Beets Carrots Turnips Radishes Rutabagas Chard Peas Beans - bush Cauliflower Broccoli - sprouting Cabbage - Chinese Chard Kale Spinach Mustards -green wave Lettuces Arugula Sorrel Bok choy Mescaline mixes Cilantro Garlic In order as they listed them and yes they mentioned chard twice bringing the list to 22. With 21 individual things to plant. 😁
I used to not like turnips much either. My mother used to boil them with potatoes. HOWEVER, I started cubing them with onions and fry them in a skillet with a little oil or butter, like home fries, and they are delicious. Browning them like this really sweetens the flavor and cuts the bitterness. If you've never tried them like this, you should. It may change your mind. You can also roast them on a sheet pan, cubed again, with onions and a little oil. I've also added sweet potatoes and white potatoes. It's great.
Turnip adds a wonderful flavor to my chicken stock. When I remove the cooked vegetables from the stock, I smash them up with butter, salt and pepper and it's so good!
Mash them with bacon grease, put them in soups and stews. I pick before they get bitter. The way you do it sounds wonderful. I will have to try them that way. Never had a turnip I didn't like except the year I left them in the ground too long and they turned bitter and woody
I fermented a lot last year, inspired by your videos. So much of it left. Going to can tomatoes this year as I still have fermented salsa left. Now you have me talked into fermenting carrots!!
Oh I have not gone huckleberries since I was a teenager. We used to go up on the mountain and pick them. Oh I remember sneaking into the freezer and grabbing a few.
Hi! First time watcher here😁 excited to find you. we bought 11 acres in Northwest Florida in January 2021. We have not been able to plant yet due to having to clean and clear damage from Hurricane Michael. Hundreds of trees down and stumps to grind. Each week we get closer to moving forward. We inherited 3 goats which turned into 6 in April. Also 3 chickens but we have bought 15 more. 😁 So much to learn. So much to enjoy. Looking forward to learning all y’all are teaching.
Growing in FLA is not like growing anywhere else in the us because we are tropical and sand. University of Fl has a seed planting guide for when to plant seed in Florida that is worth it's weight in gold.I highly recommend getting it from their web site.
We have a 4 season garden here, its pretty mild only snowing for a couple days every 4 years or so. With our 40 ft green house, IF I remember to get stuff in, then we have food all winter. The first year we had lettuce in there all winter. It even survived the freezing temps. Now to get stuff in the ground on time!!! Thank you for the reminder!
I’m a newbie, I have my first grow bags cherry tomatoes and potatoes, I feel really rewarding, the Good Lord has given us the best tomatoes ,,, now,, I have pumpkins growing by accident they grew from our fall front yard, there are about 4 separate plants and I don’t know what to do about pumpkins
I just discovered you two yesterday, and I have to say, it's quite refreshing to have someone knowledgeable talking about homesteading. Like your grandmother, my parents grew up during the Great Depression, and I've always had a big garden. In the past 10 years, I've discovered dehydrating with my Excalibur dehydrator, and this year plan on adding more fermented veggies to the mix. Thank you for the fermented ginger carrot video. I just pickled some carrots, but will ferment some in about 50 days when the next carrots are ready. One more thing to plant now, for me, is another row of red potatoes. I haven't bought potatoes in the store in years! I like to have some in late so they store well and I use them as seed potatoes. Thanks again, Debbie in New York state (far from any city)
Here in South Georgia red potatoes don’t do as well for me in the fall garden so instead I plant Yukon Golds for the fall garden and get a much larger harvest I find! Best wishes on the red ones!
@@feliciaalvarez9552what is the best way to get them to chit? I just bought some tiny potatoes (forgot name) at our local farm stand and thought I could use them for seed potatoes. I’m still waiting to see if I got any sweet potatoes to harvest. Leaves are still pretty green.
Freezing is really fabulous - I love doing it with tomatoes, too - and the true advantage to it is that I don't have to heat up the house in Summer and can spend the time in Winter then the stove is on anyway and the days are calmer!
Last week I planted cabbages, radishes, beets, and lettuces in my front flower garden. As my flowers die back I hope to have some pretty "foliage" in front of my bushes. This is the first time I've done this so I'm excited to see how it works.
I love frozen rasp..... I grew up w rasperries(im 62)... I have 6 children and did 100 jars pickles...etc. Have dehydrated...canned and frozen for 40 some years....butchered... made cheese...never fermented though....Yum !
I first started watching your videos last Sept. when we bought our small Homestead. I had all these big plans to get it working as soon as possible. Planted lots of seedlings and couldn't wait for the frost date to come and go. Tried to get chickens but the pickups kept falling through. None of the veggies came up and our beautiful garden now has 10ft tall weeds growing in and amongst the raised beds. I cant get to the back of the coop right now for the weeds! When you said you should take time to get settles in, unpack, and get to know your land I suddenly stopped feeling like I failed! Thank you so much! We have some elevated beds for Mom to.plant and yesterday I put in carrots, chard and radishes. Thanks for the advice, you all rock! I'm in zone 7-8, upstate, SC.
I started sowing carrots and leaf lettuce about two weeks ago, romaine lettuce last week, more carrots, leaf lettuce and blue lake green beans ( bush ) this week. When the beans start to sprout I will sow more seeds. I am in the mid Atlantic area. First frost into November.
Thanks for all the amazing information. Y'all have such sweet spirits. FYI- One yard revolution on YT is in Illinois and harvests twelve months a year. He's a great resource if you're learning to grow under cover.
Zone 8b, first frost is first week of November. This past week, we sowed spinach, cabbage, broccoli, and carrots. Sunday, hopeful to sow lettuce, turnips, mache, and beets. I let ALOT of my greens self sow - lettuce, parsley, chard, kales, arugula, to name a few.
I’ve enjoyed just watching your beautiful scenery! Refreshing to watch nice people! I’m having surgery but getting ideas for next year. Love that little goose in one of your videos. You have a beautiful family! Take care.
I'm an urban gardener, living in the city of New Bedford, Massachusetts and only have a small yard to plant in. The house I live in is for sale, so this year and last, I planted in 7 gallon clothe planters which I put inside milk crates that my neighborhood store gave me. This makes it easier to control the type of soil that I use and when I have to move, my garden will move with me. I found a company that makes cold frames for 4×4 gardens that I plan to use this fall and winter to grow my greens.
I had to do this for a couple years as well. Lots of things grow well in a decent sized container. I even took a small tree with me when I moved. Tomatoes, green peppers, salad greens, radishes, carrots…this year I am trying out a potato bag. Next year I plan to use a couple of larger cloth planters for my kitchen garden, because my sunny spots are at a premium, and in the winter, I need that space for plowed snow storage, so the beds will have to move in the fall. I am also looking for some inexpensive wheeled carts for small mobile beds to chase the sun (I live in a deciduous forest).
How funny! I literally just got Clyde’s planner in the mail yesterday with my Baker Creek fall order of seeds. This was perfect timing as I have just planted cabbage, sprouting broccoli, and cauliflower seedlings (started just a few weeks ago)in the garden today along with seeds of carrots, dragon bush beans, bok choy, radishes and Napa cabbage. Whew! It was like you were reading my list right back to me! 😂 I’m hoping to get some more lettuces, spinach, sugar peas and kale in the ground soon too. Looking forward to a “prayerfully” excellent harvest this fall and winter! Our first frost is about late October...maybe mid November if we’re lucky. I’m in the very northwest corner of Washington State ...zone 8A. Love your channel, and am enjoying canning, preserving and fermenting right along side of you! Thanks for all you share! Blessings for a major fall harvest this year in your new homestead!
My cucumbers and long beans are having a second wave of growth, I planted sweet potatoes back in the beginning of july, kale is doing great and oakra puts out a few at a time i love turnips and beets peppers tomatoes and a small table top of strawberry plants lots of herbs and just bought a few fruit trees in containers on drip systems chickens provide eggs and poultry
Thank you for all the great advice! I was so happy when you said,” the kids garden”!! That’s so awesome!! Me and my grandkiddos always grow our gardens, they pick out whatever they’d love to grow on a row, last year, specialty carrots!! They have oranges, purples, reds, yellows!! They loved it! Plus their favorite veggie!! Kids always should learn to know this!!
We adopted our son from Russia 30 years ago, right after the fall of the USSR. He was 5. His orphanage (ages 1-5) was excited that they were finally ALLOWED TO GROW THINGS! The USSR didn't allow individual gardens. At 5 Vinnie was great at pulling the right plants-weeds. Children can learn younger and faster than you think they can.
Hands down best bug control I have ever used was Guinea fowl in the garden. Unlike chickens they don't eat your vegetables, but I had a double 50 ft row of bush beans and there was not one hole from a bean beetle in a single leaf. They would walk down on opposite sides of the row, even with each other and get any bugs on the beans as they went. They are not the smartest fowl in the barnyard, but they're great watch dogs, seasonal layers, and you won't have a tick or a beetle on your property. They won't eat squash beetles, but I don't think anything eats those. Love your videos, I don't say that about many TH-cam videos. Yours are really well done, thank you.
I'm in Western Montana and I just put some carnival sweet pepper seeds in a container. The peppers are smaller and develope pretty fast once they set, so I am pretty sure I will get some for adding to my canning and pickling this fall.
Elizabeth is so cute! Great timing for this video. I have never done a Fall garden before. I did try to grow garlic last year but it was a flop. I am going to keep trying to I get it to grow til I figured it out.
Don't forget if you have green onions growing, cut the bottom off--about half to 3/4 inch and stick it back in the ground. It will continue to grow. If you buy store bought green onions with a little bit of root you can do the same thing. If you forget about them and it snows, unless the freeze is deep, you can dig up the bulb pretty late in the year. I'm in PA
I just love you guys! Just about every video you guys start out saying, “welcome to pantry chat 21..?.” Never remembering which one were on. 😂 I personally think it’s so funny because I can’t remember nothing! It’s nice to see I’m not the only one. You guys are great and I can’t wait to watch all your videos. Working on them all. And I just love every single video you guys put out. You always hit a certain something that I may know, however I may not know “why”. You guys give so much knowledge, I appreciate you guys. Stay grateful, thankful, and blessed xoxo
Im in zone 9a inland Southern California. We have 316 growing days with our first frost around December 1st and last around February 28. July and August are too hot for most things to start. (120°F) We’re trying so many different growing methods this year. Traditional in ground growing, raised beds, hydroponics, aquaponics, a hybrid of the two in an above ground pool with fish and also wicking beds. Our orchard goes in this fall.
Just wanted to thank you for all your really informative videos. I just got into homesteading this year, and all of your videos have been super helpful, thank you again and god bless.
You mentioned Bush Beans as a fall crop, the two varieties I recommend are Provider & Royal Burgundy because they do better with cool night temperatures in late summer as fall arrives. I'm in 6b and planting some fall crops while the tomatoes are coming in. I used to live in ID and east coast growing is a different experience with humid weather and more insect pressure.
Thank you and please talk more about long term fermenting. I would like to store my fermented food longer. This method works great. But so many are talking more in terms of a few days or weeks. I want to use this method much longer like several months.
I have never done a fall garden..this year will be my first..so thanks for both for all the list and great tips..loved the little visitor..she is a little cutie..Hello Elizabeth :)
It is my first year trying a fall garden too. I've always just bought a few tomato plants in the spring and a few other things and just let them do their thing and that was the extent of my gardening. This year I'm trying to be more proactive in the garden and trying new things too. I think for my fall garden itll mainly just be greens, radishes, and beans. But I'm going to try replanting potatoes and carrots and see if they can produce before winter.
Great conversation to overhear for someone who needs a general idea of how great gardeners do things, and who needs specifics on how to ( even look for more info). Hi Elizabeth!
Love this, you've given me a few ideas to add to my garden! In the last 2 weeks I've planted carrots, broccoli, cabbage, radishes, lettuce, and cilantro. I'm also thinking about adding turnips, swiss chard, and maybe kohlrabi this week!
Northeast AZ - First Frost Oct 15 - Planting everything this week. Microclimate behind my apartment. I hatched chicks this Spring instead of planting a Garden. Now that the chicks are fully integrated into the established flock, I am dividing the yard, containing the chickens away from the garden area, and hoping I get something. Container garden in case I move.
Hello, Loved, loved, loved the chat, E is adorable. I miss that as mine are grown. I have been winter gardening without a greenhouse here on Whidbey island, central island, for almost 10 years. Lots of trial and error and experimenting. I use a frost blanket to cover my food when the temps dip low and it has been quite successful. My go to for information is from Charles Dowdy WINTER VEGETABLES and West Coast Seeds in BC has a great booklet they offer on Winter Gardening. I plant winter hardy seeds with varying harvest dates to extend the harvest. Our winds can be quite wild and change direction from coming from the south to coming from the north...which can be challenging. I also deal with the short tailed field mouse, vole, who thinks I am planting for him. So I generally put out a trap line in and around my winter garden. My other critter challenge are the crowned sparrow which have a sweet song, but wreck havoc on the greens. They seem to be increasing in number and love the garden. So covering with a nett or something like it is a must...especially early on when they are first coming up. (My husband pulled a trampoline net out of a dumpster and it works great. I plant my brassicas as starts under lights, no heat, in July and then plant out in August. Then I have to shade them for the remainder of the month and into September otherwise they will bolt. (Another brassica to plant is kohlrabi...great stir fried or slawed. And is fast growing) I plant all you mentioned and I also do a dense planting of beets for their greens only to stir fry or add to soups. I loved your chat because it's nice to hear what others are doing and for your sharing this information that others may not know. Much of my acquaintances and some family think I am crazy and that it is too much work. But I love the challenge, it gets me outside and we are healthier for it. Blessings.
Cutie Elizabeth! Thanks y'all. Love your videos! Always helpful and full of info! Thanks Josh for the computer skills with the canning class. I am thru the waterbath section and have stockpiled mason jars, lol. and thank you Carolyn for your most ecxellent teachings. I just love you guys! Peace, joy and much gratitude to you both and your family!
My first frost date is November 30th so I get to grow lots of stuff. I’ve been able to plant heat loving plants (because it’s HOT and humid here in the south). I’m planting cowpeas, pole beans (I’m trying yard long beans this fall), and in October I start onions from seed. I plant my garlic in November. I usually try to get my brassicas to grow in the fall because they bolt very quickly for me in the spring. I’m also trying to get more out of my extended growing season for determinate tomatoes. I started this seeds early July and only planted quick producing varieties. My next round of succession planting of pole beans go in next week. Rattlesnake beans are on the menu along with Lima beans (bush) and I often have to plant in partial shade for my plants to survive or even germinate. It works though! Winter squash is also getting planting here in July as well as another round of sweet corn. Whew. I’m tired. 😂
I am in south Carolina and my frost dates is in October. I have already started bush beans broccoli, cabbage , bunch onions , dill. and planning to do more as potatoes, peppers, squash, and maybe beets . I love my veggies and am interested in your training on fermenting them . Thank you for your videos. they are so interesting and have so much new information to learn. Keep up the work and teaching to bring us new ideas on caring for our home, food and gardening. LOVE ALL YOUR VIDEOS , I can't say how much I have enjoyed watching you and your family.
I’m at 6,500 ft in colorado and i grow something year round! I do have covers and sometimes i double cover for a few extra degrees of protection. But i had bok choy last year that did great even in the below zero temps! I just put in more lettuce, and chard and carrots. I’m starting cabbages to take the space of the peppers and tomatoes when they come out around the beginning of october. I agree - seeds are cheap! Just try and see what happens! You guys are great! Thank you for all that you share!
New to your Chanel ordered the Clyde's Garden Planner. That should be very helpful . I'm 70 years young and haven't had a garden in years. Got a pressure canner and water bath canner in June. So far have been canning mostly meat and vegetables and making jams and jellies. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
In Galicia, in Northern Spain, they make a vegetable soup with potaoes, onions and such in it that includes the leaves of turnips and is very good. There they call the leaves of turnips grellos.
Lovely, informative podcast! Love to know how to keep perennial herbs such as basil, rosemary, and thyme coming back yearly! You mentioned composting, can you touch upon that a little more in your future podcasts? I grow these herbs yearly in pots. I have to buy it every year. It dies and don’t come back. I try bringing it indoor one winter and still it did not survive. Buying from the farmer markets ready planted seedlings becomes very expensive. I tried developing from seeds, no success. In addition, I have a tough time keeping thyme alive. They keep dying. I put in sunny shaded area and still not much luck! I keep having to buy more. I live in New York, next to the Big Apple - Manhattan! I am very hands-on baking breads, making homemade pestos, nut butters, granola, growing herbs, tomatoes, beans, and fig trees, as much as I can. Thanks for sharing your wonderful growing tips!
Thyme and rosemary can take a month to sprout from seed. Basil is an annual so unless you're growing holy basil or have a magic thumb it doesn't live long even in gentle climate rare-to-frost-four-seasons growing areas. However, it is easy to grow your own basil seed. I can't help you with rosemary or English thyme -they are effortless perennials on the Pacific coast (at least from Mendocino County (and probably as far north as coastal BC if you are anywhere near a "banana belt") to the Mexican border.
Tyfs! 😁🥬🌽🥕🥒 Bush beans Kale collards Radishes Spinach Mesclun Mix Peas sweet corn 🥕and sugar baby watermelon Zucchini Summer Squash in my containers and grow bags 5 and 15 gallon! 1st time Gardener already harvested spinach dill Parsley basil made a salad😁😋❤ Original planting June 28th also just created a small No Dig Garden with potatoes greens beans radishes spinach already seeing sprouts😁 I'm in zone 5-6 Central Ohio. Just came across your channel love it will grow=go (🤣🤣 through your previous videos! I subscribed!❤😁
Hi from wet SCOTLAND i watch a few of USA homesteaders i call it crofting our places are tiny compared to yours but next year i go of grid so studying you all xx
I miss raspberries! I am zone 9a, I think it would be helpful if you said what zone you are in as well. Yes, ask your neighbors! That is great advice. I too, live in amicroclimate.
I live in New Hampshire- a very similar climate as your family so your information is extremely helpful. But your sweet little Elizabeth stole the show for me🌸
We only moved onto our new garden patch in South of France in June; so have been looking to grow late! It is now early September and I planted loads of stuff you have mentioned by July/August. I use hens for fertility moving the dome around on the beds - I have five beds of permaculture - with the chooks still on bed six - having fun and a bit of hard work lots of roots in the new beds! I have tried not to dig too much though. I did not know what mesclun was, but planted it as saw in the shop so glad you mentioned this. Ready to plant some onions peas and beans soon. I am the only one around here who is planting anything!! They are saying it's the end of the season; just tomatoes and peppers grown mainly - no greens!! I also have lots of Chinese leaf. The lettuce never took off though! I did get some courgettes but a bit late for them. Rocket has been doing well and radish.
Master Gardner here City living i plant 🌱 in my flower pots & in my flower bed 🛌 planting lettuce 🥬 now parsley collard greens tomatoes 🍅Mobile Alabama
Thank you, a very informative video, I received my “Clyde’s Garden Planner a few months ago and it truly is a great guide! Thank you so much for this channel.
One thing that allows you to experiment more is saving seeds. I love the fall gardening. I live in zone 6. I would include egyptian walking onions and bunching onions for a spring harvest.
Beets
Carrots
Turnips
Radishes
Rutabagas
Chard
Peas
Beans - bush
Cauliflower
Broccoli - sprouting
Cabbage - Chinese
Chard
Kale
Spinach
Mustards -green wave
Lettuces
Arugula
Sorrel
Bok choy
Mescaline mixes
Cilantro
Garlic
In order as they listed them and yes they mentioned chard twice bringing the list to 22. With 21 individual things to plant. 😁
Thank you
Yes, thanks Angie! 👍
Thanks!
Onions
Pll8l)l
I used to not like turnips much either. My mother used to boil them with potatoes. HOWEVER, I started cubing them with onions and fry them in a skillet with a little oil or butter, like home fries, and they are delicious. Browning them like this really sweetens the flavor and cuts the bitterness. If you've never tried them like this, you should. It may change your mind. You can also roast them on a sheet pan, cubed again, with onions and a little oil. I've also added sweet potatoes and white potatoes. It's great.
Turnip adds a wonderful flavor to my chicken stock. When I remove the cooked vegetables from the stock, I smash them up with butter, salt and pepper and it's so good!
They also make nice veggie noodles, especially for Asian inspired dishes.
Mash them with bacon grease, put them in soups and stews. I pick before they get bitter. The way you do it sounds wonderful. I will have to try them that way. Never had a turnip I didn't like except the year I left them in the ground too long and they turned bitter and woody
My husband hates them. I will try you way. He like French fries. Thanks.
Put a bit of vinegar and butter in when you mash them. Takes the bitterness away tastes better
I fermented a lot last year, inspired by your videos. So much of it left. Going to can tomatoes this year as I still have fermented salsa left. Now you have me talked into fermenting carrots!!
Wonderful!
Oh I have not gone huckleberries since I was a teenager. We used to go up on the mountain and pick them. Oh I remember sneaking into the freezer and grabbing a few.
Hi! First time watcher here😁 excited to find you. we bought 11 acres in Northwest Florida in January 2021. We have not been able to plant yet due to having to clean and clear damage from Hurricane Michael. Hundreds of trees down and stumps to grind. Each week we get closer to moving forward. We inherited 3 goats which turned into 6 in April. Also 3 chickens but we have bought 15 more. 😁 So much to learn. So much to enjoy. Looking forward to learning all y’all are teaching.
Growing in FLA is not like growing anywhere else in the us because we are tropical and sand. University of Fl has a seed planting guide for when to plant seed in Florida that is worth it's weight in gold.I highly recommend getting it from their web site.
if you build a cellar don't dig...
build top ground to get the
underground coolness...build cellar then bury, create a hill
Welcome to the panhandle ❤️ Praying we don’t have another storm like Michael ever again 🙏😊
Great suggestion Edie!
We have a 4 season garden here, its pretty mild only snowing for a couple days every 4 years or so. With our 40 ft green house, IF I remember to get stuff in, then we have food all winter. The first year we had lettuce in there all winter. It even survived the freezing temps. Now to get stuff in the ground on time!!! Thank you for the reminder!
I’m a newbie, I have my first grow bags cherry tomatoes and potatoes, I feel really rewarding, the Good Lord has given us the best tomatoes ,,, now,, I have pumpkins growing by accident they grew from our fall front yard, there are about 4 separate plants and I don’t know what to do about pumpkins
For brasscia family we sprinkle used dry coffee grounds on plants as they grow this deters the white cabbage moth
Need to remember that! Thanks for the tip.
Wow! Definitely gonna try this
Thanks! Great advice.
I have to try that! This is my first year brassica “farming” and I have had so many issues with moths.
Hi K A
I’m watching this long after you made your comment! How close to the brassica plants do you sprinkle the coffee grounds please?
I just discovered you two yesterday, and I have to say, it's quite refreshing to have someone knowledgeable talking about homesteading. Like your grandmother, my parents grew up during the Great Depression, and I've always had a big garden. In the past 10 years, I've discovered dehydrating with my Excalibur dehydrator, and this year plan on adding more fermented veggies to the mix. Thank you for the fermented ginger carrot video. I just pickled some carrots, but will ferment some in about 50 days when the next carrots are ready.
One more thing to plant now, for me, is another row of red potatoes. I haven't bought potatoes in the store in years! I like to have some in late so they store well and I use them as seed potatoes.
Thanks again,
Debbie in New York state (far from any city)
Red potatoes from seed in the ground?
Here in South Georgia red potatoes don’t do as well for me in the fall garden so instead I plant Yukon Golds for the fall garden and get a much larger harvest I find! Best wishes on the red ones!
@@jamiewhitehead7791seed potatoes are ones you save to "chit" or sprout in the next growing season, then plant them for a new crop. 😊
I think they are from our county here in North Idaho 😊 my mom loves them and has followed a lot of their tips and recipes. 😊
@@feliciaalvarez9552what is the best way to get them to chit? I just bought some tiny potatoes (forgot name) at our local farm stand and thought I could use them for seed potatoes.
I’m still waiting to see if I got any sweet potatoes to harvest. Leaves are still pretty green.
Freezing is really fabulous - I love doing it with tomatoes, too - and the true advantage to it is that I don't have to heat up the house in Summer and can spend the time in Winter then the stove is on anyway and the days are calmer!
And freezing them first makes the skins come off so easily! :)
@@melaniesmith8025I love my freezer, till the power goes out.
Thank you for sharing all of this. As a divorced dad living alone, survival hints/help is appreciated.
Parsnips will keep growing next fall and be ready sooner
Last week I planted cabbages, radishes, beets, and lettuces in my front flower garden. As my flowers die back I hope to have some pretty "foliage" in front of my bushes. This is the first time I've done this so I'm excited to see how it works.
Care to tell us after how well this worked?
Wonderful video as always. Elizabeth is sure cute and so polite! I was amazed at how long she sat so quietly and just listened.
It's amazing how many people are only critics without being any productive critics. Thanks for this video. That was a nice interview.
I love frozen rasp.....
I grew up w
rasperries(im 62)...
I have 6 children and did 100 jars pickles...etc.
Have dehydrated...canned and
frozen for 40 some years....butchered...
made cheese...never fermented though....Yum !
After butchering meat do you boil it first before canning? Please
Can you explain how to can please.
I first started watching your videos last Sept. when we bought our small Homestead. I had all these big plans to get it working as soon as possible. Planted lots of seedlings and couldn't wait for the frost date to come and go. Tried to get chickens but the pickups kept falling through. None of the veggies came up and our beautiful garden now has 10ft tall weeds growing in and amongst the raised beds. I cant get to the back of the coop right now for the weeds! When you said you should take time to get settles in, unpack, and get to know your land I suddenly stopped feeling like I failed! Thank you so much! We have some elevated beds for Mom to.plant and yesterday I put in carrots, chard and radishes. Thanks for the advice, you all rock! I'm in zone 7-8, upstate, SC.
Dragon Tongue Beans are my favorite also..
Great podcast! Greetings from Central California 😇👍🏼
Thanks my friend ❤️
Would love to hear about perennial greens!
I started sowing carrots and leaf lettuce about two weeks ago, romaine lettuce last week, more carrots, leaf lettuce and blue lake green beans ( bush ) this week. When the beans start to sprout I will sow more seeds. I am in the mid Atlantic area. First frost into November.
Thanks for all the amazing information. Y'all have such sweet spirits. FYI- One yard revolution on YT is in Illinois and harvests twelve months a year. He's a great resource if you're learning to grow under cover.
I LOVE his videos. Is he still doing them? I haven’t seen one for a while.
Photos are such a keepsake because you can never get those moments back. ❤ I have lost 😡 some of my favorite pictures it was devastating!!!
My mother always freezes her berries and makes her jam in the winter. She doesn't have time in the summer either.
It is hot project to do in the summer.
I do also and it is cooler.
my mom used to do that too......
Zone 8b, first frost is first week of November. This past week, we sowed spinach, cabbage, broccoli, and carrots. Sunday, hopeful to sow lettuce, turnips, mache, and beets. I let ALOT of my greens self sow - lettuce, parsley, chard, kales, arugula, to name a few.
I’ve enjoyed just watching your beautiful scenery! Refreshing to watch nice people! I’m having surgery but getting ideas for next year. Love that little goose in one of your videos. You have a beautiful family! Take care.
I'm an urban gardener, living in the city of New Bedford, Massachusetts and only have a small yard to plant in.
The house I live in is for sale, so this year and last, I planted in 7 gallon clothe planters which I put inside milk crates that my neighborhood store gave me.
This makes it easier to control the type of soil that I use and when I have to move, my garden will move with me.
I found a company that makes cold frames for 4×4 gardens that I plan to use this fall and winter to grow my greens.
They have a video on small spaces gardening
I had to do this for a couple years as well. Lots of things grow well in a decent sized container. I even took a small tree with me when I moved. Tomatoes, green peppers, salad greens, radishes, carrots…this year I am trying out a potato bag. Next year I plan to use a couple of larger cloth planters for my kitchen garden, because my sunny spots are at a premium, and in the winter, I need that space for plowed snow storage, so the beds will have to move in the fall. I am also looking for some inexpensive wheeled carts for small mobile beds to chase the sun (I live in a deciduous forest).
You’re still learning and growing! Smart 😊
Good to know I have enjoyed what I seen🦋 and🦋 heard so far.
🐌🌱🐛🌻🐝
That sound's wonderful I can see it in my mind kind of but it's better to see picture's.
How funny! I literally just got Clyde’s planner in the mail yesterday with my Baker Creek fall order of seeds. This was perfect timing as I have just planted cabbage, sprouting broccoli, and cauliflower seedlings (started just a few weeks ago)in the garden today along with seeds of carrots, dragon bush beans, bok choy, radishes and Napa cabbage. Whew! It was like you were reading my list right back to me! 😂 I’m hoping to get some more lettuces, spinach, sugar peas and kale in the ground soon too. Looking forward to a “prayerfully” excellent harvest this fall and winter! Our first frost is about late October...maybe mid November if we’re lucky. I’m in the very northwest corner of Washington State ...zone 8A. Love your channel, and am enjoying canning, preserving and fermenting right along side of you! Thanks for all you share! Blessings for a major fall harvest this year in your new homestead!
My cucumbers and long beans are having a second wave of growth, I planted sweet potatoes back in the beginning of july, kale is doing great and oakra puts out a few at a time i love turnips and beets peppers tomatoes and a small table top of strawberry plants lots of herbs and just bought a few fruit trees in containers on drip systems chickens provide eggs and poultry
Thank you for all the great advice! I was so happy when you said,” the kids garden”!! That’s so awesome!! Me and my grandkiddos always grow our gardens, they pick out whatever they’d love to grow on a row, last year, specialty carrots!! They have oranges, purples, reds, yellows!! They loved it! Plus their favorite veggie!! Kids always should learn to know this!!
That’s awesome because my mama and my grandma had us in the garden teaching me, my sister and cousins! I’m glad I can grow my own food!
We adopted our son from Russia 30 years ago, right after the fall of the USSR. He was 5. His orphanage (ages 1-5) was excited that they were finally ALLOWED TO GROW THINGS! The USSR didn't allow individual gardens. At 5 Vinnie was great at pulling the right plants-weeds. Children can learn younger and faster than you think they can.
Thank you two for the information and a special thanks to the young one who came in and quietly entertained us with her expressions. :D
Yes, I would like to see a pantry chat on perennials for the garden.
Yes, I would like to see more on perennials.....it is nice when plants keep hanging around and you do not have to keep buying everything
Thank you ! I will plant a fall garden. Retired now so can stay home. Worked school food service for years
LOVE your husbands efficiency techniques. He makes it so interesting
I needed this video badly. Thank you so much. I just finished my raised beds. though I was going to have to wait for spring. I'm so happy.
Hands down best bug control I have ever used was Guinea fowl in the garden. Unlike chickens they don't eat your vegetables, but I had a double 50 ft row of bush beans and there was not one hole from a bean beetle in a single leaf. They would walk down on opposite sides of the row, even with each other and get any bugs on the beans as they went. They are not the smartest fowl in the barnyard, but they're great watch dogs, seasonal layers, and you won't have a tick or a beetle on your property. They won't eat squash beetles, but I don't think anything eats those.
Love your videos, I don't say that about many TH-cam videos. Yours are really well done, thank you.
Love to see how Carolyn's kitchen garden is doing; what worked,what didn't in the next few weeks.
I'm in Western Montana and I just put some carnival sweet pepper seeds in a container. The peppers are smaller and develope pretty fast once they set, so I am pretty sure I will get some for adding to my canning and pickling this fall.
Thanks for offering this information because mid summer sometimes feels too late.
Love the guest appearance by Elizabeth! 🙂 Blessings to you and your homestead!
Elizabeth is so cute! Great timing for this video. I have never done a Fall garden before. I did try to grow garlic last year but it was a flop. I am going to keep trying to I get it to grow til I figured it out.
Don't forget if you have green onions growing, cut the bottom off--about half to 3/4 inch and stick it back in the ground. It will continue to grow. If you buy store bought green onions with a little bit of root you can do the same thing. If you forget about them and it snows, unless the freeze is deep, you can dig up the bulb pretty late in the year. I'm in PA
I discovered pickled turnips and fell in love!!
I just love you guys! Just about every video you guys start out saying, “welcome to pantry chat 21..?.” Never remembering which one were on. 😂 I personally think it’s so funny because I can’t remember nothing! It’s nice to see I’m not the only one. You guys are great and I can’t wait to watch all your videos. Working on them all. And I just love every single video you guys put out. You always hit a certain something that I may know, however I may not know “why”. You guys give so much knowledge, I appreciate you guys. Stay grateful, thankful, and blessed xoxo
Wonderful to hear your kids have their own garden!!!🎉
I planted a second round of pickling cukes and zucchini a few weeks ago. Also planted carrots. I am zone 5a in northern MA.
Im in zone 9a inland Southern California. We have 316 growing days with our first frost around December 1st and last around February 28. July and August are too hot for most things to start. (120°F) We’re trying so many different growing methods this year. Traditional in ground growing, raised beds, hydroponics, aquaponics, a hybrid of the two in an above ground pool with fish and also wicking beds. Our orchard goes in this fall.
Just wanted to thank you for all your really informative videos. I just got into homesteading this year, and all of your videos have been super helpful, thank you again and god bless.
You mentioned Bush Beans as a fall crop, the two varieties I recommend are Provider & Royal Burgundy because they do better with cool night temperatures in late summer as fall arrives. I'm in 6b and planting some fall crops while the tomatoes are coming in. I used to live in ID and east coast growing is a different experience with humid weather and more insect pressure.
Which crops grew best in idaho?
Ýù òoup
Collards
Privider is a great bean!
thanks!
We’ve had literally about two weeks of sunshine since June and I’m worried what will grow in my region zone 9.
I’ll leave all that in Gods hands 🙌🏽
Thank you and please talk more about long term fermenting. I would like to store my fermented food longer. This method works great. But so many are talking more in terms of a few days or weeks. I want to use this method much longer like several months.
kimchi lasts for months -- ignore what people say about six weeks
I have never done a fall garden..this year will be my first..so thanks for both for all the list and great tips..loved the little visitor..she is a little cutie..Hello Elizabeth :)
It is my first year trying a fall garden too. I've always just bought a few tomato plants in the spring and a few other things and just let them do their thing and that was the extent of my gardening.
This year I'm trying to be more proactive in the garden and trying new things too. I think for my fall garden itll mainly just be greens, radishes, and beans. But I'm going to try replanting potatoes and carrots and see if they can produce before winter.
it still gets into the high 90s here in SC during October.
This weekend we are putting in a new garden bed, then starting our fall planting! Lots of leafy greens and root vegetables!
So glad I found you! Brand new gardener here and I was trying to figure out what to plant for the fall! Super informative!
You can always look at your state seeding charts!
Also the Farmer’s Almanac!
I was just wondering myself if it was too late, these 104 highs will sure be a challenge though!
I would love a pantry chat about your watering system! :)
Glad to have watched this now in 2020. I am going to try this this year. Thank you for shayour knowledge.
Great conversation to overhear for someone who needs a general idea of how great gardeners do things, and who needs specifics on how to ( even look for more info). Hi Elizabeth!
Love this, you've given me a few ideas to add to my garden! In the last 2 weeks I've planted carrots, broccoli, cabbage, radishes, lettuce, and cilantro. I'm also thinking about adding turnips, swiss chard, and maybe kohlrabi this week!
Northeast AZ - First Frost Oct 15 - Planting everything this week. Microclimate behind my apartment. I hatched chicks this Spring instead of planting a Garden. Now that the chicks are fully integrated into the established flock, I am dividing the yard, containing the chickens away from the garden area, and hoping I get something. Container garden in case I move.
Hello, Loved, loved, loved the chat, E is adorable. I miss that as mine are grown. I have been winter gardening without a greenhouse here on Whidbey island, central island, for almost 10 years. Lots of trial and error and experimenting. I use a frost blanket to cover my food when the temps dip low and it has been quite successful. My go to for information is from Charles Dowdy WINTER VEGETABLES and West Coast Seeds in BC has a great booklet they offer on Winter Gardening. I plant winter hardy seeds with varying harvest dates to extend the harvest. Our winds can be quite wild and change direction from coming from the south to coming from the north...which can be challenging. I also deal with the short tailed field mouse, vole, who thinks I am planting for him. So I generally put out a trap line in and around my winter garden. My other critter challenge are the crowned sparrow which have a sweet song, but wreck havoc on the greens. They seem to be increasing in number and love the garden. So covering with a nett or something like it is a must...especially early on when they are first coming up. (My husband pulled a trampoline net out of a dumpster and it works great. I plant my brassicas as starts under lights, no heat, in July and then plant out in August. Then I have to shade them for the remainder of the month and into September otherwise they will bolt. (Another brassica to plant is kohlrabi...great stir fried or slawed. And is fast growing) I plant all you mentioned and I also do a dense planting of beets for their greens only to stir fry or add to soups. I loved your chat because it's nice to hear what others are doing and for your sharing this information that others may not know. Much of my acquaintances and some family think I am crazy and that it is too much work. But I love the challenge, it gets me outside and we are healthier for it. Blessings.
Meg McGinnis
Keep up the great work you are doing, it will keep you healthy indeed and happy too. Gardening is also a great family activity.
I love Charles Dowding! His No Dig methods make more gardening possible for seniors especially!
What a well behaved contented child! She's beautiful and a credit to you
New subscriber & gardener.last year my 1st garden was a big flop so I thought I'd give fall planting a shot this year.thanks for all the gr8 info
Cutie Elizabeth! Thanks y'all. Love your videos! Always helpful and full of info! Thanks Josh for the computer skills with the canning class. I am thru the waterbath section and have stockpiled mason jars, lol. and thank you Carolyn for your most ecxellent teachings. I just love you guys! Peace, joy and much gratitude to you both and your family!
My first frost date is November 30th so I get to grow lots of stuff. I’ve been able to plant heat loving plants (because it’s HOT and humid here in the south). I’m planting cowpeas, pole beans (I’m trying yard long beans this fall), and in October I start onions from seed. I plant my garlic in November. I usually try to get my brassicas to grow in the fall because they bolt very quickly for me in the spring. I’m also trying to get more out of my extended growing season for determinate tomatoes. I started this seeds early July and only planted quick producing varieties. My next round of succession planting of pole beans go in next week. Rattlesnake beans are on the menu along with Lima beans (bush) and I often have to plant in partial shade for my plants to survive or even germinate. It works though! Winter squash is also getting planting here in July as well as another round of sweet corn. Whew. I’m tired. 😂
Oh and your little girl is precious!
I am in south Carolina and my frost dates is in October. I have already started bush beans broccoli, cabbage , bunch onions , dill. and planning to do more as potatoes, peppers, squash, and maybe beets . I love my veggies and am interested in your training on fermenting them . Thank you for your videos. they are so interesting and have so much new information to learn. Keep up the work and teaching to bring us new ideas on caring for our home, food and gardening. LOVE ALL YOUR VIDEOS , I can't say how much I have enjoyed watching you and your family.
Potatoes? Neat!
I’m at 6,500 ft in colorado and i grow something year round! I do have covers and sometimes i double cover for a few extra degrees of protection. But i had bok choy last year that did great even in the below zero temps! I just put in more lettuce, and chard and carrots. I’m starting cabbages to take the space of the peppers and tomatoes when they come out around the beginning of october. I agree - seeds are cheap! Just try and see what happens! You guys are great! Thank you for all that you share!
New to your Chanel ordered the Clyde's Garden Planner. That should be very helpful . I'm 70 years young and haven't had a garden in years. Got a pressure canner and water bath canner in June. So far have been canning mostly meat and vegetables and making jams and jellies. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
I would love to see your freezers and storage areas, if possible. TY so much, lovely channel.
Why do people want to look in other people's homes?
What a nice couple. Esp. her husband. Very good man. Wonderful family.
I just want to say thank you for all your videos
In Galicia, in Northern Spain, they make a vegetable soup with potaoes, onions and such in it that includes the leaves of turnips and is very good. There they call the leaves of turnips grellos.
Sounds great!
Elizabeth is too stinkin cute 😀. I love all the information y’all give us. How many acres do y’all have?
I'm also amid to late Frost date. Starting broccoli, chard, radishes, carrots, beets, lettuces, kohlrabi and turnips in my greenhouse
I’m so glad I stumbled upon your page
This video was great, this is my second year planting something after the first harvest. Thank you.
Lovely, informative podcast! Love to know how to keep perennial herbs such as basil, rosemary, and thyme coming back yearly! You mentioned composting, can you touch upon that a little more in your future podcasts?
I grow these herbs yearly in pots. I have to buy it every year. It dies and don’t come back. I try bringing it indoor one winter and still it did not survive. Buying from the farmer markets ready planted seedlings becomes very expensive. I tried developing from seeds, no success.
In addition, I have a tough time keeping thyme alive. They keep dying. I put in sunny shaded area and still not much luck! I keep having to buy more. I live in New York, next to the Big Apple - Manhattan! I am very hands-on baking breads, making homemade pestos, nut butters, granola, growing herbs, tomatoes, beans, and fig trees, as much as I can.
Thanks for sharing your wonderful growing tips!
Thyme and rosemary can take a month to sprout from seed. Basil is an annual so unless you're growing holy basil or have a magic thumb it doesn't live long even in gentle climate rare-to-frost-four-seasons growing areas. However, it is easy to grow your own basil seed. I can't help you with rosemary or English thyme -they are effortless perennials on the Pacific coast (at least from Mendocino County (and probably as far north as coastal BC if you are anywhere near a "banana belt") to the Mexican border.
Tyfs! 😁🥬🌽🥕🥒 Bush beans Kale collards Radishes Spinach Mesclun Mix Peas sweet corn 🥕and sugar baby watermelon Zucchini Summer Squash in my containers and grow bags 5 and 15 gallon! 1st time Gardener already harvested spinach dill Parsley basil made a salad😁😋❤
Original planting June 28th also just created a small No Dig Garden with potatoes greens beans radishes spinach already seeing sprouts😁 I'm in zone 5-6 Central Ohio. Just came across your channel love it will grow=go (🤣🤣 through your previous videos! I subscribed!❤😁
Hi from wet SCOTLAND i watch a few of USA homesteaders i call it crofting our places are tiny compared to yours but next year i go of grid so studying you all xx
Raspberry preserve dip for your air fried coconut shrimp, thin down with water, heat. Yummy!😋
I miss raspberries! I am zone 9a, I think it would be helpful if you said what zone you are in as well. Yes, ask your neighbors! That is great advice. I too, live in amicroclimate.
In another video they said northern Idaho. Way cooler than 9a. FYI.
Well, it looks like I'm buying seeds again.
Your family is great.
Enjoyed your video! Thanks guys! :) You sure put your hearts in to everything you do!
Loved this video. You guys have such great personalities. Can't wait for a video about over-the-winter gardening!
I don't have the room to plant late season crops until the garden fruits and dies out. I'll try in late Sept
thanks 4 vids
I live in New Hampshire- a very similar climate as your family so your information is extremely helpful. But your sweet little Elizabeth stole the show for me🌸
I love the southern curled mustard
We only moved onto our new garden patch in South of France in June; so have been looking to grow late! It is now early September and I planted loads of stuff you have mentioned by July/August. I use hens for fertility moving the dome around on the beds - I have five beds of permaculture - with the chooks still on bed six - having fun and a bit of hard work lots of roots in the new beds! I have tried not to dig too much though. I did not know what mesclun was, but planted it as saw in the shop so glad you mentioned this. Ready to plant some onions peas and beans soon. I am the only one around here who is planting anything!! They are saying it's the end of the season; just tomatoes and peppers grown mainly - no greens!! I also have lots of Chinese leaf. The lettuce never took off though! I did get some courgettes but a bit late for them. Rocket has been doing well and radish.
Skip to 19:55 if you just want the list of fall vegetables.
Moosehead THANK YOU
Welcome! :)
Thank you
Yes, totally agree with the flash freeze method, reason for it is most most everything I put in freezer is vacuum sealed
Master Gardner here City living i plant 🌱 in my flower pots & in my flower bed 🛌 planting lettuce 🥬 now parsley collard greens tomatoes 🍅Mobile Alabama
Thanks for your encouragement
Thank you, a very informative video, I received my “Clyde’s Garden Planner a few months ago and it truly is a great guide! Thank you so much for this channel.
Wonderful!
"living pantry". Love that idea
Love seeing your little one!! So sweet!!
Just want say thanks for starting my planing process.
Great watching you. I am from Ireland. Thank you.
Thanks for watching!
One thing that allows you to experiment more is saving seeds. I love the fall gardening. I live in zone 6. I would include egyptian walking onions and bunching onions for a spring harvest.
That's so cool that seeds can be saved and so much more abundance can happen.
I'm a zone 6 in Lebanon/Waterloo Oregon, beginner Gardner, learning everything I can.
@@jamiewhitehead7791 we are neighbors