15 Beginner Gardening Mistakes That Nobody Talks About

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025
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Комментарии • 82

  • @Gardenary
    @Gardenary  Месяц назад +4

    🥳 Join us for a free LIVE gardening event on Jan. 11: www.gardenary.com/garden-in-5-live

    • @vanderson6242
      @vanderson6242 23 дня назад

      I joined today, and I am hooked! I love cut flowers, and I started a garden during COVID with zinnias, dahlias, gladiolas and daylillies. The North Texas heat was too much in 2023, but I'm going to add veggies this year. 🙂

  • @Elysian330
    @Elysian330 Месяц назад +15

    I have actually found the opposite, I started in containers and did really well, but now I plant things directly in the ground in my allotment and it doesn’t do so well 😩 raised beds I have done and work well so I’m sticking with those this first full year 😊

    • @maryjane-vx4dd
      @maryjane-vx4dd Месяц назад +2

      I like in ground, but they don't call these hills the Rocky Mountains for nothing. My rocks seem to be very nutritious to my plants. Also, I've been improving the soil for over 30 years. No longer looks like a gravel parking lot at the end of the season. I'm breaking new ground this year by heavily seeding buck wheat to lawn to kill the grass and weed. I've done some research on this and it is supposed to work. Wish me luck on my experiment. Hopefully I'll have a good bit of new rich garden space to garden while the old rest

    • @mikesalive
      @mikesalive 10 дней назад +1

      Great to find what works for you. Have you spoken with other local gardeners about the soil condition in your area? Congrats on your progress 👍😃

    • @Elysian330
      @Elysian330 9 дней назад

      @ it may have been wrong time as it was late into the summer when I got started so we will see this year :)

    • @domoniquestewart85
      @domoniquestewart85 9 часов назад

      I started in pots too. Now I grow straight in the ground and started doing herbs and flowers seeds. They did not bad and I've brought back to life my hydrangea that was dying. Now I'm testing how to propagate lavender and stratifing seeds now too. It's a lot of learning which I like

  • @etiennelouw9244
    @etiennelouw9244 Месяц назад +6

    I started by digging out the tough Kikuyu grass and putting in cement slab barriers to form a veggie patch in August 2021, in my back yard at the end of our winter in Cape Town, South Africa. Since then I have expanded the veggie garden, now many patches. I am still expanding the different stuff I can grow as I learn. I started a food forest in my front yard as well, now it is a hot summer here, and lot of stuff is going to seed, but I catch them and they grow better than bought seeds. I also plant stuff in places I don't own, eco terrorist at your service.

  • @saucywench9122
    @saucywench9122 8 дней назад +3

    I don't think I've ever thought to myself "maybe I have too many seeds". I've got em all over the place. Fun fact: the FDA has decided that seeds should now have an annual expiration date and I work at a hardware store so all my seed is free every November when the hardware store throws them out. Anything Burpee has on offer is there almost, even cold crops. As for soil, occasionally I get a pot or two that becomes anaerobic and naturally I recycle the stinky stuff, I don't even normally have to add much to it for compost. Stuff grows so good in it.

  • @smb-zf9bd
    @smb-zf9bd 9 дней назад +3

    I've had a garden for 30 years and it's expanded from "marigolds around the pool" to over a hundred varieties of veggies and flowers. Trying to emulate YT gardeners (whose job is creating beautiful, bountiful areas) is big. My type gardening (mixing flowers and veggies) came about when my 3-year old granddaughter "helped" one year by dumping every seed packet into her pail. We planted and had garlic, cosmos tomatoes and basil side by side, pumpkin, okra, nasturtium, and leeks exploding. As crazy as it sounds, it was the most bountiful and problem free (disease, pests, varmints) I've ever had. We trapped little critters and carried them to the woods (for them to return - lol)
    Soil is by far the most important component. I can't get over folks who spend hundreds (thousands in our area) on elaborate seed starting equipment, mini green houses, costly raised beds, expensive "special" bags of soil, costly irrigation, mulch, etc Of course it still doesn't come close to the YT gardens. Great video, great advice. Good Luck....I'm giving your book to my daughter-in-law who wants a garden.

  • @Vivienwestphal
    @Vivienwestphal День назад

    Hello! I love your channel. However, I started my very first container garden with just tomatoes and chilli peppers . IN NORWAY 😂 I probably couldn't have picked harder crops if I tried😂 it was a great success because those were the crops I was excited about! I'm still going strong, 3 seasons later😊❤

  • @reddirtgreenthumb3553
    @reddirtgreenthumb3553 Месяц назад +2

    Awesome video Nicole! As a ‘Gardenary Certified’ Garden Consultant/Coach in Oklahoma I can vouch for all of this great advice -especially seeking help from a LOCAL Garden consultant in your area! This alone can save you thousands of dollars and lots of frustration.

  • @noctoi
    @noctoi Месяц назад +3

    Haha Number 1. I _kind of_ had a plan before I started my teeny garden, but basically I needed somewhere to plant my experiment-that-worked-too-well tomato seedlings (I gave away a couple dozen seedlings and STILL have about 20 left, don't underestimate how well tomatoes reproduce from being tossed in a pot of soil!!). I guess I broke that "don't start with tomatoes" rule too!!! 🤣
    So, I panicked, marched into Bunnings, spent a LOT more than I budgeted for a half dozen tomato plants, found your video, panicked again and ran BACK to bunnings to grab some leafy vegies and root vegies, panicked again...
    I'm still panicking because we had a heatwave just after I planted everything and now my poor seedlings are all baking in 38C heat! BUT!! I'm honestly impressed how well they are doing *considering* the heat! I'm definitely losing a few, but I have some backup seedlings to put in once the weather cools down again next week. I've also been in touch with the local 'friendly bug' (beneficial insect) suppliers to get hold of a box of lacewings or ladybirds if needed. Fingers crossed I won't, because the second I planted the beds I noticed ladybirds arriving in the yard, and we have hoverflies in the area already.
    Re the soil, Wish I'd thought of this earlier. The potting mix I got wasn't the cheapest, but it certainly wasn't "good". If I want to keep the plants in for the rest of summer, I'm going to have to get some compost/worm castings and probably some live worms to make it viable long term. It's got the strangest (and frankly slimiest) texture when wet. A couple dollars a bag more and I probably wouldn't be cringing every time I touch the soil. 😬
    Anyway, just wanted to say thank you!! You're right that there is way too much information online, but your videos took some of the panic away, and I love the idea of just... letting plants live the way they would 'in the wild'. Looking forward to the journey, and even if they all die in this heat I've enjoyed ladybirds for the first time in *decades* , I've learned a LOT about how plants grow, and discovered my thumbs aren't as black as I always assumed they are!
    Looking forward to your next video. 💜

  • @sharonwittmayer1221
    @sharonwittmayer1221 29 дней назад +1

    I love your book, “Leaves,Roots, & Fruits” 😊

  • @fredalackenspeil9371
    @fredalackenspeil9371 21 день назад +5

    I think tomatoes are super easy to grow!

    • @CreamSodaJunkie
      @CreamSodaJunkie 17 дней назад +1

      Exactly right! They pop up everywhere. And grow to maturity and bear fruit without any help.

  • @aquarius.thompson
    @aquarius.thompson Месяц назад +6

    Dang mistake #5 and #6 lol tomatoes, lettuce, watermelon and cucumbers were my first plants, in 5 gallon buckets on the deck and what helped me decide I wanted to do this, so added raised beds and in ground with no till method 😅

    • @noctoi
      @noctoi Месяц назад +2

      LOL same!! I started this journey because I watched a youtube short where some guy stuck sliced tomatoes in a pot of soil and grew dozens of seedlings... I thought "that can't be real! Tomatoes are so expensive!" and decided to replicate the experiment.
      To my delight and horror I now have a couple of hundred seedlings that are growing like crazy! I've given away dozens via the local community garden page, but now have four raised beds full of tomatoes, zucchini, squash, peas and lettuce as well as some herbs and flowers.
      Not sure what Nicole's done to me, but my notorious black thumb has turned to a bit of a green thumb. I'm a little overwhelmed because most of them are happy enough in my inadequately sized raised bed and crappy potting mix, that they're surviving the current 38C heat wave in southern Australia. I've never gardened before! I don't know what I'm doing! 🤦 🤣🤣🤣

  • @ReRe-hh5my
    @ReRe-hh5my Месяц назад

    Very informative! Thank you. It’s so inspiring to see your beautiful garden. I’d love to see more of the garden in your video. Thx

  • @Paheliyanzone
    @Paheliyanzone 10 дней назад

    Thanks For Share

  • @rachelbarnett6890
    @rachelbarnett6890 28 дней назад

    Grow leaves, roots, AND fruits when you start out! I'm so glad I did all 3 at the same time because I would've given up if I started with just leaves or roots. The only thing I can ever grow is squash and tomatoes. But someone else might have an easier time with the other 2 types.

  • @GrandmaSandy
    @GrandmaSandy Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing this wonderful inspirational video. Really enjoyed it. Lots of great tips for a beginner gardeners.

  • @KokoraLife
    @KokoraLife 28 дней назад

    This is so helpful!!

  • @juliehorney995
    @juliehorney995 Месяц назад +9

    Nice, however mulch only pulls N if mixed into the soil. Don't do that! Mulch also slows evaporation in the early months after planting, conserving water. ;)

    • @ajknaup3530
      @ajknaup3530 4 дня назад

      I think leaves & grass can go on or in the garden without issues, especially nitrogen. Wood chips & shredded wood is what sucks nitro the first year or 2, I think.

  • @GrandmaSandy
    @GrandmaSandy 29 дней назад

    Happy new year, my sweet friend

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  28 дней назад

      Happy New Year to you too!

  • @LayRae13
    @LayRae13 Месяц назад +5

    Thank you thank you thank youuuuu 🙏🏽 first season gardener & I am so excited ☺️☀️🌿

  • @melB-h7z
    @melB-h7z Месяц назад

    I’m glad I’ve seen this. I feel like I’m a murdered for my plants. Never too late. Thanks

  • @Azurta1221
    @Azurta1221 4 дня назад

    I would disagree with some aspects from this video. We started our first garden here in cold England back in 2020 which my husband called “the coldest Summer of all”. Not much of sunshine, too much rain. Still, we were determined. Our garden was tiny, about 6x6 meters. No room for raised beds. Everything was planted in grow bags. We even practiced vertical gardening hanging baskets with leafy stuff on the fence. The result? Tons of tomatoes and cucumbers, enough to have fresh produce till cold weather, and enough to share with our lovely neighbours. I planted 3 plants in each grow bag which was a crime 🤣 but they survived. Potatoes were planted in Ikea shopping bags 😂 and we had plenty of spuds for every Sunday roast. So dear gardeners, trust your guts, love your plants and enjoy your harvest! 💕🇬🇧

  • @TheGDJames
    @TheGDJames Месяц назад +1

    My tip for a beginner would be to start with the big seeds, and work down to the smaller. Carrots would be the last thing I'd try, rather than one of the first. Potatoes, beans, peas, onion sets, garlic, things that can easily germinate, and can pretty much look after themselves

  • @mikesalive
    @mikesalive 10 дней назад

    The true New Zealand gardener is a nocturnal creature that eats roots, shoots and leaves 😎😊

  • @marypalmer2088
    @marypalmer2088 Месяц назад +1

    Oh my gosh, all of the iron works and the round trellis are so beautiful! I am zone 5a in the western mountains of Maine where my growing season is so short so making a plan makes sense, thank you.

  • @GardenHappy
    @GardenHappy Месяц назад +4

    Oh my goodness I guess I am doing it all wrong. I started my garden with no plans at all and with one plant only. Hahaha 💙💚💛🧡💜 Liz

  • @myrahclemens3414
    @myrahclemens3414 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for sharing❤

  • @billybethel
    @billybethel Месяц назад +3

    apparently you've never used or understood how neem works. It's definitely a pesticide for my uses because it's an anti-feedant. When bugs eat leaves sprayed with neem or azadirachtin they can no longer feed. So it doesn't kill bugs that aren't pests, only the ones that eat the vegetation. besides that neem is safe to ingest for us humans and it's actually healthy for us. It's even found in some high end supplements...

  • @PrarthanaDurgam-u4m
    @PrarthanaDurgam-u4m Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for these tips...we have a school garden and we started with tomatoes and they didnt last unfortunately. What do you recommend for the plants to start with especially which young children can take care of.... thanks!

    • @jenniferwaller45
      @jenniferwaller45 Месяц назад +2

      Try radishes, beets, bush/pole beans, peas, herbs, and leafy greens! It's hard to mess those up, and they produce veggies fairly quickly. It's also helpful to ensure the varieties you select will work well in your growing zone and time of year when planted. For example, some greens grow best in cooler spring or fall weather, while others are adapted to summer temps.

    • @PrarthanaDurgam-u4m
      @PrarthanaDurgam-u4m Месяц назад +1

      @@jenniferwaller45 Thank you! We are in Houston - so we are warm climate - will look into what we can grow this month!

    • @jenniferchristopher6366
      @jenniferchristopher6366 29 дней назад

      I’m from Oklahoma… and with my Head Start kiddos we grew tomatoes, carrots, kale, lettuce, spinach, peppers , radishes, cantaloupe and not to forget the beautiful sunflowers! Love growing veggies with the children ❤️

  • @GardenHappy
    @GardenHappy Месяц назад +3

    As soon as you mentioned the negative effects of using synthetic fertilizer I subscribed!!! I wish more gardeners would mention this. 💙💚💛🧡💜 Liz

    • @noctoi
      @noctoi Месяц назад

      Same. Ditto for her talking about beneficial insects. I had no idea (perhaps a no-brainer, but it never occurred to me!) that 'pesticides' ALSO kill 'good' insects. Broke my heart when I realised I've probably murdered colonies of ladybirds and bees with the "eco-friendly pesticides' I've been using 😔

  • @kparker1615
    @kparker1615 29 дней назад

    At 1:23 - your $550 USD garden arch is rusting and paint lifting... I don't think this is going to last as long as you thought it would, once this starts it is near on impossible to stop... (may want to rethink the high price you are asking?)

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  28 дней назад +3

      The arches in my garden are actually the OGs. They're 10 years old and have been through 2 cross-country moves. We thought a lot about our price, and it reflects the craftsmanship that goes into these products. The employees who make them are paid a fair wage, and that price also covers shipping, which is quite pricey.

  • @sparklesparkle3995
    @sparklesparkle3995 Месяц назад +1

    Hi am a new subscriber from the Bahamas. Love your channel. I subscribe because I like your simple teaching and your warm personality. I Have been a gardener for more than ten years. I really do love nature and the reward of harvesting my own food. Keep up the good work!💚🌺

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks so much for subscribing!

  • @maddyreynolds7423
    @maddyreynolds7423 Месяц назад +1

    where did you get your trellis? and what all is in the soil you use?

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  Месяц назад +2

      The big arch trellis is the Nicole Arch from shop.gardenary.com. There's more info on soil here: www.gardenary.com/blog/what-type-of-garden-soil-is-best-for-raised-beds

  • @LoreleiHill-p6b
    @LoreleiHill-p6b 28 дней назад

    Great )

  • @kaycee-hb1mn
    @kaycee-hb1mn Месяц назад +4

    Why does the camera angle keep changing to where it looks like you are talking in a different direction?

    • @RychaardRyder
      @RychaardRyder Месяц назад

      It's considered "aesthetic/cinematic" by the young people these days, I'm sure she found some free camera working course that highly recommended that shot

  • @christinakostadinova7579
    @christinakostadinova7579 19 дней назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @paulinaree1164
    @paulinaree1164 26 дней назад +5

    jeez how many ads for your products do you shill in each video. its really offputting.

  • @irisrivera4138
    @irisrivera4138 Месяц назад +2

    I wish there was a mini version of this garden for balconies or for people that do not have space for a garden.

    • @kellynbtln8234
      @kellynbtln8234 Месяц назад +2

      Any sized pot or planter can be planted like this! Tomato or large plant in the middle, flowers herbs around edge. If have room around tomato put other plants. Trim when needed. Harvest and enjoy beautiful balcony! Like Nicole says you may need water more often.maybe keep on slightly shadier side of balcony. Large water dish underneath plant to help.

    • @irisrivera4138
      @irisrivera4138 Месяц назад +1

      @kellynbtln8234 Thank You for the tips.

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  Месяц назад +1

      I have two raised beds on wheels on my patio! Like Kelly says, you'd just do smaller-scale versions of how you'd plant in a larger bed.

    • @GardenHappy
      @GardenHappy Месяц назад +2

      Planting veggies in grow bags would work great for a balcony garden. I used to live in a condominium with a little balcony and loved it. I put fake grass on the floor and added some small containers and pots. You can still do it! 👍❤️😁

    • @GardenHappy
      @GardenHappy Месяц назад +1

      Great advice! 👍❤️😀

  • @lorraineelderhurst4199
    @lorraineelderhurst4199 Месяц назад +1

    Does that mean I will have to design a mesh roof over my garden to keep out rabbits and swamp hens that dig up everything. Swamp hens fly up and over highest wall

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  28 дней назад

      You could dry using garden mesh and hoops first. Even though it's a flimsy fabric, I've found it keeps larger pests out

  • @Scjg69
    @Scjg69 Месяц назад +1

    Hi
    Thank you so much for your great advice. How can I fix my Clay soil?
    Thanks

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  Месяц назад +2

      Garden in raised beds!

  • @LynneSmith-x6v
    @LynneSmith-x6v 13 дней назад

    Bit negative!? Gardening is meant to be enjoyable!

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  12 дней назад

      We're all about making it enjoyable! These are the mistakes I've seen people make that frustrate them so much they quit gardening. I want people to get their setup right so they can skip straight to the good part

  • @--Singularity--
    @--Singularity-- 25 дней назад

    Grow to eat, dont eat to grow.

  •  Месяц назад +1

    I've bought and read both her books and can honestly say it's mostly fluff. Not really useful info because details are woefully lacking. Lots of pretty pictures of Nicole (always well dressed and perfectly styled) and perfect gardens. Check out the books from your library first, is my recommendation.

  • @normandtremblay5498
    @normandtremblay5498 Месяц назад +12

    So your solution for beginner people who live in an apartmenthat and want to start the garden using pots is to not start a garden at all and take up knitting? 😅😅 title should say for land owners only😂😂

    • @Gardenary
      @Gardenary  Месяц назад +9

      Sorry I should’ve gone deeper into this-you can definitely do this on a balcony but get the biggest pot you can find-just don’t do it in small containers

    •  Месяц назад +4

      She's only interested in people for her garden consulting so apartment dwellers do not qualify. You can def do container gardening. Lots of online advice. Just not here.

    • @noctoi
      @noctoi Месяц назад +2

      My courtyard is miniscule. My biggest raised bed is about a 1M x 35cm x about 40cm deep. They're definitely growing enough to supplement our shopping, if not feed us fully for the season.

    • @maryjane-vx4dd
      @maryjane-vx4dd Месяц назад +5

      My recommendation to apartment dwellers, I would recommend speaking to management to see if they have small plots for tenants. This is available at many apartments and condos in my state. My 1st garden came from sprouted seeds from inside cheap grocery store tomatoes. I lived in a trailer and did nothing more than stuck the seeds in the ground along my patio. The seeds grew into ugly 8ft sprawling vines. The trailer park manager told me I needed to clean up my lot until I showed him what my mess was. He left with an arm full of tomatoes and I was allowed to keep my mess. I had some beautiful weeds coming up in my tomatoes. I forgot I had some potatoes sprout that I planted. The rest of the pretty "weeds" stayed in the ground untill fully matured. I was 17, working at Burger King and finishing high school. That 1st weed I putted made good garlic new potatoes. I figured if gardening was that easy I was in. A life time later I now teach gardening classes at the Senior center, churches and any individual who needs some help( all volunteer). I am now retired, building a food forest, still learning from utube channels(I've been doing this long enough, in drastically different zones, I know what advice will work, what won't and things I really want to work but shouldn't, I alter my environment, with a high tunnel,with low tunnels inside with 55 gallon barrels for passive solar). That 1st garden was in North Florida. I now garden in a North Utah Rocky Mountain valley and loving it, and still growing 100's of tomatoes with 100's of other things in my 1/4 Acers of row gardens.

    • @maryjane-vx4dd
      @maryjane-vx4dd Месяц назад +1

      ​@@noctoiAmen!

  • @Gigi2you
    @Gigi2you Месяц назад +1

    this person has absolutely no humility, most of their videos are praising their videos as being the best.

  • @dawnpettiglio6930
    @dawnpettiglio6930 Месяц назад +2

    I can't think of worse advice than don't mulch,.....

    • @noctoi
      @noctoi Месяц назад

      It definitely works well IF you plant the way she suggests. If you plant fully spaced and only one type of plant, yeah you'll need mulch in hotter climates.