Wow! This is incredible! I can't believe how neat this video is! Nobody should not watch this! This is the one and only thing I'm going to plant forever! Thank you for sharing this information with everyone but no one will believe you. Always remember the number one rule that everyone should know: never play with the algorithm!
Love Autumn olive, very tasty, in southern Ontario they are kinda invasive but they really did a great job healing the degraded soil in our neighbourhood.
@@cantseetheforestforthetree9673 I can cut mine back to the ground and they will regrow completely in less than 30 days PLUS spread underground below my driveway to the opposite side. It's wild. I could pick a 5 gallon bucket full each year easily.
I just made 9 pints of Autumn Olive jelly last month, here on the Cumberland plateau in central Tennessee, where it is illegal to propagate or sell Autumn Olives.
Kudzu may not make 'delicious edible fruits' but the entire plant is highly nutritious. The roos are starchy like potatoes, the leaves can be sautéed in butter and garlic or steamed, and the seeds can be boiled and eaten, tho the seeds are tiny and the pods inedible. It is a fantastic fodder plant. It grows a foot a day, so in a week you can cut the vines and let them dry; roll them up and store them as hay. Wonderful survival plant!
Fun fact: you can graft Goumi on Autumn Olive since they're related. Use Tillamook (aka Carmine) cultivar - it's bigger and way better taste than the rest. Of course Goumi grows fast too, but not as fast as Autumn Olive.
Every country has invasive species from other countries. In Australia we got cane toads from America to eat up all the cane beetles. And also rats tail grass for cows. Which no matter how much people throw chemicals at it . Its here to stay. The key to reducing it is other grasses, trees , legumes, green manure species to compete with it. It works.
New video title suggestion: How to identify this invasive plant, because some guy in Michigan still hasn't figured it out yet and wants to do his part by eating the berries like the other video suggested, with a link to the other video in the top left corner. Might be too long, but you get the idea.
What, man! Are there NO fountains on Michigan!?????
ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา +1
Watching you talk in front of an invasive plant I might want to grow ONLY for 4 minutes and 33 seconds because of TH-cam converting your 4:34 sec video into 4:33.
I was cautious about eleagnus, and got a few eleagnus multiflora, because they do not have a reputation for spreading wildly .. They are nice, but the more I think about it, the more I kind of want more aggressive suckering out of my pioneer plants - err on the side of more biomass .. SOMETHING has to keep up with the Jerusalem artichokes !
I support your decision to title things this way
Thanks. Gonna find and plant this
Commenting with eight words on a TH-cam video.
And so it begins! The anti-clickbait movement. Congratulations,
Here for the title
I just watched another youtuber say they would never grow these again. Thanks for another perspective!
Leaving a comment. Hitting the thumbs up.
Stop narrating my life. 😂
@@Freeland-Farm replying to your comment.
@@Dirt-Fermer Noooooooo...
Wow! This is incredible! I can't believe how neat this video is! Nobody should not watch this! This is the one and only thing I'm going to plant forever! Thank you for sharing this information with everyone but no one will believe you. Always remember the number one rule that everyone should know: never play with the algorithm!
Love Autumn olive, very tasty, in southern Ontario they are kinda invasive but they really did a great job healing the degraded soil in our neighbourhood.
Ooohhh interesting! Cheers from Australia😊
Man, I saw the title and I just couldn't resist clicking on it right away!! 🎉
My favorite Autumn Olive was killed this year by an insect, it burrowed right into the trunk. First time i have ever seen that happen.
I have seen this before, seen several of them die. Interesting I also don't see that many in the wild here although they are considered invasive
QUALITY 👏 CONTENT 👏
I grow this in Tucson, Az. Along with Goumi and Silverberry.
I feel this way about my goji berry bushes that are INSANELY invasive
That’s wild since mine hardly ever even fruits, let alone produces offspring.
@@cantseetheforestforthetree9673 I can cut mine back to the ground and they will regrow completely in less than 30 days PLUS spread underground below my driveway to the opposite side. It's wild. I could pick a 5 gallon bucket full each year easily.
I just made 9 pints of Autumn Olive jelly last month, here on the Cumberland plateau in central Tennessee, where it is illegal to propagate or sell Autumn Olives.
Kudzu may not make 'delicious edible fruits' but the entire plant is highly nutritious. The roos are starchy like potatoes, the leaves can be sautéed in butter and garlic or steamed, and the seeds can be boiled and eaten, tho the seeds are tiny and the pods inedible.
It is a fantastic fodder plant. It grows a foot a day, so in a week you can cut the vines and let them dry; roll them up and store them as hay. Wonderful survival plant!
I love ALL David The Good videos!
Commenting, like others, about the title. Love it.
I’m watching because of the title !
YES!!! NO CLICK BAIT!!!
Captivating title!
😂 love the title, love the video, rebel food forresting all the way!
I never search of autumn olives! Sounds interesting.
These are all over my family's property in PA.
Fun fact: you can graft Goumi on Autumn Olive since they're related. Use Tillamook (aka Carmine) cultivar - it's bigger and way better taste than the rest. Of course Goumi grows fast too, but not as fast as Autumn Olive.
they taste like sour candy where im at
I am definitely interested in your anti-click bait titles 😂
Yes great title
Might as well 😊
The clickbait title made me watch this video.
Yeah, major bait and switch but the thumbnail was too enticing
I came here just to say what you just said, but ended up watching the whole thing because you already said it.
Every country has invasive species from other countries. In Australia we got cane toads from America to eat up all the cane beetles. And also rats tail grass for cows. Which no matter how much people throw chemicals at it . Its here to stay. The key to reducing it is other grasses, trees , legumes, green manure species to compete with it. It works.
Awesome video. My Wife says I have an issue with creating my own methane lol
New video title suggestion: How to identify this invasive plant, because some guy in Michigan still hasn't figured it out yet and wants to do his part by eating the berries like the other video suggested, with a link to the other video in the top left corner.
Might be too long, but you get the idea.
Hahahahahahah! Hilarious best title of the year!
they taste pretty good, sour and sweet
This is for the anti-algorithm.
We've got these on our new place in Kentucky. I have mixed feelings on them. I like them more than bush honeysuckle
They still allow passage into and out of Michigan?!
The More You Know!🌈🌟
What, man! Are there NO fountains on Michigan!?????
Watching you talk in front of an invasive plant I might want to grow ONLY for 4 minutes and 33 seconds because of TH-cam converting your 4:34 sec video into 4:33.
Brilliant Title😂
Don't show this to Greg Judy. He hates those things.
Oops there goes the algorithms lol
So this is what lies on the other side of the clickbait peak. It's a wonder!
All the ones I've tried that I've found in this area were both very sour and astringent. They're weed status here.
Autumn Olive trees are going no where. Might as well embrace them, they are now a part of the ecosystem.
Yay your in the same state as me lol 😀
Concise title. Hopefully the algorithim does as well.
You forgot to mention that you will be using words such as “the”, “this”, “it”, “and” and such. Lol😄
You could at least tell us what they taste like....
Had to click because of the title!
Great click bait!
This is the most click bait title ever and totally does not represent the video >:(
🤣🤣🤣
I was cautious about eleagnus, and got a few eleagnus multiflora, because they do not have a reputation for spreading wildly .. They are nice, but the more I think about it, the more I kind of want more aggressive suckering out of my pioneer plants - err on the side of more biomass .. SOMETHING has to keep up with the Jerusalem artichokes !
❤😢😂
This clickbait is getting outrageous
Noice
So sour .
BTW, Total Clickbait!
1st!
😀🌱🐢
I have found Goji to be a nice way to get soil stabilized in record time