The Weed Free Farm and Garden - Part One

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • The biggest problem when growing vegetables organically is weeds. Let me show you how I keep Neversink Farm free of weeds and as a result highly productive.
    Find out more at www.neversinkfa...
    Sign up for my newsletter at bit.ly/2GRYHNT
    Conor Crickmore quit his job in the city and moved to the country. There he started an organic farm from scratch and never looked back.
    His farm became super successful due to his simple systems. He now works to help small farms succeed. His a well known educator throughout the world in small scale market farming and has been very successful at earning a good living growing vegetables on a small plot. He farms without a tractor and uses mostly hand tools.
    He also designs tools and hosts online courses in farming and gardening.
    Online Courses can be found at - www.neversinkco...
    Tools can be found at - www.neversinkt...
    Equipment I use at Neversink Farm
    Greens Harvestor - bit.ly/2v1A7sr
    Paperpot - paperpot.co/
    Use this discount code for 5% off @neversink_paperpot_5
    Sillage Tarps - bit.ly/2v1A7sr

Комментарии • 212

  • @kenreynolds2894
    @kenreynolds2894 5 лет назад +46

    Excellent Conor, My family had been farming a 76-acre vegetable farm for just over 100 years. About 3 years ago it was sold to a developer. My grandfather would say the secret to having a weed-free farm was to cultivate the crop before you ever saw the weed. We were always hoeing around the plants. We had two - 1948 Farmall Cub tractors with cultivators on them. They would cultivator the pathways first and then the works would come in and hoe around the plants. This would kill any weed seed that was trying to germinate in the soil. My advice for the small gardener or farmer is after a rainstorm the weed seed is most active to sprout roots so once the ground is dry enough to get back on,,,,,, get out there with your hoe or tractor and Cultivate your crops before the weeds show themselves. Enjoy, Ken

  • @flowergrowersmith449
    @flowergrowersmith449 6 лет назад +28

    Nothing beats the voice of experience..

  • @TLFarm
    @TLFarm 6 лет назад +37

    Brilliant guy with simple well though out ideas. Definitely going to try & implement some of his concepts on our farm in Thailand.
    Cheers Leigh & Toon.

  • @braintnt
    @braintnt 5 лет назад +6

    I wish I was born in a farming family like this one.

  • @bigrigchristfollower9020
    @bigrigchristfollower9020 4 года назад +3

    Very informative, thank you from an ex chicken farmer now going to learn as much as I can to make a garden for my family as well as neighbors because I think it is so essential to eating healthy foods as well as being self sufficient in this time. God Bless you and your family in this time.

  • @fatjuniesfarmette6030
    @fatjuniesfarmette6030 5 лет назад +8

    PS -- Beautifully managed farm! Your love for your work is evident.

  • @eugeneson0108
    @eugeneson0108 4 года назад +6

    well organized and clean. What a delight to the eyes! love how tidy your farm is.

  • @66bigbuds
    @66bigbuds 5 лет назад +4

    There is no substitute for hard work. Get er done. The work shows looks good.

  • @Ihaveausernametoo
    @Ihaveausernametoo 4 года назад +3

    Wow this is mighty impressive. I went to no-dig myself, they barely germinate at all now. Different kind of work though, putting all the compost on and making/sourcing it.

  • @martintopp1399
    @martintopp1399 6 месяцев назад

    HI there from NZ. Great Video. Thank you for sharing you wisdom, systems and method of how to maintain a weed free farm! Your frankness is much appreciated!

  • @samlicorish5645
    @samlicorish5645 4 года назад +2

    I appreciate the simple but specific concepts here. Planting precision, planning, linear structure, right tools, and hard work mitigated by all the upfront thought. Frankly, I doubt it would work in all native soil / weed environments without a specific plan to start out with the right soil medium. I think that is the trick. Start with the right soil medium (or sieve your soil as I've seen tropical small farmers do), and follow your principles. This has really opened my eyes to another way to get the job done.

  • @flowergrowersmith449
    @flowergrowersmith449 6 лет назад +6

    I'm facing starting a small flower farm from a grassy, weedy pasture. I'm thinking about tilling it just once, forming and staking beds, laying down weedmatting paths with woodchip on top and just dealing with and meticulously removing weeds and then covering the beds over winter. It just feels as though I need to get the beds physically established. Your immaculate farm is inspiring. Thanks for the cultivation description also. GREAT VIDEO CONOR!

    • @stephencarlsbad
      @stephencarlsbad 5 лет назад

      If you lay down clear plastic for an entire summer, it will not only sterilize your garden patch, it will kill all weed seeds too.
      Then the following season will be much, much easier to manage the weeding.

    • @freespeech8030
      @freespeech8030 5 лет назад

      I don't see how you can avoid the "first till", in your situation. You have to get to the dirt. It would be nice if you had some chickens and pigs to help as well, but that opens up a whole new set of requirements. Maybe, you could tarp one section as an experiment, while you weed the rest of the area. That's how they do it in some gardens.

    • @soulful1today
      @soulful1today 5 лет назад

      Suggest not using wood chips anywhere that one is going to be turning the soil over.

  • @jamesbrunet2755
    @jamesbrunet2755 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your tried and true methods, and congratulations for your success at becoming weed less. Where there is a will, there is a way, you have not only found it, you designed it. Once again, thank you and congratulations on a job well done. May Your Green Thumb Up Continue, J.B.

  • @amandakerns5496
    @amandakerns5496 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for taking the time to put this together.

  • @tanawatnakaland8895
    @tanawatnakaland8895 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for your idea , i live in Thailand and starting my farm

  • @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
    @RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia 5 лет назад +2

    I Gave up growing in soil, i'm disabled and creeping up on 60 now and can't get anyone to help me so i'm converting my greenhouses to Aquaculture/Aquaponics. The planning and methods you do are sound but would be labor intensive for me. Otherwise your farm looks wonderful. I'm changing over to a serious cash crop...no not Pot, not the fish alone, but Real Wasabi production.

  • @rodnjosh
    @rodnjosh 5 лет назад +4

    I seem to have smart weeds, it seems like they always like to sprout up right next to the main stem of my plants. I suppose that is where the hand weeding comes in. I do appreciate the information you provide and I will be adding the wire weeder to my Christmas list.

  • @Michael-fc2oy
    @Michael-fc2oy 4 года назад +1

    Great minds! I agree, finally you save a lot of time and money without tarps

  • @carolynmoody9460
    @carolynmoody9460 4 года назад +4

    Many blessings..this was amazing information

  • @ladynataliemarie7780
    @ladynataliemarie7780 3 года назад

    I wish you worked with the tool as you spoke of it. I can’t understand how these work.
    Very interesting!

  • @joannenardoni17
    @joannenardoni17 5 лет назад +4

    So beautiful, absolutely fabulous

  • @jeffcokenour3459
    @jeffcokenour3459 3 года назад

    What you do is an incredible blessing

  • @richstone2627
    @richstone2627 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge in these videos.

  • @PJWalmsley
    @PJWalmsley 4 года назад +4

    Cool tools! This approach seems incompatible with cover crops and bio accumulators. Thoughts on this approach vs cover crops?
    Some other good ways I've seen to choke out weeds are mulch and sterile plants that dominate an area but don't come back.

  • @cannashiva9719
    @cannashiva9719 4 года назад

    killer garden man..doing super solid work....talk about some sweet foliage......keep it up!!!! farmers are the new phd's!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @yakbutterblacktea
    @yakbutterblacktea 5 лет назад +6

    Just boogey down the row.! Thanks for the information. Very informative.

  • @MrTseardjan
    @MrTseardjan 5 лет назад +1

    i realy liked the view from above realya a amazing looking farm

  • @GardenBandits
    @GardenBandits 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the advice. Love the videos! Love your place.

  • @betsysiegmund198
    @betsysiegmund198 4 года назад

    Another excellent, informative presentation. Thanks, Conor.

  • @cavemanjoe7972
    @cavemanjoe7972 5 лет назад +2

    I use my scuffle hoe to disturb topsoil where I want my chickens to scratch; it works really well for that. I also use it around my plants because I don't have that many, and it allows me to clear a lot of small weeds in the garden very quickly before work instead of putting off weeding until they take over the garden. I like those wire hoes, though.

  • @willj5460
    @willj5460 4 года назад

    I used to feel the wheel hoe was not the right tool either. Then we ditched the Glaser, got a Valley Oak and space crops appropriately and everything changed. It's a superior tool.

  • @marcelpoitras8250
    @marcelpoitras8250 5 лет назад

    Carrying all your jingling dinner triangles,,,,and calling the plants to dinner As you mend! Nice fresh game of psychedelic off the charts,,,from aerial

  • @fletcherlarue3440
    @fletcherlarue3440 5 лет назад +1

    As a non-farmer. Whats the difference between cultivation and weeding? Also a side suggestion, can we see more shots of what he's explaining? (a video is worth a million words!)

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад +1

      Weeding is usually the same thing as hand-weeding. In this context Cultivation is disturbing the soil with a long handled tool to kill weeds. Precision cultivation is killing thread stage weeds by disturbing the entire soil surface.

    • @fletcherlarue3440
      @fletcherlarue3440 5 лет назад +1

      @@NeversinkFarm Cool thanks for the response :)

  • @BrianSmith-gp9xr
    @BrianSmith-gp9xr 4 года назад +1

    Thank you , Very helpful .

  • @silviasen6907
    @silviasen6907 5 лет назад +1

    Finally i get the answer. Thank u for this video.

  • @shivawilson4786
    @shivawilson4786 2 года назад +2

    Do you have a video about how to stop critters (raccoons mice deer gophers) from eating your crops?

  • @canadiangemstones7636
    @canadiangemstones7636 2 года назад

    Very cool, thanks for sharing!

  • @ricodegallo3060
    @ricodegallo3060 4 года назад +1

    Have you thought about using quick key chain disconnects for the plow heads?

  • @McCoysOakHillFarm
    @McCoysOakHillFarm 6 лет назад +26

    Have you had to deal with weeds that have creeping rhizome type roots like quack grass, creeping charlie, etc? If so, how did you handle them?
    I hope to take your course next year I did the free preview and I was amazed at all the very good information I have not tried myself while gardening/farming. I worked for a neighbor who was a market garden farmer for a couple of seasons. I sort of volunteered to help him at the time and thought he did not have anyone helping. I wished he could have seen your place and how you did things. The weed pressure was really bad we could never keep up, so many rocks, crooked rows, and I kept thinking at the time there has to be a better way. Thanks for sharing. :)

    • @pauldrake1858
      @pauldrake1858 5 лет назад +1

      AND Oxalis: that is really insidious, lots of tiny bulbs radiating from the root. Any suggestions are welcome. Cheers.

    • @44wolfpacker
      @44wolfpacker 5 лет назад +2

      And Bermuda/ wire grass! It spreads by stolons, rhizomes, and seed!

    • @marlonw5053
      @marlonw5053 4 года назад +1

      his advice applies the same to the questions

  • @bigears4426
    @bigears4426 5 лет назад +3

    That wire wouldn't work in my soil, but man your garden looks good

  • @Buckinghamrabbit
    @Buckinghamrabbit 4 года назад +6

    Great stuff, Conor- the wire hoe with changeable heads looks incredible to me. A question, though- how do you handle long periods of rain or moist soil that prevents precision cultivation at the thread stage?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  3 года назад +2

      Find any break in the weather and cultivate anyway. What can you do?

  • @hairyhomesteader3561
    @hairyhomesteader3561 6 лет назад

    Great advise, just wish it worked in my zone. Weed pressure is just too high, so we must use landscaping fabric.

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  6 лет назад +2

      cultivation will work in any zone. Weed pressure on my farm used to be extremely high.

  • @Zachr-np8pc
    @Zachr-np8pc 5 лет назад

    It works for me I use mulch as rocks not weighted down so I'll see why Carpenter it won't work

  • @fatjuniesfarmette6030
    @fatjuniesfarmette6030 5 лет назад +2

    How did you convert your beds in the first place, from grassy field to row crop bed? I've done the "back to eden" method with success, especially for trees & berries & tomatoes etc. But for more tender seeded cropslike lettuce or carrots, a nice soft bed with no wood chips would be convenient.

  • @lindafuiten2556
    @lindafuiten2556 Год назад

    What a beautiful garden, what do you use to make the ground fertile?

  • @frankdasaintdituri9983
    @frankdasaintdituri9983 4 года назад +2

    i like your brain

  • @ForgottenWayFarms
    @ForgottenWayFarms 5 лет назад

    Just found your channel, great info and video!

  • @cityurbanfarmjimpeckham5082
    @cityurbanfarmjimpeckham5082 6 лет назад +3

    This is a great video with awesome advice … but haven't I seen this video a few days ago ? Deja vu

  • @rockncroll1
    @rockncroll1 5 лет назад

    I hope to be breaking ground on a new plot of land this spring. The property has a very nice lawn. Instead of using tarps, I am considering renting a sod cutter. I would cut the sod to form my field blocks , and roll the sod up to compost. Bring compost and other soil amendments to build my beds. Has anyone else done it this way? Good idea? Bad idea? Looking for some input. thank you.

  • @stelviodelbrava6218
    @stelviodelbrava6218 5 лет назад +2

    Great info dear sir. One question though - what do you do when the weed grows too close to crop's body? You then just hand weed it?

  • @CottageGardensonForest
    @CottageGardensonForest 5 лет назад +1

    What the best way to turn a lawn into garden. I thought covering it with a tarp from this summer through the winter. I live in a zone 8 with hot summers. Thanks

  • @randylanglois
    @randylanglois 5 лет назад

    Beautiful.

  • @wintergardenusa3988
    @wintergardenusa3988 Год назад

    Our lot is covered in Quack Grass. I've seen 2 questions regarding quack grass (Elymus repens) or Bermuda Grass but no answer :(. The rhizomes of quackgrass go down 8 ft. The more weeded by hand, the worse they come back, though I have tried to get every last rhizome, I literally cannot go down in the earth 8 ft. Please, what to do. Even the Weed Steaming Company said they did not know what Quack Grass was (sounds convenient). Cultivating land with Quack Grass will make it worse as more plants populate when the rhizome is broken. Solarization is not an option here (we rarely get above 60 degrees, town with coldest summer in USA)

  • @DIYSolarandWind
    @DIYSolarandWind 4 года назад

    Awesome video

  • @sameoldmphymel
    @sameoldmphymel 5 лет назад

    Excellent video!

  • @shaniduncan2255
    @shaniduncan2255 5 лет назад +4

    What do you do about bermuda grass? All around our garden is bermuda, we've dug troughs, weed wicked them, etc, but they just go deeper and still come back into the garden. any ideas?

  • @healingrain651
    @healingrain651 5 лет назад

    Just found your channel. Learned much and will impliment your methods. Question: do you have suggestions for ant/pest free organic gardens??

  • @edgeofentropy3492
    @edgeofentropy3492 2 года назад +1

    With this title, you will never have a toker view this video.

  • @krishnaksingh2928
    @krishnaksingh2928 2 года назад

    Nice video

  • @aaronhubbard9957
    @aaronhubbard9957 5 лет назад +1

    great vid

  • @stephencarlsbad
    @stephencarlsbad 5 лет назад +4

    I wonder if Big Ag could scale this to where it was economically feasible to not have to use herbicides?

    • @denveradventures589
      @denveradventures589 4 года назад

      They can, it requires cheap immigrant labor, though.............

    • @canadiangemstones7636
      @canadiangemstones7636 Год назад

      Try hand hoeing a thousand acres once a week and let us know how it goes.

  • @johnraymondcave8426
    @johnraymondcave8426 5 лет назад +22

    Allow weeds to grow for one year, means your weeding for the next seven years.

    • @Ihaveausernametoo
      @Ihaveausernametoo 4 года назад +1

      "One year of seeding seven years of weeding." They plant themselves with the wind as well, so no single approach is enough.

    • @brucemartin8435
      @brucemartin8435 4 года назад +3

      Just purchased a property with a garden that had neglected for 5 -7 years. Let the games begin!

    • @hosoiarchives4858
      @hosoiarchives4858 4 года назад +2

      Wood chips back to Eden

  • @michellebressler5957
    @michellebressler5957 3 года назад

    good voice!!!

  • @latifurrahmanrahman9751
    @latifurrahmanrahman9751 5 лет назад +1

    Very good,thanks sir.
    I have a question,
    It doesn't change soil PH ?
    &
    Soil don't be effective?
    Thanks

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад

      PH change is from a change in the balance of the elements in the soil. Cultivation will not change it.

  • @chrismelton6117
    @chrismelton6117 4 года назад +1

    Curious to know if these processes can be successful in warmer, more humid climates? I'm in south Georgia and would very much like to know more!

  • @rockncroll1
    @rockncroll1 5 лет назад +1

    I have a scuffle hoe, probably just use it for my walkways.
    I like your precision weeding tool with the attachments that’s great.!
    I am also interested in your flame weeder attachment thingy, can you leave a link where I might be able to purchase these tools.
    Thank you.😀

  • @philxdev
    @philxdev 4 года назад +4

    we need robots for mechanical weed wacking..

  • @brigittelm6054
    @brigittelm6054 5 лет назад

    Gorgeous weeds can be edible and important too.

  • @zenlife100
    @zenlife100 4 года назад

    Please pass on the Link where i can purchase the weed control tools.. fantastic Video cheers

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  4 года назад

      www.neversinktools.com/collections/mutineer

  • @amoxus
    @amoxus 5 лет назад

    How do you deal with weeds during long rain and muddy spells? The weeders wont work well then, but the weeds will still grow. Thanks for the great video.

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад +1

      We get lees kill percentage of the weeds but we still cultivate when wet when we must

  • @noellucganachaud3983
    @noellucganachaud3983 2 года назад

    Tarping is the best way to clear to start a garden only takes two to three weeks then you must put cardboard down and compost on top then you can control them from there...

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  2 года назад +1

      To remove perennial weeds and grass it will take many more months of tarping. Cardboard is a good garden strategy but not a good choice at a farm level.

  • @tothna1
    @tothna1 3 года назад

    Do you pick up the weeds then? Or does disturbing the soil like that kill the tiny weeds?

  • @colinmcgee5931
    @colinmcgee5931 3 года назад

    Love the tools you've designed!
    A question re flame weeding - does it not damage the mycelial layer of the soil, kill earthworms, that sort of thing? Thank you!

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  3 года назад +1

      Not at all. Soil is the best insulator. The heat doesn’t travel beyond the surface.

    • @colinmcgee5931
      @colinmcgee5931 3 года назад

      @@NeversinkFarm thank you!

  • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
    @user-jv9qz2bu1r 5 лет назад

    vg thanks

  • @nineallday000
    @nineallday000 6 лет назад +1

    How sturdy is the attachment between the hoe and handle on that hoe? Just wondering how it would hold up over 10 years with quite a lot of use, really like it i am just wary that it wont hold up having a joint at such a critical pressure point for the tool.

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  6 лет назад

      Incredibly strong but ten years for a hoe blade? On my farm blades are changed regularly as we use them daily.

    • @nineallday000
      @nineallday000 6 лет назад

      I more meant the attachment to the handle rather than the blade itself, Is the locking mechanism sturdy enough to hold up over time, I realize i will have to change the blades more often i just want to be able to change them without thinking about the mechanism working or not

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  6 лет назад

      Yes the mechanism is sturdy. I have yet to have even the smallest issues with mine. I have about seven of them which are used by workers daily.

    • @nineallday000
      @nineallday000 5 лет назад

      ​@@NeversinkFarm thanks for always taking time to reply, really apprecieate it, will definitely be ordering a pair for me and the wife!

  • @russellclark4447
    @russellclark4447 4 года назад

    What type of wheel is used in the paths? I’m looking for something for my 18 inch walkways. Also wondering if the 17in inferno flame weeder sold at Neversink tools could be used in 18 in paths while crops are growing in beds on either side? Thank you!

  • @c.s.5177
    @c.s.5177 6 лет назад +3

    Do you find that with time there are fewer weeds? Eventually?

    • @jasonsimmons4319
      @jasonsimmons4319 4 года назад

      That will happen if you stay on top o it yes. You will deplete viable seed bank in your soil but will always have some degree of outside seed coming in

  • @percybrown9191
    @percybrown9191 5 лет назад +1

    I would like to see the implement close up rather than him sound was good though.

  • @christinaperez254
    @christinaperez254 6 лет назад +3

    Did he say he flames after seeding but before germination?

  • @seem0r3buttz
    @seem0r3buttz 5 лет назад

    what is that orange cylintrical tool hanging off the top on the side of your tool rack? do you use it?

  • @draganplavsic
    @draganplavsic Год назад

    wher i can buy that wire tool ? can you seend me some lingk please ?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  Год назад

      www.neversinktools.com/collections/mutineer

  • @thejpooks
    @thejpooks 3 года назад

    Does all that cultivation cause problems with organic matter loss or erosion after heavy rain storms/high winds? Worried about soil health from constant agitation. What kind of soil are you on?

  • @dolanlehen1917
    @dolanlehen1917 5 лет назад +1

    have you tried a tine weeding rake? if so have they been useful on your farm?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад +2

      Yes and it damages your crops. I can only see using it in an emergency situation but never as part of a cultivation system.

    • @dolanlehen1917
      @dolanlehen1917 5 лет назад

      Thanks for your reply

  • @keepark1702
    @keepark1702 3 года назад

    Where can buy that equipment?

  • @emarkjacobs
    @emarkjacobs 3 года назад

    thanks for this
    you are also hillarious

  • @flowergrowersmith449
    @flowergrowersmith449 5 лет назад

    Any thoughts on steam weeding guys? I'd never heard of it but saw a sign advertising it. Do you think it could kill off beneficial soil life??

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  3 года назад

      Beneficials bounce back extremely quickly as long as you have the right soil environment

  • @TheVigilantStewards
    @TheVigilantStewards 5 лет назад

    Question: What about the disturbance and bare soil that exists in this system though? How do you keep the soil alive and growing?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад

      That is not an issue. Living soil is more about maintenance through balancing and feeding.

    • @TheVigilantStewards
      @TheVigilantStewards 5 лет назад

      So you don't find a decrease in mycorrhizal fungi and such things that are touted as signs of wonder soil in permaculture? That's interesting. I'll have to do a precision farming section and just compare it. What you're doing... it's called precision farming right? That's all I've heard you describe it as @@NeversinkFarm

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад

      Precision Cultivation

    • @TheVigilantStewards
      @TheVigilantStewards 5 лет назад

      Thanks!@@NeversinkFarm

    • @sueturner8122
      @sueturner8122 5 лет назад

      Carmelo Santini I was wondering the same thing - this seems different to a no till garden. I cover my garden beds with woodchips to stop the weeds.

  • @dana7340
    @dana7340 2 года назад

    Does anyone know where to find the wire weeding tool used in the video?

  • @maryaust600
    @maryaust600 5 лет назад

    Any recommendations as to where to get a set of cultivators?

  • @markweston3345
    @markweston3345 4 года назад

    What is the process of selling produce on a farm this size? Do they sell directly to supermarkets or is there a type of "middle Man" purchase company?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  4 года назад

      usually direct to consumer

    • @markweston3345
      @markweston3345 4 года назад

      @@NeversinkFarm Great. What farmers market do you sell at so we can come buy something?

  • @elizabethhall1716
    @elizabethhall1716 4 года назад

    Our area has nut grass. How do you get rid of that? My husband has spent hours for years. We've heard pigs love the nuts, but haven't gone there yet.

  • @MC-xg9fv
    @MC-xg9fv 3 года назад

    Can I ask how do you cultivate a spinach patch?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  3 года назад

      #6 or #4 pacifists with a rebellion on a mutineer. www.neversinktools.com/

  • @jerrybear3081
    @jerrybear3081 5 лет назад

    do you use the flame between rows instead of cultivating if you have the chance?

  • @cassityart7001
    @cassityart7001 6 лет назад

    Are you using the flame weeder in one pass or up and back two passes on the same bed? Always before planting.

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  6 лет назад +1

      One pass, once a week on every open bed

  • @briancheruiyot9011
    @briancheruiyot9011 5 лет назад

    Wow

  • @richardcooney7789
    @richardcooney7789 5 лет назад

    I live in Canada . Who sells the hand weeder you have . Thank you Richard

  • @jodibillingsley
    @jodibillingsley 5 лет назад +1

    Do you run the wire weeder daily/weekly? Thanks for the info! Looking to buy one of them before spring

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад +1

      Weekly until summer

    • @gotredeemed
      @gotredeemed 5 лет назад

      Do you make your own weeding tools?

    • @ppac300
      @ppac300 4 года назад

      Neversink Farm what happens during summer?

    • @arthurr8670
      @arthurr8670 4 года назад

      I'm curious about the summer. I could do weekly, but I wouldn't have time if it was more than two times a week.

  • @Kid_Ikaris
    @Kid_Ikaris 4 года назад +3

    Boogy down the row

  • @JDMGonzalez
    @JDMGonzalez 5 лет назад

    from point zero did you have to use herbicide at any point ?

    • @NeversinkFarm
      @NeversinkFarm  5 лет назад +3

      Absolutely not. Also Neversink has been certified organic since day one

  • @kimmartin4418
    @kimmartin4418 3 года назад

    Where do I by tools?

    • @RyanKudasik
      @RyanKudasik 3 года назад

      Totally my question. I want his exact setup.