The new season of the inspiring garden series is here! This is now an annual occurrence on this channel as a way to provide ideas, information, and inspiration to use gardeners for next spring. I hope you enjoy! And here is Wade's book: shop.permaculture.co.uk/the-orchard-book-plan.html Edit: Looks like some spambot has appeared in the comments section. Hoping to keep on top of it.
Beautiful! It should be known that the Irish reliance on potatoes was a result of colonisation by the Brits. The Irish knew monoculture was risky but its occupier, the Brits, exported a lot of other Irish foods and products for its own gain (classic characteristic of colonisation) leading to a lack of food and resources for the Irish people. A blight came and the Irish, with very little else to eat, experienced a famine. There's much more to the story than Irish lack of knowledge on crops.
WHEN HE SAYS "AND PEOPLE SAYS ITS NOT WORTH GROWING POTATOES BECAUSE THEYRE CHEAP, BUT I LOVE UNEARTHING YOUR OWN POTATOES".... He has understood the meaning of life....😉🙃😎🤠
Growing food is not about saving money. It's about food security, knowledge, experience, and beauty, all in exercise. The same people who don't want us to grow potatoes go to the gym for their only exercise, and many, many of them don't even know what truly fresh food tastes like.
It’s also about texture and FLAVOR. I have never had a commercial potato that even approximates the beautiful texture and taste of one grown in the garden! I garden and go to the gym too! They are not mutually exclusive. 😀
No it's not necessarily about saving money but it does help on the grocery bill during the growing season (especially in this economy). It is good exercise and therapeutic also.
@@fullTimeVeganinOhio wait untill next year. Most produce is bought on contract. These contracts often are signed the year prior. The real hit to our wallets is more likely to happen next year.
I was standing next to a woman in a Costa que once when she was saying to her friend that her little boy wanted an apple tree but she didnt have the room for it. I told her that you can dwarf apple trees it's good to get one the is self pollinating. I showed her everything she needed a big tub to stand the tree in and explained about keep apply new new nutrients every year by mulching it. I saw a few months ago and she thanked me she said it had gave her a great crop and she had never had such a good apple before. Xxx
A beautiful and productive garden! I fully agree with his philosophy that gardening isn't work if you enjoy it. I truly enjoy every minute in the garden.
O.M.G.! LOVED this video! I agree with everything he spoke about. This morning I was sleep baking and made English cinnamon cranberry scones to enjoy with coffee and settled in for this wonderful surprise. 😊 When I began gardening I too said Oh, I'll only grow what I eat... in all of my glorious ignorance! I now understand the importance of biodiversity. And, no it's not work...I'll step outside to do two things in the garden, spend two hours out and it feels like five minutes. It's joyous, therapeutic and relaxing. Thank you for sharing. It's vast and lovely! ❤️
I do the same... I start off having a coffee and enjoying looking around my garden, next thing I am pulling weeds out, potting up, cutting back a bush etc... oh my is that the time? Lol ... cheers. 🌼🪴🐞
Gardening is therapeutic. It truly is. Rarely watch any TV. Just youtube videos of gardening 😂👍🏼. The most rewarding thing is you get FOOD from your own yard. FRESH!! When my daughters tried a cucumber from our yard they couldn’t believe how different they tasted from the store bought ones. Especially tomatoes. My goodness, like night and day.
I thought I was the only one. The only time I watch shows is hanging out in the evening with my hubby. It’s just so lovely to watch something go to from flower to being ripe. It’s giving me such respect for the passage of time and how much energy it takes to get the food we eat.
this was a super inspiring Saturday morning watch! love seeing the different ways people apply permaculture right in their backyard. Got some good ideas from this one, excited for me episodes in this series.
What a lush garden! As someone who is living in a city I wouldn't call it small or tiny though. No buildings or neighbour's trees casting shadows, and enough space for a greenhouse and several trees, not to mention 6 waterbutts?!
He's so right, it's not work when you enjoy it so much. I've been busy raking leaves and adding them to my compost pile this month, and I know if it weren't for these opportunities to be outdoors I'd be inside all day not getting any exercise. I am so grateful to have a yard to get me outside to enjoy the sun and fresh air.
I wish more people could have the opportunity to taste heirloom apples, that's all I grow. There's a certain satisfaction when you see someone's eyes light up the first time they taste one straight from the tree and you tell them it's the same variety Thomas Jefferson and George Washington grew in their orchards. Unfortunately, so many of orchards in the States were chopped down during Prohibition, but, 90 years later, they heirloom varieties are starting to make a comeback.
Huw, I just love your winter garden profiles! I got so excited when I saw this one, and I had to make sure that I watched it on my computer and not my phone as was doing other things. The videography is just stunning, and I love the way you edit it to just let the gardeners talk. I can't wait to see more of them. Also I think every gardener has that experience of people saying "what a lot of work!" in that tone of voice. I mean, yes, it is, but I think we need that work for our bodies and our "souls."
It's good for our souls, our mental health, and our physical health (both exercise and nutrition). Because of health problems, I am hit and miss, but even just some parsley and rainbow chard for an omelette is better than nothing. I've just had to move house, into another rental, so not a lot of scope. The existing garden is lawn, concrete, and narrow beds along the fences, full of agapanthas and yukkas. Even so there are a few gaps where I can squeeze a few things in. Tomatoes should have been planted 3 weeks ago. I have some timber packing crates with forklift feet, so the plan is to fill them this weekend and place them under the laserlite verandah which acts as a sort of open-sided greenhouse. Tomatoes should do well there.
What a lovely video and a great garden, I was really impressed to see how much Wade grows, plus that he has chickens and ducks on such a small space. Goes to show, one doesn't need acres of land to grow a good amount of food.
What an inspirational video! He has made me restless to get out in the garden and start ‘doing’ and we have several long dark months before that can happen! Thank you for sharing.
If that wasn't precious I don't know what is! I just Loved 💕 & appreciate it! No truer words spoken from a sincere heartfelt gardener! I feel the same and sure do wish others felt like we gardeners do! Thank you both Huw for bringing this peaceful happy video to us! Julie Ann ♥
God do I love this man and his garden. His great attitude, the simplicity of his words and the sheer love for gardening. Bravo, you are indeed inspirational!
Great garden, I do wonder about keeping the soil alive and mineralised. Irish famine wasnt about a voluntary mono culture, all the other crops were shipped out under armed gaurd to feed empire.
I loved this! His attitude toward gardening, his plot size, layout and and conditions are pretty much the same as mine. although we're thousands of miles apart. It encourages me that he's been so successful. I don't have chickens at the moment, but miss them and plan on getting more in the spring. I do need to work on my water capture and was inspired by his, as I really have no space where I can have a big water tank. I do envy his hand pump and sistern!
Great video. I really liked when he said, "grow a variety of vegetables". I'm a small place gardener for several years now. And I experienced that some crops don't do well every year. Peas never worked at my place. Zucchini didn't do well this year. I harvested 3 from one plant and then it was done. My water melons were a great success. I harvested more cucumbers from one plant than I could eat. Garlic wasn't so good. But when I grow lots of different veggies, I always have a harvest. Gardening is being flexible. Carrots in the ground never did well. I grow them in pots now and they' re amazing. There is a learning curve every year. It's always different. And of course nature has the final say.
Would love to see an overhead 'snapshot' of these spaces I have a small backyard (townhouse) that I'd like to pack in everything including a food forest LOL and so I'd love to be able to see what others are doing layout-wise
This garden fits a lot into a smallish space. th-cam.com/video/GXoho7rCa8g/w-d-xo.html. Also look at Kat Lavers' The Plummery. Both highly productive spaces
Lovely garden! Smaller spaces force creativity (and particularly creativity for productivity)! When you grow in an organic and sustainable way, that does becomes easier!
I love this! That's right gardening is food of the soul! I love gardening !I can stay all day outside doing gardening even if its hot rather than watching tv 😂
Thank you for this. I have read about Wade's garden and it is lovely to see it and to put a face to the name. I found myself doing lots of nodding in agreement but also feel inspired to grow more on my plot. And especially to keep my crops as diverse as possible.
As someone who lives in east Texas, I'm always so jealous of these beautiful gardens that are quite commonplace in the UK. Flowering gardens mixed in with vegetables is something I have tried many times, but even using heat tolerant plants, the summer always devastates the flowers, which means the pollinators aren't around to do their job. It was 40 C (104 F) here last year! We have also had many fruit trees (Lemons, oranges, apples,etc.) that can handle the hot weather that we cared for for many years that were finally beginning to mature and the consecutive freak freezes the past two years have killed them all except one! My decorative garden with many mature and grown-in heat loving plants has also been devastated by the freeze. I can't just dig up a 40 pound Agave and roll it into a greenhouse! Does anyone have any suggestions for keeping pollinators around during the hotter months? In Texas we have a long growing season, but most of that season occurs in 85+ degree heat. Not exactly the best weather when you want to be able to grow anything other than corn T-T
@@user-ed7et3pb4o Yes! The issue that comes in the height of summer is not from the sunlight itself but the ambient heat in general. That deep in the season, the sun will bake the ground and the heat will radiate off of it for hours even after the sun has gone down. I started keeping the flowers in pots that could be moved indoors but this defeats the purpose of having them in the garden because the pollinators can't get to them. Shade helps some but the flowers will always wilt and look absolutley pitiful during the day. The only thing I've had any luck with is milkweed because the monarchs like it but they also eat the plants and eventually kill them by laying their eggs on them. I also can't keep milkweed close to the garden so the caterpillars don't chew on the veggie plants.
That was a joy to watch. I love Wade’s garden - and his attitude towards growing. I totally agree about ‘hard work’ not feeling hard if you enjoy it. That’s always been my sentiment. Thanks for sharing.
I agree with everything Wade has said here. Had the being told to only grow or not to grow certain things when we got our first allotment just over a year and a half ago, particularly potatoes which have turned out to be our favourite thing to grow, especially with the variety you get home growing! The it’s such hard work thing is another thing we get from friends but it really doesn’t feel that way, I can spend hours there and not notice how much time has gone by yet when I’m doing my ‘day’ job it drags so much sometimes 😂 I wish I could grow things full time as it is the best feeling and the food we make from our own produce is incredible and the satisfaction from having grown from seed to plate is unbeatable imho. I wish I had the opportunity to grow more earlier in life and much more space now! ❤
He's wrong about the Irish potato famine being caused by monoculture. The peasants starved because their diet was almost exclusively potatoes but their overlords (the English "nobility") still had a variety of vegetables from their walled gardens.
@@andrewreaney I think the sentiment of his statement about monoculture is correct. Having absentee landlords, living in England, collecting rents from impoverished & powerless tenants who were paid minimal wages to raise livestock & crops to send to England predominately, while they were forced to live in horrendous conditions, only able to grow potatoes was an abhorrent use of power by the British in Ireland & is a factor in my family, on my dads mums side, in having to leave the country. Monoculture enforced or by design has disastrous consequences, so I think his point broadly stands.
I’ve added a Braeburn and Gala M26 semi dwarf trees this year and have a Morello Cherry Gisela semi dwarf en route right now. Moving into my third no dig year in 2023. So excited as I expand my once formal plot.
TRULY, FOOD for my weary soul. Huw, I've watched your channel since you started, as a teenager demonstrating how you do leaf mould bins. Your content and spirit are REAL substance and SOOO VALUABLE. Hearty thank you!! LOVED your gardening course as well! 💓🌱🦋
Such a beautiful video! And yes I agree, gardening isn't work, it's relaxation! From the overwhelm of the day and turning of the constant availability. I only learned where some vegetables come from (peanuts grow an a bush but still underground?!) As a grown up and I love that my son get to learn about it all at a young age instead. So beautiful with different varieties of things and seasons of food. Just keep growing!
What a delightful garden, cared for by such a lovely man! This has given me so much inspiration going forward - thank you so much Huw! Beautifully filmed, as always 😊👍
What could be more important than growing your own healthy food? Much of what we buy is sub par and even contaminated with fillers or other unwanted ingredients. Thanks so much for sharing!
What a wonderful story! People also say to me of my garden, 'what a lot of work' but like Wade my garden is my happy place and it never feels like work but like relaxation and casting off the troubles of the world. I feel sorry for the people who see it as 'work'.
Like to see people gardening in smaller areas. Most of us just don't have room for a lot of beds. I also have to share my backyard with running room for 3 dogs. 😊
This is 1 of the best simple shots, easy commentary, point made. The BBC used to be like this (hint, maybe BBC do some homework on real things and grassroots). A good eye, well written or spoken piece, does the job. Huw, i studied media and this is like the original life on earth, yes you have better cameras, but that's it, keep it simple. As a piece, i would recommend @TH-cam to trail blaze this as this is Journalism (the good way), Documentary, and stand alone one of the greatest pieces of work i have seen in easy 20 years.💯💯💯❤❤❤
This was fantastic! I picked up Wade’s book at a local bookshop and was totally captivated. It’s sparked a but of obsession with orchards of all sizes and cider-making. It was great to hear him speak about the rest of his garden. Would love another interview with him in future.
What a beautiful and inspiring space. I'd love it if you could talk about sunlight and shade, and how you (and perhaps Wade) manage it in your gardens -- you both grow so densely, and some of your plants reach such heights -- how do you make sure you position things properly so that everything gets the light it wants?
Fair play for the garden. But bit rich saying the Irish Famine was due to monoculture. Multiple variety’s, of multiple Irish crops were being exported by the English.
Thank you Huw and Wade, what an amazing garden and both you two are living garden legends. Thank you for sharing your life work with us. So much too learn and definitely I can pack some more productive food spaces into my small garden
What a nice video. Great shots of the inscets enjoying themselves. I've finally put up my first poly tunnel today... So looking forward to using that this coming season.
What an absolutely lovely video about an absolutely lovely inspiring gardener!! What a wonderful addition to your series, I was captivated by this video from start to finish!! I am a firm believer in so much of what he says and try to practise as much as I can in a suburban yard while working at a job as well. And you are so right, “working” in the garden is not work! Cheers
Beautiful film and amazing garden! I love the concept of permaculture; I have been doing it for years and I am with you Wade certainly Gardening is good for the soul!
This is such inspiration, the book is very interesting as well. We are well established on the house garden and will be building the permaculture gardens around the new greenhouse this coming year. Gardening is soul food for sure.
Indeed it is not work, it is a joy. Such a beautiful garden, so self contained with all the variety, the water collection, compost, ducks and chickens. Huw, do you know how Wade gets such perfect apples. I always struggle with the codling moth.
Nice garden - I love the water harvesting system! But its not "TINY"!!! Mine is less than a quarter of his ... just built 1 raised bed and planted 1 dwarf tree. Will see how I get on with the veg in one bed plan.
The new season of the inspiring garden series is here! This is now an annual occurrence on this channel as a way to provide ideas, information, and inspiration to use gardeners for next spring. I hope you enjoy! And here is Wade's book: shop.permaculture.co.uk/the-orchard-book-plan.html
Edit: Looks like some spambot has appeared in the comments section. Hoping to keep on top of it.
Awesome video! I love seeing other small permaculture properties in the UK, it is so rare these days.
@@growingwithnatureofficial TH-cam advertising radicalized me
Beautiful! It should be known that the Irish reliance on potatoes was a result of colonisation by the Brits. The Irish knew monoculture was risky but its occupier, the Brits, exported a lot of other Irish foods and products for its own gain (classic characteristic of colonisation) leading to a lack of food and resources for the Irish people. A blight came and the Irish, with very little else to eat, experienced a famine. There's much more to the story than Irish lack of knowledge on crops.
💯
WHEN HE SAYS "AND PEOPLE SAYS ITS NOT WORTH GROWING POTATOES BECAUSE THEYRE CHEAP, BUT I LOVE UNEARTHING YOUR OWN POTATOES".... He has understood the meaning of life....😉🙃😎🤠
It's true, and they always taste better when they come from your garden, then from the store.
Growing food is not about saving money. It's about food security, knowledge, experience, and beauty, all in exercise. The same people who don't want us to grow potatoes go to the gym for their only exercise, and many, many of them don't even know what truly fresh food tastes like.
Yes!
It’s also about texture and FLAVOR. I have never had a commercial potato that even approximates the beautiful texture and taste of one grown in the garden! I garden and go to the gym too! They are not mutually exclusive. 😀
No it's not necessarily about saving money but it does help on the grocery bill during the growing season (especially in this economy). It is good exercise and therapeutic also.
@@SteveL2012 obviously. I do also. 💪
@@fullTimeVeganinOhio wait untill next year. Most produce is bought on contract. These contracts often are signed the year prior. The real hit to our wallets is more likely to happen next year.
I was standing next to a woman in a Costa que once when she was saying to her friend that her little boy wanted an apple tree but she didnt have the room for it. I told her that you can dwarf apple trees it's good to get one the is self pollinating. I showed her everything she needed a big tub to stand the tree in and explained about keep apply new new nutrients every year by mulching it. I saw a few months ago and she thanked me she said it had gave her a great crop and she had never had such a good apple before. Xxx
A beautiful and productive garden! I fully agree with his philosophy that gardening isn't work if you enjoy it. I truly enjoy every minute in the garden.
Well said! And I also relate to Wade's philosophy too, especially when he said he could just be sitting on the sofa watching TV haha!
I have take myself.out my garden to do anything else including paid work lol
I agree completely about the joy of eating a tomato in the garden that's been warmed from the sun!
O.M.G.! LOVED this video! I agree with everything he spoke about. This morning I was sleep baking and made English cinnamon cranberry scones to enjoy with coffee and settled in for this wonderful surprise. 😊
When I began gardening I too said Oh, I'll only grow what I eat... in all of my glorious ignorance! I now understand the importance of biodiversity. And, no it's not work...I'll step outside to do two things in the garden, spend two hours out and it feels like five minutes. It's joyous, therapeutic and relaxing.
Thank you for sharing. It's vast and lovely! ❤️
I do the same... I start off having a coffee and enjoying looking around my garden, next thing I am pulling weeds out, potting up, cutting back a bush etc... oh my is that the time? Lol ... cheers. 🌼🪴🐞
Gardening is therapeutic. It truly is. Rarely watch any TV. Just youtube videos of gardening 😂👍🏼. The most rewarding thing is you get FOOD from your own yard. FRESH!! When my daughters tried a cucumber from our yard they couldn’t believe how different they tasted from the store bought ones. Especially tomatoes. My goodness, like night and day.
Since I took up gardening I no longer feel the need to practice meditation.
I thought I was the only one. The only time I watch shows is hanging out in the evening with my hubby. It’s just so lovely to watch something go to from flower to being ripe. It’s giving me such respect for the passage of time and how much energy it takes to get the food we eat.
this was a super inspiring Saturday morning watch! love seeing the different ways people apply permaculture right in their backyard. Got some good ideas from this one, excited for me episodes in this series.
Thank you so much Mike! Hopefully you will be all ready for spring by the end of the series :)
Totally agree with you, it is a lifestyle, not work in a negative sense, but inspired activity that is self sustaining and self perpetuating ❤
What a lush garden! As someone who is living in a city I wouldn't call it small or tiny though. No buildings or neighbour's trees casting shadows, and enough space for a greenhouse and several trees, not to mention 6 waterbutts?!
True, but he said it was 80ft by 40, that is only 3200 square feet, it’s amazing what he has done with such a small area
What a humble dude
He's so right, it's not work when you enjoy it so much. I've been busy raking leaves and adding them to my compost pile this month, and I know if it weren't for these opportunities to be outdoors I'd be inside all day not getting any exercise. I am so grateful to have a yard to get me outside to enjoy the sun and fresh air.
I wish more people could have the opportunity to taste heirloom apples, that's all I grow. There's a certain satisfaction when you see someone's eyes light up the first time they taste one straight from the tree and you tell them it's the same variety Thomas Jefferson and George Washington grew in their orchards. Unfortunately, so many of orchards in the States were chopped down during Prohibition, but, 90 years later, they heirloom varieties are starting to make a comeback.
Wade talks common sense and shows what our wonderful country can grow with ease. Thanks for posting a video that leaves you inspired.
What a lovely little film, nice work Huw, with a tip of the hat to the editor too.
Thank you so much I will pass that on! :)
Huw, I just love your winter garden profiles! I got so excited when I saw this one, and I had to make sure that I watched it on my computer and not my phone as was doing other things. The videography is just stunning, and I love the way you edit it to just let the gardeners talk. I can't wait to see more of them. Also I think every gardener has that experience of people saying "what a lot of work!" in that tone of voice. I mean, yes, it is, but I think we need that work for our bodies and our "souls."
It's good for our souls, our mental health, and our physical health (both exercise and nutrition).
Because of health problems, I am hit and miss, but even just some parsley and rainbow chard for an omelette is better than nothing.
I've just had to move house, into another rental, so not a lot of scope. The existing garden is lawn, concrete, and narrow beds along the fences, full of agapanthas and yukkas. Even so there are a few gaps where I can squeeze a few things in. Tomatoes should have been planted 3 weeks ago. I have some timber packing crates with forklift feet, so the plan is to fill them this weekend and place them under the laserlite verandah which acts as a sort of open-sided greenhouse. Tomatoes should do well there.
I agree, as I was watching I thought, Huw just lets the gardener talk. Ihave saved details to get the book
Absolutely inspirational! Wade Muggleton, as with his garden, crammed do much into that short film. Beautifully shot too. Thank you both.
Thank you so much Ted!
"Always leave a bit for nature". I love that.
What a lovely video and a great garden, I was really impressed to see how much Wade grows, plus that he has chickens and ducks on such a small space. Goes to show, one doesn't need acres of land to grow a good amount of food.
Exactly that! Thanks so much for watching and commenting
What an inspirational video! He has made me restless to get out in the garden and start ‘doing’ and we have several long dark months before that can happen! Thank you for sharing.
This is a great example of how most people can do permaculture, even on a small plot. I love the strategies and how he came about with what he's got.
A very nice garden, thanks for featuring it on your channel Huw...Steve...🙂🙂
Any time Steve!:)
I love this guy. His philosophy, his honesty, his directness, his ease in his own being are such a balm to my spirit, and a great role model.
If that wasn't precious I don't know what is! I just Loved 💕 & appreciate it! No truer words spoken from a sincere heartfelt gardener! I feel the same and sure do wish others felt like we gardeners do! Thank you both Huw for bringing this peaceful happy video to us! Julie Ann ♥
That was a really nice video. Gardening isn't work when it feels like play. When I was a kid I played in the dirt and had so much fun!
God do I love this man and his garden. His great attitude, the simplicity of his words and the sheer love for gardening. Bravo, you are indeed inspirational!
Great garden, I do wonder about keeping the soil alive and mineralised. Irish famine wasnt about a voluntary mono culture, all the other crops were shipped out under armed gaurd to feed empire.
Exactly.
That’s a big ass backyard
I loved this! His attitude toward gardening, his plot size, layout and and conditions are pretty much the same as mine. although we're thousands of miles apart. It encourages me that he's been so successful. I don't have chickens at the moment, but miss them and plan on getting more in the spring. I do need to work on my water capture and was inspired by his, as I really have no space where I can have a big water tank. I do envy his hand pump and sistern!
Happy thanksgiving
Great video. I really liked when he said, "grow a variety of vegetables". I'm a small place gardener for several years now. And I experienced that some crops don't do well every year. Peas never worked at my place. Zucchini didn't do well this year. I harvested 3 from one plant and then it was done. My water melons were a great success. I harvested more cucumbers from one plant than I could eat. Garlic wasn't so good. But when I grow lots of different veggies, I always have a harvest. Gardening is being flexible. Carrots in the ground never did well. I grow them in pots now and they' re amazing. There is a learning curve every year. It's always different. And of course nature has the final say.
What a lovely video, so inspiring. And I completely agree, it's definitely NOT work! It is JOY.
It really is!
Would love to see an overhead 'snapshot' of these spaces
I have a small backyard (townhouse) that I'd like to pack in everything including a food forest LOL and so I'd love to be able to see what others are doing layout-wise
I could get that done with one of the photos! Great idea
This garden fits a lot into a smallish space. th-cam.com/video/GXoho7rCa8g/w-d-xo.html. Also look at Kat Lavers' The Plummery. Both highly productive spaces
@@kimfindlay3500 significantly larger than my space tho. I'm looking for tiny spaces.
Lovely garden! Smaller spaces force creativity (and particularly creativity for productivity)! When you grow in an organic and sustainable way, that does becomes easier!
What an inspirational masterpiece. Thank you very much.
Glad you enjoyed it!
This is beautiful, everything feels at place,the more we grow our own food, the more we make it affordable for others.
I love all the trees around the edges with the garden in the middle! Perfect!
I love this! That's right gardening is food of the soul! I love gardening !I can stay all day outside doing gardening even if its hot rather than watching tv 😂
Yay so glad these are back. They are so well made and enjoyable to watch along with giving inspiration.
Thank you so much Amy!! The real challenge is finding enough new places to film next year now
What a wonderful and inspiring garden/gardener! Thanks for filming and sharing.
What a gorgeous video! And what lovely messages of wisdom about gardening. So inspiring.
Thank you so much Lyndsey!
Thank you for this. I have read about Wade's garden and it is lovely to see it and to put a face to the name. I found myself doing lots of nodding in agreement but also feel inspired to grow more on my plot. And especially to keep my crops as diverse as possible.
You are inspiration Wade. Have watched this video more than 10 times. Thank you. Absolute my fav garden. Love from Miri Borneo Malaysia
As someone who lives in east Texas, I'm always so jealous of these beautiful gardens that are quite commonplace in the UK. Flowering gardens mixed in with vegetables is something I have tried many times, but even using heat tolerant plants, the summer always devastates the flowers, which means the pollinators aren't around to do their job. It was 40 C (104 F) here last year! We have also had many fruit trees (Lemons, oranges, apples,etc.) that can handle the hot weather that we cared for for many years that were finally beginning to mature and the consecutive freak freezes the past two years have killed them all except one! My decorative garden with many mature and grown-in heat loving plants has also been devastated by the freeze. I can't just dig up a 40 pound Agave and roll it into a greenhouse! Does anyone have any suggestions for keeping pollinators around during the hotter months? In Texas we have a long growing season, but most of that season occurs in 85+ degree heat. Not exactly the best weather when you want to be able to grow anything other than corn T-T
Have you tried growing the typical flowers but putting them under slight shade during the hottest months?
@@user-ed7et3pb4o Yes! The issue that comes in the height of summer is not from the sunlight itself but the ambient heat in general. That deep in the season, the sun will bake the ground and the heat will radiate off of it for hours even after the sun has gone down. I started keeping the flowers in pots that could be moved indoors but this defeats the purpose of having them in the garden because the pollinators can't get to them. Shade helps some but the flowers will always wilt and look absolutley pitiful during the day. The only thing I've had any luck with is milkweed because the monarchs like it but they also eat the plants and eventually kill them by laying their eggs on them. I also can't keep milkweed close to the garden so the caterpillars don't chew on the veggie plants.
That was a joy to watch. I love Wade’s garden - and his attitude towards growing. I totally agree about ‘hard work’ not feeling hard if you enjoy it. That’s always been my sentiment. Thanks for sharing.
I second everything this gentleman spoke of. Beautiful videography as well 💖
I agree with everything Wade has said here. Had the being told to only grow or not to grow certain things when we got our first allotment just over a year and a half ago, particularly potatoes which have turned out to be our favourite thing to grow, especially with the variety you get home growing! The it’s such hard work thing is another thing we get from friends but it really doesn’t feel that way, I can spend hours there and not notice how much time has gone by yet when I’m doing my ‘day’ job it drags so much sometimes 😂 I wish I could grow things full time as it is the best feeling and the food we make from our own produce is incredible and the satisfaction from having grown from seed to plate is unbeatable imho. I wish I had the opportunity to grow more earlier in life and much more space now! ❤
He's wrong about the Irish potato famine being caused by monoculture. The peasants starved because their diet was almost exclusively potatoes but their overlords (the English "nobility") still had a variety of vegetables from their walled gardens.
@@andrewreaney I think the sentiment of his statement about monoculture is correct. Having absentee landlords, living in England, collecting rents from impoverished & powerless tenants who were paid minimal wages to raise livestock & crops to send to England predominately, while they were forced to live in horrendous conditions, only able to grow potatoes was an abhorrent use of power by the British in Ireland & is a factor in my family, on my dads mums side, in having to leave the country. Monoculture enforced or by design has disastrous consequences, so I think his point broadly stands.
Loved this Huw, great job. Inspiring for the regular sized blocks
I’ve added a Braeburn and Gala M26 semi dwarf trees this year and have a Morello Cherry Gisela semi dwarf en route right now. Moving into my third no dig year in 2023. So excited as I expand my once formal plot.
TRULY, FOOD for my weary soul. Huw, I've watched your channel since you started, as a teenager demonstrating how you do leaf mould bins. Your content and spirit are REAL substance and SOOO VALUABLE. Hearty thank you!! LOVED your gardening course as well! 💓🌱🦋
Such a beautiful video! And yes I agree, gardening isn't work, it's relaxation! From the overwhelm of the day and turning of the constant availability.
I only learned where some vegetables come from (peanuts grow an a bush but still underground?!) As a grown up and I love that my son get to learn about it all at a young age instead. So beautiful with different varieties of things and seasons of food. Just keep growing!
This was a fantastic video. I wish he had a channel and more books detailing his permaculture and sustainability principles and implementation.
What a delightful garden, cared for by such a lovely man! This has given me so much inspiration going forward - thank you so much Huw! Beautifully filmed, as always 😊👍
Absolutely agree it's definitely not work. I love being in the garden, my favorite thing to be doing 😊
Beautiful! I loved catching a glimpse of the Sarracenia in the green house.
What could be more important than growing your own healthy food? Much of what we buy is sub par and even contaminated with fillers or other unwanted ingredients. Thanks so much for sharing!
What a wonderful story! People also say to me of my garden, 'what a lot of work' but like Wade my garden is my happy place and it never feels like work but like relaxation and casting off the troubles of the world. I feel sorry for the people who see it as 'work'.
That is so true! I think it's peoples jealousy showing ;)
Like to see people gardening in smaller areas. Most of us just don't have room for a lot of beds. I also have to share my backyard with running room for 3 dogs. 😊
As a Kiwi (New Zealander...) "Always leaver a bit for nature" As I do... and lovely words.
What a fantastic video. So great for those of us with small gardens.
This is 1 of the best simple shots, easy commentary, point made. The BBC used to be like this (hint, maybe BBC do some homework on real things and grassroots). A good eye, well written or spoken piece, does the job. Huw, i studied media and this is like the original life on earth, yes you have better cameras, but that's it, keep it simple. As a piece, i would recommend @TH-cam to trail blaze this as this is Journalism (the good way), Documentary, and stand alone one of the greatest pieces of work i have seen in easy 20 years.💯💯💯❤❤❤
Your garden is an inspiration. May you enjoy it for many seasons .
hes so calm. all gardeners are calm
9:21 gardening is the best kind of medicine. Chemical free
Great camera work and editing! Beautifully shot. Thanks for putting this together
You're most welcome Patrick :)
This was fantastic! I picked up Wade’s book at a local bookshop and was totally captivated. It’s sparked a but of obsession with orchards of all sizes and cider-making. It was great to hear him speak about the rest of his garden. Would love another interview with him in future.
What a beautifully presented and well articulated way to share the joy of nature, especially in a smaller space. A very inspiring story, thank you!
Love watching this episode over breakfast. Very relaxing and inspiring. Thanks Huw and team. Cheers 🎉
Absolutely loved this. He's an inspiration!
I have his book and it is great. Blessings from north Idaho, TeresaSue.
What a beautiful and inspiring space. I'd love it if you could talk about sunlight and shade, and how you (and perhaps Wade) manage it in your gardens -- you both grow so densely, and some of your plants reach such heights -- how do you make sure you position things properly so that everything gets the light it wants?
Fair play for the garden. But bit rich saying the Irish Famine was due to monoculture. Multiple variety’s, of multiple Irish crops were being exported by the English.
Exactly
Beautiful! Inspiring on a cold snowy morning.
That is the whole idea of this series so I am glad you've found it inspiring! :D
That was great to see. Thanks to all concerned.
Beautiful garden, beautiful man. I wish more people would take up his philosophy!
One of the best videos you have done, and I have watched. Excellent, sir!!!
Wonderful video! I agree 100% that gardening is ‘good work’ so it doesn’t feel like work at all.
Thank you Huw and Wade, what an amazing garden and both you two are living garden legends. Thank you for sharing your life work with us. So much too learn and definitely I can pack some more productive food spaces into my small garden
Gorgeous garden. Beautifully filmed, Huw.
What a nice video. Great shots of the inscets enjoying themselves. I've finally put up my first poly tunnel today... So looking forward to using that this coming season.
Huge congratulations on getting your first polytunnel up!! I am so excited for how you are going to benefit so much from it over the coming years:D
@@HuwRichards Thanks Huw. It was your advice that helped me go for it. 👍🏻
The best yet. For a very seasoned gardener, this was a delight and inspiration to watch.
Another fantastic video by Huw Richards. Thank you for this and to Wade for allowing is to see his fantastic video. Plot envy or what?
lovely garden! would love a new series of inspiring gardens in the future!
What a beautiful video of a lovely garden! Thanks for sharing 👍
So cool to see another one's no dig garden. Thank you!
What an inspiring garden!
Definitely!
what a lovely relaxing but inspiring video Hugh, Wade's garden is chock full of treasure Thanks for all these films they are really great
Really glad you enjoy them :)
What an absolutely lovely video about an absolutely lovely inspiring gardener!! What a wonderful addition to your series, I was captivated by this video from start to finish!! I am a firm believer in so much of what he says and try to practise as much as I can in a suburban yard while working at a job as well. And you are so right, “working” in the garden is not work! Cheers
Beautiful film and amazing garden! I love the concept of permaculture; I have been doing it for years and I am with you Wade certainly Gardening is good for the soul!
Echinops is one of my favorite flowers in the garden! I don’t see many ppl use them or talk about them. His were beautiful 💙
I loved this! So encouraging for a small backyard gardener such as myself.
Food for the belly, food for the soul. Thank you 🙏🏼
This is such inspiration, the book is very interesting as well. We are well established on the house garden and will be building the permaculture gardens around the new greenhouse this coming year. Gardening is soul food for sure.
Thank you for this great Video.❤️
You're very welcome
“Always leave a little bit for nature.” 💛
Indeed it is not work, it is a joy. Such a beautiful garden, so self contained with all the variety, the water collection, compost, ducks and chickens. Huw, do you know how Wade gets such perfect apples. I always struggle with the codling moth.
Super nice video! I love this series!
Nice garden - I love the water harvesting system! But its not "TINY"!!! Mine is less than a quarter of his ... just built 1 raised bed and planted 1 dwarf tree. Will see how I get on with the veg in one bed plan.
So beautiful and inspirational. Thank you for sharing.