You have the life I dream of. I’m a Texas boy and I want to retire to a mountain cabin with a greenhouse twice the size of the house. You have a wonderful charmed existence. I envy you.
Thank you for sharing your garden and knowledge with us. I’m a TH-cam gardener too. It’s my 3rd year and ever year I try to get better. This year I’m trying intercropping/companion planting. I found your channel in my research. This is very helpful and I and so happy I found your channel because it has so much to offer. I hope we can learn more from each other as we grow our gardens and our channels! Happy Planting!
Hi Tanya. Just come across your channel and love the challenge you are posed with. I'm from Bolton, Lancashire in the U.K. with an allotment. I have been researching what to do with my waterlogged plot with very little success as its very wet for 7 months here. Raised beds were the solution and created a balance when the fruit trees took over. I practice hop and drop also. The paths are still wet but manageable. Our plot is very flat compared to yours. On terraced gardening like yours, I have been reading a lot about the construction of swales to stop soil erosion. I believe this to be a way forward for you. Let me know if it is allowed where you are as some places ban it! Strange but true. Rick.
Beautiful garden. Very inspiring. I have a question..... what do people in the UK mean when they say their allotment? I have heard people say this before. Is this just a way to say my plot or land? I live in the US, and I am just curious.
No snakes? Rattlesnakes will be curled up and not rattling this morning in the garden. Walk softly. I am an Irishman trying to grow in the chemical waste land called Kansas. Where chemical farmers are destroying everything. Including the topsoil. I have to pay a lady friend of mine to make soap :-) I was glued on you from the minute your video started. Absolutely love your garden. My fourth year with living soil and very interested in food forest. I have 100 foot row that is basically that. So excited to find your channel :-) They must put all the angels on Islands😊
To stop gooseberry sawfly, mulch below with cardboard...when the caterpillar drops to the ground to pupate, it will land on this hard surface instead of the soft earth and either fry in the sun or get picked off by birds, breaking the life cycle.
Lavender is easier to grow from small purchased plants, or cuttings from existing plants. I'm not sure why you're having issues with calendula though -- it will grow practically anywhere!
Caucasian Spinach. Highly recommend. Easy to grow. Tolerant of many soil types and sun or part sun or shade. Climbs quickly but not invasive. And young leaves taste good raw or older leaves hood cooked just like spinach.
Isn't it strange Tanya? - Like you I just fell into fruit and veg growing - I was 37 years old om 2001 and suddenly got the bug and grew veg at home and then I got an allotment in 2003 which I still have. I actually had a few dreams whilst asleep - those kind of vivid dreams of tending raspberries on an allotment - I don't know why - I had no real interest in fruit and veg growing then, even though my late father used to grow fruit and veg in our back garden, I was never really interested in it. I found out from my Dad that his grandfather had an allotment from about 1935-1955 in Newton Heath, Manchester - he was called Andrew Osbourne Wilson and lived from 1874 until 1960 - 86 years old is quite an acheivement - he did half a day at school and half a day working at the cotton mill in Ancoats in Manchester in the 1880's aged 11 to 14 - he was one of those children who used to run under the spinning Jenny machines spinning cotton and he had to clear out the cotton waste off the floor before the machinery came back and would have crushed him to death! No health and safety in 1880's Manchester! but with working om his allotment he lived to 86 - he had no shoes on his feet as a child.
Poor great granddad, and yet now we're so disconnected from the earth that a great thing called grounding/earthing has arisen where we're encouraged to go barefoot on grass for our long term health. Despite his dangerous childhood job he grew up to eat well from his allotment and probably slept very well in his youth at least, from earthing. I have 2 allotments with lots of permanent fruit and other plants, many trees and herbs that I put in myself. Now I consider this my all-year-round haven with its super-cosy feel even in winter in the UK Midlands. I can understand just why, like you and your granddad, my own late dad loved allotment growing too.
Thank you for inviting me to share about the garden Permaculture Magazine 😊💚
It was a great interview, nice to see you featured here.
@@itsmewende Thank you! It was a pleasure to make and share☺💚
Lovely looking garden and surroundings
You have the life I dream of. I’m a Texas boy and I want to retire to a mountain cabin with a greenhouse twice the size of the house. You have a wonderful charmed existence. I envy you.
Beautiful gadern and knowledge is ❤power .we grasped a lot from you
Beautiful and inspiring. Sounds like a very useful book to read and keep on the shelf !
I love Tanya's channel, been watching her for a long time now.
We do too and are delighted to feature her here and in our latest magazine issue
Thank you for sharing your garden and knowledge with us. I’m a TH-cam gardener too. It’s my 3rd year and ever year I try to get better. This year I’m trying intercropping/companion planting. I found your channel in my research. This is very helpful and I and so happy I found your channel because it has so much to offer. I hope we can learn more from each other as we grow our gardens and our channels! Happy Planting!
I like your ideas,thank you! Happy, and Safe New Year Mrs!
Happy new year!
Thank you ma'am for sharing your knowledge in permaculture
Love it!
Beautiful work
Beautiful garden.👌
So nice of you
Hi Tanya. Just come across your channel and love the challenge you are posed with. I'm from Bolton, Lancashire in the U.K. with an allotment. I have been researching what to do with my waterlogged plot with very little success as its very wet for 7 months here. Raised beds were the solution and created a balance when the fruit trees took over. I practice hop and drop also. The paths are still wet but manageable. Our plot is very flat compared to yours. On terraced gardening like yours, I have been reading a lot about the construction of swales to stop soil erosion. I believe this to be a way forward for you. Let me know if it is allowed where you are as some places ban it! Strange but true. Rick.
Have you tried the concept of walls?
Beautiful garden. Very inspiring. I have a question..... what do people in the UK mean when they say their allotment? I have heard people say this before. Is this just a way to say my plot or land? I live in the US, and I am just curious.
Allotment is a designated veg patch
@@LittleBerryMidnight I see; one is allocating that area. Thanks.
@@wudangmtn Search for allotments on Wikipedia and you'll learn all about them and their history.
@@Lovelygreens Thanks lovely. I will check it out.
No snakes? Rattlesnakes will be curled up and not rattling this morning in the garden. Walk softly. I am an Irishman trying to grow in the chemical waste land called Kansas. Where chemical farmers are destroying everything. Including the topsoil. I have to pay a lady friend of mine to make soap :-) I was glued on you from the minute your video started. Absolutely love your garden. My fourth year with living soil and very interested in food forest. I have 100 foot row that is basically that. So excited to find your channel :-) They must put all the angels on Islands😊
To stop gooseberry sawfly, mulch below with cardboard...when the caterpillar drops to the ground to pupate, it will land on this hard surface instead of the soft earth and either fry in the sun or get picked off by birds, breaking the life cycle.
I my self fully believe in companion planting. Everything in my garden has its purpose and place nothing is grown just anywhere.
still trying growfrom seeds lavander and camomile calendula and no luck 🤷♀️ ill take any tips ❤
Lavender is easier to grow from small purchased plants, or cuttings from existing plants. I'm not sure why you're having issues with calendula though -- it will grow practically anywhere!
👍👍👍👍
Caucasian Spinach. Highly recommend. Easy to grow. Tolerant of many soil types and sun or part sun or shade. Climbs quickly but not invasive. And young leaves taste good raw or older leaves hood cooked just like spinach.
Isn't it strange Tanya? - Like you I just fell into fruit and veg growing - I was 37 years old om 2001 and suddenly got the bug and grew veg at home and then I got an allotment in 2003 which I still have. I actually had a few dreams whilst asleep - those kind of vivid dreams of tending raspberries on an allotment - I don't know why - I had no real interest in fruit and veg growing then, even though my late father used to grow fruit and veg in our back garden, I was never really interested in it. I found out from my Dad that his grandfather had an allotment from about 1935-1955 in Newton Heath, Manchester - he was called Andrew Osbourne Wilson and lived from 1874 until 1960 - 86 years old is quite an acheivement - he did half a day at school and half a day working at the cotton mill in Ancoats in Manchester in the 1880's aged 11 to 14 - he was one of those children who used to run under the spinning Jenny machines spinning cotton and he had to clear out the cotton waste off the floor before the machinery came back and would have crushed him to death! No health and safety in 1880's Manchester! but with working om his allotment he lived to 86 - he had no shoes on his feet as a child.
Poor great granddad, and yet now we're so disconnected from the earth that a great thing called grounding/earthing has arisen where we're encouraged to go barefoot on grass for our long term health. Despite his dangerous childhood job he grew up to eat well from his allotment and probably slept very well in his youth at least, from earthing. I have 2 allotments with lots of permanent fruit and other plants, many trees and herbs that I put in myself. Now I consider this my all-year-round haven with its super-cosy feel even in winter in the UK Midlands. I can understand just why, like you and your granddad, my own late dad loved allotment growing too.
💚👍
👌🏾
She needs to learn how to say ‘medicinal’ 😬