Do "Regrowing Food Scraps" Hacks Actually Work?

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2020
  • Grab the Epic Sticker Pack: bit.ly/epicsticker Back again with another "garden hacks" video to react to! I wanted to share some additional context around these "tips and tricks" to help you think like a gardener, and realize that many times, the best hack is simply following best gardening practices.
    Hacks should either same time, money, or both - and many of these don't, although some actually DO work.
    Original video: watch/?v=369...
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Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @epicgardening
    @epicgardening  4 года назад +890

    If you regrow from food scraps, which work best for you?

    • @praywithpio6028
      @praywithpio6028 4 года назад +128

      Bell pepper, romaine, tomato, pumpkin are all l've been able to grow from scrap (so far). I like your channel !

    • @julierodgers9005
      @julierodgers9005 4 года назад +66

      Celery and leeks (in soil)

    • @Ash-fd8ww
      @Ash-fd8ww 4 года назад +87

      Not even trying. The best tomatoes I've ever grown were accidentally included in reused potting soil or compost. Same goes for peppers, papayas, grape vines, and cow peas.

    • @johnliberty3647
      @johnliberty3647 4 года назад +87

      I do what you suggested for green onions, Bought them at the store and planted them in the ground and kept harvesting greens.

    • @christinacyrus3824
      @christinacyrus3824 4 года назад +38

      While growing from scraps might be ok for some people, I live in an apartment with a plant stand and a small balcony so I have to grow particular varieties.

  • @KarlaRei
    @KarlaRei 4 года назад +5522

    _"First of all that's a cucumber..."_
    I laughed really hard right here. What amazing pepper seeds they must have to grow cucumbers!

    • @tsrease81
      @tsrease81 4 года назад +61

      He is saying that the leaves that they “time lasped” were actually cucumber

    • @mourningdove5661
      @mourningdove5661 4 года назад +89

      It was a cucumber im a farmer and that was a cucumber ive never seen a pepper look like that

    • @SPIKE-ll6vt
      @SPIKE-ll6vt 3 года назад +73

      Yup thats not pepper, pepper sprouts have pointed leaves.

    • @baronalexis3852
      @baronalexis3852 3 года назад +62

      @@tsrease81 Sarcasm

    • @brittanybailey7768
      @brittanybailey7768 3 года назад +12

      Did no one realize they never claimed to be growing a pepper actually, it said compostable seed starter. I hate this channel don't take me wrong, but I think this time y'all may have jumped to conclusions. If you notice hooky even still see the pepper when you see the sprouts, so idk.

  • @ImminentAl
    @ImminentAl 4 года назад +3858

    The avocado plant I’ve grown from seed has just become a depressing reminder of my my own mortality

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +408

      😂😭

    • @123cutieputtie
      @123cutieputtie 4 года назад +418

      My grandmother actually grew one from seed. Its huge. Once its fully mature you'll have more avocados then you'll ever need. The avocados are delicious also

    • @Jpiggye
      @Jpiggye 4 года назад +230

      @@123cutieputtie That's cool it paid off for her. I read that the genetic diversity from seed is all over the place so you don't know how much flesh / how big your future avocados will be. It's definitely a gamble and long term investment. I've got a 7 month old indoor one rn that is doing pretty well.

    • @sherreeroper1944
      @sherreeroper1944 4 года назад +137

      So true, 7yrs to bear fruit?
      I'll start one and pass it down to my son when he gets his family's forever home.

    • @rsdxxxx
      @rsdxxxx 4 года назад +74

      @@Jpiggye mine's a year now, still only about 1-2ft and with about 7 leaves sprouting from the top... 😅

  • @CarmineAbattoir
    @CarmineAbattoir 3 года назад +749

    I once bit into a tomato that had started germinating inside. The unexpected texture was absolutely horrifying. I almost cried in relief when i saw it was little seedlings and not the thousand baby spiders i had irrationally feared.

    • @zeldapinwheel7043
      @zeldapinwheel7043 3 года назад +35

      Yeah, that always freaks me out. I always slice my tomatoes, now b

    • @lizzymandile2022
      @lizzymandile2022 3 года назад +27

      Never biting into a tomato again

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 2 года назад +55

      I don't even know the texture you're talking about but this almost made me throw up just from imagining it

    • @spillednoodles9847
      @spillednoodles9847 2 года назад +26

      whait why where you just bitin ginto a whole tomato

    • @Masked_muscle_mommy
      @Masked_muscle_mommy 2 года назад +57

      @@spillednoodles9847 cus its good- idk maybe i just grew up in the country but i thought that was normal. its like biting an apple, portable sweet snack

  • @Ichneumonxx
    @Ichneumonxx 3 года назад +934

    The way I germinated my strawberry plant is that a sparrow shat in a pot on my balcony once and it grew on its own. How'd you like that for a plant hack!

    • @barbaracoleman6641
      @barbaracoleman6641 3 года назад +107

      That happened with a sunflower seed in my parents back yard. Their grass needed cutting and their mower was broken so I decided to take my lawnmower over there and do it. Having never grown a sunflower from seed, I was frustrated that this large, thick, seemingly impervious stem was growing in the middle of the yard. The weed whacker couldn't chop it down, didn't even penetrate the outer covering. I had a good laugh a few days later when I came back to visit my parents and there was a 4 ft tall sunflower blooming merrily in the middle of an other wise plain lawn. I should have saved those seeds.😕 It seemed to be a very hardy plant. But the birds got to it first.

    • @katiegraham6149
      @katiegraham6149 3 года назад +28

      Now if I could just get them to do it on command! 😂

    • @Sparrow420
      @Sparrow420 3 года назад +49

      How do you know it was me and not another bird? haha

    • @PHOEBUSDANCER
      @PHOEBUSDANCER 3 года назад +23

      @@Sparrow420 🤣 your UN didn’t register to me and I was thoroughly confused

    • @vincetravis8701
      @vincetravis8701 3 года назад +13

      Something similar happened to me with peanuts. There was a peanut field down the road and a squirrel buried some in my raised bed (that didn't have anything in it at the time) and forgot about them.

  • @GlamRoyal
    @GlamRoyal 4 года назад +3983

    Just a thought. What if you made a demonstration video comprised of “Grow Hacks That Actually Work”? It would be cool to see the results.

    • @ashtintodd5193
      @ashtintodd5193 4 года назад +45

      Yes please make this!

    • @0614Rei
      @0614Rei 4 года назад +35

      That will take a long time though

    • @ivonahumpalot538
      @ivonahumpalot538 3 года назад +8

      Hell yea

    • @terryfuldsgaming7995
      @terryfuldsgaming7995 3 года назад +27

      people have been growing crops for 2k years... I'm pretty sure its all been figured out by now.

    • @terryfuldsgaming7995
      @terryfuldsgaming7995 3 года назад +24

      unless by "hacks" you jsut mean how to do it properly... Which isnt a hack... Most "hacks" are not hacks, other than they are made by a hack that wants your money. They are scams and clickbait.

  • @nicsim7469
    @nicsim7469 4 года назад +2517

    "First of all thats a cucumber"
    Me: "rass this aint a good start"

    • @athenamorales7321
      @athenamorales7321 4 года назад +3

      Good one

    • @SusuReedJango
      @SusuReedJango 4 года назад +12

      Lost it right there, lmao

    • @miklostamas4457
      @miklostamas4457 4 года назад +13

      Its a magic bell pepper

    • @CH-jj8wk
      @CH-jj8wk 3 года назад +6

      @sirmaj fisher to be fair, cucumber leaves are the thickest seed leaves I've ever seen, the only similar leaves I've seen are borage. So that's how he did it so quickly but it was still impressive ahahah

  • @namebrandmason
    @namebrandmason 4 года назад +1305

    Fun fact: It takes DECADES for nut trees to start to fruit. That walnut will take 30 years to return on your investment.
    Also: Walnut trees drop stuff everywhere and are kind of a pain.
    Also: a whole walnut does not qualify as "food scraps."

    • @maruubnd
      @maruubnd 3 года назад +41

      Indeed, we had two pecan trees in the house I grew up. it was so much hard work to pick them up and dry them, we rarely did it

    • @thefallenyeeter
      @thefallenyeeter 3 года назад +6

      thats a lot of alsos

    • @greengeckygecko
      @greengeckygecko 3 года назад +28

      oh god walnuts just *everywhere*
      and the fact that small earworms can get into the fruit as a surprise just sucks-

    • @tylerburney8576
      @tylerburney8576 3 года назад +33

      And eventually the squirrels wise up to the fact that you’ve got a nut tree, and suddenly you have nothing to eat

    • @toxic1698
      @toxic1698 3 года назад +63

      @@tylerburney8576 That's not true, now you have squirrels.

  • @Kimberly-gq3us
    @Kimberly-gq3us 4 года назад +445

    Omg the burn with "first of all.. that's a cucumber" 😂

    • @pris8595
      @pris8595 2 года назад

      It's a cucumber plant grow up people

  • @GardenALittle
    @GardenALittle 4 года назад +779

    Camomile tea does contain viable seeds. Found out by accident when I thought the tea was too old and threw it in my garden bed as some mulch and it grew a ton of camomile. 🌱

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +101

      Nice!!!

    • @jaimezimmerman161
      @jaimezimmerman161 3 года назад +17

      Omgosh that's amazing!!!

    • @HaydenonYT
      @HaydenonYT 3 года назад +19

      Thats some god like stuff there

    • @cloudGremlin
      @cloudGremlin 3 года назад +33

      Chamomile is almost akin to weed types of hardy XD We have to be careful when growing it here in NB because it Will take over whatever garden bed it’s in

    • @michaelsorensen7567
      @michaelsorensen7567 2 года назад +22

      Can* contain viable seeds. Doesn't necessarily every time.

  • @Shuan1227
    @Shuan1227 4 года назад +1967

    I’ve grown roses from cutting 15 years ago and it’s still alive today. You have to put it in water until you get leaflets then plant it in soil.
    These roses are even more special because it’s the roses my then boyfriend (now husband) gave me for our first year together.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +333

      That's so amazing

    • @shahana_style
      @shahana_style 4 года назад +95

      Awwwwww this is so mushy gushy and sweet. I love it! 💜

    • @katyachan3814
      @katyachan3814 4 года назад +36

      Can you please explain how you do that?

    • @RozariePlays
      @RozariePlays 4 года назад +14

      That is beautiful

    • @viceb7
      @viceb7 4 года назад +15

      That's amazing! Rooting hormone? Dead head the roses? I've never got it to work

  • @franniepan
    @franniepan 4 года назад +240

    I did "fall" for the tomato plant hack and now I have 4 pretty large tomato plants in my garden that I never really anticipated to care for lol

  • @alyssa_the_noodle5228
    @alyssa_the_noodle5228 4 года назад +490

    I’m starting my own cherry tree. It’s two feet tall now. It’s taking forever but it’s growing well. Wish me luck on my very long journey lol

    • @yasinhenfs4540
      @yasinhenfs4540 3 года назад +20

      i feel that, im kinda obsessed with growing kiwis since a few years but luckyly they seem to grow a little bit faster

    • @pridepotato2810
      @pridepotato2810 3 года назад +4

      How tall is it now

    • @alyssa_the_noodle5228
      @alyssa_the_noodle5228 3 года назад +10

      @@pridepotato2810 about half an inch taller lol it bushed out tho

    • @alfrancis8
      @alfrancis8 3 года назад +3

      @@yasinhenfs4540 omg kiwis? i never considered that, i must research that :)

    • @yasinhenfs4540
      @yasinhenfs4540 3 года назад +8

      @@alfrancis8 now 4 months later i can tell they grow very well and climbed up to 3 meters in 2 growing seasons while surviving -10°C ^^

  • @LeelaLu7
    @LeelaLu7 4 года назад +1594

    Fourteen years ago I started several Asian pear trees using seeds from a store-bought fruit. One of those trees is now over 20 feet tall and produces hundreds of pounds of fruit every summer. Never say never!

    • @knottyrootsbylindsey
      @knottyrootsbylindsey 4 года назад +99

      That's so awesome to know about, I love Asian Pears and they are so expensive here so I buy one or two every so often. I'm gonna totally start one from the next time I buy! Thanks for this knowledge!

    • @crazy4beatles
      @crazy4beatles 4 года назад +8

      wow! that's so cool

    • @dannyboii9117
      @dannyboii9117 4 года назад +26

      @@knottyrootsbylindsey That or see if you can't find one either online or at a nursery. I myself am not that patient xD❤. Did start some lemon seeds for fun though.

    • @nikkimd2984
      @nikkimd2984 4 года назад +17

      Me too! Then I realize we dont have the land for it! Now they’re cute bonsai vertical garden plants instead. :)

    • @elektra121
      @elektra121 4 года назад +37

      My grandmother planted a very young walnut tree and it became an impressible large tree in about 10 to 15 years and bore fruits even earlier. So, seems to very much depend on the species. And why not try? "If I knew the world would end tomorrow, I'd plant an apple tree today."

  • @DollyDarkside
    @DollyDarkside 4 года назад +740

    I regrow my carrot tops for my guinea pigs. I find it fun to watch them grow, and the guinea pigs get to enjoy them :)

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +126

      So cute

    • @LillibitOfHere
      @LillibitOfHere 4 года назад +29

      My budgies love them too! The squawk at me whenever I bring in greens from the back yard.

    • @DollyDarkside
      @DollyDarkside 4 года назад +20

      @@LillibitOfHere I love the squeaks! Im buying a house in the next 6 months so ill have the space to have a large garden. I cannot wait! Then my guinea pigs will have unlimited veggies freshly picked. (Not that they dont already, but the fruits and veggies are from the store)

    • @denisepinkston7160
      @denisepinkston7160 4 года назад +13

      I think carrot tops are pretty and I like them in salads. My 🐔 like them, too.

    • @dawnesmith-sliming7004
      @dawnesmith-sliming7004 4 года назад +4

      Dolly's Discussions Wish I had known that when we had guinea pigs. Would have saved us some real money!

  • @KageNoKarasu
    @KageNoKarasu 3 года назад +44

    I have grown tomatoes from store bought romas for years, and they are an over producing monster, and I love them. Also a fun hybrid.

  • @terryfuldsgaming7995
    @terryfuldsgaming7995 3 года назад +605

    most of these are just "rather than buying a 69 cent pack of seeds, throw a hundred dollars of food away!"

    • @caithlyn1510
      @caithlyn1510 3 года назад +5

      nice

    • @martinhriibek3443
      @martinhriibek3443 3 года назад +44

      That was my first thought, when I saw the pepper. The bag of seeds is usually cheaper, than half of pepper.

    • @sinine1100
      @sinine1100 3 года назад +48

      ​@@martinhriibek3443 Don't you remove the seeds from the pepper for many foods, anyway? You can eat you pepper and have the seeds, too!

    • @martinhriibek3443
      @martinhriibek3443 3 года назад +15

      @@sinine1100 Possibly? I dunno to be honest. Many of the fruits and vegetables you buy is not fully ripe, so dunno if the seeds would work. But yeah, still better than burying half the pepper :-D

    • @justjess6636
      @justjess6636 3 года назад +6

      @@sinine1100 If they're hot peppers, people usually just throw the whole thing in. For me, I definitely take bell pepper seeds out.

  • @seanpaints
    @seanpaints 4 года назад +2331

    Actual plant hack: buy those “living herbs” from the grocery store and plant them back in the ground lol.

    • @Cal-cf2vo
      @Cal-cf2vo 4 года назад +44

      I do that, too

    • @mrbrightsightfreak
      @mrbrightsightfreak 4 года назад +114

      problem is, those normally don't do as well as ones you have grown from seed. with like tomatoe plants etc it's different but those herbs never seem to make it for a long period of time :(

    • @vi4269
      @vi4269 4 года назад +58

      Wait.. those aren't for that reason? I've always done that!

    • @TheMCGmandy
      @TheMCGmandy 4 года назад +49

      @@mrbrightsightfreak I replanted a living herb Basil plant from March, and I have repotted a couple times....it is now spread through my garden in every tomato pot. Cannot prune it enough, but properly pruned it is brushing out

    • @wyattspop
      @wyattspop 4 года назад +155

      Guys, those grocery store Basil for example are $4, most nurseries charge about $2.25-$2.75 for a 4" herb and they are much heartier than the ones that sat in storage, then on a grocery floor display

  • @Kesangarangaree
    @Kesangarangaree 4 года назад +653

    I’ve grown chamomile from tea bags! Just the cheap teabags from Aldi, they weren’t whole flower heads but it still worked :)

    • @nevertime1246
      @nevertime1246 4 года назад +8

      that's great!!!

    • @Daliena
      @Daliena 4 года назад +22

      Did you brew tea first or just took seeds from dry tea bag? My concern with applying boiling water - it will kill the seeds in the process. However dry tea bag just acts as a seed packet.

    • @wildfyah
      @wildfyah 4 года назад +2

      Really?

    • @Ketutar
      @Ketutar 4 года назад +60

      @@Daliena You do not brew tea and then expect to have anything but mold grow from the seeds.

    • @roblesink6119
      @roblesink6119 4 года назад +21

      Thanks for letting us know :) I bought what was supposed to be chamomile and turned out to be another plant. Now imma buy tea bags instead

  • @2fortsmostwanted
    @2fortsmostwanted 3 года назад +99

    I love that Blossom put a skewer through a corncob and put it in a planter and thought they'd finally hacked the practice of corn agriculture we've mastered for centuries.

    • @pankobro4536
      @pankobro4536 2 года назад +1

      I love the name Dosnel

    • @pankobro4536
      @pankobro4536 2 года назад +1

      Donsel, Dosnel is pretty nice as well

  • @laneyb8911
    @laneyb8911 4 года назад +41

    I love that you mentioned carrot top pesto! I grew carrots in our backyard, and while I did not till the soil enough so the roots did not grow long, the tops grew huge and I made so much delicious pesto from it! I also threw it in some soups and used it in some salads. I couldnt show off the carrot part but I was so proud I could eat something I grew for the first time lol

    • @_BlueMoon
      @_BlueMoon 2 года назад

      Don't you get flowers with seeds from the tops and use the seeds to plant?

    • @nikmassa
      @nikmassa 2 года назад +1

      Tilling might have been the problem but there is also a chance of too much nitrogen in the soil to cause more foliage then root.

    • @dawnboren594
      @dawnboren594 Год назад +2

      Omg, try radish tops in s salad. They have a slightly peppery taste. Love them.

  • @LanaUnderPressure
    @LanaUnderPressure 4 года назад +585

    That's a cucumber growing out of the pepper, lol. I'm dying. Wait until I tell my friends.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +24

      LOL

    • @SomewhatLazy
      @SomewhatLazy 4 года назад +4

      You really should edit the video to highlight this to show how fake these really are.

    • @Tri7on
      @Tri7on 4 года назад +7

      @@SomewhatLazy haha he seems like a pretty wholesome guy, and probably seen this aswel, but didnt feel like calling it out exactly. Its about making his communiy bettwr at gardening not calling out hacks. (Just letting his own community these arent real hacks)

    • @rickykimble1246
      @rickykimble1246 4 года назад +5

      I tried to propagate a snake plant cutting and now I have a squash or cucumber plant growing out of it that was a few months ago it's in the ground now with flowers 😂

    • @axlent123
      @axlent123 4 года назад +8

      So.... if I slice a cucumber and plant it, will I get a bell pepper?

  • @ivacheung792
    @ivacheung792 4 года назад +824

    WHY WOULD YOU WASTE A PERFECTLY GOOD PEPPER AND NOT EAT IT???

    • @sunset6010
      @sunset6010 4 года назад +64

      Just take out the seeds - and eat the REST !
      I think that regrow video was partly for entertainment

    • @Erika70079
      @Erika70079 4 года назад +39

      I agree. And where I live it's cheaper to buy a pack of pepper seeds than a single pepper.

    • @doloresreynolds8145
      @doloresreynolds8145 4 года назад +12

      Erika70079 About the same cost here, but with the red pepper you can use the pepper and get a few dozen seeds, too.

    • @patdthomas
      @patdthomas 4 года назад +9

      Wait until you see the one where they grow corn plants from a can of Niblets.

    • @nizaragogoi1529
      @nizaragogoi1529 4 года назад +7

      This actually works, i tried, the nutrients from the ripe bell pepper helps it grow faster, once the saplings come out, you need to plant them in a different pot. I tried planting the seeds separately and also tried directly planting the bell pepper hack, the plants from the direct seeds are just 3 inches long while the bell pepper hack ones are 2 feet long and already bearing multiple fruits. Try it if you don't believe it, i experimented and i have actual results.

  • @misspoopsy6336
    @misspoopsy6336 3 года назад +68

    My mom only grows flowers and throws out my drying seeds, so I have to start gardening in secrecy! Once they're plants, she can't stop me lol!

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 2 года назад +4

      oof, y she keep yeetin' them? Got some good news for ya, tho. If there's trees in your backyard, you can weave your own pots for free, dig up some backyard soil, and grow the plants without costing a single extra penny. Be sure to let mama know that if she takes 'em away, you'll just make more (and the more she takes 'em away, the better you'll get at remaking 'em). Since it costs nothin', there's nothin' to stop you from doing it shy of her locking you indoors forever- at which point, I'm sure a local government entity would take interest.

  • @RedRaven64
    @RedRaven64 3 года назад +172

    I remember when I was younger, I planted 3 pumpkin seeds, I watered them every day, they were very healthy, actually got quite large...
    My parents had workers come and they trampled my pumpkin plants
    I was sad

    • @liquidsleepgames3661
      @liquidsleepgames3661 3 года назад +10

      Those workers are dickz

    • @samanthamayhugh9354
      @samanthamayhugh9354 3 года назад +1

      @@liquidsleepgames3661 right

    • @arirose5887
      @arirose5887 2 года назад +15

      Pumpkins and sunflowers are the two things I've grown that it felt impossible to kill. Our pumpkin plant took over to the point we wanted to rip the whole thing out and tried but it just came back. Tenacious things, usually

    • @apollomommy7364
      @apollomommy7364 2 года назад +10

      My dad weed whacked my tiny garden on accident, destroyed my pepper plant 😅 so I feel your pain

    • @AlanaeImontae
      @AlanaeImontae 2 года назад +8

      I remember my kingergarden teacher gave us little pumpkins for halloween. I ate mine then planted the seeds. Once the actual pumkins started growing(plant starts turning upside down) I threw it away bc I thought it was dying :). I'm still upset about it til this day🤣🤣🤣

  • @sottosopravoce
    @sottosopravoce 4 года назад +277

    "This actually works...so, not as bad of a Blossom video as most of them." This will now be my go-to example of damning with faint praise.

  • @Cola82
    @Cola82 4 года назад +331

    Here’s a little anecdote about this: my first year as a gardener, I cut open a store bought butternut squash to find that most of the seeds inside had germinated. I planted them in my garden and they flourished. But they were all different. Some were bush types and some were vines, and the fruit was different, too.
    That’s when I learned that grocery store produce is mostly the result of hybrids that will not breed true when you plant their seeds. This is done mostly to produce plants that yield hardy fruit that will survive shipping and storage and look appealing in the store.
    So after that I was a lot more selective. I find more unusual produce tends to breed true. Because of its niche appeal, there isn’t any reason to bother with creating the perfect hybrid (which has to be produced every season from the varieties it’s crossed from).
    It’s always worth experimenting, though. I’ve saved pepper seeds I found on the kitchen floor without knowing what they came from.

    • @a.deadgirl
      @a.deadgirl 4 года назад +11

      Yeah a lot of them are from clones. I know from my mom's friends (older people) after some time and generations of the plants, they get better.

    • @a.deadgirl
      @a.deadgirl 4 года назад

      @Gharch Pariii here in Florida they have some farms. Where do you live?

    • @a.deadgirl
      @a.deadgirl 4 года назад +2

      @Gharch Pariii aww shucks! (Miami here) there are some nurseries here that I think ship them. Try aguacates sanctuary hmm the other names I forget. One is in saint pete and another in fort Myers. I can look it up if you like.
      There are some in Cali too. I guess it depends on the exact stuff you're looking for and if they still have some. They inspect the roots and leaves to make sure there aren't any bugs. Which idk if ALL do that, most do. Lmk

    • @athousandlives7231
      @athousandlives7231 3 года назад +9

      Yeah also if squash/pumpkin seeds cross-pollinate with zucchini, they can make seeds, which if panted and the fruit harvested is actually no longer edible. The fruit will taste bitter and can even make you unwell.

    • @mistressofmadness
      @mistressofmadness 3 года назад +3

      @@athousandlives7231 Learn something new everyday. That's pretty neat and useful information.

  • @spacecaptain9188
    @spacecaptain9188 3 года назад +12

    Wow. It's so refreshing to hear someone be honest when they don't know something. Thanks for keeping it real!

  • @mizuki3183
    @mizuki3183 4 года назад +17

    My bf is growing an avocado from seed and we named it Timmy, we get hyped everytime Timmy grows new leaves 😊

  • @let_uslunch8884
    @let_uslunch8884 4 года назад +535

    I love how he's taking time and answering the hacks one by one thoughtfully, seriously, like the videos are not bs.

    • @kodiejc4202
      @kodiejc4202 4 года назад +21

      you should watch ann reardon on how to cook that, she does debunking videos for these mass consumption "hack" videos.

    • @let_uslunch8884
      @let_uslunch8884 4 года назад +9

      I actually have seen a couple of her videos where she's concerned about the safety of some of these "hacks".

  • @danielwalker2381
    @danielwalker2381 4 года назад +278

    “Well, they just showed a complete tomato.” He’s not even surprised at this point 😂😂

    • @nardalis4832
      @nardalis4832 4 года назад +1

      Yea, could've been whatever tomato at all when they show it like that lol

  • @kellyjames5125
    @kellyjames5125 3 года назад +25

    "You can do that. You can't do that." I had to pause I was laughing too hard. I'm the idiot who tried these things and when they inevitably failed I felt bad for myself. Thank you for restoring my self esteem. 🤣

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 2 года назад

      Glad you've since learned. Sadly, there's a lot of people (particularly kids) stumbling across these content farm channels like Blossom and falling into the same pitfalls. The worst part is that some of the 'hacks' shown on content farms are legitimately dangerous. There's one I saw where they suggested making a wall charger for your phone by *casting the entire thing out of metal.* Can anyone say 'electrocution'? Certainly not the poor sap who tries it in an old house, that's for sure.
      By the way, if you ever come across a video from a content farm that promotes something legitimately dangerous (like the solid metal wall charger block or the 'drip hot liquid candy onto a spinning drill bit' ones), be sure to report them. videos promoting dangerous acts go against RUclips's ToS.

  • @Reenomeano
    @Reenomeano 3 года назад +22

    I managed to grow a mango seed. So happy 😊 probably won't grow mangos but I have a new plant 🌿 😂

  • @AndYourLittleDog
    @AndYourLittleDog 4 года назад +60

    It’s adorable how you never miss a chance to talk about your dragonfruit and narrowly escape bursting with pride over it 💕

  • @loveramos98
    @loveramos98 4 года назад +64

    I actually did the bell pepper one because I saw that video and now I have 93 saplings that are 3”-5”

  • @jonpagel8373
    @jonpagel8373 3 года назад +58

    I’m 10 and 5 years ago I found a video on RUclips that showed how to grow an avocado tree. I followed the instructions and it worked.
    Now I have a 6 and a half foot tree, and I don’t care if it doesn’t produce fruit, it is still a beautiful tree

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 2 года назад +3

      that didn't happen, but ok.

    • @pris8595
      @pris8595 2 года назад +2

      It does happen

    • @simpinainteasyRHEC
      @simpinainteasyRHEC 2 года назад +3

      Thats awesome!!! @Jon Pagel nice job!! ✊🤘

    • @AlanaeImontae
      @AlanaeImontae 2 года назад +1

      👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽go you!!😎

  • @livallison77
    @livallison77 3 года назад +9

    "actually a cucumber" LOVE this! I did the pepper hack, as they call it. Accidentally at first, with a pepper plant that over wintered, I just buried the whole plant into the garden about a month before planting for spring. Little organic matter. In a few days It looked like a little pepper sprout forrest, very similar to a small patch of micro greens. Then just to see if it would work inside a pepper like you showed. Very similar end result, although I would not garden this way, It makes a really cool experiment to introduce kiddos into the would of gardening or just to watch something transform. With the help of an adult you could try and transplant a few and see if they would take. This makes a pretty impressive impact to little kids especially.

  • @ilenastarbreeze4978
    @ilenastarbreeze4978 4 года назад +36

    for me, i like the idea of saving seeds for use year after year and its just something to add to the joy of gardening

  • @naomimay82
    @naomimay82 4 года назад +154

    Yes, it totally works! Instead of throwing my food scraps in the compost, for a short while I dug holes in the garden and buried the food scraps. As a result, I have potatoes growing in my garden where I didn’t plant potatoes! Also, we threw some spoiled tomatoes out on the ground last fall. This year I have wild tomatoes growing everywhere! I didn’t yank them out because I have three rows in my garden that the rabbits ate; the pepper plants and green bean plants. So I allowed my wild tomatoes to just grow wild. I used heirloom seeds, so they will produce tomatoes. They are already loaded with blossoms and green tomatoes.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +29

      Potatoes are a great one to do!

    • @jayamilapersson4030
      @jayamilapersson4030 4 года назад +9

      Potatoes is easy to grow from potatoes but they arent actual seeds the potatoes will grow a plant of the same type but actual potato seeds would grow a new variety of potato if you have seen a tomato like fruit on your potato plant you can get seeds from those.

    • @uzzadazza
      @uzzadazza 4 года назад +1

      Naomi May - Sustainable Prepper awesome! I love feral plants

    • @naomimay82
      @naomimay82 4 года назад +2

      Jayamila Persson I have tomatoes growing wild from rotten tomatoes we threw out in the yard AND potatoes from potato peels that I buried. I have both vegetables growing wild.

    • @naomimay82
      @naomimay82 4 года назад

      Ursula Davis Me too! I have just allowed the potatoes and tomatoes to grow where they sprouted. It defies my straight rows in my garden, but oh well. I don’t care.

  • @seecanon5840
    @seecanon5840 3 года назад +117

    Warning for strawberries: if planted in a garden they will run free and spread all over.

    • @caleighcaleigh2986
      @caleighcaleigh2986 3 года назад +21

      I bought 5 strawberry plants just as a spur of the moment thing, and did little to no research on them. I heard they would only grow about 6 inches. Within 2 weeks it grew several vines, around 12 inches in length. I learned the hard way.

    • @mattleandiaz611
      @mattleandiaz611 3 года назад +4

      My plant died then grew again

    • @camso6
      @camso6 3 года назад +3

      maybe use a trellis.

    • @penelopegrier5073
      @penelopegrier5073 3 года назад +4

      I've never been able to grow strawberries. They die before they even get started.

    • @spillednoodles9847
      @spillednoodles9847 2 года назад +19

      i kinda want to get an empty yard and plant strawberry, raspberry and mint and let them fight for the space

  • @jgurka2105
    @jgurka2105 2 года назад +5

    "The mind of a gardener" - exactly. Thanks for letting us watch you think, laugh a bit, and learn a lot.

  • @I_know_it_I_sew_it_I_grow_it
    @I_know_it_I_sew_it_I_grow_it 4 года назад +79

    Chamomile is absolutely possible to grow from a tea bag! It 's simply the flowers which contain the seeds. Simply, cut open a fresh , unused, tea bag.

    • @mookinbabysealfurmittens
      @mookinbabysealfurmittens 3 года назад +1

      ☝Unused, ah, is key. (I doubt the seeds could survive being boiled, or nearly so.) Also, be aware that a lot of tea (especially generic tea) is a lot of "misc", filler. But it's just a tea-bag; worth checking if you want! ^_^

  • @RuRaynor
    @RuRaynor 4 года назад +27

    After none of my seed packets of peppers worked (old seeds), I scraped seeds out of a bell pepper and meticulously laid them out in a seed tray in a 8 × 11 configuration. Ended up with 59 pepper plants! I've been giving them away like crazy.

  • @POAGeckos
    @POAGeckos 4 года назад +7

    I just wanted to make a quick correction! Flower propagation is often achieved through using flowerless stem cuttings and placing them in nutrient rich soil. Carnation cuttings need to have their bottom leaves, flowers and buds removed(to focus on root development instead of blooming), maybe use a root stimulator, and then plant them in a compost rich soil under a cloche or in a green house, it works and is a very easy and successful way to propagate flower babies! 😁👍

  • @banana7558
    @banana7558 3 года назад +12

    The pili nut my dad planted took 8 years to grow into a tree. He planted it when I was five and now we have unlimited pili nuts.
    He also planted almonds 3 years ago in hopes of also growing into a tree. (It's doing pretty good)

  • @TheJazzimum
    @TheJazzimum 4 года назад +88

    I bought some chamomile tea with flower heads from the health food store, so I'll take some heads and plant them and see what happens and will let you know! Thanks for the tip on the leek. I'll get mine in soil today!

    • @lukeb2351
      @lukeb2351 4 года назад +9

      Keep us updated! I want to try if it works!

    • @leastitdidforme
      @leastitdidforme 4 года назад +3

      Yes! Let us know!

    • @knottyrootsbylindsey
      @knottyrootsbylindsey 4 года назад +4

      Yes! Totally want to know the results. Or hell I have some I should probably just try it myself lol. But still let us know!

    • @elektra121
      @elektra121 4 года назад +3

      This one could totally work. Since tea is meant to be drunk, the drugs shouldn't be treated with anything chemical, just dried at low temperatures, because heat will destroy some of their pharmaceutical ingredients. So, they should be able to germinate.

    • @jayamilapersson4030
      @jayamilapersson4030 4 года назад

      The problem with leeks grown like this is it wont take that long until it blossoms of course you can let it go to seed and gather those to replant for more leeks but most if not all onions have a 2year cycle they usually grow a bulb or roots and leaves the first year and Bloom the next the store bought leek has been growing one time putting it in soil now Will automatically start its second year phase.

  • @OnLongIsland
    @OnLongIsland 4 года назад +93

    Because of the covid thing and shortage of foods, I did plant seeds from organic cherry tomatoes and got tons of seedlings that I planted and gave away to family and neighbors. Mine are doing awesome and getting ready to ripen. :) I have about 10 from my BJ's store tomato.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  4 года назад +6

      Nicely done!

    • @OnLongIsland
      @OnLongIsland 4 года назад +3

      @Amy Sternheim I'm new to this so I have no idea. I do know they were "organic" and they are cluster chain fruiting cherry toms. :) I also was able to buy plant starts at nurseries when we were able and all are doing great. I do believe they are indeterminate since I see most commercial tomato growers I've seen have huge tall plants. As long as they taste good, I'm getting a huge amount of tomatoes from just one small cherry tomato.

    • @OnLongIsland
      @OnLongIsland 4 года назад +2

      I looked up some info on the growers website and found out they are definitely not GMO tomatoes and this is what the commercial grower said; "The seeds we grow from are first-generation (F1) varieties. This means that seeds dried and grown from our products will be second-generation (F2) seeds. Fruit from F2 plants will not necessarily look the same and will definitely not have consistent flavor." That said, I still got lots of tomato plants that are fruiting well and that's what I needed at the time everything happened with the food chain. With State politicians like a certain one from MI, saying seeds were "not essential" (Really?)...I decided to give it a try and hope for the best in case things got bad. It worked! Yay! I got edible tomatoes! :) Happy Gardening! :)

    • @aanawenjigewin
      @aanawenjigewin 4 года назад

      Last year I planted some seeds that sprouted from an organic tomato and it worked pretty well! Only problem was I didn’t plant them in a good spot so I only grew a few small green tomatoes.

  • @ibonnie1047
    @ibonnie1047 4 года назад +28

    "That's just like a bean sprout, I'm pretty sure" LMAOOO

  • @jocelynjones2245
    @jocelynjones2245 2 года назад +2

    I’m not a great gardener but my teenagers and I love growing fruits, veggies, and flowers. We have pumpkins and Amaranth blooming, and we just dried lemon and papaya seeds to plant. We also started a pineapple bush, sweet pea flowers, wild flowers, and more. You’re in a different zone than us but I appreciate all your advice!

  • @k9spot1
    @k9spot1 4 года назад +169

    The only “regrow” hack that’s worked for me was the onion regrow hack (I think it was featured on this channel) specifically the one where you take a sprouting onion, peel off the outside, split up the inner core plants and replant them. I got three full sized onions from one rotten one that way!

  • @sarahtorres4490
    @sarahtorres4490 4 года назад +244

    Because of Covid and not wanting to go out to a plant nursery to buy seed packets, I'd like to know how to grow plants from grocery store produce (which is delivered). Perhaps you could put out your own accurate video for this! I would love it.

    • @kmw4359
      @kmw4359 4 года назад +28

      You can still order seeds from the nurseries. Plants too.

    • @heathertrice2636
      @heathertrice2636 4 года назад +9

      I ordered my seeds and seedlings from Market Wagon which is a to your door market for local farms and growers. I also ordered other seeds direct from Burpee.

    • @sarahtorres4490
      @sarahtorres4490 4 года назад +1

      @@kmw4359 Good point. I've never done that before so I'm not sure who to order from.

    • @sarahtorres4490
      @sarahtorres4490 4 года назад +1

      @@heathertrice2636 Oh that sounds promising! I will look into both of those, thank you.

    • @wyattspop
      @wyattspop 4 года назад +4

      @@kmw4359 Actually most nurseries are picked through by May and growers are already using their space to produce Poinsettias. Except for Lows and Home Depot, you'd be lucky to find so much as a rosemary plant, maybe a rootbound tomato plant at even large nurseries in July

  • @mantis_toboggan_md
    @mantis_toboggan_md 4 года назад +79

    I'm 99% sure that Walnut would have been previously roasted, totally unviable.

    • @abydosianchulac2
      @abydosianchulac2 Год назад

      And even if it were raw, it one of those seeds that would need stratification (cold storage to mimic the winter, or overwintering outside) before it would germinate.

  • @thesmallestbarnacle2505
    @thesmallestbarnacle2505 3 года назад +1

    My parents compost bins constantly have volunteers. Last year they had volunteer cantaloupes on one, tomatoes on another, squash on another, and moon and stars watermelon in another. They change every year, it's become an exciting thing to look forward to! LOL!

  • @bersef
    @bersef 4 года назад +44

    I got some worm casting from a friend and ended up with multiple tomato varieties and strawberries just popping up on their own. It was awesome.

    • @normaltoast-yq5vv
      @normaltoast-yq5vv 3 года назад +2

      Same, I put some of my compost in soil and some tomatoes started sprouting

  • @TGO92507
    @TGO92507 4 года назад +44

    I tried many, most will regrow, but while one part of the plant is putting on new life the other part is rotting and draws bugs... didn’t dig it so now I plant seeds 🌱

  • @belle6618
    @belle6618 3 года назад +6

    Just found your channel, have been gardening with my folks since I was a kid! These hack videos frustrate me, so I appreciate you analyzing them to shed light to people that are starting out. And i agree, tomatoe seeds sprouting inside a tomato is super bizarre looking haha!

  • @briellejones9550
    @briellejones9550 3 года назад +12

    You had me at “First of all that’s a cucumber.” Lol. Blossom is making fools out of people.

  • @belindadomingo
    @belindadomingo 4 года назад +20

    I tried celery and planted the base in soil and it’s growing well. It’s growing a little faster than my seedlings so far

  • @chrisbrownlov1
    @chrisbrownlov1 4 года назад +31

    I recognized those cucumber leaves cus I just cleaned some seeds!! Lol I feel so smart

  • @CorpseBride64
    @CorpseBride64 3 года назад +2

    I do the tea bag thing every Spring, as a fun experiment. This year I got one gorgeous Sunflower from a Camomile tea bag, yup it's true. As I said she was beautiful and I harvested her seeds for next Spring. I think every parent should do this with their child, it's always a surprise to see what you will get!!

  • @applepie4462
    @applepie4462 2 года назад

    I am a big fan of yours ! I'm a 70 year old grandma that needs good advice to start gardening again. I've seen these Blossoms on Pinterest and I was very skeptical of these hacks. Thanks for the straight skinny on how to really grow veggies.

  • @artotay7063
    @artotay7063 4 года назад +13

    Man these videos are so entertaining. I legitimately laughed out loud when you interrupted yourself to point out the "pepper" seeds were growing cucumber plants lmao

  • @katieddg5877
    @katieddg5877 4 года назад +7

    I regrow my green onions in water then transfer to soil when there’s a little more of a root. I tried carrot tops, it worked but before the carrot tops got too big the carrot started to rot away so they got tossed. I love these videos that you do! It’s so easy to fall for all these “hacks” when you don’t know any better !

  • @kristis4147
    @kristis4147 3 года назад +4

    “ I’ve got some seasons under my belt”. Humble man. He’s an amazing gardener!!

  • @alfrancis8
    @alfrancis8 3 года назад

    I am one of those quarantine gardeners that have popped up over the year..... and have and am trying all those hacks and avo growing. I dont put so much hope it in, just a way to spend time, no matter how long they survive. What i have got out of it is a few minutes away from worrying and stress of the 2020-21 global crisis, and thats invaluable. It is so calming just to wake up and be excited to see if any growth happened, any roots, repot etc.

  • @gardensbyjudylevy8031
    @gardensbyjudylevy8031 4 года назад +44

    I have done the strawberries, the tomatoes and the green onions and they work and are cost saving. I had strawberries the next year after planting seeds from my strawberry the summer before🌾🌾

  • @ThirdCoastGardening
    @ThirdCoastGardening 4 года назад +76

    I’ve regrown food scraps from grocery stores. Like green onions, bok choy and lettuce.

    • @DeeDiamond2981
      @DeeDiamond2981 4 года назад +1

      Chive, celery,

    • @pixychx2418
      @pixychx2418 4 года назад +7

      Only problem is they come out smaller. They also do have a different flavor than the mother plant, but it's not bad. I also like garlic greens. I'll take the little hard to chop cloves of garlic and put them in soil and use the green sprouts in cooking too.

    • @kimers12660
      @kimers12660 3 года назад

      Did you use organic produce non-gmo?

  • @RummerChan
    @RummerChan 2 года назад +1

    "First of all, that's a cucumber... that's a cucumber coming out" 🤣 I think that got me way harder than it should have.

  • @ManicPandaz
    @ManicPandaz 4 года назад +255

    Apple hack:
    Take apple
    Drop on ground
    Thrown soil over
    Water
    Wait 10 years
    Now you have apples!

    • @prudence8808
      @prudence8808 4 года назад +60

      Knowing these videos theyd probably somehow produce whole ass iphones

    • @skwerl81
      @skwerl81 4 года назад +4

      Omg this actually made me laugh out loud, thank you for that! 😂

    • @alexandraprytkova387
      @alexandraprytkova387 4 года назад +19

      Yeah, it won't work. Apples usually need to be grafted. You will probably get a wild apple from the seeds...(I know you were joking, just pointing out that even if they showed that hack, it would still be wrong, lol)

    • @nafismubashir2479
      @nafismubashir2479 4 года назад +3

      im surprised you have not been hearted

    • @Qwex1992
      @Qwex1992 4 года назад +11

      Our neighbour had a lot of fallen apples last year. She put them into the garden bed (hoping they would turn into fertilizer). This year she had dozens of tiny apple sprouts there instead.

  • @owenl3929
    @owenl3929 4 года назад +24

    I haven’t had the chance to find a vendor for a dragonfruit cutting, but I’m growing two from seed right now and one has grown almost an inch in the past week! (It’s only two inches tall right now so that’s still quite a bit of growth)

    • @a.deadgirl
      @a.deadgirl 4 года назад

      I have some too. I need to repot them desperately. I have no clue 😩😂

    • @a.deadgirl
      @a.deadgirl 4 года назад

      The ones I have are 5 years old

    • @flameingirl
      @flameingirl 3 года назад +1

      This is super late, but it can actually be very easy to find dragonfruit cuttings! They just won't be labeled as dragonfruit.
      If you go to a big box store like Home Depot, Walmart, or Lowe's, you often find little cacti/succulent plants that have a 2-3 inch long vertical stem with a weird yellow or red spiky ball thing on top. That ball part is actually grafted onto a dragonfruit cutting! If you cut off the ball portion, the dragonfruit cutting will actually continue to grow. Best part is, these succulents are usually about $4-5, much cheaper than you'll find a dragonfruit cutting for.

  • @acciaiomorti
    @acciaiomorti 3 года назад +6

    growing strawberries from seeds was rough, used to try to grow them with my mom when i was really little, didn't work the first couple attempts when finally they sprouted
    the strawberries that grew were small and really sweet with very hard seeds, perfect for a little kid, even better for for spiders
    I mostly enjoyed the plant because I liked spiders

  • @trevorlambert4226
    @trevorlambert4226 3 года назад +1

    I'm not a Master Gardener, but my wife is. One piece of info I've picked up that you don't mention when it comes to planting seeds you take from mature fruits (or just shoving part of the whole plant in the ground): unless you make sure it's an heirloom variety, you're not going to get another of what you plant. So the pepper they just shoved in the ground, sure some peppers are going to grow out of there, but you're probably not going to want to eat them. So this applies to pretty much everything you might buy at the supermarket; they are almost all hybrids whose seeds will NOT produce the same variety as the mature plant they came from.

  • @o0Avalon0o
    @o0Avalon0o 4 года назад +7

    I love how masterfully you edit. It's so helpful to see what you're talking about.

  • @katieclemm6875
    @katieclemm6875 4 года назад +8

    I have planted onions, celery, and lettuce from scraps so far. I am not good at gardening but I sure can grow an onion still in the bag on my counter lol

  • @locus_of_magic217
    @locus_of_magic217 3 года назад +5

    so this is the first video of yours I have ever watched and- "ok, that's a cucumber-" I have now subscribed X'D

  • @preethyvibin
    @preethyvibin 2 года назад

    When I was young, I would just love growing plants. Whenever I go to a hotel or an award ceremony, I take those cut roses and flowers and plant them in the soil. And after a few weeks it withers. I just love those memories

  • @LeelaLu7
    @LeelaLu7 4 года назад +21

    I'm interested in any quick and dirty tricks to produce good, usable seeds. I think the seed supply may be in some danger right now, and I'd like to have plenty of everything to share with anyone who needs them. Thanks for all your great tips!

    • @Reyairia
      @Reyairia 4 года назад +3

      Seconded on this!

    • @denisepinkston7160
      @denisepinkston7160 4 года назад +2

      Last year I saved seed from bell peppers, squash, okra, and herbs. Wash squash seed, lay on a paper towel to dry. Once dry store in an envelope. Label the envelope with seed variety. Bell pepper and okra you can skip washing then do the same. Okra can be allowed to dry in the pod then break pod when ready to plant. Herbs and lettuce make seed. Allow seed to mature on the plant then save. I have grown basil, dill, and cilantro from seed I saved. I am saving romaine seed from lettuce I grew from a core. I have enough seed from it to last a year with fall and spring planting. Peas and beans can be allowed to dry in the pod. I planted purple hull peas from 2 years ago and they are looking great. I experiment a lot.

    • @LynnAgain83
      @LynnAgain83 4 года назад +2

      @@denisepinkston7160 make sure you put them in a cool dry place like a basement/cellar, etc.

  • @shanteltice1541
    @shanteltice1541 4 года назад +8

    Thank you sooooo much!! I've watched these same videos and you said the same things I was yelling to them. Thank you for sharing this video

  • @neodora
    @neodora 3 года назад +3

    I decided to try to grow a lemon tree from a seed, it's been over a year and it's a little over 50 cm tall, if I could go back I'd rather just buy a small lemon tree or a cutting, but I'm definitely proud if it so far lol

  • @summerwillows4655
    @summerwillows4655 4 года назад +1

    Can't say for sure about chamomile tea bags from the store, but I grow the herb. The tea is mare from the dried flower heads. So I'd guess you be able to replant them easily enough

  • @WilliamChan
    @WilliamChan 4 года назад +16

    I was trying to regrow Bok Choy, but because we've had a heat wave, it's bolted big time. Hope I can get the seeds in time for fall planting!

    • @ryanflores2489
      @ryanflores2489 4 года назад +1

      Oh no! That's like my favorite crop to grow. I actually grow it on my balcony. But lately we have had so much rain and now it looks a little worrisome. Hope u can get more! Those are the best.

    • @Emeraldwitch30
      @Emeraldwitch30 3 года назад

      I hope it made a lot of seed for you. Ice been growing tatsoi and I really like it as much as bokchoi. Very cold hardy. Some of the last things in the garden.

  • @rancisgamer
    @rancisgamer 4 года назад +76

    I regrow lettuce to collect seeds for the next season

    • @tauceti8341
      @tauceti8341 4 года назад +8

      I purposly bolt mine a season before so that it can seed.
      The bees really like vegetable flowers.
      I've seen at least 6 different types so far!

    • @DiscoChixify
      @DiscoChixify 4 года назад +2

      I do this too! The first time I did it was with a cutting from a romaine lettuce from a discount grocery store. I harvested the seeds (& leaves while it was growing out) and replanted them in a large pot in the fall. That tub exploded with romaine lettuce and we started giving them away. I repeated the process and there were twice as many the following spring.

    • @teachernxtdoor
      @teachernxtdoor 4 года назад +5

      I've just started regrowing lettuce. Where will I find the seeds?

    • @doloresreynolds8145
      @doloresreynolds8145 4 года назад +4

      R Y After it flowers, the seeds develop within the dying flower heads.

    • @DiscoChixify
      @DiscoChixify 4 года назад +1

      R Y they’re similar to like Milkweed, so the seeds come out in tufts after it flowers. Try to harvest them quickly bc they will blow away on the breeze. But once you have all those seeds you can either grow them regularly or you can grow them like micro greens by over seeding.

  • @Leah.Peah92
    @Leah.Peah92 2 года назад

    I grew a huge gardenia bush from a cut flower someone gave me. The flower died off but the leaves were still green. I had it in a cup with water, and the way it was situated, the water didn’t evaporate. Roots eventually filled the cup and I planted it in another container with soil. I literally left this plant alone in a container for years and let the elements take care of it. It had 20 blooms on it last year! I gave it to my parents when they moved to their new home and they planted it on their property. It’s still going strong. I already had tons of gardenias lining my property so I figured it would make a nice gift.

  • @AzraelAbyss92
    @AzraelAbyss92 4 года назад +1

    Loved the video! He was right about the flower btw. I’ve water propagated all sorts of plants, so I have some experience on the subject. There’s a chance it could root and I’ve successfully done it before, but the percentage goes waaaay down once a stem has flowered. Always take a cutting from a new, green section with at least 2 nodes (the part where leaves come out) and trim the top to promote growth downwards instead of upwards. Depending on the type of plant, in a few weeks a couple of roots will start to grow from the nodes! Don’t forget to change the water once a week and you’ll have a healthy cutting ready to transfer into soil in no time!

  • @waoe.
    @waoe. 4 года назад +7

    Good thing we have a smart person like you

  • @BF-Gator
    @BF-Gator 4 года назад +33

    If you plant a leek directly from the store without cutting it, it grows into this huge crazy super mario 2 esque climbable vine

  • @helena8999
    @helena8999 3 года назад +1

    For the carrot hack, if any of you have pet rabbits out there, I found my rabbit absolutely loved carrot tops. It’s a cheap way of growing some snacks for your pet from scraps

  • @jeannewilson6757
    @jeannewilson6757 3 года назад

    I accidentally stumbled upon your videos and have to say, you have so many outstanding ideas. I'm in Thousand Oaks, and the climate here is perfect for gardens, BUT, it's also perfect for rodent explosions!! Every time I start to grow anything in containers, the squirrels and roof rats waste no time eating off the leaves, oh and rabbits as well. So I pretty much gave up on growing my own veggies and fruits. The hardest thing for me is to see all the beautiful, softball size pomegranates get bitten into every season. I've actually bartered them. I have a friend whom is Indian and she 's always asking to trade me pomegranates because they use them frequently in many of their dishes. So one year she noticed I was having to hang laundry outside to dry along my patio and said since I've given her tons of pomegranates each year, how about a trade for a dryer she had sitting in her garage collecting dust for pomegranates. Well couldn't pass that deal up. I also give my neighbors lemons and Tangelos. But only to give since my trees always seem to give so much fruit. Anyways, really enjoy watching your videos.

  • @marieheffern1575
    @marieheffern1575 4 года назад +3

    omg. I love this video. Some of these videos are more like Ripley's believe it or not! Thank you for going through it.

  • @carolineconnelly8620
    @carolineconnelly8620 4 года назад +6

    Blossom *is* a content farm. Some of their video “hacks” are actually quite dangerous. Even if they get taken down, they often are reposted shortly thereafter in another compilation.
    From what I’ve seen, their gardening hacks are on par with their kitchen skills.
    Food scientist Ann Reardon takes on some of their recipes: ruclips.net/video/vSBSzWmjXO0/видео.html

  • @bridgettewade4167
    @bridgettewade4167 Год назад

    Thanks for the shoe organizer hanging garden tip at the end! That's a really neat idea for an apartment herb garden

  • @violet5610
    @violet5610 2 года назад

    I'm grateful I found your channel. I'm a new gardener and I would try those hacks and feel like I wasn't good. Now I've learned how to do things properly. Thank you

  • @Kayari
    @Kayari 4 года назад +12

    I've gotten a bell pepper plant and a yellow cherry tomato that I've currently got growing that I saved seeds from fruit I got from the grocery store but that's the closest thing to any of these 'hacks' that I've done lol

  • @Snagafraz
    @Snagafraz 4 года назад +6

    I loved this video! I hope you continue to do more like it! Thank you!

  • @TaliahLewis
    @TaliahLewis 3 года назад

    A few minutes in...
    Can I... Can I subscribe? This is one of the most legit gardening channels I've found in a while. Omg. Great content.

  • @vharr3257
    @vharr3257 3 года назад

    Best thing with you is that you give such valuable information to me as a person who loves gardening and nature and wants to learn more.

  • @johngagon
    @johngagon 4 года назад +3

    Love these videos. Re: Strawberries, strawberries have runners that are extremely prolific between May and July in zone 7. The real hack is using 1-2 plants and over the course of just a few years and getting a 4x4 bed full or even a yard full. Germinating strawberries from seed is not so easy and the germination rate, hybrid and sprout/transplant care problems are worse before a certain breaking point than with runner clone cuting or original plants. The kind I like are fairly cold hardy, they look greener than the grass in the winter and attractive..so much so that I'm considering them as a kind of backup edible ground cover with no mowing since they never get tall and read very easily when it comes to ground moisture. Flowering lawn might look unkept to some but there's still alternatives like thyme (which has many varieties like woolly, variegated or basic). Some weeds are easier to remove than others so I prefer purslane, chickweed, thyme over say bermuda grass which is an impossible to control plant.
    As for flowers, I think it can be done but it takes more preparation and cutting at a node and you'd never rely on just one cutting to make it.

  • @abyssal_phoenix
    @abyssal_phoenix 4 года назад +13

    I am an experimental gardener, so I tested some out.
    Pepper: Before the seeds germinate, the seeds died of root fights.
    Corn: Those corn seeds decompose instead of germinating.
    Garlic: This works, but they die after planting cause you damage everything too much
    Dragonfruit: would work. I prefer drying them so the flesh won’t mold
    Walnut: didn’t try it. We already have a massive tree that is older than me.
    Leek: (So this is what the English name). I regrow it in water first, then soil. Doesn’t end up as large as the original.
    Watermelon: didnt try it.
    Strawberries: I use this method (together with drying again), since I crossbreed them.
    Carrot: I did this. I like to use the greens as a snack.
    Tomato: haven’t tried it, but looks plausible
    Flower: never tried it. Cause you are basically making a zombie. I prefer getting the seeds for next year
    Green union: never tried it

    • @LmaoMoni
      @LmaoMoni 4 года назад +1

      The garlic one actually worked for me. But i live in scotland so our spring feels like winter

    • @jayamilapersson4030
      @jayamilapersson4030 4 года назад

      I also got garlic I live in Sweden we get cold winters sometimes

    • @umeuzair
      @umeuzair 3 года назад

      I got garlic, onions, leeks, tomato, potato n pepper. Have some thing growing out of the cucumber one but don't really know for sure if its actually cucumber or just some wild growth. also got lentil n beans microgreens as well as coriander n mint leaves. no luck with the lettuce or iceberg. have also started rose cuttings. yesterday I checked n two of them have the tiniest roots coming out. still waiting for the rest though.

  • @brondroid
    @brondroid 4 года назад

    I never comment on videos, but I regrow from ends and salvaged seeds all the time, so...
    We bought tomatoes at the farmers market and ate them, but saved the seeds (same as you'd do with a bell pepper) -- our tomatoes and bell peppers are totally producing in the garden right now!
    I propagated store-bought basil, regrew green onions... But our favorite has been regrowing bok choy! Ours is currently going to seed after a couple of harvests, so soon we won't be regrowing it, but... Yum!!
    We totally tried regrowing celery (saw it in a video and we were curious and figured why not), and it never ever actually grows, it just produces some celery greens.

  • @workinonchangin
    @workinonchangin 4 года назад +1

    One of my greatest joys in life is taking avocado pits and watching them turn into trees. Even if I never got avocados from them, I would still be so jazzed!! :)