I think cabbage is one of the most dramatically amazing veggies to grow instead of buy at the store. The flavor of fresh cabbage just indescribably delicious.
Got the itch myself. Amended the rows yesterday. Pepper and tomatoes are near ready to transplant. Everything else is direct seed straight from Hoss. Just wait a bit longer. Still a few cool nights here in North Central Texas.
I had pretty much given up on growing cabbage here in San Diego as the winters are too warm and the heads never produce well. I tried your Caribbean Queen and had great success even though we had a really mild and warm winter unlike the rest of the country. This variety is definately going to be a continued part of my winter garden plantings.
Was able to get in to my southern facing beds and broad forked them. We still have alot of local ice, and snowed again last nite..my Fava beans, onions, leeks, etc will just have to wait a bit longer. Bok choi, Kale, collards, lettuce, and spinach, still growing well under row covers..I am amazed. They taste great too. Garden blessings to all for a great growing season!
Great video, love all the positivity. I will definitely be ordering some of that Caribbean Queen cabbage from yall, hopefully it's a good heat and humidity tolerant variety! Very cool! It was 82 and sunny here yesterday, I accidentally cooked a bunch of trays of brassicas by forgetting to open my greenhouse door before work, got up to 102 F. Winter is over in the deep south it seems, happy spring yall!
Looking good, Travis! Glad you're showing "start to finish" drip tape install and planting for the newbies. Still trying to find an "old lady-friendly" rear-tined tiller so I can get my ground prepared.
Understand completely. Some of the tiller models out there are a beast to run even for my 35 year old self. Definitely want one that's easy to maneuver and something that's not going to be at the repair shop all the time.
They usually do just fine. The harvesting window is just much more narrow, so we have to be on top of our game to harvest them at the right time before they go to seed.
Thank you Travis! 77 degrees sounds real nice🌞I can't wait to get my toes in the warm garden plot's 👩🌾 We still got a few weeks to go here...I'm just now starting my Hoss seedlings! Happy and blessed gardening everyone 👨🌾👩🌾🌞🌻🐝🦋🌼🌱🍅🌽🌶🥒🥬🥦🥔🥕🚜🇺🇸
GOD BLESS YOU BROTHER. WE HAVEN'T GOT STARTED YET. STILL PRAYING. TEXAS PREPPER 2 IS SENDING US TO YOU. WHAT A GODLY MAN. LOVE YOU BOTH. Y'ALL ARE BLESSED TO HAVE THAT KIND OF FRIENDSHIP. AMEN
Travis, on the pressure regulator and filter assembly you guys offer, are you able to turn your water facet on full-flow, or do you also have to regulate the pressure at the facet by turning it down?
Depends on your flow rate. Our pressure regulator can handle a flow rate up to 8 gal/min. You can determine your flow rate easily by seeing how long it takes to fill a 5 gal bucket at your water source. My flow rate is right at 8, so I don't have to throttle my spigot. If you have a flow rate above 8, you can go with a high flow pressure regulator, or just throttle the water flow at the source.
With the mainline tubing (supply line) we carry, you can feed a row up to 100' long. You can do longer rows if you go to a larger supply line. The commercial farmers around here use this same tape for massive fields, but they use a mainline that looks like a blue fire hose.
Hey Travis thanks for the video! Is there a reason that is stopping you from using a greenhouse on 1 of your plots to be able to grow more throughout the winter? Thanks!
They become useless in any season other than winter due to heat. High cost for install and upkeep, for crops that are relatively cheap if you wait just one or two months and don't need one.
@Richard Keener Dad has one at his place over at Hoss HQ. Due to the heat down here, it's not that useful most of the year as a high tunnel greenhouse. We would use it for growing squash in January and sometimes plant onions in there. But once April or May hits, it's just too hot to grow anything in there. After Hurricane Michael ripped the plastic, we replaced it with shade cloth. The shade cloth is much more useful in our climate so we can grow things in there during the warm months.
I got the 8 mil drip tape set up last year and really have liked doing it this way , I have a lot less weed pressure than I did when overhead watering, also it’s easier to fertilize this way. Ps are y’all gonna get anymore Amish paste tomato seeds this year?
Really looking forward to seeing that kohlrabi harvested, I think it's one of the unsung heroes of the brassica world! Did you mentioned which variety it was?
Wow...you're doing another round of cool season crops. I'm envious. We lost an entire plot of our 2020-Fall-to-2021-Winter Broccoli to Alternaria earlier this month. I'm afraid to re-plant brassica ANYWHERE on our tiny little postage stamp on the heels of that pathogen. I also no longer trust the broccoli seeds we have left. I've heard Alternaria could be seed-borne, soil borne, or air borne, but we've never seen this pathogen in our plots here before, or in any previous growing seasons / years. It's a new one to us. Do you test the brassica seeds that Hoss brands / sells for the Alternaria pathogen (or any other brassica pathogens)? Don't worry, the broccoli seeds we used were not sourced from Hoss...but I'm already out looking for a reliably "certified" disease-free seed source for brassica seeds for our Fall 2021 line up - which we'll be indoor seeding, likely, in August, here in Zone 9a, Florida. Have you ever dealt with Alternaria of Brassica in your organic plots? If so, how did you "recover" the infected area? (What treatments, soil amendments, cover crop, or food crops can best follow a Brassica alternaria infected bed)? I've left messages with IFAS, as well as other states' extension agencies, but have not heard back from any; so I'm betting there are few "organic management" strategies for this nasty pathogen, other than rotating the infected bed to non-host crops for upwards of 3 years! Greater than 3 year rotation is hard to do on a postage stamp lot in the deep south, where we typically have 2 planting seasons per year, and NO excess real estate for "new beds." I really appreciate you sharing the results of your experiment with "no till" cabbage. Thank You! "No till" has not worked well for us, so far, either, in any of our trial no-til beds. We're growing organic / low input in Zone 9A, Florida. Transitioning to Organic / Vegan input, and will be fully organic / vegan input for all of our spring 2021 crops. I think the heavy summer rains and mostly sandy / alkaline native soils of the typical southeastern / Gulf Coast urban garden just get too compacted and depleted during our long, hot, wet season, even if they're in cover or food crop. It's also quite challenging to find effective cover crops with the necessary adaptations and pest/pathogen resistances that are able to grow during our optimal "windows" for covers here in the deep south....with all our nematodes, pathogens & pests that attack so many of the cover crops recommended by the no-till acolytes and gurus (who seem to primarily grow in more moderate / temperate climate zones, and in points well North of (cooler than), or West of (less humid than) those of us here in the deepest south)....and certainly, on lands much larger than the typical urban postage stamp lot where there's little (if any) budget for a bed NOT producing one's family food for an entire season, year, or longer. I haven't completely given up on no-till, just still trying to find more optimal cover crop options that are better suited to our climate, and to our pathogen & pest host challenges.
Is that a double wheel seeder with attachment, or a double wheel hoe plow (with attachment) that you are using to roll out your drip tape with? What would you recommend using to break virgin ground with? We just bought some former cow pasture and I’m planning my garden..
That's the Double Wheel Hoe with the Drip Tape Layer Attachment (hosstools.com/product/drip-tape-layer-attachment/) that we use to lay and bury the drip tape. A tiller is going to be the best bet for breaking new ground, unless you've got plenty of time to tarp it and let the grass die that way.
5:33 "last thing I want to do is load a truck up with a couple of tons of compost or chicken manure and get stuck". Laughing at that. When I was twelve (about 40 years ago, lol), I went with my grandfather to get a load of fairly fresh chicken manure for his garden. A radiator hose blew out on the way back. That experience is a lot more fun to talk about than to experience!
Do you still support using 20-20-20? I am glad things have dried up for you in South GA. My HOSS pepper seeds are sprouting very well. Starting to see some true leaves on some.
Travis do you re-use your tape? This is my 2nd year with the same tape in raised beds, finding the emitters might be plugged up. Last year I went above ground this year I'm burying it just below the surface.
I did the F.A.D. a little different just to try it... I put the tape in the hole first then put the ammendment on top... seems like it just isn't deep enough after you add the ammendment
I like to use my own homemade compost.... that way the tape is nice and deep and less likely a chance to hit it with the single tine cultivator or rub the hoe across it
I'm in Florida zone 9 and my nappa cabbage and broccoli bolted 10 days ago so how do suggest we get another planting of the same when our weather is warming, not today but heading to hotter times?
This may seem like a stupid question but with seed potatoes y’all’s Yukon gold do I only plant sections of the potato I see that has eyes on it. Like let’s say I have 4 eyes and I cut them off but I have a bottom section of potato that doesn’t have visible eyes popping or growing yet. Should I plant that also or save the room for one I know has eyes??
@@gardeningwithhoss 10-4 last question. So I had the bright idea to put my cells infront of a heater and killed em So now I’m behind is there anything I can do to speed up my transplant? I know to fertilize them after they have their true leaves Is it possible to do that earlier than that? Any other options to speed em up.
My question is about watering plants. On my land I have no water source. So for the mean time I have two 275 gallon IBC totes that I will fill up with water and use a trash pump to run water through my drip tape. How much water is needed to give plants what it needs. Using drip tape to reduce runoff, mist, and evaporation.
@@gardeningwithhoss I’m more of trying to get a answer in how many gallons, or inches of water does each plant need. Such as if I have a 275 gallon tank, and I feed 10 rows of corn that has 100 stalks on each row, how often will it need to be watered.
Ooooh ... that's tricky. Depends a good bit on your soil temp and outdoor temps. Clay soils hold water much better than our sandy soils down here. Gonna be hard to predict without some trial and error.
@@gardeningwithhoss seems like a good experiment I can do and get back with you on some results. Would be good to know for people that don’t have a good water source like myself solely relying on rain.
Good video as usual Travis , I do have a question though . Do you ever have trouble with rabbits eating your young plants? Last yr I lost several rows of beans and peas due to them. Just curious. Thanks
Yes we do on occasion. I just shot one a week or two ago. I take my shotgun when I go to the barn to feed the cats at night and do a little rabbit walkaround. If I see one, he's a goner.
Hey Travis, great to see a new video! I always learn and enjoy. I have a few questions for you before I purchase my first seeder from you. Can I email you directly with my questions? If so, what address is yours? Thanks!
Probably not. We're not really setup for walk-in orders and we don't have an actual store -- just the shipping warehouse. Our software and systems are built for fast shipping. If you place an order before 3:00pm EST, you'll usually have it the next day considering your'e close.
When you get down in the low 20s, things can get hairy for some of them. Depends on the brassica. Things like collards and Brussels sprouts are usually fine below 20.
Hey man, I dig the shirt, green thumbs up on the video, enjoying the channel over here in shady Grady. (Cairo) Do Y'all ever use fleece when starting brassicas, likes or dislike
Is there a commercial product called “fleece”? As a spinner and weaver, fleece has a very different meaning! 🤣. Twenty-plus years ago, I used fleece (sheep’s wool) around my strawberries as a weed suppression method - one of those “Seemed like a good idea at the time” moments. NEVER AGAIN! Pulling fiber off each strawberry (and out of my mouth when I missed some) was awful! I cannot speak to brassicas because I wasn’t willing to try it again with anything else. Kate
Hey Travis, you been hitting the weights more? Y’all look you are going through a growth spurt. I’ll tell ya, if your traps get any bigger its going to start interfering with your ability to hear!
I think cabbage is one of the most dramatically amazing veggies to grow instead of buy at the store. The flavor of fresh cabbage just indescribably delicious.
Very true!
Katie you are so right!
Love that there is planting going on somewhere. I am still 6 weeks away at least but not complaining watching the snow melting gives me hope.
Got the itch myself. Amended the rows yesterday. Pepper and tomatoes are near ready to transplant. Everything else is direct seed straight from Hoss. Just wait a bit longer. Still a few cool nights here in North Central Texas.
I had pretty much given up on growing cabbage here in San Diego as the winters are too warm and the heads never produce well. I tried your Caribbean Queen and had great success even though we had a really mild and warm winter unlike the rest of the country. This variety is definately going to be a continued part of my winter garden plantings.
Great to hear!
Got the potatoes, mustards, spinach & carrots going this week!
👌
Was able to get in to my southern facing beds and broad forked them. We still have alot of local ice, and snowed again last nite..my Fava beans, onions, leeks, etc will just have to wait a bit longer. Bok choi, Kale, collards, lettuce, and spinach, still growing well under row covers..I am amazed. They taste great too. Garden blessings to all for a great growing season!
Blessings to you all as well!
Great video, love all the positivity. I will definitely be ordering some of that Caribbean Queen cabbage from yall, hopefully it's a good heat and humidity tolerant variety! Very cool! It was 82 and sunny here yesterday, I accidentally cooked a bunch of trays of brassicas by forgetting to open my greenhouse door before work, got up to 102 F. Winter is over in the deep south it seems, happy spring yall!
Just put in all of our Hoss Tools brassicas in the ground yesterday in North Georgia!! Looking good with Travis and Greg's tips!
Good stuff!
Looking good, Travis! Glad you're showing "start to finish" drip tape install and planting for the newbies. Still trying to find an "old lady-friendly" rear-tined tiller so I can get my ground prepared.
Understand completely. Some of the tiller models out there are a beast to run even for my 35 year old self. Definitely want one that's easy to maneuver and something that's not going to be at the repair shop all the time.
VERY interested to see if these cool season crops will come off successfully in your (and my) zone being planted this late in our cool weather.
They usually do just fine. The harvesting window is just much more narrow, so we have to be on top of our game to harvest them at the right time before they go to seed.
Thank you Travis! 77 degrees sounds real nice🌞I can't wait to get my toes in the warm garden plot's 👩🌾 We still got a few weeks to go here...I'm just now starting my Hoss seedlings! Happy and blessed gardening everyone 👨🌾👩🌾🌞🌻🐝🦋🌼🌱🍅🌽🌶🥒🥬🥦🥔🥕🚜🇺🇸
👍
I'm a zone 4a, I'm getting excited to start my peppers and tomatoes soon. 🍅🌶❤🙏
Love the drip tape, wondering if I could make it work in raised beds. 👍🏻
Sure you can. You'd just need to run the mainline tubing from bed to bed so you can control it all at the spigot.
I can't wait for potato videos!! In zone 6B so a few weeks yet before I can start planting. Potatoes are my favorite to plant (and eat!!).
Potato video coming tomorrow night!
GOD BLESS YOU BROTHER. WE HAVEN'T GOT STARTED YET. STILL PRAYING. TEXAS PREPPER 2 IS SENDING US TO YOU. WHAT A GODLY MAN. LOVE YOU BOTH. Y'ALL ARE BLESSED TO HAVE THAT KIND OF FRIENDSHIP. AMEN
Alan is a great guy! Glad he sent you our way.
Great video Travis and great music
👍
Travis, on the pressure regulator and filter assembly you guys offer, are you able to turn your water facet on full-flow, or do you also have to regulate the pressure at the facet by turning it down?
Depends on your flow rate. Our pressure regulator can handle a flow rate up to 8 gal/min. You can determine your flow rate easily by seeing how long it takes to fill a 5 gal bucket at your water source. My flow rate is right at 8, so I don't have to throttle my spigot. If you have a flow rate above 8, you can go with a high flow pressure regulator, or just throttle the water flow at the source.
I'm seriously looking forward to some fresh kohlrabi.
Kohlrabi slaw is the 💣
Looking good.
How long (distance) can the drip tape be before a discernable difference in volume of water flows out of the individual emitters?
With the mainline tubing (supply line) we carry, you can feed a row up to 100' long. You can do longer rows if you go to a larger supply line. The commercial farmers around here use this same tape for massive fields, but they use a mainline that looks like a blue fire hose.
Garden envy, we’re still too cold.
Hey Travis thanks for the video! Is there a reason that is stopping you from using a greenhouse on 1 of your plots to be able to grow more throughout the winter? Thanks!
They become useless in any season other than winter due to heat. High cost for install and upkeep, for crops that are relatively cheap if you wait just one or two months and don't need one.
@Richard Keener Dad has one at his place over at Hoss HQ. Due to the heat down here, it's not that useful most of the year as a high tunnel greenhouse. We would use it for growing squash in January and sometimes plant onions in there. But once April or May hits, it's just too hot to grow anything in there. After Hurricane Michael ripped the plastic, we replaced it with shade cloth. The shade cloth is much more useful in our climate so we can grow things in there during the warm months.
Great editing and content Travis 👍
Thanks LB!
How long should chicken manure set before you use it in your garden?
And ratio for spreading of the manure?
If you till it in the soil, you can usually plant a few weeks later. I think around 100 lbs per 1,000 sq. ft. is plenty.
Loving all your Cog Hill tshirts!
I got the 8 mil drip tape set up last year and really have liked doing it this way , I have a lot less weed pressure than I did when overhead watering, also it’s easier to fertilize this way. Ps are y’all gonna get anymore Amish paste tomato seeds this year?
Amish Paste is out for 2021. But I'd highly recommend this one right here as a more than suitable replacement: hosstools.com/product/tachi-tomato/
Really looking forward to seeing that kohlrabi harvested, I think it's one of the unsung heroes of the brassica world! Did you mentioned which variety it was?
Konan Kohlrabi. You can find it on our site right here: hosstools.com/product/konan-kohlrabi/
Wow...you're doing another round of cool season crops. I'm envious.
We lost an entire plot of our 2020-Fall-to-2021-Winter Broccoli to Alternaria earlier this month. I'm afraid to re-plant brassica ANYWHERE on our tiny little postage stamp on the heels of that pathogen.
I also no longer trust the broccoli seeds we have left.
I've heard Alternaria could be seed-borne, soil borne, or air borne, but we've never seen this pathogen in our plots here before, or in any previous growing seasons / years. It's a new one to us.
Do you test the brassica seeds that Hoss brands / sells for the Alternaria pathogen (or any other brassica pathogens)? Don't worry, the broccoli seeds we used were not sourced from Hoss...but I'm already out looking for a reliably "certified" disease-free seed source for brassica seeds for our Fall 2021 line up - which we'll be indoor seeding, likely, in August, here in Zone 9a, Florida.
Have you ever dealt with Alternaria of Brassica in your organic plots? If so, how did you "recover" the infected area? (What treatments, soil amendments, cover crop, or food crops can best follow a Brassica alternaria infected bed)? I've left messages with IFAS, as well as other states' extension agencies, but have not heard back from any; so I'm betting there are few "organic management" strategies for this nasty pathogen, other than rotating the infected bed to non-host crops for upwards of 3 years! Greater than 3 year rotation is hard to do on a postage stamp lot in the deep south, where we typically have 2 planting seasons per year, and NO excess real estate for "new beds."
I really appreciate you sharing the results of your experiment with "no till" cabbage. Thank You!
"No till" has not worked well for us, so far, either, in any of our trial no-til beds.
We're growing organic / low input in Zone 9A, Florida. Transitioning to Organic / Vegan input, and will be fully organic / vegan input for all of our spring 2021 crops.
I think the heavy summer rains and mostly sandy / alkaline native soils of the typical southeastern / Gulf Coast urban garden just get too compacted and depleted during our long, hot, wet season, even if they're in cover or food crop.
It's also quite challenging to find effective cover crops with the necessary adaptations and pest/pathogen resistances that are able to grow during our optimal "windows" for covers here in the deep south....with all our nematodes, pathogens & pests that attack so many of the cover crops recommended by the no-till acolytes and gurus (who seem to primarily grow in more moderate / temperate climate zones, and in points well North of (cooler than), or West of (less humid than) those of us here in the deepest south)....and certainly, on lands much larger than the typical urban postage stamp lot where there's little (if any) budget for a bed NOT producing one's family food for an entire season, year, or longer.
I haven't completely given up on no-till, just still trying to find more optimal cover crop options that are better suited to our climate, and to our pathogen & pest host challenges.
We don't test them ourselves, but our breeders do test them before they're sent to us.
Is that a double wheel seeder with attachment, or a double wheel hoe plow (with attachment) that you are using to roll out your drip tape with? What would you recommend using to break virgin ground with? We just bought some former cow pasture and I’m planning my garden..
That's the Double Wheel Hoe with the Drip Tape Layer Attachment (hosstools.com/product/drip-tape-layer-attachment/) that we use to lay and bury the drip tape. A tiller is going to be the best bet for breaking new ground, unless you've got plenty of time to tarp it and let the grass die that way.
@@gardeningwithhoss thanks!
5:33 "last thing I want to do is load a truck up with a couple of tons of compost or chicken manure and get stuck". Laughing at that. When I was twelve (about 40 years ago, lol), I went with my grandfather to get a load of fairly fresh chicken manure for his garden. A radiator hose blew out on the way back. That experience is a lot more fun to talk about than to experience!
Doesn't sound very fun at all, but probably fun to laugh and tell stories about.
Do you still support using 20-20-20? I am glad things have dried up for you in South GA. My HOSS pepper seeds are sprouting very well. Starting to see some true leaves on some.
Yes, we'll be using some of the 20-20-20 through the drip system once these things start to show the smallest sign of growing in their new soil.
Travis do you re-use your tape? This is my 2nd year with the same tape in raised beds, finding the emitters might be plugged up. Last year I went above ground this year I'm burying it just below the surface.
I do reuse it. Haven't ever had any issues with emitters getting clogged.
I did the F.A.D. a little different just to try it... I put the tape in the hole first then put the ammendment on top... seems like it just isn't deep enough after you add the ammendment
Good point. Depends on what type of amendment you're using.
I like to use my own homemade compost.... that way the tape is nice and deep and less likely a chance to hit it with the single tine cultivator or rub the hoe across it
I'm in Florida zone 9 and my nappa cabbage and broccoli bolted 10 days ago so how do suggest we get another planting of the same when our weather is warming, not today but heading to hotter times?
If they bolted already, you're probably done with cool-season crops for a while.
This may seem like a stupid question but with seed potatoes y’all’s Yukon gold do I only plant sections of the potato I see that has eyes on it. Like let’s say I have 4 eyes and I cut them off but I have a bottom section of potato that doesn’t have visible eyes popping or growing yet. Should I plant that also or save the room for one I know has eyes??
Cut them so that you have at least 2 eyes per piece. I wouldn't plant a piece if it didn't look like it had any eyes.
@@gardeningwithhoss 10-4 last question. So I had the bright idea to put my cells infront of a heater and killed em
So now I’m behind is there anything I can do to speed up my transplant? I know to fertilize them after they have their true leaves
Is it possible to do that earlier than that? Any other options to speed em up.
Heat mats for faster germination, and then a good fertilizer program once they have true leaves. That's about all you can do.
My question is about watering plants. On my land I have no water source. So for the mean time I have two 275 gallon IBC totes that I will fill up with water and use a trash pump to run water through my drip tape. How much water is needed to give plants what it needs. Using drip tape to reduce runoff, mist, and evaporation.
Until temps get into the mid 90s, usually 30 mins to an hour every other day is sufficient on the tape.
@@gardeningwithhoss I’m more of trying to get a answer in how many gallons, or inches of water does each plant need. Such as if I have a 275 gallon tank, and I feed 10 rows of corn that has 100 stalks on each row, how often will it need to be watered.
Ooooh ... that's tricky. Depends a good bit on your soil temp and outdoor temps. Clay soils hold water much better than our sandy soils down here. Gonna be hard to predict without some trial and error.
@@gardeningwithhoss seems like a good experiment I can do and get back with you on some results. Would be good to know for people that don’t have a good water source like myself solely relying on rain.
👍
What is the variety of pointed head cabbage that they grow there
Right here: hosstools.com/product/charleston-wakefield-cabbage/
Thanks for the informative video. I was wondering if you deal with cabbage butterflies and if you do what do you do about protection for your plants?
Those cabbage worms are pretty easy to handle with B.t. - hosstools.com/product/monterey-bt/
Good video as usual Travis , I do have a question though . Do you ever have trouble with rabbits eating your young plants? Last yr I lost several rows of beans and peas due to them. Just curious. Thanks
Yes we do on occasion. I just shot one a week or two ago. I take my shotgun when I go to the barn to feed the cats at night and do a little rabbit walkaround. If I see one, he's a goner.
I was going to ask the same thing! They got all but one of my red cabbages. 😭
I've got 2 rows green beans just poking out of soil but I'm in zone 9B
Hey Travis, great to see a new video! I always learn and enjoy. I have a few questions for you before I purchase my first seeder from you. Can I email you directly with my questions? If so, what address is yours? Thanks!
You can send any questions to custserv@hosstools.com and our staff will be glad to help.
Berlin GA here I finally got to work my onions yesterday. Old Odom farm 133
Gonna work mine as well on this beautiful day!
I have a problem with cutworms the first week or so after planting my cabbage. What is a good method to avoid them cutworms?
B.t. or Spinosad will take care of them as long as you spray the plants when they're young.
@@gardeningwithhoss thanks
How much is a spool of drip tape
Right here: hosstools.com/product/drip-irrigation-tape/
Will ya store ever open back up for walk ins went by the other day siign said stop on line order only.
Probably not. We're not really setup for walk-in orders and we don't have an actual store -- just the shipping warehouse. Our software and systems are built for fast shipping. If you place an order before 3:00pm EST, you'll usually have it the next day considering your'e close.
What is too cold for brassicas
When you get down in the low 20s, things can get hairy for some of them. Depends on the brassica. Things like collards and Brussels sprouts are usually fine below 20.
Hey man, I dig the shirt, green thumbs up on the video, enjoying the channel over here in shady Grady. (Cairo) Do Y'all ever use fleece when starting brassicas, likes or dislike
Never used any fleece.
Is there a commercial product called “fleece”?
As a spinner and weaver, fleece has a very different meaning! 🤣.
Twenty-plus years ago, I used fleece (sheep’s wool) around my strawberries as a weed suppression method - one of those “Seemed like a good idea at the time” moments. NEVER AGAIN! Pulling fiber off each strawberry (and out of my mouth when I missed some) was awful! I cannot speak to brassicas because I wasn’t willing to try it again with anything else. Kate
Carrots too right should I start my carrots now?
Yes. Definitely time to get another round of carrots in the ground.
Those plants looked happy as they can be . sitting there in that drip irritated soil .
Oh they are!
Hey Travis, you been hitting the weights more? Y’all look you are going through a growth spurt. I’ll tell ya, if your traps get any bigger its going to start interfering with your ability to hear!
😂 I haven't lifted weights in years. I do a decent amount of cardio and a few pull-ups every now and then.
@@gardeningwithhoss maybe your traps are growing from you carrying all those 30 lb watermelons Greg loves to eat.
🤣