Looking good! I’m still waiting for popcorn to finish before pulling it. Growing glass gem. And some normal popcorn. Not sure if I’ll have time to plant in its place before frost though. Well… maybe I’ll throw some garlic in that spot… Dec.1 is our first frost date here in the country side just south of Paris France. Already planning for next year though lol
Garlic sounds like the perfect thing to plant right after. Good luck. Would love to see that glass gem corn. I've seen it in catalogs and have wondered if it looks that cool or if it's just photoshopped.
I keep planting various warm weather vegetables in fall and protect them from frosts with tarps from frosts as long as I can. But I`m always in a battle with Mother Nature here in Louisiana.
If you are letting the beds sit overwinter, definitely leave the roots, It feeds the worms, the worms poop replenishing nitrogen in the soil at root level. And, if you are buying worm cadtings (poop), it saves you money in the logn run.
@dianagrasiano6793 Its not goo all the time. If i left them where would the new roots from the plants I am planting go? I only do it in winter if the beds will rest for a while. plus my soil is not compacted so I dont need them to create new channels for water. By mulching and adding compost I am introducing new nutrients that the roots will take months to provide. If you aretrying to build soil leaving roots is an ok option but there are many other methods that work much better and faster.
Cool seeder! I've place it on my wish list. I can definitely use it for planting onion seeds and carrot seeds. It will make it so much easier!
i hope you get it. Makes gardening so much easier
That’s a cool seeder tool!
Thanks for the baked radish hint. I, too get tired of raw radish flavor.
It's so good!
Hope you're all ok and didn't get hit by the hurricane!!!
Missed us thankfully
@@sandybottomhomestead 🙏
Looking good! I’m still waiting for popcorn to finish before pulling it. Growing glass gem. And some normal popcorn. Not sure if I’ll have time to plant in its place before frost though. Well… maybe I’ll throw some garlic in that spot… Dec.1 is our first frost date here in the country side just south of Paris France.
Already planning for next year though lol
Garlic sounds like the perfect thing to plant right after. Good luck. Would love to see that glass gem corn. I've seen it in catalogs and have wondered if it looks that cool or if it's just photoshopped.
I keep planting various warm weather vegetables in fall and protect them from frosts with tarps from frosts as long as I can. But I`m always in a battle with Mother Nature here in Louisiana.
haha @danlowmusic
my frost date is in about a month and you see what I am planting.
I've heard that leaving the roots in the bed are good for the soil, why do you pull everything?
If you are letting the beds sit overwinter, definitely leave the roots, It feeds the worms, the worms poop replenishing nitrogen in the soil at root level. And, if you are buying worm cadtings (poop), it saves you money in the logn run.
@dianagrasiano6793 Its not goo all the time. If i left them where would the new roots from the plants I am planting go? I only do it in winter if the beds will rest for a while. plus my soil is not compacted so I dont need them to create new channels for water. By mulching and adding compost I am introducing new nutrients that the roots will take months to provide. If you aretrying to build soil leaving roots is an ok option but there are many other methods that work much better and faster.
Dont think ill be buying that particular seeder
Ok