Tomato Growing Secret an Old Farmer Made Me SWEAR Not To Tell

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • In this episode I am sharing with you a secret to growing indeterminate tomatoes that an 80 year old farmer made me swear not to tell anyone. So here I am telling you. Check out our new clothing line! http:www.freshpickedapparel.com

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @The.Master.Seamstress
    @The.Master.Seamstress 4 года назад +520

    When my father passed (Native American), we had him a sacred fire in his garden. The next year I tilled up all the ashes into the soil to spread them around. The center of the fire yielded that absolute biggest tomatoes I'd ever seen - and very prolific!! Best thing was I felt like my father was with me every time I went to work in the garden 💞

    • @ixchelskyfeather2513
      @ixchelskyfeather2513 4 года назад +18

      D Jones Beautiful story. Thank you for sharing 🙏🏻❤️

    • @sarikasabnis2369
      @sarikasabnis2369 4 года назад +20

      That's amazing. I have always said I'd want my family to spread my ashes in my own garden. I didn't know this was a Native American practice, so thank you for sharing. A beautiful sentiment

    • @abh6967
      @abh6967 4 года назад +9

      Man this is beautiful

    • @carlafrechette1589
      @carlafrechette1589 4 года назад +7

      What a lovely tradition!

    • @tomrobards7753
      @tomrobards7753 4 года назад +12

      Our ancestors are always with us

  • @purplethumb7887
    @purplethumb7887 2 года назад +46

    I'm never telling you a secret. 😂🤣 It's so important to teach people to grow their own food so they can feed their families and to save whatever money they can doing so, especially in this day and age. Thank you for your helpful and very informative videos. Always well done! Oh, and I completely agree that these types of secrets should not die with the people who kept them. 👏👍

  • @Gaspa79
    @Gaspa79 4 года назад +311

    If you don't wanna watch 13 minutes of footage:
    Apply a cup of woodash to the base of your tomato plants. Determinate tomatoes only (might hurt indeterminate). Works by being alkaline and a good source of potash.
    Confirmed by 2 different & independent universities too

    • @Mina-gm3pg
      @Mina-gm3pg 3 года назад +11

      He is science and information based which is why I enjoy watching his videos. Otherwise just read a gardeners horticultural manual. Very specialist and not easy for the amateur/home gardener.

    • @denisse37921
      @denisse37921 3 года назад +8

      I knew that but I didn’t know about the indeterminate part... thanks for sharing.

    • @will8154
      @will8154 3 года назад +1

      Can you reply to me so I can have your comment on me nonfictions 😁

    • @CG-mj8tk
      @CG-mj8tk 3 года назад +4

      Could I use ashes from woodburning stove? Ty

    • @Gaspa79
      @Gaspa79 3 года назад +1

      @@will8154 ash notification

  • @kimwhelan7941
    @kimwhelan7941 5 лет назад +78

    Interesting note on this video....I am 59 and have spent my life teaching science and gardening among others....when I was young, an old farmer also told me to always use wood ash to help grow tomatoes. I have faithfully done this for years until recently. One day, as a high school science teacher I had an epiphany, knowing that ash is extremely alkaline and also that tomatoes love acidity, I questioned this age old practice. Because I trusted my old farmer, I had always connected ash to acid, even though as a science teacher, I knew this was not true. I had to laugh at myself for making this mistake for all these years. Today, this video popped up on my computer and I feel a sense of relief that I was correct for using wood ash but not for the reason I have always thought! Thanks for the clarification!

    • @patriciareynolds2729
      @patriciareynolds2729 3 года назад

      most of my huge pink tomatoes have rotted we had so much rain in tenn. i use lime, fert 13-13-13-, & epsom salts. any help? it hurts to throw away so many sweet tasting tomatoes!

    • @mayseventy4466
      @mayseventy4466 Год назад

      @@patriciareynolds2729 hi 👋 from what I've learned and experience is heavy and constant rain causes crop to lose oxygen this they die. I used hydrogen peroxide and the plant perked up as it adds oxygen. When planting you want to be sure water can run off rather than hold in soil. Hope it helps ☺️🙏🇹🇹
      One more thing I mix all the fertilizers in to the soil at the same time I sow seedlings.

  • @DeeFromBrooklyn
    @DeeFromBrooklyn 4 года назад +95

    The old school is the best school. Bless that old farmer. Imagine what else he knew

    • @allupinya5938
      @allupinya5938 3 года назад +1

      He knows what you did last summer too.

    • @petepenn1
      @petepenn1 3 года назад

      OATS are a Great trans planter boost.

  • @smor944
    @smor944 4 года назад +446

    When an old person tells you a "secret " its because they want you to learn, grow, and pass on.

    • @chrisc9611
      @chrisc9611 4 года назад +17

      S Mor it makes it more attractive

    • @CaroleHaddon
      @CaroleHaddon 4 года назад

      I

    • @robertschmidt9296
      @robertschmidt9296 5 месяцев назад

      Telling it to a youngster that you don't know kinda confirms your point.

  • @rebeccagrimsley7260
    @rebeccagrimsley7260 4 года назад +7

    I am 58 and my father had the greenest thumb I have ever seen. And I have ALWAYS had a garden. My largest was 2 acres and I love listening to you. I have picked up many tricks from you.

  • @ES-mc3cc
    @ES-mc3cc 4 года назад +215

    Anything that increases the food production of a plant should be shared. We have a lot of people to feed on this planet!

    • @obviouslytwo4u
      @obviouslytwo4u 4 года назад +25

      The government would rather feed them animal products to keep them weak, sick and dumb.

    • @obviouslytwo4u
      @obviouslytwo4u 4 года назад +12

      @@oh_k8 finally someone who realises this because you know this is why most of us have a lot of diseases and autoimmune disorders.

    • @hopeking3588
      @hopeking3588 4 года назад

      Thats for sure! And calaforia is being burned so that's less gardens there

    • @phillippinter7518
      @phillippinter7518 3 года назад +5

      @@oh_k8 actually Vegans get around the same amount of protein as “omnivores”
      It’s only the animal protein that’s dangerous. Eat your beans ppl

    • @botanicalstig
      @botanicalstig 3 года назад +13

      @@phillippinter7518 Protein comes from plants. I'm not against eating meat, but it drives me nuts when people equate meat & protein. Cows eat grass, not deep fried bacon wrapped chicken.

  • @erica9388
    @erica9388 4 года назад +3

    Wood ashes are actually minerals.
    Wood ashes have been used for centuries for gardening in almost every culture.
    My tribe uses them and have for a very long time. My other side of the family being European, have also used them.
    I used to help my great grandmother and grandfather put the ashes on the whole garden before planting the seeds.
    Then we would flood the garden with creek water coming from the mountain.
    We also made a trip every year to acquire volcanic ashes and glacial till, all for the vitamin and mineral content.
    The vegetables and fruit were always very large and very sweet!
    It's amazing to me that not every person knows this information. I am a very big advocate for teaching this information in school.....along with home economics.
    All of the children of this nation should know how to grow their own food as well as process it in as many ways as we can teach!
    Thanks so much for your channel!
    It would be a great one for classes in school!
    My friend is a teacher and I showed her your channel.......needless to say, she is showing her students!!!!❤💛

  • @shawncope110
    @shawncope110 5 лет назад +59

    I have been adding ash to gardens and compost since i could walk. My grand parents and parents have all ways done this. It works amazing. Wood ash, compost, and worm casting is all we use

    • @tammywillis3352
      @tammywillis3352 3 года назад +3

      How are you using? In the hole at planting, or worked into the upper soil?

  • @gaganjain5191
    @gaganjain5191 5 лет назад +170

    Lol, if you have any Indian friends, they would have told you that a long time back, wood ash is alkaline and rich in calcium, but it, discourages pests and mites, good luck and happy gardening

    • @1N2themystic
      @1N2themystic 4 года назад +1

      It's a great source of potassium.

    • @acolley2891
      @acolley2891 4 года назад +2

      Asians know gardening that's for sure.

    • @jameswiggle
      @jameswiggle 4 года назад +8

      @@acolley2891 i think he meant indian as in native american?

    • @fayetanner2244
      @fayetanner2244 3 года назад

      I forgot about this. I learned about this from Rachel from Tenn. On utube. Thank you!!!😊🎵🙏

    • @AmyJ81
      @AmyJ81 3 года назад

      Can you just sprinkle it in the garden?

  • @sandrabeck8788
    @sandrabeck8788 3 года назад +16

    I used to have a “friend “ who was a good baker, and I asked her for a few recipes. She always left out some detail that med the recipe fail for me. I’m sure she did that to everyone who asked her for a recipe. I also gave her several intact recipes, I’m a good baker too, and that is ok. It’s nice the old farmer shared his secret which he really did not want to keep a secret!

    • @MsSagittariusA
      @MsSagittariusA 3 года назад +4

      Wow, just say she should just have said "I don't share recipes" instead of sharing botched recipes

    • @xaviercruz4763
      @xaviercruz4763 2 года назад

      Hi, do you still bake?

  • @paulmoss7940
    @paulmoss7940 4 года назад +71

    Haha. Anyone who has ever heated with wood has known this for centuries. Youngsters and city dwellers may not be privy. A lot of old ways are rooted in science and performance. We used to raise food as a necessity ,not an edible hobby. Take the time to learn from your elders about ways of old. Because before you know it,you will be that old person.

  • @mariebarnes416
    @mariebarnes416 3 года назад +7

    I loved your story about the old farmer. So precious. It's amazing how gardening has become so complicated and expensive. We need to listen to our elders and learn.

  • @CaroleHaddon
    @CaroleHaddon 4 года назад +12

    I believe that when an "old farmer" tells a "secret" to successfully grow food, the farmer WANTS you to think about why it would work. And an 80 year old farmer knows full well that any growing season could be his last at that age, and telling a passionate 15 year old boy a "secret" is passing on knowledge. He knew he'd tell the secret.

  • @nativewolf4651
    @nativewolf4651 5 лет назад +108

    Was anyone else surprised to find out he is only 25? His maturity and wealth of knowledge had me guessing mid 30’s . Keep up the great content it’s definitely helped me in my garden already ! 👍

    • @terrisouthernplainsprepper5927
      @terrisouthernplainsprepper5927 5 лет назад +2

      Yes, same here.

    • @katoucha007
      @katoucha007 5 лет назад +3

      Yes!!! Incredible!

    • @jeffd1919
      @jeffd1919 4 года назад +5

      Mi has become my favorite garden tipster.

    • @sitdown3983
      @sitdown3983 4 года назад +3

      @@jeffd1919 I agree with all the above from the comment about his age on.👍👏

    • @AMcDub0708
      @AMcDub0708 4 года назад +3

      He doesn’t look “older” but by his knowledge and maturity, like you said, I thought the same thing 🤯

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows 5 лет назад +31

    My Mother used to tell me that back in Italy they ALWAYS put wood ash on the crops.

  • @shanli2693
    @shanli2693 4 года назад +70

    It is only a secret to those who don't have wood stoves...

    • @davidbugg6990
      @davidbugg6990 4 года назад +5

      My mom grew up on a farm and was born in 1912. In the 1950s when I grew up we we always took the ashes from the wood stoves in the garden

  • @aveoxus1139
    @aveoxus1139 5 лет назад +33

    It does work, I've used potash biochar from the wood stove on tomato plants for years. Not a huge secret but it has huge results

  • @arthurleslie9669
    @arthurleslie9669 5 лет назад +221

    You’re covered ... That’s not a secret.
    The real secret is to make you think it’s a secret. Shh ... but don’t tell anybody,

  • @paulamalone5022
    @paulamalone5022 4 года назад +5

    Luke, I LOVE your videos and refer back to them often. You are smart and energetic! My father was one of those "old" people. Your description of the ol' guy sounds just like him. He grew tomatoes like you do without having the full scientific understanding that you do. He tied up the plants to the eve of the house. "Old" people like to "tease" kids...and asking them to "swear" doesn't mean to curse. It's to emphasize how special YOU are for him to share the information with you. And by asking you to "swear", he was hoping you would share the knowledge. And you did!

  • @benb7727
    @benb7727 5 лет назад +517

    Remind me to never tell you anything

  • @cindypalmer5985
    @cindypalmer5985 5 лет назад +4

    This past winter I put my fireplace ashes in my two 4x4 beds. I mixed it in this year with more bagged compost a little of Trifecta and 2 Tums by each indeterminate tomato. I think I have a pretty good harvest (also planted late) and the best tasting tomatoes yet! Thank you for all your knowledge, I'm definitely a spong🌞

  • @7munkee
    @7munkee 4 года назад +8

    I haven't planted tomatoes in years but I get a bushel plus each year. An old Beefsteak Heirloom grows wild because I cold composted years ago and the seeds got transferred to all my beds. Now when I see a volunteer tomatoes in the spring, I just let it go. The seeds make it through the winter and still thrive in the srping.

  • @dougmccoy1260
    @dougmccoy1260 4 года назад +10

    Wood ash also helps to reintroduce trace minerals. Heard this from a nutritional doctor talking about depleted soils.

  • @feralsage5696
    @feralsage5696 3 года назад +3

    Knowledge that's passed on by old-timers always carries a story with it, giving context to it. Successfully using this knowledge, or finding it doesn't work for us, still lets us have a conversation with history and gives us a sense of communion with growers over time. I'm amazed by the wisdom of people all over the world who have learned the peculiarities and preferences of what they grow for food. Thanks for sharing your experience. I imagine that, if the old guy is still alive and hears this, he would be blushing with pride.

  • @CatherinesGardenHomeLWS
    @CatherinesGardenHomeLWS 5 лет назад +11

    Thanks for sharing the secret! Your tomatoes look great. I hope you don't get in trouble for sharing the secret. My tomatoes grew well this year too!

  • @icecreamladydriver1606
    @icecreamladydriver1606 5 лет назад +48

    I heard that after mount st. helens blew, the crops grew like crazy for several years afterward.

    • @Foxkitten86
      @Foxkitten86 4 года назад +5

      We lived in southern Alberta when Mt.St.Helens blew. Yes, everything grew better afterwards, and we were shocked because all the news and just general information we had said the ash would kill everything.

    • @icecreamladydriver1606
      @icecreamladydriver1606 4 года назад +5

      @@Foxkitten86 It was bad in some ways and good in others.

    • @sassytherabbit
      @sassytherabbit 4 года назад +5

      My Grandma used to tell me about the amazing tomatoes my parents grew after Mt. St. Helen's erupted. My Dad could have cared less about the tomatoes, he was angry about the fence he painted white just before the eruption. I feel my Dad's pain but I would have loved to have been old enough to appreciate those tomatoes!

    • @Agui007
      @Agui007 2 месяца назад

      For a natural disaster comes a precious gift in return 😊

  • @Junzar56
    @Junzar56 5 лет назад +8

    I appreciate hearing the science why this “secret” works! Good job!

  • @pamelasierzan7838
    @pamelasierzan7838 5 лет назад +15

    Good to know, thanks. Suggestion on an upcoming video: how you take down/tear down your garden. What plants you pull up and which ones you leave in the ground, for next year. example artichoke, peppermint..... Thanks for all you do! You've taught me a lot.

    • @stevengonzalez27
      @stevengonzalez27 5 лет назад +1

      Pamela Sierzan
      Peppermint comes back, leave in. A lot of herbs come back. Asperagus once established keeps giving for about 10 years I have heard. Strawberries about 3 years. Need to be replanted. Berry bushes stay many years, many kinds. Rubarb lasts years and years. Sage will last too. Don't forget fruit trees. Some can be purchased as mini dwarfs, meaning their are grafted to a compatible rootstock not to exceed a small size. Great for small spaces. Then there are the columnar varieties of apple trees. Tall and streight up. Like a column, hence the name. Need to be ordered at a nursery.

    • @PaintingVideos
      @PaintingVideos 3 года назад

      I heard beans come back. Cut these off above ground. Broadbeans, brownbeans

  • @urbsoapco5489
    @urbsoapco5489 5 лет назад +11

    We use that method here in the UK........everyone at our allotment site uses the ash from any wood fire on their soil a month before they plant their tomatoes.

  • @christinekennedy3020
    @christinekennedy3020 2 года назад +1

    Funny timing for me on this same discovery about wood ash just this year and then seeing your video right after. I have been growing tomatoes for 25 years in my small raised bed and a few large grow bags. Never have I grown any as LOADED with tomatoes as the few volunteer plants that came up in my burn pit this year. The plants are pretty short compared to any others I've grown, but they are gorgeous! These few have by far out produced my other 8 giant plants in the raised bed. I know it has to be the ash because I had heard of the benefits it can bring to a garden. This "secret" is a definite keeper for my future gardening!

  • @trailrider2473
    @trailrider2473 5 лет назад +3

    I have known this since I was a little girl. My grandfather would burn his tree trimmings on his garden bed and then dig it in before he planted his garden every year. That was 40 years ago. After I started a garden, I always saved my wood stove ash to use in my garden.

  • @charlesroberts3910
    @charlesroberts3910 3 года назад

    I appreciate you sharing one thing I learned from
    An old gardener is because I worked at a paper mill from the age of 19 after several burns and infections at a cast iron pipe foundary

  • @fotara
    @fotara 5 лет назад +5

    Back in the day I remember the farmers use to burn all plant waste and spread it around their fields ...such as dried out tomato vines,tree and grape vine pruning waste..ect good disease control as well...nothing was wasted☺

  • @Nambosmom
    @Nambosmom 5 лет назад +31

    This is my first year ever doing a garden and I've been following your videos! I started with tomato seeds in my basement and I have to say, you said your tomatoes got 6-8 feet tall, and I used the Trifecta fertilizer...mine got to 8 feet and showed no signs of slowing down! I ended up with 25 tomato trees!! Lol.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 4 года назад +2

      What is the trifecta? Mine are only 5' tall. I have room to improve!

    • @brettlamar118
      @brettlamar118 4 года назад

      @@TheRainHarvester It is his fertilizer that he sells on his website. It was still sold out the last time I checked.

  • @splash5974
    @splash5974 4 года назад +5

    My grandfather took all his ashes from the woodstove, and always mixed it into his garden...i remember this over 30 years ago

  • @saluto1397
    @saluto1397 4 года назад +53

    In my part of world, wood ash is generally tossed over tomatoes and other plants. Helps to get rid of bugs. Bugs hate touching ash

    • @cristinamonteiro3817
      @cristinamonteiro3817 4 года назад +1

      I never knew. Does it hurt worms? Do you agree it's not great for indeterminate tomatoe plants?

  • @someguy43210
    @someguy43210 5 лет назад +6

    My secret to growing tomatoes is learning, persistence, and willing to experiment. I started gardening in South Florida which is arguably the worst place to grow tomatoes because of climate, root knot nematodes, pests, diseases and whiteflies carrying TYLCV.
    I don't think there is any one magic ingredient, you just do it a lot and you get good at it, and you have to adapt the methods to your situation. I tried many things and ended up with organic matters, compost and mulching which makes the biggest difference. Grow bags is also amazing. Having big durable trellis and planting at the right time of the year are vital. And then experiment which variety is more productive for your climate. Eventually I got pretty good. Now I live in the north and not trying to be arrogant, but it's a walk in the park gardening up here compared to Florida.

    • @michaeljohnson3976
      @michaeljohnson3976 5 лет назад

      Great advice.

    • @stevengonzalez27
      @stevengonzalez27 5 лет назад

      Max Johnson
      Plant chives, green onions and lots of marigolds too, as a lot of pests don't like them. Solves many problems.
      Safe all your clean eggshells and crush them really small with the potato mashing device. Sprinkle all around your tomato plants, and goodbye snails and slugs. It cuts their little bodies, so they go elsewhere.

  • @kcjilly2515
    @kcjilly2515 Год назад

    I’ve put it around my tomatoes twice this year. They have flowered more and put on more tomatoes than ever. I’d say it works! Watch your videos all the time. Thanks for everything

  • @GenetryHomestead
    @GenetryHomestead 5 лет назад +19

    Love your secret. Don't worry I won't tell him you told us. I am going to have to try this next spring.

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 5 лет назад +3

      Test your own soil first, wood ash is 'alkaline'.

    • @helenpatterson3858
      @helenpatterson3858 5 лет назад

      @@Ms.Byrd68
      Right, I live in the desert where I have to add oak leaf mold from the nearby mountains to get the soil acid enough to get the tomato to have flavor.

  • @raminsatyahadi4642
    @raminsatyahadi4642 4 года назад +4

    Wow you’re only 25. Such wisdom and wealth of information for such a young age...amazing!👍🙏

  • @jas57264
    @jas57264 5 лет назад +16

    Just so you know.....that Old Farmer's ghost will haunt you now. hehehe

  • @floriebrown2089
    @floriebrown2089 5 лет назад +5

    Hi there so delighted to hear you say that about ash, I keep shaking my head when I hear people saying do not put a lot of ash around your plants because of the alkaline and yet that is one of my major ingredient in my compost and I grow fantastic plants thanks for the video

    • @Monarky777
      @Monarky777 4 года назад

      I have been adding it to may garden for a few years now I have tested my soil. I have not seen my ph climb one tenth of a number still reads 7

  • @yotagerlie
    @yotagerlie 5 лет назад +13

    I used wood ash in mine this year and they won't stop growing lol. I only have 2 plants.. And I have toooo many lol its incredible.

  • @lidip8700
    @lidip8700 Год назад

    When planting a garden, my grandparents always put in 1 cup of sugar & 1 cup of Epsom salt in every hole before placing the tiny tomato plant in it. A week later, they added an organic fertilizer. Then every other week they alternated more Epsom salt or more fertilizer. Many times their plants were as tall as my grandpa, loaded with tomatoes.
    They fed many families.

  • @virginiareid5336
    @virginiareid5336 5 лет назад +7

    My parents grew up in South Dakota. They grew up with and went to school with the Sioux indians that lived near by. My Dad's mother did this all the time when she could not get the two ingredients for her fertilizer .

    • @stevengonzalez27
      @stevengonzalez27 5 лет назад +2

      Virginia Reid
      Ashes are a way better fertilizer anyway, provided they come from natural untreated woods. Contain minerals and trace minerals said trees pull up with their deep roots. Farmers used them yesteryear and collecting the house wifes leftover ashes from towns used to be an actual occupation before electricity came along.

  • @marydonaldson1483
    @marydonaldson1483 5 лет назад +7

    good share, also people can use volcanic ash which has 60 different minerals

  • @howabootthisone
    @howabootthisone 4 года назад +66

    That old farmer probably told everyone this ”secret”. He invited you to his farm after all

    • @joem2745
      @joem2745 3 года назад

      Either that or he will be cursed for life for swearing a promise and breaking it.

  • @DP-hy4vh
    @DP-hy4vh 2 года назад

    I've been putting wood ashes in my garden for years as well as vegetable scraps, egg shells, coffee grounds and bat guano from the barn every winter. In the spring, I simply rototill all of that into the dirt and get some of the best vegetables every year.

  • @sherrybacon8041
    @sherrybacon8041 5 лет назад +6

    Thankyou for the tip!! I think most of these people are joking Luke!! I love that you shared the story. Thanks

  • @carlalaster3641
    @carlalaster3641 3 года назад +2

    We old-timers may not know the science behind some of our "secrets", but we know what works & gladly pass it on. Where would we be if we didn't?

  • @donnabrown1518
    @donnabrown1518 5 лет назад +3

    I always put a sprinkling of kelp powder under every tomato plant and never have blossom end rot when I do. (But do when I don't)

  • @veronicastewart1112
    @veronicastewart1112 3 года назад +1

    We have a fire pit, and my husband has been putting wood ash in our garden for years. Yep, it works.

  • @HomeGrownVeg
    @HomeGrownVeg 3 года назад +3

    In the UK if someone cant keep a secret we have a saying: " I wouldn't show him a birds nest". Jim.

    • @Celtman101
      @Celtman101 3 года назад

      Home Grown Veg, I discovered your channel a few weeks ago and you have fast become one of my favourite channels to watch! You got me inspired to grow in pots this year. Thanks mate and keep up the great work.

    • @alicefrolio1929
      @alicefrolio1929 3 года назад

      I really like Jim he has taught me so much about gardening and I miss molly so much in your videos

  • @SaraMastros
    @SaraMastros Год назад

    I grew indeterminate tomatoes (a variety called "German Queen") where we dumped the fire pits last year, and that plant was VERY VERY productive and the tomatoes were huge (the biggest was almost as big as my head!!).

  • @joanapotvlogs
    @joanapotvlogs 5 лет назад +24

    Hey there I’m waiting for your video i wanna be a good gardener and planting plants 🤣
    Sorry for grammar 🤣 I’m from Philippines

    • @peterscherling9000
      @peterscherling9000 5 лет назад +2

      joanapot VLOGS hi I’m in makati and miss my gardens very much! It’s very important that your soil has fiber in it! Most people don’t know that! Leaves shredded or wood chips without the bark or best might be rice husk! Fiber retains the water and ph for hot days!

    • @jeannine9066
      @jeannine9066 5 лет назад

      Your grammar was perfect 👍🏻

  • @stephanievineyard2249
    @stephanievineyard2249 3 года назад

    My dad tills wood ash from his fireplace into the garden every year. He's not a big tomato guy, but his potatoes are amazing! He regularly gets 1-1.5 pound red potatoes.

  • @CustomGardenSolutions
    @CustomGardenSolutions 5 лет назад +26

    The old scarcity versus abundance approach to life.
    Obviously you're in the abundance camp or you wouldn't be sharing this great information on RUclips.
    People ask me why I share so much information on RUclips when I run a company that does exactly what I talk about on RUclips. The answer for me is that there is plenty of room people who want to learn and do it for themselves. There are other people who need our help or want us to do the whole job. Most of our customers are a mixture of the last two, they learn why we do the work.😎😎😎😎

  • @juliemcgugan1244
    @juliemcgugan1244 4 года назад +2

    I reckon he was probably told this, by somebody else! I know he said this was his own deduction, but in my experience, some of the older farming generation (was esp those who are secretive about their growing secrets,) like to pass knowledge off as their own! Fair enough l, he worked hard and he earned that title. I am blessed to be part of a growing community where everybody loves to freely share and doesn’t really take any credit for the what they pass down to others. The joy of seeing somebody benefitting from this info is just as much!

  • @777ttaylor
    @777ttaylor 5 лет назад +12

    Love this, Luke! Lifelong learner right here as well ✋

  • @jefftracy3771
    @jefftracy3771 4 года назад +2

    Wood ash is fantastic for cucumbers too. I mix it into my soil before I start my seeds and the plants get massive and I end up with way more cucumbers than I know what to do with.

  • @lincolnklee
    @lincolnklee 5 лет назад +3

    i have been finger pollinating my tomatoes this year and ALL blossoms are tomatoes, thank you. i do have those teeny white flies this year

    • @stevengonzalez27
      @stevengonzalez27 5 лет назад

      Karen Lincoln
      Try using an electric tooth brush to vibrate your plants. That too does it. Just a little while... and polination will have taken place. Do it often.

  • @jerrymatthews8968
    @jerrymatthews8968 3 года назад +1

    Thank you - good video, my dad used to use wood ashes.

  • @mizzlemoonglade4996
    @mizzlemoonglade4996 5 лет назад +3

    I wonder of he used it for indeterminate tomatoes? Something I did this year was put saved tea leaves under each tomato plant and in my cucumber bed. My tomato plants grew huge and my cucumbers produced more than they ever have. I may combine wood ash with tea leaves for the maters next year.

    • @fatou1975
      @fatou1975 5 лет назад

      Chelsey Hartmann hello there I planted tomatoes for the first time ever this summer in my garden and Out of 5 indeterminate plants, I had 4 successes, the one variety that didn’t succeed is called “ cœur de bœuf” in French it translates to “ beef heart” in English and it was attacked by mildew. I would like to know how you used tea leaves please for me to improve my results for next year. Thanks.

    • @mizzlemoonglade4996
      @mizzlemoonglade4996 5 лет назад

      @@fatou1975 I just saved used tea bags and buried one or two under each plant. They add nitrogen to the soil and supposedly raise the acidity a bit as well. They probably won't help with flower/fruit production though. But the plants should get some size to them.
      I've never had problems with mildew so can't help you there.

  • @sarahnovamusicatlanta
    @sarahnovamusicatlanta 3 года назад +1

    Best gardening channel so far

  • @tammyrusso4340
    @tammyrusso4340 5 лет назад +4

    I have always looked up to my neighbor she always has such a beautiful garden. So when I started gardening I would ask her for advice when I had issues. She would just say “oh I don’t know “. After a while I realized she was withholding information. I was so hurt that she deliberately didn’t want or care to see my garden flourish. It discouraged me to some degree I just don’t understand that mind set. I thought gardeners were a band of brother in a way ready to help each other out. Boy was I wrong.

    • @gointothedogs2
      @gointothedogs2 5 лет назад

      I agree we should be happy someone thinks were doing a good job and share all we can. Just because i know a lot of things foesnt mean they always work but if you help someone out they are growing and learning and when they find out the missing link so to speak, they have things they can share. It shouldnt be a competition but a race to see how much we can get ahead so we can help others. We all need all the info we can get and a lot of experience to test why these things work or dont. The longer i grpw the more simple i get with techniques and find its consistent watering and fertlizing and planting the right time for what kind of plant. Its tricky when you grow so many kinds of plants. Its consistency and application and learning how to grow healthy living spoil and let the beneficials do the work. Considering natures ways are so enlightening.

    • @jelatinosa
      @jelatinosa 5 лет назад

      I hate when people are like that. My sister does that and it drives me insane!

  • @MsFuzzywuzy
    @MsFuzzywuzy 3 года назад

    I read that trees collect Dioxins and some folks were concerned about wood ash having concentrated levels of Dioxins. I am so paranoid i sware, but i still use wood ash when needed. Thank you for the very informative video, for sure he would be okay knowing many people can benefit from this knowledge. Thank you God Bless

  • @metalmartha2571
    @metalmartha2571 5 лет назад +33

    It’s definitely not a secret lol
    My mom has been growing with ash with her tomatoes, beets & radishes for years..
    In fact I remember my grandma doing the same.
    She swore it kept the pests off root veggies and would keep her tomatoes alive longer. Yes old Timer mini series!!🤭👍🏻farmers always have the best tricks and tips.

  • @lauraservey495
    @lauraservey495 Год назад

    Wood ash works for all flowering plants. Don't expect them to get really tall, but they will be bountiful. I've never seen as many peppers on my pepper plants before this year and I put a 1/2 inch layer in the pot and mixed it into the layers of compost, sand and clay.

  • @monicagoldstein5413
    @monicagoldstein5413 4 года назад +3

    Thank you Luke! Does it work to bury a fish under a plant? I am gathering info to start my first container vegetable garden. I have no clue about even what to plant and when to sow the seeds, but I am going to plant spinach first! Yay! I am so excited and I love your energy. Thank you for sharing your wealth of information. God bless you for teaching us! 💕

  • @purplewildflower1031
    @purplewildflower1031 3 года назад

    I''m really surprised that you think that about older gardeners. All the older gardeners I've talked to have been very generous with sharing their gardening wisdom. Maybe try another way of asking? Just a couple of days ago I talked to a woman in our community garden who is probably in her mid-seventies. After sharing info, we're now working together on planting more pollinator plants in the garden. Older people are precious gems in our communities!

  • @wayneleamon3186
    @wayneleamon3186 5 лет назад +7

    My cousins tomato plants had blossom end rot. I told him to pour some buttermilk around the base. I was at his house a couple of weeks later and the blossom end rot was gone.

    • @ourfamily3570
      @ourfamily3570 5 лет назад

      Wayne Leamon
      Cool!!!

    • @JJ-he9ec
      @JJ-he9ec 5 лет назад

      I had the same issue and I dissolved 2 Tums antacids in 1cup if water poured around the tomato plant and it totally recovered. I found it was a lack of calcium causing this.

    • @kellyc2425
      @kellyc2425 5 лет назад

      Blossom end rot is VERY common in the first fruit set.
      Your buttermilk and Tums doesn't have plant available calcium until it breaks down by 2021.
      They recovered on their own.

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 5 лет назад

      Blossom end rot is caused by lack of calcium. We had the same problem with a patio tomato this year. Added calcium and the BER stopped.

  • @arachnonixon
    @arachnonixon 5 лет назад

    an oldtimer taught me 2 similiar tricks. ash your cigarettes in one can, & put your butts in another. adding the pure ash to soil greatly improves fruit growth/ production, & the separate tin w/ the butts add water to & it makes a wonderful all natural pesticide you can apply to the base of any plant & it kills/ wards off most any pest insect. ppl who hate smoking are gonna comment that this is bs or harmful to the plant, but I swear both work amazingly.

  • @psychorooks
    @psychorooks 5 лет назад +6

    The stories help the knowledge to stick. Well done, Sir. Keep it up..

  • @donna9384
    @donna9384 5 лет назад +1

    Around here it is common to use wood ash in the garden.
    But it's nice to know there is science to back it up.
    Hugs

  • @Buppysmediaworld
    @Buppysmediaworld 5 лет назад +3

    I learned this actually from my favorite Aussie farmer

  • @overratedprogrammer
    @overratedprogrammer 3 года назад

    My dad had some tomato plants he bought from a greenhouse that weren't doing so hot so I put wood ashes around them, watered, and now they're doing much better a week later

  • @daveh16
    @daveh16 5 лет назад +5

    Haha, my dad puts wood stove Ashe into the compost. People share lots of similar thoughts/ideas.

  • @meekookeem5944
    @meekookeem5944 4 года назад

    @MIgardener
    LATE COMMENT BUT
    One thing not mentioned is what makes up wood ash. It is the left over minerals from the plant material. Minerals do not evaporate they stay in solid form. I have used this method for over 30 years and my family for generations. Yes there are major minerals but the key is the trace minerals here... Great facts that it increases growth, yield, health and flavor. Try any humic/fulvic or other mineral blend if you cant get wood ash..

  • @growwhereyoureplantedhomes9166
    @growwhereyoureplantedhomes9166 5 лет назад +5

    My grandparents used wood Ash on their rows in their garden. You're loved more than you know.

  • @sandman_7326
    @sandman_7326 3 года назад

    I burn natural wood in my fire pit & with the ash & bits of burnt wood I add it to my tomatoes garden beds & the plants do great , It's a lot like when a forest fire happens & all the new growth comes back beautiful from the fire ash , Also I think the smell of burnt ash / bits helps keep the gritters out of the garden , This year going to try it with some of my bell peppers , Can even add some used coffee grounds & crushed egg shells.

  • @amittal2856
    @amittal2856 5 лет назад +114

    Am i the only one who wants to see his granpa in a video?!

    • @occamsrazor5376
      @occamsrazor5376 5 лет назад

      He says it's his grandpa and then later he says it is an old farmer and he doesn't know if he's still alive. GEEZ. (I WAS INCORRECT WITH THIS STATEMENT!)

    • @laudya1
      @laudya1 5 лет назад +6

      @@occamsrazor5376 Please go back to the beginning of the video and listen carefully, he did NOT say he got the information from his grandpa, he spoke of his grandpa.

    • @occamsrazor5376
      @occamsrazor5376 5 лет назад +3

      @@laudya1 Then I apologize for my misinterpretation! Thank you for clarifying. :-)

  • @reallife2849
    @reallife2849 4 года назад +1

    Bio char works really well treated with lime in a pile before being applied to your plowed ground . What I have discovered over the years is don’t use a softwood ash . Aromatic acidic wood doesn’t fit every plants need intact it can hurt . Maple and alder wood breaks down rapidly into plant food . Maple leaves instant food . No oak it’s to acid . Bio char lasts for years. Tips to Try

  • @nutequest
    @nutequest 5 лет назад +7

    You are amazing. I wish I knew what you know. In Australia we have bush fires, more often than I like. It’s abnormal for them to come where I live. Anyway, one did recently and took my fruit and nut trees with it. Can I use that ash? There is a lot of it.

  • @nyddubwarren
    @nyddubwarren 5 лет назад +2

    I applied wood ash to my garden for the first time this year, HOLY COW... It seems like everything did better in my garden from squash and peppers to my tomatoes. My soil has never been PH adjusted however, so who knows the layer across the whole garden could have helped a TON.

    • @sinisterfoxy
      @sinisterfoxy 3 года назад

      That’s great! Did you mix in the soil a few inches, or just sort of toss it on top?

  • @lauraparman9722
    @lauraparman9722 5 лет назад +3

    We have put wood ash in our garden for years

  • @southjerseysound7340
    @southjerseysound7340 4 года назад

    My dad used to add ashes to the garden every year. But not during planting. If you add it during the winter months the alkalinity is not a big problem.

  • @sluiceboyprospecting
    @sluiceboyprospecting 5 лет назад +5

    I cant understand who thumbs down these videos? Jerks.
    Great video buddy! Love them all!

  • @suicidebetties
    @suicidebetties Год назад

    My grandfather taught me about wood ash 30 some yrs ago. But a lot of the wood ash from his wood stove often went on the garden or in the driveway when it snowed...

  • @aimebouch
    @aimebouch 5 лет назад +3

    mix the wood ash with urine, tomatoes grow like crazy, water at the base of plant

  • @americanescu
    @americanescu 3 года назад

    The first 2 minutes should be the principal tenet of one's living next to "do onto others as you want them to do onto you"! I've lived my life that way (and I've been around a while). Experience is something you can't just acquire over a weekend so when someone is willing to, honestly and altruistically, share it with you, open up your ears and listen carefully. Your life will be better in every possible way!

  • @kellyc2425
    @kellyc2425 5 лет назад +9

    Thanks for sharing that Luke!
    That kind of information isn't, and shouldn't be a "secret". That's ridiculous. Looking forward to the mini series!!

  • @tracipapp8698
    @tracipapp8698 2 года назад

    I LOVE that story! It sounds like that old farmer was smarter than we might know! I think he wanted you to tell as many people as possible!

  • @cherrywilliams695
    @cherrywilliams695 4 года назад +45

    Fyi, he was pulling your leg about keeping it a secret.

    • @coletventer3044
      @coletventer3044 4 года назад +1

      all of the others complaing about his trustworthy also

    • @trappedinroom1014
      @trappedinroom1014 3 года назад

      But it does make an attractive click bait title! 🤔🤨😉

  • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
    @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 5 лет назад +2

    I think potash is good for roses too. Roses and tomatoes are pretty similar in what they need. If you think about it, they're both vines (climbing roses) and make blossoms! =D

  • @somethingboutgardening9532
    @somethingboutgardening9532 5 лет назад +3

    Are you still growing the 87 year old tomato verity?

  • @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629
    @vickijacksonmcgaugh6629 5 лет назад

    My grandmother used her woodash as mulch around everything for cutworms. She also buried her squash and pumpkin stems to stop borers....well the moth from laying the eggs. I do this now, burning all my paper trash, bills etc. I also add it to my compost pile.
    Great vlog!

  • @megasuperawesomestuf
    @megasuperawesomestuf 4 года назад +5

    My grandma taught me the same thing lol. She has been gardening her whole entire life, she even grew up on a farm.

  • @brianmorris364
    @brianmorris364 2 года назад

    Potash and biochar ae great for plants. Use in moderation, and use in fall so by spring everything is available and balanced. 👍