Unlocking the Genius of Fruit Tree Guilds for Abundant Harvests

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2025

Комментарии • 92

  • @niallgardens
    @niallgardens  Год назад +30

    What do you think of my fruit tree guilds? Is it something you'd like to try? Or have you already got your own? 😃

    • @lorainemcguire5795
      @lorainemcguire5795 Год назад

      ❤ will definitely be planting some around my fruit trees it looks brilliant as well as useful 😊

    • @LorraineG123
      @LorraineG123 Год назад

      Niall absolutely fantastic

    • @juliehorney995
      @juliehorney995 Год назад

      Putting 3 in under 3 y.o. fruit trees today!

    • @ADAWC
      @ADAWC Год назад

      Awesome!!! Your garden is so pleasant and aesthetic! Your arrangements make gardening a joy!
      I plant colourful mix herbal medicine plants and vegetables in our garden and attract lots of birds and butterflies. I know this is right because our fruit guild and vegetable guilds attracted Italian lizards, mantis and lots of other beneficial insects in our tiny city garden in the recent years
      Thank you for sharing! Keep up the good work!👍

    • @ImeldaByrne-z4x
      @ImeldaByrne-z4x 8 месяцев назад

      I'd really like to have a go at this, it seems very easy to manage, but I have a question please, could I use blackcurrant, redcurrant and raspberries or does it have to be apple trees?

  • @norcimorci
    @norcimorci 9 месяцев назад +5

    You know what's awesome? Listening to useful gardening stuff in my favorite dialect🥳

  • @melissaschloneger9902
    @melissaschloneger9902 Год назад +5

    Her voice is like listening to music, mesmerizing. I love both of your accents. Wonderful video - thank you!

  • @YenniHope
    @YenniHope Год назад +12

    Lovely video but would hugely appreciate a list of the mentioned plants in writing, especially as the accents are not always so easy to understand for us non-native speakers.

    • @SeverusFelix
      @SeverusFelix 9 месяцев назад +2

      Or native speakers from America lol

  • @spudsandroses
    @spudsandroses Год назад +7

    It is looking stunning Niall, beautiful flower combinations 😍 The plants have really grown for you and it is unbelievable how guickly the beds have filled. Well done👏💚🌿

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      Thanks Maiju! I love having you on the channel. I think I have a bit more work to get them established like yours, but for the first few months I'm happy with where they're at 😃

  • @honoregale856
    @honoregale856 Год назад +4

    Another great beautiful video. Inspired by you and Mayu earlier this year I created a small flower guild around two apple trees on my allotment. Wishing to be frugal! I used oddments plants from around the plot so transplanted some borage and chive plants, some achillea cuttings from home, a stray sedum, a small perennial geranium, cosmos and nasturtiums. It is now a pretty little shady area where I sit with my coffee and enjoy the wildlife. Thank you both for introducing us to this idea.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Hi Honore! That's actually so cool that it inspired you to create your own guild! Wow! Even better that it's worked our for you - definitely sounds like a really special little spot to sit and enjoy. Do keep me updated with how you get on!

  • @jSheapullen
    @jSheapullen 14 часов назад

    I have a lemon tree in a wicking pot made from an unused shopvac...hubby made it...anyway. a banana pepper griw with it!

  • @LorraineG123
    @LorraineG123 Год назад +1

    Sorry Niall,i havent been on much,crazy busy this summer. You must have to pinch yourself walking through the beds. Your fruit tree guild is so beautiful,your vision from the day you went down west, has come true. Well done Niall. I can truly say you are a happy gardener for sure.

  • @annelundquist269
    @annelundquist269 26 дней назад

    Just wanted to say thank you for this inspiring, clear, and absolutely gorgeous video. Will try this in my yard!

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  11 дней назад

      Thanks for the lovely comment, I really appreciate it!

  • @stacyrosa6672
    @stacyrosa6672 6 месяцев назад +1

    One of the most lovely guilds I've ever seen! Very inspiring.

  • @hazelmanship7516
    @hazelmanship7516 Год назад +2

    Hi Niall and your dear friend,Just back from church, very hot here after our 2 hour storm last night,Sheffield was horrible, poor plants are really dashed,petals all over never mind,the lawn was very thirsty for rain.
    Your gilds look amazing,so beautifully done with all the gorgeous colours,the wild life will have a good picnic for sure, my plants are now starting to burst into colour, marigolds, nicotiana,tagettes,godetia,cosmos, ageratum, the sunflowers are really doing good too,buds are showing,my hanging baskets with my begonias I'd saved from last year looking stunning beautiful oranges among the mixed lobelia, thanks for sharing your knowledge, happy gardening everyone bye for now stay safe 😊🌻🌺🌸x

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Hi Hazel! How are you keeping? Such a shame to hear about the plant damage because of the storm. We've been having the same thing here - really heavy showers and it's also been surprisingly windy recently. You've got such a brilliant collection of different things - I love the sound of it ❤️ Have a great week!

    • @hazelmanship7516
      @hazelmanship7516 Год назад

      @@niallgardens hi Niall a good thanks hope you are too, had another storm 6pm last night only 40 mins but torrential rain again the grass is looking greener, my friends always love my garden,it reminds them of cottage gardens full of colour.its so hot today but getting very cloudy and breezy,forecast more rain, oh joy, but managed a short stroll this morning.tame care see you soon x

  • @TEPO--
    @TEPO-- Год назад +2

    Wonderful !
    Such lovely selections, concepts and color palettes that yes, do "make my heart sing".
    Delightful, thank you.
    Enjoy !

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Ah I'm so pleased that you enjoyed it!

  • @richardm4706
    @richardm4706 Год назад +2

    Comfrey grows very readily on my farm in Japan. Unchecked, it will spread all over. It is, however, a fantastic attractor for bees, and is also a good organic compost.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Thanks for sharing! Yeah they can certainly spread everywhere!

  • @jasminelouisefarrall
    @jasminelouisefarrall Год назад +2

    Cracking selections 🍃🌸🍃

  • @lesleymccauley3664
    @lesleymccauley3664 Год назад +3

    Impressive! Like you I don’t know why this concept isn’t more widely know. I certainly hadn’t heard of it before so thanks to Maiju and yourself for explaining so clearly how it works and illustrating it so beautifully. I’m now thinking about how I can make a space in my wee garden to try it for myself. (Love the matching chair and wheelbarrow 🤣) Take care 😀

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Thanks very much! I've been amazed at how well it's worked in such a short time, so it should give a good foundation to build on year after year as the fruit trees (hopefully!) mature!

  • @saracappello6805
    @saracappello6805 10 месяцев назад

    Finally a fruit tree guild with some thoughtful design for the human in it! I started one last year, but most guilds are a bit of a scraggly mess, more wild than domesticated. I want my fruit trees to be happy and healthy, but I want to enjoy it too, and I don't live in the country; my garden is visible to neighbors. I will take some tips from this video this year for sure! Much thanks!

  • @chrisdooney5374
    @chrisdooney5374 Год назад +2

    Wow it looks amazing so colourful my dream veg garden

  • @Florida882
    @Florida882 10 месяцев назад

    I have never seen fruit tree guilds in raised beds. I follow a few people who do permaculture. I have fruit trees with fruit bushes. Herbs. Lots of flowers. I love how yours looks best. It would work with a home association that we have here.

  • @MarkDMoore-rr1rv
    @MarkDMoore-rr1rv Год назад +2

    It would be great if you set up a playlist of this series for your fruit tree guilds. I want to see what you did in the order that you did it (so I can learn from you and make mine - a peach tree guild and a blueberry bush guild).😃

  • @oliverlondon5246
    @oliverlondon5246 Год назад +2

    Wonderful! I’ll try this out next year

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      It's so so worth doing! I'm delighted with mine!

  • @ulaw2711
    @ulaw2711 Год назад

    What a brilliant idea ❤
    My small fruit trees grow in big containers and they look very lonely, they just need friends 😊
    Why I didn't think about that earlier? I have all the plants you mentioned ❤. Very happy for finding your channel 😊. Greetings from Wales ❤

  • @jeffreyrossi5084
    @jeffreyrossi5084 Год назад +1

    That area must be becoming your favorite part of your yard, it's easy to see why you don]'t need any encouragement to go out there. It will be interesting to see the area in a few years when the trees start to develop some architecture and give the garden a whole new environment. I know I would go crazy trying to prune them to that exact right form.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Yeah the veg garden has become my favourite spot in the garden. Is it weird that I'm kinda looking forward to learning how to prune those apple trees properly? Ha!

  • @LearnPermaculture
    @LearnPermaculture 5 месяцев назад

    Great video Niall! :) Guilds of well chosen species add a lot of function and beauty at the same time. We use mint and daffodils here to deter nibbling by the many voles we have here.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks very much for the lovely comment - I really appreciate it. I’d been reading about the use of daffodils actually, so great to hear that you have success with it.

    • @LearnPermaculture
      @LearnPermaculture 5 месяцев назад

      @@niallgardens They used to be planted a lot in orchards here in SW England - many still have them, though they're usually spread out these days rather than just around the trees. Of course they look nice too! :)

  • @sharimuhamad5905
    @sharimuhamad5905 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge Niall ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @andrewwyatt-younger7115
    @andrewwyatt-younger7115 Год назад +1

    As ever, I enjoy learning from your experience. Thank you for this episode!

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      My pleasure! Really glad you get something from the episodes

  • @LucindaEm
    @LucindaEm Год назад +1

    Fantastic video Niall, thank you!

  • @McNeep
    @McNeep Год назад +1

    Excellent & informative video! Love it

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      Thanks so much Eilish! I'm planning on creating another later in the summer to show how the beds mature

  • @erschaffenswert
    @erschaffenswert 11 месяцев назад

    awesome records, thanks for sharing

  • @missglenellen
    @missglenellen Год назад

    How interesting (and so beautiful!), thank you so much !

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @TheEnglishladyskitchengarden
    @TheEnglishladyskitchengarden Год назад

    That's a lovely concept.

  • @annamariapievani-bw4lv
    @annamariapievani-bw4lv 8 месяцев назад

    Grazie.....ottimi consigli.adoro i fiori come la calendula e lavanda.

  • @nooie99
    @nooie99 Год назад +1

    Super colours and very interesting to learn. Will try myself
    Love that your boots and chair matched the flower colours. Was that deliberate or coincidence?

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      Thanks so much! I've truly found them to be a game-changer! The funny thing is that the chair and trainers were a complete coincidence.... I love when that happens!

    • @nooie99
      @nooie99 Год назад +1

      Naill I thought it might have been. But added to your wonderful informative video.

  • @williamcash8855
    @williamcash8855 Год назад

    I really like the concept of the fruit tree guild and what to create some of my own next year

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Thanks William! Glad it's inspired you - good luck with it!

  • @deirdredear
    @deirdredear Год назад

    So Wonderful!

  • @Oktopia
    @Oktopia Год назад

    Your talk about fruit tree guilds made me want to make my own. Sadly my expensive plum tree died from a combination of travel and drought. I have a small seedling from a plum stone and I will be planting that to see what I can make of it. Hopefully, in a few years, I'll have the fruit tree guild of my dreams.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Oh no! Sorry to hear that your plum tree died. That would be so lovely if you can get your baby plum tree to flourish and have it planted in a guild!

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      Oh no! Sorry to hear that your plum tree died. That would be so lovely if you can get your baby plum tree to flourish and have it planted in a guild!

    • @Oktopia
      @Oktopia Год назад

      @@niallgardens Fingers crossed :D

  • @thebeehutt
    @thebeehutt 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you ❤ lovely video

  • @marlenepisani9887
    @marlenepisani9887 9 месяцев назад

    This was such a great video, but I hve a question, I thought it was always important to not have anything around fruit trees, because they would compete for nutrients, mnily heard about grass, so does grass remove more nutrients?

  • @Lynnhopeacres
    @Lynnhopeacres Год назад

    Great video as usual!

  • @rashmiendenburg5115
    @rashmiendenburg5115 Год назад

    So happy for you, Niall that you got this to work for you. It is truly beautiful and I bet it works too. I will have to get going myself . Is rhubarb a dynamic accumulator too ?

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад

      Thanks Rashmi! I did a little research after getting your question about Rhubarb and I can't see it referred to as a dynamic accumulator I'm afraid

  • @Ann-bm5qg
    @Ann-bm5qg 7 месяцев назад +1

    It’s useful information. I think it would be easier to absorb if you covered one subject in each video.

  • @Familygarden88
    @Familygarden88 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing, I happened to have fruit tree guilds without knowing this concept 😊. I purely created it due to limited space and maximise productivity. With your wonderful suggestions, I can even improve it further. How about strawberries as a ground cover? Do you have to leave certain gap between the fruit tree and other plants? Many thanks 😊

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      Strawberries will definitely work nicely as a ground cover - funny, they're something I'm introducing in my asparagus beds for exactly that reason. In terms of the gaps, I'm probably the worst person to ask! Ha! I tend to cram things in at the start and then have to move things to make spaces later on!

    • @Familygarden88
      @Familygarden88 Год назад

      @@niallgardens I’ve planted some strawberries & pumpkins in my asparagus bed this summer, I’m yet to see the results !

  • @marymcandrew7667
    @marymcandrew7667 Год назад

    I really want to start doing this around our fruit trees! I have a question though, wouldnt we need to plant attractor flowers that will be in bloom early when the trees have their blooms? I dont have a green house so its difficult to get things started early. I have started calendula and cornflowers and they are not in flower yet. Any advice on early flowers that maybe are perennial?

  • @SeverusFelix
    @SeverusFelix 9 месяцев назад +2

    I'd had an idea for something like this with my fruit trees, but I didn't know enough to know what to research.
    I'm in a somewhat different climate, but I think this points me in the right direction.

  • @bjohnstone8331
    @bjohnstone8331 Год назад +1

    I recently started learning about fruit guilds, and this is by far the best video I've watched. Thanks for breaking it down and making it so easy to understand. Plus, yours are beautiful!!!

  • @cherylhowker1792
    @cherylhowker1792 Год назад

    Can you build these in large containers??? I have fruit trees that are dwarf rootstock and so so they are in large containers- like a size of a raised bed. But obviously there is a bottom to them.

    • @niallgardens
      @niallgardens  Год назад +1

      In my mind, I don't see why you couldn't take elements and add them into containers. Particularly choosing to include attractor plants and repellent plants. Or getting legume plants that will offer some nitrogen fixing ability providing you choose small varieties. Could be a fun project!

    • @cherylhowker1792
      @cherylhowker1792 Год назад

      @@niallgardens thanks. I have got some dwarf French bean in the cherry one as last year they grew soooo well but don’t seem to be this year. Maybe it needs a feed?
      And there is some flowers in all of them. But just bedding plants I’ve picked up from the shop.
      I trued to grow some that you have and they never germinated. I wonder if I just need to scatter the seed outside in the tubs and hope they come up?
      Sorry new to all this

  • @salward6709
    @salward6709 Год назад

    I planted similar fruit tree guilds about 2 years ago in North Yorkshire after reading about them from US websites with interest.
    I have many of the same plants as you have.
    The main issue I've found is that the plants are so small at the start of the season whe the fruit trees blossom. This year, in the warmth the fresh new growth was smothered in aphids which completely decimated the blossom. (I resisted the urge to spray!) There was a lag of a few weeks before the predators really got on top of the pests. The fruit trees look better now but alas there will be very few fruits. 😢
    I have 3 apple trees, 2 pear trees and a Victoria plum tree.
    I will be interested to hear what other people do to manage pests early in the season.

  • @marilynweber7957
    @marilynweber7957 10 месяцев назад +1

    We can't understand the 2nd thing in the supressors - tatutee? What are you saying - sorry but we are trying hard to copy what you two are doing and I just can't hear there THANK YOU!!

    • @tonyalewis9053
      @tonyalewis9053 9 месяцев назад

      He says Tagasaste, low growing evergreen. Tagetes is the genus of Marigolds. I would guess the former would be good at suppression.

  • @honestlee4532
    @honestlee4532 7 месяцев назад

    Another benefit of borage and calendula is the fact that they are edible flowers.

  • @ddubsr5886
    @ddubsr5886 9 месяцев назад

    5:57 dude what the heck; attracting pollinators? Those are house flys why would you want to attract those?

  • @oakley1471
    @oakley1471 Год назад

    🎶 *Promo sm*