I learned this trick from a farmer in the Caribbean. It's cool to see the hidden roots! Compost Your Enemies T-shirts: www.aardvarktees.com/collections/vendors?q=The%20Survival%20Gardener Free Plants for Everyone: amzn.to/3d6QgjM
I have grown and have eaten my first home grown pineapple last year in the searing desert of Saudi Arabia. Now I have 5 pups and suckers from two plants and I lost two because of neglect. 3 of the pups already have fruits. Thanks to my son who came back home and suggested we plant them in the raised bed. The variety is Indian with thorny leaves but I don’t mind. I will wear gloves when I deal with them.I would love to try other varieties but the supermarket one arrives with the heart (top) gutted out and dry. Those come from the Philippines.thanks for the info David.
Del Monte have a plantation in the Philippines, maybe the pineapples were from them and that's why it have the crown pulled out. I've seen vids on what to do in such cases. Never tried them (I always find crowns) but people managed to propagate pink pineapples that way.
After trying for many years I finally listen to you and followed your instructions on growing avocado. Now I have several. One is 3' tall. I will follow your instructions for pineapples. One word of caution for others. Chickens love pineapples.
Dude....talk about cosmic timing. I bought 4 pineapple plants off Amazon and this is a huge help. Also, for what it's worth that coca tree you turned me on to is doing great. 5 new leaves all coming in at once. You are a wealth of information and I appreciate it. Ty.
Good morning, David. I just finished your book, "Free Plants for Everyone." Your encouragement has led me to become a "cutting collector." It never hurts to ask homeowners if you may safely take a cutting from their trees. The worst they can say is, "No, get out of here!" I discovered our local Community Garden, tended by some school groups under a City Administered program. I asked if I may have some suckers from the fig tree. Their reply? "Need any tools?" That's a true Community Garden. Ps- wore my "Compost Your Enemies" shirt and received many green thumbs up! 🍈🍋🥭🍑🌻🍑🍈🍋🥭
@@retheisen that's really cool, thank you. I think I'll try combining that technique with the one I already use, which is to strip the bottom leaves (like David shows in this video) and root the plant in a plastic cup full of water. Using a clear cup makes it easy to see the progress, and to see if the water needs to be changed.
Thank you kind Sir, I got a pineapple top from the trashbin of the local open air market here, put it in water and ITS ALIVE, but barely hanging on, so I'll be making time to plantin' it in a pot, who'd a thought when we buy a pineapple we just don't eat the fruit inside but if we're as smart as you we can grow our own pineapples and the peels here, once washed of dirt and debris they may have, we ferment them with jaggery and after a coupla weeks we have a refreshing Tepache, on ice or chill, its so refreshing and from what I've heard of fermented foods, good for your gut and body.
One thing about the tops is the fruit becomes progressively smaller each time you do it. You want to get the kikis from the base they will stay true to size . Love the video!
@@tanarehbein7768 hey Tana the tops will produce Pineapple and you might not notice the difference. But the next generation will be smaller. If you take those tops and grow them on the second generation they begin to get noticing smaller. However if you take the babies from the base or side of you plant. Called kikis they will be true to size as well as taste. I hope I was able to explain for you
@@tanarehbein7768 Try to keep them dry and in full sun as much as possible. Green houses tend to be damp but the soil needs to be as dry as possible. Try placing bricks or bigger dark colored rocks around it. They will absorb the heat from the sun and radiate back to the plant at night. Pineapples love warmth. Good luck
Think main problem with rooting in water is sometimes hard mineral deposits, Often not ph'd and alkaline. So I just mix a hydroponics solution like general hydroponics for mild veg, ph to 5.6. Change it out every 7 days. After 14 days have good roots. Then I place in soil.
In the book 365 Days of Walking the Red Road by Terri Jean there is something very interesting. On May 29, "Alabama" means "I am one who works the and, harvests food from it." Choctaw. It speaks strongly . We greatly enjoy watching your show, keep growing.
@@jannievaught4344 I read somewhere that the Alabama tribe used to do the farming for the Chahtas (Choctaw tribe), who were artisan builders, weavers, and potters.
I finally got a pineapple to root this winter. I still did it in water, but this was the first time I removed the old fruit and bottom leaves. I didn’t think about putting it in dirt right away but I could definitely see the root nubs once I took the leaves off.
Excellent stuff as always, David. 👍 I was always told to twist the top off rather than cut it. But no one ever said to peel off the lower leaves. It makes sense now why my attempts at growing pineapple took forever to sprout any roots.
honestly every time i tried rooting from water except for one time. they all failed. cores rotted out. but planting in the soil directly has given me more success. 100% success rate so far. i had one pineapple plant from the water rooting and now i have an extra 4 of them as i have recently gotten interested in planting the tops again using the just planting them method.
I actually did root mine in water - using a sort of hyacynth glass, but i did peel the leaves back. Its doing okay, but as you said "limping along" because it does not get a ton of light.
Hello David The Good thanks for the information on pineapple 🍍 I have been doing it wrong take all the bottom leaves off I'll get another one and start over again thanks
Hey, that's just like how I propagate climbing aloe. Neato! Any idea how closely related they are? Thanks for showing this. Bet you learned a ton of cool tricks from those tropical farmers.
I've done side-by-side experiments here in southwest Florida, and time after time, I still get much better production (bigger fruit) in less amount of time when suspending the tops in my mineral rich well water. I don't do container gardening. I also cover the fruit with paint strainer bags or cheese cloth to prevent the palm rats from munching on the fruit once it begins to ripen 🐝🐝🐝✌️
When suspending in water, the "trick" I have found to be most helpful is to place the top in full sun (don't root them indoors). I think the intensity of the sunlight plus the humidity really helps the plant go into to "oh crap I gotta grow now" mode.. whereas if you just plant them in soil where it's roots are cooler, they tend to take longer to acclimate
Oh, and Pink ornamental pineapples are FANTASTIC as a security boarder. The pink ornamental variety has huge thorns on them & they'll tear ya apart if you unsuspectingly bush up on them, LOL
I bought another pineapple the center of the crown died but I planted it anyway it rooted in quite well after 2 months it's putting on sucker's don't give up on the centerless crowns the sucker's usually fruit quicker anyway.
Yup! Have 6 of them! I pull the leaves wet the exposed area, wet it and put rooting hormone on it and stick in pot for several months to establish a root system then plant em’ out in garden. Have had 100% success. i have to say though. FL grown pineapples are the very sweetest and juicy pinepples I ever ate! So when aldais has em’ for 1.29. Yup I get one eat it, and then plant the tops. And don’t have to do anything after that. Also sprouted a coconut, tree is about 6’ now. And a mango seed from the neighbors AWESOME mango this spring/summer. It’s about hip high now. Waiting for spring. Going to attempt to graph it with mama so I get a clone! FINGERS CROSSED!! Isn’t gardening awesome!! 👍
Yes, it works well. I harvested one this year. It took a year to flower and in about 4-5mths I got the sweetest pineapple ever I I don't if it was because I made it into a minion tyre planter.
You're totally CRUSHIN' it Monique! Fresh, homegrown and sweet Pineapples, or as we say in spanish: Piñas para la Niña, translated: Pineapples for the Girl(You)! ;)
@@qualqui they were baby tissue culture starts so I’ll report back in a year and a half to 4 years 😂 😂 😂 I do like them regardless, the variegated ones are gorgeous
Pineapples are surprisingly hardy because I always viewed them as a tropical plant. However, mine survived the epic late freeze of 2021 that killed my peach tree. Granted I live in a subtropical 8b/9a. But I have a nice little pineapple patch grown exclusively from store bought pineapples that I simply stuck the tops into the ground instead of tossing them in the compost pile. I have never bothered peeling back the lower leaves because I always took the attitude that the little bit of pineapple still on it provides some food to help it along and whatever leaves it doesn't need provide protection anyway from potential foragers. I am just careful to build a little circle of rocks around it to discourage any predators from digging it up because for some reason they tend to attract animals that like the leaves and roots which can be a problem when the plants are young.
How can there be no God to create something so amazing? A prickly plant that grows a beautiful bloom that produces such delicious fruit to enjoy. Glory to our Creator!
Saw this video and immediately went out to my pineapple top that has languished for MONTHES in the soil with barely a couple leaves green in the center ring ... gently unearthed it and gingerly started stripping away dead leaves ... about 4 layers in I started finding roots about one inch long that were smothered by the layers of dead leaves ... stripped several more layers away added compost to the hole and replanted ... we'll see how it grows ... I am finally hopeful - I will report back with progress
You must be a mind reader! I just put some rooted tops in the ground (zone 6a). I figured I could treat them like a biennial and dig them up and bring them in when it gets too cool in the fall. Do you think that will work, or should I have just stuck with pots? Your shirt made my day, btw! 😂
Dave have heard of the Garden Expo for people with plant nurseries in Texas. It’s in SanAntonio in Aug. Thought you might like to know maybe what’s new.
I bought a pineapple plant in clearance and when I was putting it in my car the little baby pineapple broke off. I put it in water not knowing what to do. What should I do with it? It’s still on the stem in the water. Any help would be amazing thank you.
I did not know you could grow pineapples from the tops. All our pineapples are imported and therefore doused in pesticides. Will try this as soon as a find a permanant place to live.
I keep trying to start pineapple plants from tops. Not working out well for me so far 😢 I’ve tried sitting in fresh water and as well as soil. My tops keep dying off. The leaves just crinkle up and die off. I’ve tried so many pineapples. I just can’t seem to get it 🤷♂️ I let it sit out for a couple days to dry out and sometimes before I can even plant it, it’s struggling
I understand that you're late to the game when it comes to growing pineapples. I myself live here in fort Lauderdale. I have been growing pineapples now almost 40 years. Various varieties of pineapple. I have some mind blowing techniques better than the one you're showing. So if you would like to come check out my food Forest. Show the next time you're in fort Lauderdale you can give me a holler.
If you want to tell me secrets I would love to have them. What’s best for feeding them? I live in N C and getting ready to harvest my 1st from a grocery store 2 yrs ago. Very excited!
@@davidthegood I think they’re quite interesting in the garden as well. I have some pineapple tops from ones we ate and also some cultivars like the white and variegated pineapples.
@@moniquegebeline4350 Cool! My friend Eric has some of those fluorescent pink types... they're crazy! A lot of lovely cultivars around that you don't see often.
I learned this trick from a farmer in the Caribbean. It's cool to see the hidden roots!
Compost Your Enemies T-shirts: www.aardvarktees.com/collections/vendors?q=The%20Survival%20Gardener
Free Plants for Everyone: amzn.to/3d6QgjM
grow brugs!
angel trumpets!
I’m gonna compost my enemies and plant a pineapple on top. 😎
Hahahaha
lol....Baafeemus gonna git ya!
I have grown and have eaten my first home grown pineapple last year in the searing desert of Saudi Arabia. Now I have 5 pups and suckers from two plants and I lost two because of neglect. 3 of the pups already have fruits. Thanks to my son who came back home and suggested we plant them in the raised bed. The variety is Indian with thorny leaves but I don’t mind. I will wear gloves when I deal with them.I would love to try other varieties but the supermarket one arrives with the heart (top) gutted out and dry. Those come from the Philippines.thanks for the info David.
Sounds like Rockefeller of pineapples
Del Monte have a plantation in the Philippines, maybe the pineapples were from them and that's why it have the crown pulled out. I've seen vids on what to do in such cases. Never tried them (I always find crowns) but people managed to propagate pink pineapples that way.
After trying for many years I finally listen to you and followed your instructions on growing avocado. Now I have several. One is 3' tall. I will follow your instructions for pineapples. One word of caution for others. Chickens love pineapples.
GREAT WORK!
Thanks for the heads up on the chickens!
I pull the suckers off and plant them too. Home grown pineapple is awesome.
Going to get a few pineapples at my grocery and grow them!
My mom gave me one she started. Such a beautiful little plant. My dog ate it. I found half of one leaflet so I guess it was yummy, too.
That's hilarious.
@@davidthegood Lol... I thought you might appreciate it
David the great as I call him lol! Glad I found this channel!!!
Thank you, Ryan. Glad you're here.
Dude....talk about cosmic timing. I bought 4 pineapple plants off Amazon and this is a huge help. Also, for what it's worth that coca tree you turned me on to is doing great. 5 new leaves all coming in at once. You are a wealth of information and I appreciate it. Ty.
U can't beat the glorious sweetness of a fully ripened pineapple straight off the plant.. delectable!
Gonna try this after years of rotting the tops in water.
Good morning, David. I just finished your book, "Free Plants for Everyone." Your encouragement has led me to become a "cutting collector." It never hurts to ask homeowners if you may safely take a cutting from their trees. The worst they can say is, "No, get out of here!" I discovered our local Community Garden, tended by some school groups under a City Administered program. I asked if I may have some suckers from the fig tree. Their reply? "Need any tools?" That's a true Community Garden. Ps- wore my "Compost Your Enemies" shirt and received many green thumbs up!
🍈🍋🥭🍑🌻🍑🍈🍋🥭
YES!
Going to the kitchen right now to rescue thw pineapple top from the water!
If you want to go the extreme rooting route, that stripped top can be sliced into multiple cuttings that can root out 4, 6 or maybe even 8 new plants.
How do you do that? Split it lengthwise?
@@johnharvey5412 ruclips.net/video/Fn11kYDqHlg/видео.html good video here.
@@retheisen that's really cool, thank you. I think I'll try combining that technique with the one I already use, which is to strip the bottom leaves (like David shows in this video) and root the plant in a plastic cup full of water. Using a clear cup makes it easy to see the progress, and to see if the water needs to be changed.
I have rooted a lot of pineapples in my time with a lot of success.
I've been doing this WRONG!? The new results will be immeasurable, thanks David the Good! I'll grow MONSTER pineapples now😁
@@davidthegood the good guide to growing really good redwoodgrapefruit pineapples. Love it! Lol
They also like a acid soil. Mine do great under my oak trees. I never fertilize.
Thank you kind Sir, I got a pineapple top from the trashbin of the local open air market here, put it in water and ITS ALIVE, but barely hanging on, so I'll be making time to plantin' it in a pot, who'd a thought when we buy a pineapple we just don't eat the fruit inside but if we're as smart as you we can grow our own pineapples and the peels here, once washed of dirt and debris they may have, we ferment them with jaggery and after a coupla weeks we have a refreshing Tepache, on ice or chill, its so refreshing and from what I've heard of fermented foods, good for your gut and body.
One thing about the tops is the fruit becomes progressively smaller each time you do it. You want to get the kikis from the base they will stay true to size . Love the video!
Please explain.
@@tanarehbein7768 hey Tana the tops will produce Pineapple and you might not notice the difference. But the next generation will be smaller. If you take those tops and grow them on the second generation they begin to get noticing smaller. However if you take the babies from the base or side of you plant. Called kikis they will be true to size as well as taste. I hope I was able to explain for you
Good explanation, Eric.
@@ericmoulton9533 ahhh, thanks. Will they survive 40F in my winter greenhouse?
@@tanarehbein7768 Try to keep them dry and in full sun as much as possible. Green houses tend to be damp but the soil needs to be as dry as possible. Try placing bricks or bigger dark colored rocks around it. They will absorb the heat from the sun and radiate back to the plant at night. Pineapples love warmth. Good luck
I've been doing it a wrong - but I'm learning. Thanks!
That is a great attitude. I'm learning too.
I always rooted in dirt it takes a while to get going. Once they start growing they grow pretty good
David you're right on ! That's the trick and it always works!
Great video David! Thank you! 🙂🙏
Hey David, I got your book. It is fantastic. Thanks for the pineapple video.
Thank you
Doing some Pine Farming in Jamaica.Learned this trick from a guy in the jungle.
Love ow the ladies at the end twalk :D
Think main problem with rooting in water is sometimes hard mineral deposits,
Often not ph'd and alkaline.
So I just mix a hydroponics solution like general hydroponics for mild veg, ph to 5.6.
Change it out every 7 days.
After 14 days have good roots.
Then I place in soil.
In the book 365 Days of Walking the Red Road by Terri Jean there is something very interesting. On May 29, "Alabama" means "I am one who works the and, harvests food from it." Choctaw. It speaks strongly . We greatly enjoy watching your show, keep growing.
Oops Works the land. Silly typing finger
@@jannievaught4344 I read somewhere that the Alabama tribe used to do the farming for the Chahtas (Choctaw tribe), who were artisan builders, weavers, and potters.
Such incredible advice! Thank you so much for sharing. Trying this immediately😊
Rock on!
Love it David. Just completed one of your books!
Thank you!
I finally got a pineapple to root this winter. I still did it in water, but this was the first time I removed the old fruit and bottom leaves. I didn’t think about putting it in dirt right away but I could definitely see the root nubs once I took the leaves off.
Excellent stuff as always, David. 👍
I was always told to twist the top off rather than cut it. But no one ever said to peel off the lower leaves. It makes sense now why my attempts at growing pineapple took forever to sprout any roots.
honestly every time i tried rooting from water except for one time. they all failed. cores rotted out. but planting in the soil directly has given me more success. 100% success rate so far. i had one pineapple plant from the water rooting and now i have an extra 4 of them as i have recently gotten interested in planting the tops again using the just planting them method.
I actually did root mine in water - using a sort of hyacynth glass, but i did peel the leaves back. Its doing okay, but as you said "limping along" because it does not get a ton of light.
Hello David The Good thanks for the information on pineapple 🍍 I have been doing it wrong take all the bottom leaves off I'll get another one and start over again thanks
Good luck!
Hey, that's just like how I propagate climbing aloe. Neato! Any idea how closely related they are? Thanks for showing this. Bet you learned a ton of cool tricks from those tropical farmers.
I've only tried the rotten mess method, which never was any success😆 thank you, this makes total sense
I've done side-by-side experiments here in southwest Florida, and time after time, I still get much better production (bigger fruit) in less amount of time when suspending the tops in my mineral rich well water. I don't do container gardening. I also cover the fruit with paint strainer bags or cheese cloth to prevent the palm rats from munching on the fruit once it begins to ripen 🐝🐝🐝✌️
When suspending in water, the "trick" I have found to be most helpful is to place the top in full sun (don't root them indoors). I think the intensity of the sunlight plus the humidity really helps the plant go into to "oh crap I gotta grow now" mode.. whereas if you just plant them in soil where it's roots are cooler, they tend to take longer to acclimate
Oh, and Pink ornamental pineapples are FANTASTIC as a security boarder. The pink ornamental variety has huge thorns on them & they'll tear ya apart if you unsuspectingly bush up on them, LOL
Rule of thumb I follow is take off all leaves so that only ones left are vertical in orientation.
That works.
hahaaa who were those ladies at the end!? lol. As usual love your vids man thank you!
My sisters.
Clever skit at the end. Keep up the excellent work, good sir!
Thank you, Ben.
Thanks for explaining so well. U have a new subscriber.
Welcome, Paula! Thank you.
I bought another pineapple the center of the crown died but I planted it anyway it rooted in quite well after 2 months it's putting on sucker's don't give up on the centerless crowns the sucker's usually fruit quicker anyway.
Thanks for the great demonstration!
I go them all the time
Expose the root nubs, cut the plant in quarters. Plant the four pieces for four new plants. A pup will grow out from each quartered piece you planted.
It does work!
I pull out many leaves and left with a tiny bulb. Would that take well to quartering? We've only planted full crowns so far.
Yup! Have 6 of them! I pull the leaves wet the exposed area, wet it and put rooting hormone on it and stick in pot for several months to establish a root system then plant em’ out in garden. Have had 100% success. i have to say though. FL grown pineapples are the very sweetest and juicy pinepples I ever ate! So when aldais has em’ for 1.29. Yup I get one eat it, and then plant the tops. And don’t have to do anything after that. Also sprouted a coconut, tree is about 6’ now. And a mango seed from the neighbors AWESOME mango this spring/summer. It’s about hip high now. Waiting for spring. Going to attempt to graph it with mama so I get a clone! FINGERS CROSSED!! Isn’t gardening awesome!! 👍
Great info thanks
Elizabeth in far north California: This was great; now I'll check out my pineapple that's been potted at least a year.
I have pineapples crowns about to plant them
We plant our pineapples in old tyres. So far so good.
I bet they like that.
Yes, it works well. I harvested one this year. It took a year to flower and in about 4-5mths I got the sweetest pineapple ever I I don't if it was because I made it into a minion tyre planter.
Thanks!! So good to know!!
Oh my gosh. Good info ty.
thanks for the information my friend
Thanks, Ann.
Spot on!
That's awesome David! I just threw a stalk in my compost. Maybe I can pull it out and plant it
DO IT
@@davidthegood I did it!!! I pulled it out of the Compost pile , pulled off the bottom leaves and was super surprised to find lots of roots in there!!
Yep I’ve got a few out there
You're totally CRUSHIN' it Monique! Fresh, homegrown and sweet Pineapples, or as we say in spanish: Piñas para la Niña, translated: Pineapples for the Girl(You)! ;)
@@qualqui they were baby tissue culture starts so I’ll report back in a year and a half to 4 years 😂 😂 😂
I do like them regardless, the variegated ones are gorgeous
Pineapples are surprisingly hardy because I always viewed them as a tropical plant. However, mine survived the epic late freeze of 2021 that killed my peach tree. Granted I live in a subtropical 8b/9a. But I have a nice little pineapple patch grown exclusively from store bought pineapples that I simply stuck the tops into the ground instead of tossing them in the compost pile. I have never bothered peeling back the lower leaves because I always took the attitude that the little bit of pineapple still on it provides some food to help it along and whatever leaves it doesn't need provide protection anyway from potential foragers. I am just careful to build a little circle of rocks around it to discourage any predators from digging it up because for some reason they tend to attract animals that like the leaves and roots which can be a problem when the plants are young.
Good work. I am always surprised by how hardy some plants can be.
Got mine growing from way last year . Hoping soon
How can there be no God to create something so amazing? A prickly plant that grows a beautiful bloom that produces such delicious fruit to enjoy. Glory to our Creator!
Saw this video and immediately went out to my pineapple top that has languished for MONTHES in the soil with barely a couple leaves green in the center ring ... gently unearthed it and gingerly started stripping away dead leaves ... about 4 layers in I started finding roots about one inch long that were smothered by the layers of dead leaves ... stripped several more layers away added compost to the hole and replanted ... we'll see how it grows ... I am finally hopeful - I will report back with progress
That is great! Grow, little pineapple!
So kewl! Another awesome video. :) Thanks so much!
Thank you for watching.
Great Tutorial!
Thanks.
Hello David
I am starting an experiment that you will love
I will try to make terra preta mix in 90litres containers for my container garden
What you think about it;
Sounds like a cool experiment
You must be a mind reader! I just put some rooted tops in the ground (zone 6a). I figured I could treat them like a biennial and dig them up and bring them in when it gets too cool in the fall. Do you think that will work, or should I have just stuck with pots? Your shirt made my day, btw! 😂
I would keep them in pots so there's no root disturbance, but nothing ventured, nothing gained!
Dave have heard of the Garden Expo for people with plant nurseries in Texas. It’s in SanAntonio in Aug. Thought you might like to know maybe what’s new.
I have not - thank you.
Awesome
I tryed rooting in water and that is how you grow mosquitoes in your kitchen window.
Ok, you convinced me to try pineapple 🍍 one more time
Do it!
So that's how you do it. Thanks.
As usual 👍 Great Stuff
Who are the two ladies from New Jersey and what are they doing in South Florida?
Half of NJ is in South Florida...
I have a lovely pineapple plant growing
Good job.
@@davidthegood thank you
It's just over a year
I am hoping it will fruit soon
Grilled pineapple is the GREATEST.
Roast pineapple on a shish kabob sounds good I just cut one up last night
When the pineapple is harvested, will that plant grow another pineapple, or should it just be discarded?
I bought a pineapple plant in clearance and when I was putting it in my car the little baby pineapple broke off. I put it in water not knowing what to do. What should I do with it? It’s still on the stem in the water. Any help would be amazing thank you.
You could cut the top off and plant the top. It is likely to root.
I didn’t know you could bury the stem that deep. Much raiders than trying to not move it until it roots😂
I did not know you could grow pineapples from the tops. All our pineapples are imported and therefore doused in pesticides. Will try this as soon as a find a permanant place to live.
I keep trying to start pineapple plants from tops. Not working out well for me so far 😢 I’ve tried sitting in fresh water and as well as soil. My tops keep dying off. The leaves just crinkle up and die off. I’ve tried so many pineapples. I just can’t seem to get it 🤷♂️ I let it sit out for a couple days to dry out and sometimes before I can even plant it, it’s struggling
Just plant right away, in soil.
I might just have to write it on a T shirt in mud, shipping to NZ, and the exchange rate is pricey. 👍
I started 6, half and water half in soil all but one died I did get two pups off of another one just before it died but no pineapples just plants
Maybe you'll end up with pineapples soon.
That size pot will really be enough to make a good pineapple?
@@davidthegood Sounds like ill have a pineapple in 2-3 years haha!
@@lukelave8615 best time to plant a pineapple? 2-3 years ago.
2nd best time to plant a pineapple? Today!
Now push the zone on a mango. In the ground maybe.
Yeah...
No pollination needed to get a fruit?
No
Will Free plants for everyone be on Audible one day?
Yes - I just haven't voiced it yet.
@@davidthegood Awesome thanks
I'll be honest. I root mine in water because it's more fun.
"Carefully ripping them out of here..." ;)
Hasn’t worked for me 😢
Now cutt that crown into quarters and you got 4 pinapple plants yay
Its a secret tho dont tell anyone
But has it been double-blind randomized peer reviewed?
Ivermectin is so last year. 😜
Adding some Paramagnetic lava sand to the soil mix want hurt.
Didn't you already cover this once already?
@@davidthegood lmfao
I understand that you're late to the game when it comes to growing pineapples. I myself live here in fort Lauderdale. I have been growing pineapples now almost 40 years. Various varieties of pineapple. I have some mind blowing techniques better than the one you're showing. So if you would like to come check out my food Forest. Show the next time you're in fort Lauderdale you can give me a holler.
If you want to tell me secrets I would love to have them. What’s best for feeding them? I live in N C and getting ready to harvest my 1st from a grocery store 2 yrs ago. Very excited!
i got like 40 tops man im toasted
Every time you say “mild nutrient solution” I hear “pee on your pineapples” thats right, right?
Mildly pee.
🤣
Why is it called a pineapple? It's neither a pine nor an apple. 🤔
18 months to 3 years lol!
Gardening is never instant gratification lol
@@davidthegood I think they’re quite interesting in the garden as well. I have some pineapple tops from ones we ate and also some cultivars like the white and variegated pineapples.
@@moniquegebeline4350 Cool! My friend Eric has some of those fluorescent pink types... they're crazy! A lot of lovely cultivars around that you don't see often.
@@davidthegood I got them where else, Florida! Lol
Carefully ripping? 😂🤣👍
Lol, I caught that funny also.
Not really start to finish.