Massive thank you to Readly who kindly sponsored this video! Enjoy 2 months of unlimited access for FREE: readly.me/huwrichards (by the way, any guesses on how many times I said self-sufficiency in this video?)🌿😀
I would be very hungry, very quickly if I only eat from MY garden. I didnt get much this year. I did try to grow a lot but most of it just didn't grow very well. I am still getting tomatoes and peppers, but not a lot of them, only a few. I am hoping to put my bucket garden into the car shed. And over winter my plants. I am praying next season I will have more food that I can preserve, because THEN I have plenty to share with other's. That is what I really want to be able to do, share loads of food with other's.
The biggest strides I've made towards "self sufficiency" have come from embracing "community sufficiency" instead. For example, I grew almost 40 pounds of onions this year, which my family wouldn't be able to eat fast enough before they start going bad, so I gave 5 pound bags of onions to several coworkers and friends. My parents likewise grew an abundance of squashes, so now I have several on my table waiting to make meals in the winter.
@@kevintheweedman I do that with some of them, but only so much room in the freezer. I would rather share then bend over backwards to keep them all for myself, which was the point. If we all share we all become food secure together, instead of trying to each achieve that individually.
My strategy is to grow those foods that are the most expensive in the shops. Soft fruits, green beans, broccoli, peppers, plum toms, cherry toms, etc etc.
Hello from Costa Rica. You might find it unusual that somebody follows you living in a tropical area, but believe me I learn sooo much from you! Thank you very much for sharing! 🙏🏼
I follow him too, and learn so much, and I'm from Northern BC in Canada. So, total opposite! Lol It's so cool how Huw is managing to bring so many people together like this😍
dude.. the camera angles, the scripting, the “challenge” approach and its longterm benefits.. you killed this video! your book has already taught me so much and im excited to see whats next!!!!
Haha, that's pretty much what I'm doing. Cook and eat whatever's available in the garden at that time. Simply because I'm kind of lazy when it comes to making plans and organize things. Gardening is my counterpoint to the stress the rest of my life tends to give me. It helps me to relax and for some reason too much planing and organizing would kind of destroy that. Keep up the wonderful work you do! Love from Germany, Andrea
Does not sound lazy. Not every one can be self sufficient, ie I would like doctors and nurses to be able to do their jobs and still be able to shop for the things they need, if they all leave the profession to be self sufficient what will happen if there is a gardening accident or you just get ill, many other jobs are like this, important to society. I do love gardening for stress release too.
It really does help when you make videos like this. It's so easy for people with different spaces and different accessibility to growing areas to feel over whelmed and not good enough and to simply give up because they aren't doing everything every one else is doing.
Well done. This year I did trial by fire. Tripled my garden size. Learned a lot this season. Glad I did it. Had lots of room to plant vegetables I had never eaten before. Kohlrabi is my new favorite. Also learned what vegetables I need to grow more of and less of. Short season zone 3. Excited for spring.
Hi Huw, this is a great point you're making. One suggestion: don't go down the road of clickbait bossy titles. Instead of "Do THIS...," how 'bout what you said at 1:50? "Embracing part-time self sufficiency." Love from UP of Michigan USA.
This was such an awesome video! Thank you for talking about self sufficiency in this way! I call this learning how to be sustainably self sustainable. Self sustainability is a great goal, but we have to be reasonable with our abilities and time available to do so. If we just go pedal to the metal, it's very possible to burn out. It's important to be respectful to ourselves while we learn how to do as much as we can to provide for our families.
Some very wise words here. Watching this in NZ and thinking what a long way you have come from your first videos. I have used lots of your ideas, just have to remember to translate the seasons lol. This video really struck a chord and I will watch it again. Great stuff, thanks for posting. Cymru am byth!
Huw, thanks for speaking freedom and permission into our gardening experiences. I appreciate your encouragement for the value of time and balancing that with gardening and the rest of life and for challenging us to think wisely about what we grow so that we can avoid burn-out. As always...your videos are like taking an educational course every week! Thanks, Huw!
i started watching your videos somewhere in 2011 to 2013 range. i've enjoyed watching your videos since day one and watching you grow and mature as time went on. please keep doing what you're doing. thanks.
I really enjoyed your take on this! I think it's what I needed to hear - I tend to fall into the trap of looking at self-sufficiency as a binary thing, all or nothing, when actually it doesn't have to be. Love your view on part-time self-sufficiency - so it's time to ease up on myself a bit!!
Thank you so mcuh Niall I really appreciate it! That is a very good point there about looking at it as a binary being. Hope you have a great rest of the weekend! :)
I've been watching you since you're a kid! You are a class act Huw... I'm so impressed. I'm not a full time youtuber, but we have many of the same influences.
ugh your garden is LUSH and gorgeous I am jealous to the max and gonna up my game this year!! Thanks for the inspiration! I literally am taking snapshots of your garden and putting it on my vision board hahaha!!
This is incredibly well thought out. Researching and collecting recipes so that you can enjoy what you grow rather than getting bored. I like that you aligned your topic (some don’t) with your sponsored product. Still don’t know what to do with eggplant but all the people I give it to appreciate it.
Hi Huw, I was looking into cold hardy citrus to grow where I live too. Unfortunately I am in zone 7 and haven't found any good candidates for my zone. The best ones I found would be pushing it in zone 8. Since you are in zone 8 you might have some luck with them outdoors in a sheltered spot like a south facing wall of a heated building, but better still in your polycrub if you have the room. The most promising ones I have read about are Arctic Frost Satsuma and Satsuma Orange Frost. They are two newish crosses that were developed in Texas and are meant to be cold hardy to zone 8. Both are relatively short trees, 8 to 12 feet tall in the ground, 6 feet in a container. Arctic Frost is the more cold hardy of the two. Other satsuma have similar if not quite the same cold hardiness. Owari Satsuma, Brown Select Satsuma, Satsuma Miho, and Satsuma Seto are varieties that can survive a frost. I am not sure if this is a different name for the citrus you plan to grow, but the one that I read of is the Ichang lemon, which I've read tastes a bit like a lemon and a grapefruit, and has a lot of juice but a lot of seeds. There is an Ichang lemon variety that is supposed to have fewer seeds than the standard called Grand Frost Lemon. Changsha Tangerines are supposed to be a more cold hardy parent to Arctic Forst and Orange frost, but very seedy with an insipid flavor, so not worth eating. Honey Changsha is still seedy but it is supposed to be a better tasting Changsha and more cold hardy than the satsumas. Sweet Frost Tangerine is meant to be a Changsha variety that tastes better and is nearly seedless, but I am not sure how cold hardy it is. Anyway, sorry about the wall of text. It's just something I had been looking into but haven't found something that will suit my climate. Maybe some of these will suit yours.
Thanks Huw , another thought provoking video, I don’t have enough growing space to be self sufficient, much as I would love to be, but the important thing to me is what I grow is organic and much healthier than shop bought stuff , so at least I am reducing what I buy .
I am so blessed by your wisdom AND practicality. This is exactly where we are, as a family getting back into gardening and becoming more self-sufficient. Thank you for this video! And thank you for sharing your insights and experience!
very interesting as usual Huw. The best thing I have done recently to aid production is to buy a dehydrator. I think it will do so much against food waste. Thanks for a great video.
Huw, your growth is incredible. I've been learning from you since you were a teenager. Keep it up! Dried Stevia is a lot stronger, but leaves an aftertaste. Borh the leaf and the stem are packed with sweetness. When you find a way to dry Stevia sans the bitter after taste, do show us. Thanks again!!
LOOKING FOR INSPIRATION TO START MY SELF-CONSUMPTION GARDEN, I FOUND THIS CHANNEL, I THINK IT HAS THE NECESSARY INFORMATION TO START, THANK YOU FOR PUTTING THE INFORMATION FOR FREE ACCESS
When I don't know what to make with what I've grown, I either stir fry with tofu, beans or meat in a wok, slow roast, or saute the veggies for a while on low temperature.. Hot peppers, cumin, garlic, and turmeric are often in the picture. It always comes out great! A step up for me would be having a recipe to make in advance so I will try Readly. I am enjoying your inspiring videos.
After unsuccessfully trying to grow lemons outdoors I purchased a miniature Meyer lemon and put it in a small poly tunnel. It worked a treat. I also have an orange tree in there I grew from seed. No fruit yet and it's approx 15 years old. I love coriander, I mince mine and pop it in ice cube trays for my winter curries 😍
You make great points. It takes time to establish a food supply at home & gain the knowledge & skills required. I’ve cut down my labour significantly by using the Kratky passive hydroponic method for some things such as strawberries, capsicum, tomatoes. I plan to overwinter these & make new plants via cuttings. Planting perrenials such as Perpetual spinach, kale, celery. Choosing everbearing, early cropping, prolific & longer storing varieties. Root vegetables with an abundance of edible leaves such as sweet potato, multiplier onions, radish, beetroot. These types of decisions have allowed me to grow more than I could achieve otherwise
I have grown stevia and it does well in zone 6, New York. It is very hard to grow from seed but we have a local grower that has them as 4" pot starts and I buy them like that. I think they are easier to propagate via rooted cuttings than seed.
Great phrases Huw, "Create a true value for the time we spend in the garden".How can we be more clever with our time"... This wisdom has enabled such clarity in my planting plans and choices. Thankyou so much ! ☺
Wow.. love this..your creativity of your garden landscape & the variety of plants on it, the ideas & the hardwork, were just soo amazing. God bless you.
Haha like your def. it’s what I gonna adopt for me. I never wanted to be self sufficient. It would make me unsocial. I want to join my colleagues for lunch and I want to support my local farmers and restaurants. But be self sufficient on weeknights veg could work.
I love gardening. And I love drying herbs for tea, freezing, fermenting and canning. This year I picked and canned wild pokeweed. Delicious, and I now cultivate this hardy weed out in the fields. Life in a garden is life harmony.
Huw thank you so much for your videos, they are indeed a valuable teaching tool. To your point, I too love fresh fruits and vegetables from the garden, and I do believe we should grow seasonally, but I also believe that a certain amount of preservation from the garden is important, as never knows what the future holds; drought, illness, job loss. Unless you have a massive garden, it is very difficult to feed a family solely off of fresh fruit and vegetables from your garden, this is when the preservation of last season’s crops are helpful. I live in Florida, and wile I technically have a yearlong growing season, there are vegetables that I cannot grow in the summer due to heat and humidity, and the winter due to the cooler temps. Growing what’s in season makes for a much better tasting vegetable or fruit, and takes some of the stress out of fighting Mother Nature to grow something that isn’t seasonal.
Hi Hugh I love your enthusiasm and the sight of your garden is a delight. I am no longer young and ambitious, my goal is to grow as much healthy seasonal food as I can and enjoy the process of growing, cooking and preserving and taking delight in the renewed sense of purpose in my life…
There is a fruit called Chaenomeles that is called "northern lemon" here in Estonia. It is sour as hell and we but it a tea just like a lemon. We also preserve it in a sugar syrup for winter.
@@maggiemaggie66 What I do is, cut it up (wheels), pour sugar on them and keep them in a fridge over night. Sugar "sucks out" the juice and Then I just put them in a jar and thats it. Sugar is actually really good preservative and it has not spoiled once.
Its so nice, I planted so many vegetables also on my rooftop, I bought them from vegetables store, then I'm taking the seed then tried to plant them in the plybag, pot or planter bag, bcs I dont have a big space to transplant them in the bigger pot bcs I live in the cental city, I wish I can live in the village, I do love a pure nature and I love this video so much❤
I grow all sorts of beans and in large patches. I cook tender beans throughout summer but there’s huge amount remaining which I leave on the vines until November. Then harvest all the beans on a sunny day and remove all the dry beans onto trays and leave them to dry further in my conservatory. Then put them in large bottles ready to use anytime in winter. Great colours and different sorts look fantastic in bottles in my kitchen. High protein and fibre and delicious superfood ready in plenty especially for vegetarians. White bean hummus is a great idea Hugh, thank you. I also freeze excess tomatoes in small bags and use them to fry and make stews as they can’t be eaten in salads of course. Much better than tin tomatoes to use in curries and stews.
I only started last year with a little bit of gardening as a hobby. I'm going very slowly because I don't wat to feel it like a job. For now I'm only growing a few aromatic herbs and tomatoes. I think I have a talent for this (it's called "green thumb" I believe) but I'm not skilled at all yet, I'm just doing what feels right, I make many mistakes and I learn from them. Watching some videos on youtube helped a lot.
Hi Huw. Thanks so much for another inspiring video! I'm here in CA, propagating a bunch of raspberries for next year. I'm setting the seeds for self-sufficiency by planting a bunch of fruit trees. And for the hungry gap, I'm trying to plant as many citrus trees as I can find space for. As for vegetables, I'm doing mostly greens because they're so reliable and I can seem to grow them even in the middle of the winter. Here in CA, it would appear we can start carrots as late as september. One of the issues we have here is that if we start too early the winter vegetables will get too hot.
I live in Ventura county, CA.. It has a transverse mountain range empties onto the coastal Plains, (considered by many to be the best soil on the planet) The geography produces so many types of micro climates, We are able to produce over 100 Ag commodities, year around. Now it even includes coffee. Privately owned farms, 85% are organic. It also has 33 privately owned cattle ranches and the largest fishing industry on the West Coast. I believe it is the most food secure location in the country and the world. My food concerns are minimal
I love all your ideas here! I grew way too many tomatoes this summer. I'm thinking of having a tea garden next summer. I'd never heard of Readly so this is exciting also. Thanks bunches!
" I grew way too many tomatoes this summer." Sorry but that comment is right up there with 'spare cash' or 'self-cleaning anything' or 'two weeks to flatten the curve'. Doesn't exist!! There's no such a thing as 'way too many tomatoes' Just saying. Cause I'm really jealous! And struggling to grow a SINGLE tomato! 😉😉 Wow, lucky you! Sigh, I'll keep trying though! Cheers from Australia!
Same here! No such thing as 'way too many tomatoes'! Give away, swap, barter or as Huw says: 'try new recipes' like home made passata, salsa, chilli jam, pasta sauce, dried tomatoes, roast cherry tomatoes in the oven then pack into jars with olive oil, etc, etc, etc.
Hello Huw, yes, you have just nailed the biggest problem for me: to balance the time invested on the one hand and the results on the other hands. Goal being self-sufficiency. Obviously enjoying the whole process in between enormously. Thank you very much for all the videos. Very very informative!
Great video - I always focus on trying to get the most crop on Onions, Potatoes, French Beans and Squash's - everything else is a bonus / experiment at the moment. Still working on the wife for a bigger freezer ;)
This is a beautiful philosophy. Last year was my first garden and I enjoyed cooking 🍳 everything I grew. I only made pickles, dried herbs and froze lemongrass! So encouraging to watch this video. Thank you for sharing 🤩
For lemony taste, I just learned researching what to plant in one neglected area of our garden, that Tagetes tenuifolia- a fairly common annual here grown in the gardens, especially by the older generation, is in fact edible and! The leaves of the yellow flower variety are said to taste like lemon zest, while the orange flower variety.. you guessed it ;) I have the seeds ready waiting for May and I will be sure to try for myself
I've been enjoying chimichuri - a parsley, cilantro, garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, and salt paste on everything lately. My goal for this season is to grow scads of parsley and cilantro so I can make as much of it as I can from home. Thank you for your great advice!
Absolutely brilliant info. Got me to thinking for certain about my own veg garden. You have put in to concise words some very real and good advice. Thank you!
Huw, you have been an inspiration and have helped me in my love for gardening. Through watching your videos, I’ve learnt a lot and got introduced to a lot of other gardeners. You are so selfless in your approach and make my time in the garden worthwhile. I will encourage others to watch Huw, a remarkable young man.
Thank you. I live in the desert and found out last year with our 100 degree temps and my plants dying that this year I am going to start much smaller and dedicate much of my indoor living space and only a small portion of my garden and only grow those veggies I truly love. Grateful to God I have 7 cats who love to chase away peasty predators!
Started doing this in the past few seasons. Went thru things and but back to what we really need/use, and what had the best labor-time-yield combination. Anything that doesn't produce, produces more than we need, or is too labor/time intensive has been cut or reduced. We still produce good quantities but in about half the space. Also have come up with specific methods and procedures to make everything as simple and quick as possible. Try to keep a good balance between fresh and preserved (I juice and cook alot) and do year round gardening as we can fit in.
I too have been looking for recipes to freeze produce. Quiches provide a good lunch when you want something warm. However flour, eggs, cheese and cream come from the shops. I've used several Chetna (RUclips) recipes this year, Sweetcorn and Aubergine Curries that taste really good also using tomatoes from the garden. However all those spices need buying too. My main problem are my supply of cucumbers, which are slowing down, but still coming at several every day. The cucumber soups were insipid and the cucumber curry was a little thin in flavour. Carrots or potatoes to assist are so powerful that any cucumber flavour is swamped. First year of growing them so haven't sorted methods of dealing with excess. Interesting video, thank you.
I did want to grow chickpeas for my homemade hummus but did realize it wasn't worth the effort. But I am trying my hand at beans and now I have the idea to see what kind of hummus I can make out of those instead. Thanks for the idea.
from april on, we'll gonna have thick beans fresh for months (planted in autumn '21) & jerusalem artichokes & cabbages - so there's almost no hunger gap, only in variety.
Thank you so much ! In a and of April there are aetable herbs start to grow. Dandelion and nettle. You can make wonderful spring salad out of it. Ful of prana, vital energy and vitamins. Wish you all health and prosperity!!
I'm going to experiment with growing red okra outside next year so I don't have to buy that (which I presume isn't local or seasonal!) - I've found a variety that is apparently okay to grow outdoors in the UK. Also yellow Siberian tomatoes are apparently super early and good to grow outdoors here. Just takes a bit of browsing seed catalogues!
This is epic. What fantastic information. I’ve just reorganised my growing and storing. I’m going to do more dehydrating and bottling and less freezing. I won’t bother with butternut squash, they take up too much room for little produce and potatoes, never again in the ground. I tend on the whole to grow stuff that’s expensive in the stores, like red/white currants and strawberries. Why grow things like potatoes that are cheap and good in the stores? I grew Stevia but it needs a cosy place over winter. I gave up on fussy things that are never good like a blue sausage plant which hated wet, cold winters.
I agree about the 'grow expensive' approach! I also factor the waste into that - for example, you buy a bunch of parsley, only need a bit, chuck it in the fridge and then forget about it till its too late Better to grow only a few plants and use what you need. Salad too - better to pick a few leaves as you need them. I also look for the taste factor - my home grown beets are WAY more delicious than some expensive organic ones I bought!
I've been building my gardening knowledge slowly since 2017, and one of the things I've enjoyed the most is discovering new plants that either aren't available or taste really bland in the grocery store, like ground cherries. They're so tasty, they self-seed year after year, and they produce an absolute abundance of fruit! A great fruit ☺️
I learned many things from your RUclips videos about gardening...Self-sufficiency is very important nowadays especially of what happening to our economy, cost of living is increasingly expensive. It helps us to save money.
Thanks for the video! Gives a lot of input at the end of the growing season and for planning the next. We are growing only what we like to cook and so we just found our basic crops. Every year I'm adding a bunch of new ones in a corner of the garden. Some are staying, some don't. Only the space is not growing. 😂
Your planning has really helped me prioritize instead of just planting my favorite foods; instead planning for the lean late winter and early summer plan.
Love this video, personally not trying to be self sufficient just enjoy growing to eat seasonally and make food gifts for others. This year I seem to have had a slug festival going on, learnt there are such things as root aphids, and the beautiful metallic blue beetles found may well be flea beetle. May have a bigger hungry gap than expected as we also had some badgers visit the Pumpkin patch. This year has definitely been one for gardening for wildlife. Have set up buckets and tubs for the nettle and comfry tea do they help reduce pest and disease, your produce looks amazingly clean do you have any idea if it is the no dig that is the main reason or something else you are doing?
I do try to grow "too much" but what I'm thinking of is (a) the local food bank and (b) in case the kids (in their late 30s now) need to come home in a emergency. As it is they raid us regularly, which is, like, our favorite thing. Also it really helps bind our friends to us to hand out eggs, tomatoes, and apple butter on a regular basis.
There are some good points here Huw. I think that there is room for growing and storing crops that might be very time intensive or even costly if those are the crops that you are most passionate about. But you do need to balance this with crops that are more efficient.
A huge factor in what my wife and I grow is taste and freshness, for instance before growing our own my wife hated the taste of carrots and would never buy them, but we now look forward to harvesting our own and why we grow most of what we grow.
Self sufficiency in not about just you (the person) and what you want, it's understand that you are part of a bigger system. When the person understands this, understands what grows well in there environment and how to utilize it in there life then the person can be eco system sufficient. Feel the word self sufficiency is to focus on the individual not the whole. Thank you very interesting topic.
Hi Hugh I was surprised you can’t grow lemons because we grow them outside here in Tasmania without problems. I even have a wonderful lime it’s my second time as I had one in the garden in our previous home, I had that growing near the garage wall, after five years it was nearly up to the top of the garage wall, both limes have been highly productive.
Average daily maximum temperatures in winter in Devonport, Tasmania where I live are about 12 or 13 degrees celsius. Tasmania just recorded its 2nd warmest winter on record. My 2 lemon trees produce more than I can use and I dont really prune them.
My challenge as a beginner is to produce a few big crops to freeze and dehydrate for the year. I'm choosing zucchini, spaghetti squash, and kale. Maybe tomatoes to can. We like kale and zucchini in a lot of things, especially soup.
Thank you Huw, you really were my inspiration for starting gardening again this year. I’ve made 5 raised planters, so far and intend on 7 more. By next Spring I’ll have 12 planters ready to go. I’ve put my Strawberries 🍓 to bed for the winter, planted my Onions 🧅 & Garlic 🧄, which are coming on great in just a few weeks, and next week I’m transplanting my Cauliflower plants & hoping for a wonderful surprise next Jan/Feb I still have some carrots to pull, and have some carrots I hope will grow up until Xmas. Also got my Sarpo Mira potatoes 🥔 which I can harvest in December. We’ve also had Lettuce 🥬 & Peas as well as Corn 🌽 on the Cob & French Beans so yes Thank You for the boost I needed xxx
@@zarahsgarden2097 To be honest the potatoes 🥔 are starting to look a little sorry for themselves and I think I may get another 4 weeks out of them before I have to cut the greens off ( they are looking sad 😞), but, I have my storage nets to hand so if I have to harvest early, I can hopefully keep them for Yuletide. I’m also in Wales 🏴 like Huw, just a different part xxx
Hey Huw, thanks for making this video definitly food for thought... no pun intended. Touching on what you said about finding alternative varieties or sub-varieties that better suit your growing climate. Do you have or can suggest suppliers within the UK that you recommend looking at for their selection of unusual varieties or standards of adapting these varieties to the British climates??
I’ve learned the hard way that trying to grow everything I enjoy results in getting zero satisfaction. Next year I’m going to grow herbs, tomatoes and onions and I’m looking forward to having a great harvest of all three!
Massive thank you to Readly who kindly sponsored this video! Enjoy 2 months of unlimited access for FREE: readly.me/huwrichards (by the way, any guesses on how many times I said self-sufficiency in this video?)🌿😀
I would be very hungry, very quickly if I only eat from MY garden. I didnt get much this year. I did try to grow a lot but most of it just didn't grow very well. I am still getting tomatoes and peppers, but not a lot of them, only a few. I am hoping to put my bucket garden into the car shed. And over winter my plants. I am praying next season I will have more food that I can preserve, because THEN I have plenty to share with other's. That is what I really want to be able to do, share loads of food with other's.
just a guess - 12?
Good video as usual, and thanks for introducing me to Readly. Very helpful indeed.
se ven ricos esos limones😊
super
The biggest strides I've made towards "self sufficiency" have come from embracing "community sufficiency" instead. For example, I grew almost 40 pounds of onions this year, which my family wouldn't be able to eat fast enough before they start going bad, so I gave 5 pound bags of onions to several coworkers and friends. My parents likewise grew an abundance of squashes, so now I have several on my table waiting to make meals in the winter.
Correct, "selfsufficiency" is dumb buzzword
this is very good idea,
This is the way
Freeze them. I have bags of them and my wife uses them.
@@kevintheweedman I do that with some of them, but only so much room in the freezer. I would rather share then bend over backwards to keep them all for myself, which was the point. If we all share we all become food secure together, instead of trying to each achieve that individually.
My strategy is to grow those foods that are the most expensive in the shops.
Soft fruits, green beans, broccoli, peppers, plum toms, cherry toms, etc etc.
Yep. Me too. On spinach now plus I plant every cutting from the scallions!
Hello from Costa Rica. You might find it unusual that somebody follows you living in a tropical area, but believe me I learn sooo much from you! Thank you very much for sharing! 🙏🏼
I follow him too, and learn so much, and I'm from Northern BC in Canada. So, total opposite! Lol It's so cool how Huw is managing to bring so many people together like this😍
Hiya from Jamaica :)
And from Perth, Western Australia. I learn so much from this lovely, humble man!
Hi from Aruba 🏝… learning quite a lot too… danki (tx)
dude.. the camera angles, the scripting, the “challenge” approach and its longterm benefits.. you killed this video! your book has already taught me so much and im excited to see whats next!!!!
not to mention how much your speech has improved, its clear youve been putting in work 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
Awh Thank you so much! Its nice to hear the work is appreciated :)
Haha, that's pretty much what I'm doing. Cook and eat whatever's available in the garden at that time. Simply because I'm kind of lazy when it comes to making plans and organize things. Gardening is my counterpoint to the stress the rest of my life tends to give me. It helps me to relax and for some reason too much planing and organizing would kind of destroy that. Keep up the wonderful work you do! Love from Germany, Andrea
Does not sound lazy. Not every one can be self sufficient, ie I would like doctors and nurses to be able to do their jobs and still be able to shop for the things they need, if they all leave the profession to be self sufficient what will happen if there is a gardening accident or you just get ill, many other jobs are like this, important to society. I do love gardening for stress release too.
"Simply in season" is a cookbook that has helped me a lot in this regard!
It really does help when you make videos like this. It's so easy for people with different spaces and different accessibility to growing areas to feel over whelmed and not good enough and to simply give up because they aren't doing everything every one else is doing.
Well done. This year I did trial by fire. Tripled my garden size. Learned a lot this season. Glad I did it. Had lots of room to plant vegetables I had never eaten before. Kohlrabi is my new favorite. Also learned what vegetables I need to grow more of and less of. Short season zone 3. Excited for spring.
Hi Huw, this is a great point you're making. One suggestion: don't go down the road of clickbait bossy titles. Instead of "Do THIS...," how 'bout what you said at 1:50? "Embracing part-time self sufficiency." Love from UP of Michigan USA.
I agree
I also agree. Especially with his calming voice and overall gentle persona, the bossy clickbait titles seem so.... misplaced, dissonant and unnatural.
Loving the consistent quality content Hew 👊🏽😊
Thank you so much, hope you're having a lovely day😊
@@HuwRichards great thanks out for a cheeky Nando’s and buying some new seeds and bulbs, pretty hard to top. 😀Have a good one Hew!
This was such an awesome video! Thank you for talking about self sufficiency in this way! I call this learning how to be sustainably self sustainable. Self sustainability is a great goal, but we have to be reasonable with our abilities and time available to do so. If we just go pedal to the metal, it's very possible to burn out. It's important to be respectful to ourselves while we learn how to do as much as we can to provide for our families.
Some very wise words here. Watching this in NZ and thinking what a long way you have come from your first videos. I have used lots of your ideas, just have to remember to translate the seasons lol. This video really struck a chord and I will watch it again. Great stuff, thanks for posting. Cymru am byth!
Huw, thanks for speaking freedom and permission into our gardening experiences. I appreciate your encouragement for the value of time and balancing that with gardening and the rest of life and for challenging us to think wisely about what we grow so that we can avoid burn-out. As always...your videos are like taking an educational course every week! Thanks, Huw!
i started watching your videos somewhere in 2011 to 2013 range. i've enjoyed watching your videos since day one and watching you grow and mature as time went on. please keep doing what you're doing. thanks.
I really enjoyed your take on this! I think it's what I needed to hear - I tend to fall into the trap of looking at self-sufficiency as a binary thing, all or nothing, when actually it doesn't have to be. Love your view on part-time self-sufficiency - so it's time to ease up on myself a bit!!
Thank you so mcuh Niall I really appreciate it! That is a very good point there about looking at it as a binary being. Hope you have a great rest of the weekend! :)
I've been watching you since you're a kid! You are a class act Huw... I'm so impressed. I'm not a full time youtuber, but we have many of the same influences.
3:49 beautiful garden shot
ugh your garden is LUSH and gorgeous I am jealous to the max and gonna up my game this year!! Thanks for the inspiration! I literally am taking snapshots of your garden and putting it on my vision board hahaha!!
This is incredibly well thought out. Researching and collecting recipes so that you can enjoy what you grow rather than getting bored. I like that you aligned your topic (some don’t) with your sponsored product. Still don’t know what to do with eggplant but all the people I give it to appreciate it.
Eggplant is really versatile. Look at Indian and Chinese recipes. Also, baba ghanoush and Mediterranean recipes. Even Italian recipes.
Hi Huw, I was looking into cold hardy citrus to grow where I live too. Unfortunately I am in zone 7 and haven't found any good candidates for my zone. The best ones I found would be pushing it in zone 8. Since you are in zone 8 you might have some luck with them outdoors in a sheltered spot like a south facing wall of a heated building, but better still in your polycrub if you have the room.
The most promising ones I have read about are Arctic Frost Satsuma and Satsuma Orange Frost. They are two newish crosses that were developed in Texas and are meant to be cold hardy to zone 8. Both are relatively short trees, 8 to 12 feet tall in the ground, 6 feet in a container. Arctic Frost is the more cold hardy of the two. Other satsuma have similar if not quite the same cold hardiness. Owari Satsuma, Brown Select Satsuma, Satsuma Miho, and Satsuma Seto are varieties that can survive a frost. I am not sure if this is a different name for the citrus you plan to grow, but the one that I read of is the Ichang lemon, which I've read tastes a bit like a lemon and a grapefruit, and has a lot of juice but a lot of seeds. There is an Ichang lemon variety that is supposed to have fewer seeds than the standard called Grand Frost Lemon.
Changsha Tangerines are supposed to be a more cold hardy parent to Arctic Forst and Orange frost, but very seedy with an insipid flavor, so not worth eating. Honey Changsha is still seedy but it is supposed to be a better tasting Changsha and more cold hardy than the satsumas. Sweet Frost Tangerine is meant to be a Changsha variety that tastes better and is nearly seedless, but I am not sure how cold hardy it is.
Anyway, sorry about the wall of text. It's just something I had been looking into but haven't found something that will suit my climate. Maybe some of these will suit yours.
I like the block gardening method.
Thanks Huw , another thought provoking video, I don’t have enough growing space to be self sufficient, much as I would love to be, but the important thing to me is what I grow is organic and much healthier than shop bought stuff , so at least I am reducing what I buy .
That's perfect. Even small spaces make a difference and provide lovely organic food. Good luck with your garden :)
I am so blessed by your wisdom AND practicality. This is exactly where we are, as a family getting back into gardening and becoming more self-sufficient. Thank you for this video! And thank you for sharing your insights and experience!
You are very welcome! Glad you enjoyed, it's lovely to hear. Good luck with your family garden :)
very interesting as usual Huw. The best thing I have done recently to aid production is to buy a dehydrator. I think it will do so much against food waste. Thanks for a great video.
Huw, your growth is incredible. I've been learning from you since you were a teenager. Keep it up!
Dried Stevia is a lot stronger, but leaves an aftertaste. Borh the leaf and the stem are packed with sweetness.
When you find a way to dry Stevia sans the bitter after taste, do show us.
Thanks again!!
LOOKING FOR INSPIRATION TO START MY SELF-CONSUMPTION GARDEN, I FOUND THIS CHANNEL, I THINK IT HAS THE NECESSARY INFORMATION TO START, THANK YOU FOR PUTTING THE INFORMATION FOR FREE ACCESS
When I don't know what to make with what I've grown, I either stir fry with tofu, beans or meat in a wok, slow roast, or saute the veggies for a while on low temperature.. Hot peppers, cumin, garlic, and turmeric are often in the picture. It always comes out great! A step up for me would be having a recipe to make in advance so I will try Readly. I am enjoying your inspiring videos.
Here, Here!
Gardening & cooking takes SO much time. Fortunately I enjoy it, but I do like doing other things 😁
After unsuccessfully trying to grow lemons outdoors I purchased a miniature Meyer lemon and put it in a small poly tunnel. It worked a treat. I also have an orange tree in there I grew from seed. No fruit yet and it's approx 15 years old.
I love coriander, I mince mine and pop it in ice cube trays for my winter curries 😍
You make great points. It takes time to establish a food supply at home & gain the knowledge & skills required. I’ve cut down my labour significantly by using the Kratky passive hydroponic method for some things such as strawberries, capsicum, tomatoes. I plan to overwinter these & make new plants via cuttings. Planting perrenials such as Perpetual spinach, kale, celery. Choosing everbearing, early cropping, prolific & longer storing varieties. Root vegetables with an abundance of edible leaves such as sweet potato, multiplier onions, radish, beetroot. These types of decisions have allowed me to grow more than I could achieve otherwise
I have grown stevia and it does well in zone 6, New York. It is very hard to grow from seed but we have a local grower that has them as 4" pot starts and I buy them like that. I think they are easier to propagate via rooted cuttings than seed.
Great phrases Huw, "Create a true value for the time we spend in the garden".How can we be more clever with our time"... This wisdom has enabled such clarity in my planting plans and choices. Thankyou so much ! ☺
Wow.. love this..your creativity of your garden landscape & the variety of plants on it, the ideas & the hardwork, were just soo amazing. God bless you.
Haha like your def. it’s what I gonna adopt for me. I never wanted to be self sufficient. It would make me unsocial. I want to join my colleagues for lunch and I want to support my local farmers and restaurants. But be self sufficient on weeknights veg could work.
I love gardening. And I love drying herbs for tea, freezing, fermenting and canning. This year I picked and canned wild pokeweed. Delicious, and I now cultivate this hardy weed out in the fields.
Life in a garden is life harmony.
Huw thank you so much for your videos, they are indeed a valuable teaching tool. To your point, I too love fresh fruits and vegetables from the garden, and I do believe we should grow seasonally, but I also believe that a certain amount of preservation from the garden is important, as never knows what the future holds; drought, illness, job loss. Unless you have a massive garden, it is very difficult to feed a family solely off of fresh fruit and vegetables from your garden, this is when the preservation of last season’s crops are helpful. I live in Florida, and wile I technically have a yearlong growing season, there are vegetables that I cannot grow in the summer due to heat and humidity, and the winter due to the cooler temps. Growing what’s in season makes for a much better tasting vegetable or fruit, and takes some of the stress out of fighting Mother Nature to grow something that isn’t seasonal.
Hi Hugh I love your enthusiasm and the sight of your garden is a delight. I am no longer young and ambitious, my goal is to grow as much healthy seasonal food as I can and enjoy the process of growing, cooking and preserving and taking delight in the renewed sense of purpose in my life…
There is a fruit called Chaenomeles that is called "northern lemon" here in Estonia. It is sour as hell and we but it a tea just like a lemon. We also preserve it in a sugar syrup for winter.
Wow, I thought about growing one of these. How do you preserve them? Cut up or whole? And pour the hot sugar syrup over them I suppose?
@@maggiemaggie66 What I do is, cut it up (wheels), pour sugar on them and keep them in a fridge over night. Sugar "sucks out" the juice and Then I just put them in a jar and thats it.
Sugar is actually really good preservative and it has not spoiled once.
We have it in the UK, flowering quince. I don't always bother to use the fruit as it is so hard to chop but I will try it in tea soon.
Its so nice, I planted so many vegetables also on my rooftop, I bought them from vegetables store, then I'm taking the seed then tried to plant them in the plybag, pot or planter bag, bcs I dont have a big space to transplant them in the bigger pot bcs I live in the cental city, I wish I can live in the village, I do love a pure nature and I love this video so much❤
Once again, just super inspiring! Thanks Huw!!! From Nova Scotia Canada
You are very welcome! Thanks for watching :)
I grow all sorts of beans and in large patches. I cook tender beans throughout summer but there’s huge amount remaining which I leave on the vines until November. Then harvest all the beans on a sunny day and remove all the dry beans onto trays and leave them to dry further in my conservatory. Then put them in large bottles ready to use anytime in winter. Great colours and different sorts look fantastic in bottles in my kitchen. High protein and fibre and delicious superfood ready in plenty especially for vegetarians. White bean hummus is a great idea Hugh, thank you.
I also freeze excess tomatoes in small bags and use them to fry and make stews as they can’t be eaten in salads of course. Much better than tin tomatoes to use in curries and stews.
I only started last year with a little bit of gardening as a hobby. I'm going very slowly because I don't wat to feel it like a job. For now I'm only growing a few aromatic herbs and tomatoes. I think I have a talent for this (it's called "green thumb" I believe) but I'm not skilled at all yet, I'm just doing what feels right, I make many mistakes and I learn from them. Watching some videos on youtube helped a lot.
Hi Huw. Thanks so much for another inspiring video! I'm here in CA, propagating a bunch of raspberries for next year. I'm setting the seeds for self-sufficiency by planting a bunch of fruit trees. And for the hungry gap, I'm trying to plant as many citrus trees as I can find space for.
As for vegetables, I'm doing mostly greens because they're so reliable and I can seem to grow them even in the middle of the winter. Here in CA, it would appear we can start carrots as late as september. One of the issues we have here is that if we start too early the winter vegetables will get too hot.
I live in Ventura county, CA..
It has a transverse mountain range empties onto the coastal Plains,
(considered by many to be the best soil on the planet)
The geography produces so many types of micro climates, We are able to produce over 100 Ag commodities, year around. Now it even includes coffee.
Privately owned farms, 85% are organic.
It also has 33 privately owned cattle ranches and the largest fishing industry on the West Coast.
I believe it is the most food secure location in the country and the world.
My food concerns are minimal
I love all your ideas here! I grew way too many tomatoes this summer. I'm thinking of having a tea garden next summer. I'd never heard of Readly so this is exciting also. Thanks bunches!
" I grew way too many tomatoes this summer." Sorry but that comment is right up there with 'spare cash' or 'self-cleaning anything' or 'two weeks to flatten the curve'. Doesn't exist!! There's no such a thing as 'way too many tomatoes' Just saying. Cause I'm really jealous! And struggling to grow a SINGLE tomato! 😉😉 Wow, lucky you! Sigh, I'll keep trying though! Cheers from Australia!
Same here! No such thing as 'way too many tomatoes'! Give away, swap, barter or as Huw says: 'try new recipes' like home made passata, salsa, chilli jam, pasta sauce, dried tomatoes, roast cherry tomatoes in the oven then pack into jars with olive oil, etc, etc, etc.
That's so important to discuss the economy of our operation.
Hello Huw, yes, you have just nailed the biggest problem for me: to balance the time invested on the one hand and the results on the other hands. Goal being self-sufficiency. Obviously enjoying the whole process in between enormously. Thank you very much for all the videos. Very very informative!
I love your garden layout.
Great video - I always focus on trying to get the most crop on Onions, Potatoes, French Beans and Squash's - everything else is a bonus / experiment at the moment. Still working on the wife for a bigger freezer ;)
This is a beautiful philosophy. Last year was my first garden and I enjoyed cooking 🍳 everything I grew. I only made pickles, dried herbs and froze lemongrass! So encouraging to watch this video. Thank you for sharing 🤩
I love experimenting in the garden and kitchen too.
The two best places to be in😉
For lemony taste, I just learned researching what to plant in one neglected area of our garden, that Tagetes tenuifolia- a fairly common annual here grown in the gardens, especially by the older generation, is in fact edible and! The leaves of the yellow flower variety are said to taste like lemon zest, while the orange flower variety.. you guessed it ;)
I have the seeds ready waiting for May and I will be sure to try for myself
I've been enjoying chimichuri - a parsley, cilantro, garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, and salt paste on everything lately. My goal for this season is to grow scads of parsley and cilantro so I can make as much of it as I can from home.
Thank you for your great advice!
Absolutely brilliant info. Got me to thinking for certain about my own veg garden. You have put in to concise words some very real and good advice. Thank you!
That's so kind of you thank you so much!!
Huw, you have been an inspiration and have helped me in my love for gardening. Through watching your videos, I’ve learnt a lot and got introduced to a lot of other gardeners.
You are so selfless in your approach and make my time in the garden worthwhile.
I will encourage others to watch Huw, a remarkable young man.
Another fantastic and real video.
Thanks Huw, you are an absolute star 🌟
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Hope you have a great weekend😊😊
Thank you. I live in the desert and found out last year with our 100 degree temps and my plants dying that this year I am going to start much smaller and dedicate much of my indoor living space and only a small portion of my garden and only grow those veggies I truly love. Grateful to God I have 7 cats who love to chase away peasty predators!
Started doing this in the past few seasons. Went thru things and but back to what we really need/use, and what had the best labor-time-yield combination. Anything that doesn't produce, produces more than we need, or is too labor/time intensive has been cut or reduced. We still produce good quantities but in about half the space. Also have come up with specific methods and procedures to make everything as simple and quick as possible. Try to keep a good balance between fresh and preserved (I juice and cook alot) and do year round gardening as we can fit in.
Amazing and natural. Mind blowing. Love it!
I too have been looking for recipes to freeze produce. Quiches provide a good lunch when you want something warm. However flour, eggs, cheese and cream come from the shops. I've used several Chetna (RUclips) recipes this year, Sweetcorn and Aubergine Curries that taste really good also using tomatoes from the garden. However all those spices need buying too. My main problem are my supply of cucumbers, which are slowing down, but still coming at several every day. The cucumber soups were insipid and the cucumber curry was a little thin in flavour. Carrots or potatoes to assist are so powerful that any cucumber flavour is swamped. First year of growing them so haven't sorted methods of dealing with excess.
Interesting video, thank you.
Definitely wisdom being spoken.
I love how you design your garden 😍 it is pleasant to look at. I would love to download the layout of it
Perfect timing we are planning our garden for next season. Great advice and awesome knowledge.
So glad its helpful! Good luck with your planning :)
Love watching your videos. Always a pleasure to watch. So informative without talking down to your audience. Inspiring!
Thank you so much I really appreciate that!
I did want to grow chickpeas for my homemade hummus but did realize it wasn't worth the effort. But I am trying my hand at beans and now I have the idea to see what kind of hummus I can make out of those instead. Thanks for the idea.
Sounds great, glad this was helpful! Good luck with your beans :)
Thank you, I needed this info. My small garden did not go well.
I really hopes it help your next season! :)
from april on, we'll gonna have thick beans fresh for months (planted in autumn '21) & jerusalem artichokes & cabbages - so there's almost no hunger gap, only in variety.
Thank you so much ! In a and of April there are aetable herbs start to grow. Dandelion and nettle. You can make wonderful spring salad out of it. Ful of prana, vital energy and vitamins. Wish you all health and prosperity!!
I can't wait to put some of these ideas into practice - such great ways of thinking and approaching the garden - thank you!
I'm going to experiment with growing red okra outside next year so I don't have to buy that (which I presume isn't local or seasonal!) - I've found a variety that is apparently okay to grow outdoors in the UK. Also yellow Siberian tomatoes are apparently super early and good to grow outdoors here. Just takes a bit of browsing seed catalogues!
This is epic. What fantastic information. I’ve just reorganised my growing and storing. I’m going to do more dehydrating and bottling and less freezing. I won’t bother with butternut squash, they take up too much room for little produce and potatoes, never again in the ground. I tend on the whole to grow stuff that’s expensive in the stores, like red/white currants and strawberries. Why grow things like potatoes that are cheap and good in the stores? I grew Stevia but it needs a cosy place over winter. I gave up on fussy things that are never good like a blue sausage plant which hated wet, cold winters.
I agree about the 'grow expensive' approach! I also factor the waste into that - for example, you buy a bunch of parsley, only need a bit, chuck it in the fridge and then forget about it till its too late Better to grow only a few plants and use what you need. Salad too - better to pick a few leaves as you need them. I also look for the taste factor - my home grown beets are WAY more delicious than some expensive organic ones I bought!
Great job
Thank you! :)
I love your work smarter not harder way of gardening.
I'm in Alaska, zone 3b. We have an extremely short growing season.
Yes exactly! Work smarter not harder and make the most of your time :)
@@HuwRichards I'm in zone 3b (Alaska) so it's more evident here with such a short growing season. Any advice for a zone 3b woman?
Great video! I'm glad you pointed out being more clever with your time. That's huge. Keep up the great content 😎
I've been building my gardening knowledge slowly since 2017, and one of the things I've enjoyed the most is discovering new plants that either aren't available or taste really bland in the grocery store, like ground cherries. They're so tasty, they self-seed year after year, and they produce an absolute abundance of fruit! A great fruit ☺️
I learned many things from your RUclips videos about gardening...Self-sufficiency is very important nowadays especially of what happening to our economy, cost of living is increasingly expensive. It helps us to save money.
Thanks for the video! Gives a lot of input at the end of the growing season and for planning the next.
We are growing only what we like to cook and so we just found our basic crops. Every year I'm adding a bunch of new ones in a corner of the garden. Some are staying, some don't.
Only the space is not growing. 😂
Thank you, Huw. Your video is timely for me. I've been killing myself trying to keep up with the work I've created for myself. You are wonderful.
You're Welcome glad it was useful :)
Your planning has really helped me prioritize instead of just planting my favorite foods; instead planning for the lean late winter and early summer plan.
You always have such sound advice and I appreciate you sharing your insights.
Love this video, personally not trying to be self sufficient just enjoy growing to eat seasonally and make food gifts for others. This year I seem to have had a slug festival going on, learnt there are such things as root aphids, and the beautiful metallic blue beetles found may well be flea beetle. May have a bigger hungry gap than expected as we also had some badgers visit the Pumpkin patch. This year has definitely been one for gardening for wildlife. Have set up buckets and tubs for the nettle and comfry tea do they help reduce pest and disease, your produce looks amazingly clean do you have any idea if it is the no dig that is the main reason or something else you are doing?
I do try to grow "too much" but what I'm thinking of is (a) the local food bank and (b) in case the kids (in their late 30s now) need to come home in a emergency. As it is they raid us regularly, which is, like, our favorite thing. Also it really helps bind our friends to us to hand out eggs, tomatoes, and apple butter on a regular basis.
Beautiful lay out!
Ty 4 sharing your tips.
Will apply them.
❤ from Casamance
There are some good points here Huw. I think that there is room for growing and storing crops that might be very time intensive or even costly if those are the crops that you are most passionate about. But you do need to balance this with crops that are more efficient.
A huge factor in what my wife and I grow is taste and freshness, for instance before growing our own my wife hated the taste of carrots and would never buy them, but we now look forward to harvesting our own and why we grow most of what we grow.
Agreed quality counts and you can taste the difference
Self sufficiency in not about just you (the person) and what you want, it's understand that you are part of a bigger system. When the person understands this, understands what grows well in there environment and how to utilize it in there life then the person can be eco system sufficient. Feel the word self sufficiency is to focus on the individual not the whole. Thank you very interesting topic.
Hi Hugh I was surprised you can’t grow lemons because we grow them outside here in Tasmania without problems. I even have a wonderful lime it’s my second time as I had one in the garden in our previous home, I had that growing near the garage wall, after five years it was nearly up to the top of the garage wall, both limes have been highly productive.
How cold does it get in winter where you live?
Average daily maximum temperatures in winter in Devonport, Tasmania where I live are about 12 or 13 degrees celsius. Tasmania just recorded its 2nd warmest winter on record. My 2 lemon trees produce more than I can use and I dont really prune them.
My challenge as a beginner is to produce a few big crops to freeze and dehydrate for the year. I'm choosing zucchini, spaghetti squash, and kale. Maybe tomatoes to can. We like kale and zucchini in a lot of things, especially soup.
Don’t forget a few yummy herbs. They are a big game changer! ☺️ Best wishes from Germany ❤️
Thank you Huw, you really were my inspiration for starting gardening again this year. I’ve made 5 raised planters, so far and intend on 7 more.
By next Spring I’ll have 12 planters ready to go.
I’ve put my Strawberries 🍓 to bed for the winter, planted my Onions 🧅 & Garlic 🧄, which are coming on great in just a few weeks, and next week I’m transplanting my Cauliflower plants & hoping for a wonderful surprise next Jan/Feb
I still have some carrots to pull, and have some carrots I hope will grow up until Xmas. Also got my Sarpo Mira potatoes 🥔 which I can harvest in December. We’ve also had Lettuce 🥬 & Peas as well as Corn 🌽 on the Cob & French Beans so yes
Thank You for the boost I needed xxx
Good for you! 👍 Wow you get to harvest potatoes in December? You must have a mild winter! Sounds nice lol
@@zarahsgarden2097
To be honest the potatoes 🥔 are starting to look a little sorry for themselves and I think I may get another 4 weeks out of them before I have to cut the greens off ( they are looking sad 😞), but, I have my storage nets to hand so if I have to harvest early, I can hopefully keep them for Yuletide.
I’m also in Wales 🏴 like Huw, just a different part xxx
Huw! Truly excellent video!
Love your wooden garden beds. I wish we live in the golden triangle for termites in Australia. Little buggers
Gracias por enseñarnos y por los subtitulos. Saludos desde California🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏😊
Thank you for your valuable advice 🙏
Huw.. how are you always so clean in your gardening clips?!?! Anytime I'm in the garden i seem to be head to toe in mud/compost/leaves!
Because for the majority of gardening I don't need to roll about in the mud🤣
Hey Huw, thanks for making this video definitly food for thought... no pun intended. Touching on what you said about finding alternative varieties or sub-varieties that better suit your growing climate. Do you have or can suggest suppliers within the UK that you recommend looking at for their selection of unusual varieties or standards of adapting these varieties to the British climates??
Hi Lewis, I'll put one together for you I think! It would be a great resource for gardeners 😊
@@HuwRichards Appreciate that Huw. That will be brill look forward to it.
I'm growing flying dragon citrus on zone 7a Virginia US. I will also be trying Yuzu lemon
I’ve learned the hard way that trying to grow everything I enjoy results in getting zero satisfaction. Next year I’m going to grow herbs, tomatoes and onions and I’m looking forward to having a great harvest of all three!
Thank you so much for sharing your expertise. You're helping to educate and improve the world and I appreciate your help.
That's a lovely thing to say! Thank you, glad it's appreciated :)
thanks Huw..this is amazing. just what i need it❤
I tried planting chickpeas. You're right about the effort vs yield.
Exactly!