 года назад +2

    This was fantastic! I didn't realise you could grow so many fruits and vegetables in the garden!

  • @georgejennings9959
    @georgejennings9959 9 месяцев назад +1

    Last year I started skirret and canna edulis achira and queensland varieties. Canna tubers are hardy to 18F. Started with a tray of Skirret seedlings and each plant gave me 5-15 offsets so literally exponentially increased the # plants/beds in 1 year and they are delicious, even tastier than parsnip and you can pull it out of the ground and eat it like a carrot. Its one of my favorite most delicious perennials now besides pokeweed leaves/shoots, stealth gardening substitute for asparagus. Skirret is not invasive, not potentially a spreading problem like daylillies and horseradish which spread can readily across the garden in full sun.

  • @MrBlacksunster
    @MrBlacksunster 2 года назад +3

    Thanks you for the video! Always great to see perennial edible plants that other people have. Less maintenance as annual, more wildlife habitat, stronger plants and what I also find interesting are the more unusual plants.
    We have an (red) hardy kiwi in our garden (one male, one female). Flowered (both) this year for the first time but no fruits yet. Hope next year. Watch out though, can get massive and needs a lot of climbing space. Hope yours will grow and be healthy!

  • @utuberick1
    @utuberick1 2 месяца назад

    Great video Mona! Thank you for sharing your garden experience. Perennials are the best. I’m going to give the Kiwis a shot based on your recommendation. Fingers crossed 🤞.

  • @bobbilynnmiller742
    @bobbilynnmiller742 2 года назад +2

    Your videos are lovely . I learned a lot , and look forward to growing these plants in my garden! Thank you for sharing your garden journey with us!

  • @charlesbale8376
    @charlesbale8376 Год назад

    Great information...Enjoyed spending time in your garden.

  • @waterbottles4744
    @waterbottles4744 9 месяцев назад

    Caucasian spinach is a great one to grow. Nice garden!

  • @kelleyamador8838
    @kelleyamador8838 2 года назад

    That is a very nice assortment of perennial vegetables. I have most but not all of them in my garden.

  • @platypups
    @platypups 2 года назад

    So many autumn leaves already!

  • @TheOtherFitzwilliam
    @TheOtherFitzwilliam 2 года назад

    I'm obsessed!!

  • @samanthahatton712
    @samanthahatton712 2 года назад +1

    Loved this! Makes me even more excited for my asparagus crown to mature. Can you a similar video for flowers.

  • @jackstone4291
    @jackstone4291 Год назад +1

    There are hardy, small kiwi plants from New Zealand which do well - issai or red hairless or red Ken or a few other varieties which pomona fruits do and should do well in UK climate

  • @Bf26fge
    @Bf26fge Год назад +2

    Chenopodium is good. It is virtually indistinguishable to spinach.

  • @celineetter301
    @celineetter301 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for the Video, what kind of perenial onions are next to the walking onions? i think you forgot to mention the name 🙈

  • @mrcreativequarter6087
    @mrcreativequarter6087 6 месяцев назад +1

    May I ask if young blueberry plants are okay to grow in a small garden? We are in the UK, too. Thanks!

  • @michaelhaddan1965
    @michaelhaddan1965 2 года назад

    Very helpful. Thank you!

  • @flowerpixel
    @flowerpixel 2 года назад +2

    Wow I've never heard of strawberry sticks

    • @MrBlacksunster
      @MrBlacksunster 2 года назад

      Same, haven't heard anything about them either. Hope to try those myself one day!

  • @agnieszkapilot-bambynek8025
    @agnieszkapilot-bambynek8025 2 года назад

    Another good one video 👏 I've had no idea, that there is a kind of onion like this! I've already spotted where I can buy it 😁
    I'm still sad because of my asparaguses. I've had them for a few years, there were yummy and the crops were massive. But it was so tasty that some rodent ate them all 😢
    I have something to add on the theme - I highly reccomend a kind of rucola which is on the same spot for many years. I have one for 3 years now and it's thriving. So many rucola leaves during all summer and bees love their flowers. Win-win.

  • @BumblebeeAdventure
    @BumblebeeAdventure 10 месяцев назад

    🐝 Thanks for the great video 🌻 subscribbed

  • @crashofthemoons
    @crashofthemoons 2 года назад +1

    I would love to know the exact varieties you planted so I can buy the same ones!

  • @workphone4210
    @workphone4210 Год назад +1

    U CAN EAT SMALLER BELL PEPPERS LEAVES & ANY SIZE RADISHES LEAVES. KINDA LIKE SPINACH.

  • @EBW-615
    @EBW-615 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hey what as the second type of onion you did not mention the name of it. Many thanks, Emma

  • @hestertolman6484
    @hestertolman6484 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for the video. Can you tell me the name of the plant you just bought, with the berries and spinachlike leaves?

  • @georgejennings9959
    @georgejennings9959 9 месяцев назад

    I started blazing star last year, it was a tuber food source of the indians. Very beautiful. I havent tasted it yet. It doesnt seem to be a aggressive divider/reproducer like other flowers. I also have jerusalem artichoke but am careful to plant them in partial shade and/or poor soil. I had a friend plant jerusalem artichokes in full sun in 100% composted horse manure and in desparation he had to spray roundup over a huge area, it was quite a mess/challenge and learning experience for him. However that toxic stuff stays in the soil so I feel bad for him, hopefully is not growing anything in that soil again.

  • @thomastonnessen8056
    @thomastonnessen8056 6 месяцев назад

    Keep it sprayed with BT as a natural and organic pesticide to keep caterpillars out of your garden.

  • @HiddenBlessingsHomestead
    @HiddenBlessingsHomestead 27 дней назад

    What zone are you? Would these plants be perennial in a zone 4?

  • @judithhobson5868
    @judithhobson5868 Год назад +1

    you need a male and female kiwi plant to get fruit,nd did you know strawberry leaves are also eadible and very nutritous. i dry them and addto my tealeaves , the help with eye degeneration problems as well

    • @markirish7599
      @markirish7599 Год назад +1

      Jenny kiwi is self fertilising

    • @shannonfisk506
      @shannonfisk506 Год назад

      My kiwi were sold in male/female plants. Never bloomed but still have 2 that are over 15 years old

  • @johnferdon6525
    @johnferdon6525 Год назад

    Amazing, I feel like I’ve been transported to England in the 1600’s. So captivating.

  • @neverendingharvest6413
    @neverendingharvest6413 2 месяца назад

    Thank you! What state are you located in?

    • @aceexceed4105
      @aceexceed4105 Месяц назад

      They aren't located in any state, their bio says Southwest England 😅

  • @Bf26fge
    @Bf26fge Год назад

    You will eventually regret invasive jerusalem artichoke. They are a lot of work to clean. If you want a great bulb and also a substitute for green beans get the native day lilly hemerocallis

  • @georgejennings9959
    @georgejennings9959 9 месяцев назад

    My daylillies are happy in soil that stays wet/damp even waterlogged after rains, and apios americana seems happy to grow in that same location and climb up the daylilly stalks. I believe canna will enjoy that location also, and apparently the wet/moist conditions will help grow huge tubers. And apios americana will be very happy to climb these very beautiful 6-12 foot canna. The queensland variety grew over 10 last summer. Apios americana is a member of the pea family and a nitrogen fixer and I think they should be happy together.

  • @ruthcreech1113
    @ruthcreech1113 2 года назад +1

    How do you care for your new strawberry plants? Do you let them stay where they are planted? Do you cut them from the “mother” plant or leave them connected?

    • @dellah7507
      @dellah7507 2 года назад +3

      I leave my strawberries where planted and don’t cut the babies “off” I wait till the connection has dries out and then take the babies to a different spot when needed. I think the babies are stronger when they where able to “nurse off” the mother plant till the end.

    • @Karincl7
      @Karincl7 Год назад +3

      It s a choice, baby plants or bigger fruit. Don t expect the plant can do both

  • @peterpiper487
    @peterpiper487 Год назад +3

    "These ones..." ??? Do you mean 'These" ??