Still selling starts. Blue Butterfly Pea, Moringa and Lemongrass sell well consistently. Red Robin and Rosy Finch tomato plants in 6" pots and hanging baskets do welĺ. Many people want hotter peppers than ive been growing. Variety is key. About to start more peppers, high temp tomatoes and herbs. Only been growing 2 years and loving it. Getting better at it everyday. Still kill stuff. Live and learn. Great vids.
Good stuff Farmer Keith. Back yard gardener here in Iowa Zone 5a, but the process is the same: know your market. The wife (my market) finally convinced me we don't need so many tomatoes and greens because our freezers are full. So this year, just a few plants, easier to manage, & room for more stuff if we want it. Eggplant, for example. Any suggestions on keeping the flea beetles in check? I notice that you use plastic fabric. I mulch everything with shredded leaves to retain moisture and feed the soil. Maybe beetles hide in the mulch? I don't know. This year I'm not playing around. I'm dusting the eggplant leaves with Sevin. Not organic, I know, but whatever works...
Still selling starts. Blue Butterfly Pea, Moringa and Lemongrass sell well consistently. Red Robin and Rosy Finch tomato plants in 6" pots and hanging baskets do welĺ. Many people want hotter peppers than ive been growing. Variety is key. About to start more peppers, high temp tomatoes and herbs. Only been growing 2 years and loving it. Getting better at it everyday. Still kill stuff. Live and learn. Great vids.
Great video! So much information but you cover it well and don't waste time.
Great information dump! Thank you farmer Keith!
Welcome. Keep Farming!
Your farm is beautiful
Thank you! Personally, I appreciate this type of video. Fast, yet informative and detailed.
You are very welcome. Keep Farming!
That was awesome!
Thank you. Keep Farming!
That Arkenburg trellis looks nice. I'm gunna try it with my 2nd round of toms.
If I have done 2 videos on it. Look up Arkenberg Trellis
Good stuff Farmer Keith. Back yard gardener here in Iowa Zone 5a, but the process is the same: know your market. The wife (my market) finally convinced me we don't need so many tomatoes and greens because our freezers are full. So this year, just a few plants, easier to manage, & room for more stuff if we want it. Eggplant, for example. Any suggestions on keeping the flea beetles in check? I notice that you use plastic fabric. I mulch everything with shredded leaves to retain moisture and feed the soil. Maybe beetles hide in the mulch? I don't know. This year I'm not playing around. I'm dusting the eggplant leaves with Sevin. Not organic, I know, but whatever works...
Flea bettles also like eggplant, but never kill them. I just ignore the damage and they alway do great