Answer is Topinambur - Helianthus tuberosus Did you consider writing a new book based on your knowladge gained on FQT Farm? Would be really great to see how you got animals and market garden working together and all the related management. Thanks for the videos
Still wondering if animal and nature mixed by humans really is the best .. cause those animals MUST BE FED and its ususally not entirely from the farms while composts and forests composts instead allow wild animals to do a much less intensive work.. and most people are always too addicted to cadaver taste to admit they might be wrong on certain things... maybe if you had less of them id believe it.. as well as i saw documentaries on this and hunting wild animals made it extremely harder the guy had to get sheep dogs (the biggest little farm) to hold them and those are known to debalance the eco system around them do umentary 7 worlds one planet i think it was... ladt episode i think it was) stopping wolves in their feast while REAL OMNIVore dogs just stole their hunt And ususally they too clever for fences foxes wolves cayotee etc... how did you fix that issue? Really wonder if its hypocrite there or do you really think its more sustainable or is it just for selfish taste buds pleasure?
Keep up with the video's! Live Free Farms is in its first year this year and its because of you and you book that we can do what we love! My family and I thank you and look forward to joining your Master class one day! Your inspiration will help change this worlds food systems forever!
Hello, super vidéo, continuez comme ça j'adore vos 2 fermés. Merci pour youtube pour les traductions.. Même si c'est pas exactement ça....merci pour les partage de connaissances dans toutes tes vidéos !!!!!!!!!!! Bye !!!!
As many of us want to learn and practice this kind of lifestyle yet have limited to no access to funding, land and resources, i often hope that this could open more locations across canada. Not necessarily franchise or corporatize as i hope there is another model system, but just open more locations with these business models, ethics and methods. I don't speak french, or enough french to carry a conversation and have tried for years, this is my limiting quality to apply at FQT while i admire the push to keep french heritage alive in quebec. I can keep hoping.
I feel where your coming from. I hope to in the near future to generate the opportunity for 2-10 people to help me in my ½acre regenerative farm. Just built a modest yet modern rammed earth house, green house is next.... As a community we need more interconnectedness, diverse contribution in resource and agility....then this is a staple in many contexts of local economies. 🤞
Beautiful aerial shots of a beautiful farm. Thanks so much for this tour. Eagerly looking forward to part deux. And major props to whomever is responsible for the amazing videography. And, JM, as someone who's followed you for years from afar via your book (loved it -- consumed it -- told so many others about it & you) and the few past videos with you and the few articles written with/about you, I'm very glad for your success. This farm, as I understand it, is very much your brainchild. I'm glad to hear that your original farm and this one are both surviving -- and I very much hope they're both very thriving. Best Regards.
The crop you asked if anyone knew is sunchokes. Here in japan that is my main crop! I dedicate about 5 acre per year to those and they sell at about 8 dollars per kilo! If spaced to about 40cm apart (in row) and in raised beds I get an average of 4.5-5 kg per plant and harvest around 400kg per day from October until April.
@@jeanmartinfortierprivate There aren't many organic farms here, unfortunately. Our farm is organic and I am the only non-Japanese farmer in the region as far as we know. We are actually planning on down sizing this coming year since it is too much work load for me and young help is extremely hard to find. But, your always welcome to come visit!
Ce sont des Topinambours!!! J'ai en dans mon jardin cette année pour la première fois! Petite question concernant la conservation... Est-ce que c'est mieux de les garder au frigo une fois récolté?
i knew it was sunchokes in a fraction of a second lol. next season im going to try to start breeding with some varieties i found growing wild. love that plant.
What a great video and an even better yet training farm! We are so excited about your apprentice program - such needed in our world! Great job guys. I know that it's a thankless job many times, but you have friends in Panama who highly appreciate you! Come visit us sometime soon if you can.
can you do a video or a description of how you built your hedgerows and/or simply a list of the plant groupings in them? you've mentioned them a lot, but i haven't seen a detailed layout of them, thank JM
Hey, JM, are you still doing compost tea, and what's your take on its viability on a commercial market garden? (note: not expecting an answer here, just hoping you'll cover this in a future video...or book, course, whatever).
Very intersting project. What I don't get, if they aim for a greener production, why they use so much plastic foil? Is this foil on the outside beds used once or reused for many years?
This is where the balance between market gardening and permaculture comes in, and the "not perfect" aspects of it. Using 0 plastic would be amazing, but we also need a farm where we can pay all of our employees well for their work, so we are simply doing the best we can to find that balance, and for now, this is where we are at! And we reuse as much as possible! Thanks for the comment Micha 🙂
@@TheMarketGardeners Thank you for the detailed answer. Would black sisal or linen sheet do the trick? Would that be possible or is that too expensive or not working in general?
Do you think that the school systems would benefit by hiring people in using land like this to feed the school systems. As well as teach students who are interested in doing this. They could do it like a trade school. As well as have a summer camp for teenagers to do this.
Farm To School programs are certainly on the rise and we think that's awesome! They take a lot of work to implement and get going but I think we will continue to see more and more schools and farms connecting and making programs like this happen.
verything is great, but what I see critically is the amount of plastic that accumulates as micropalstic in plants - isn't there a better solution, for example with mulch?
In my view permaculture is mostly about wilding the landscape. You know, in the manual there is a chapter on trees. But even Mollison compromised with other's ideas post manual. Good luck otherwise in trying to keep this particular civilization in food, which is impossible.
@@saulibus1 Allowing natural succession is the most important aspect only because humans have and continue to alter the landscape cutting burning and poisoning the landscape. Intentional wilding, as you put it, is close enough to there is nothing happening I can type is not happening. Biointensive growing is for small groups to keep humans from cutting the wild areas down, not buying food but growing food, which is not suppose to be for sale. End the sale of food and there will be such a scramble! Permaculture A Designers' Manual is about taking care of ourselves along with wilding - plant trees - in short. Look it up.
Wonder if your income slash work is sustainable srai nice den avoir plus toutes les fermes ici on trop dmonde qui y travail deja.. donc c pas la main doeuvre qui manque
This is how a TH-cam quality video should be made every time. The video really leaves the wannabe homesteads on Yu-ho-Tube with an identity issue. More of this kind of video is on the wish list.
@@thomaskumpf8912 LOL I did not know wise guy, but it does not affect my experience of the quality video. It's far better than the turbo-junk the wannabe homesteads upload every other day just to get advertising revenue. The billionaire behind the adventure is named André Desmarais, a wise guy too.
Sounds like a miscommunication! We do not believe that working hard just for the sake of it is a good thing, but we do believe that successful market gardening requires hard work and very good planning and self-discipline. For this reason, we want our workers to experience what it takes to do high quality and high yield market gardening. This way they will know what it will takes to start their own project, and whether or not it is actually something they want to do! Make sense?
@@TheMarketGardeners hello and thank you for trying to bring more sense into the matter - I can see your best intentions here. My criticism is more systemic - for me, a healthy modern life means that we spend a lot of free time with family an friends and enjoy cultural activities. Unfortunately, even In community supported agriculture, people work 12 hours and more to manage their farms. This doesn't seem like a solution to me. People should live a long and healthy life AND work passionately on what they love to do - high yields and profitability may be a nice side effect. I know that this is necessary today, but it's not a nice vision for the future.
@@canadiangemstones7636 I never said this - objection: speculation.. I say: with all our knowledge and technology, we meant to ease our lives. But all we aim at is increasing our productivity. So in the end, we all work the same or even harder, we don't have time for family and friends or extended holidays, we have no time to prepare quality food. So what is the real profit in the end?
Way to go JM. Continue to be a beacon BUT take time for yourself and family before it’s absolutely needed. We need you happy, healthy and recharged.
Bonjour Monsieur Stéphane
Ravi de vous retrouver actif sur le net. J'attends avec impatience vos nouvelles vidéos.
He seems fine 🍠
Great tour. Thx
Topinambour! 😊
Merci pour le partage thank you I suscribe
FQT farm was fun, can't wait to see part 2.
Respect from Africa 🇿🇦
🇿🇦
So nicely green views
Blessings to all!
Beautiful to see your learning garden.
So much respect for you :)
Shout Out to Sophie, the amazing flower farmer ❤💐
What?!! I’ve missed all this Fortier gravy.
Binge watching incoming.
Answer is Topinambur - Helianthus tuberosus
Did you consider writing a new book based on your knowladge gained on FQT Farm? Would be really great to see how you got animals and market garden working together and all the related management. Thanks for the videos
💪
The Urban farmer on youtube Richard Perkins, Curtis Stone, Charles Dowding do a lot of videos and write very interesting book to
for those that don't read latin: Jerusalem Artichoke / sunchokes
Still wondering if animal and nature mixed by humans really is the best
.. cause those animals MUST BE FED and its ususally not entirely from the farms while composts and forests composts instead allow wild animals to do a much less intensive work.. and most people are always too addicted to cadaver taste to admit they might be wrong on certain things... maybe if you had less of them id believe it.. as well as i saw documentaries on this and hunting wild animals made it extremely harder the guy had to get sheep dogs (the biggest little farm) to hold them and those are known to debalance the eco system around them do umentary 7 worlds one planet i think it was... ladt episode i think it was) stopping wolves in their feast while REAL OMNIVore dogs just stole their hunt
And ususally they too clever for fences foxes wolves cayotee etc... how did you fix that issue? Really wonder if its hypocrite there or do you really think its more sustainable or is it just for selfish taste buds pleasure?
Fascinating.
Belle visite... Votre livre m'a éclairé... Merci
What an amazing video - thank you for sharing!
Thanks so much, glad you enjoyed it! Plenty more coming! 😉
Wonderful
Farm-on Dude. Thanks, love the work you're doing. Greetings from Oz
This is truly amazing. Thanks for sharing!
thank you sir for sharing.
Our pleasure!
Thanks so much for the quick tour and excited to hear there is more to come. These longer videos really are a treat!
Thank you Allen! It's a treat to make them 😊
Keep up with the video's! Live Free Farms is in its first year this year and its because of you and you book that we can do what we love! My family and I thank you and look forward to joining your Master class one day! Your inspiration will help change this worlds food systems forever!
So happy to hear 😊 Best of luck with your farm and I'll see you at the Masterclass one day! 😉
Hello, super vidéo, continuez comme ça j'adore vos 2 fermés.
Merci pour youtube pour les traductions.. Même si c'est pas exactement ça....merci pour les partage de connaissances dans toutes tes vidéos !!!!!!!!!!!
Bye !!!!
so inspirational!!!
That's a pretty big farm!!! Ca donne envie de venir vous donner un coup de main et travailler! Bravo, quel travail... 👌
Cool! Il love tour cap, but thé price to send this to France is crazy... 😅 Thanks for your small cool movies!
As many of us want to learn and practice this kind of lifestyle yet have limited to no access to funding, land and resources, i often hope that this could open more locations across canada. Not necessarily franchise or corporatize as i hope there is another model system, but just open more locations with these business models, ethics and methods. I don't speak french, or enough french to carry a conversation and have tried for years, this is my limiting quality to apply at FQT while i admire the push to keep french heritage alive in quebec. I can keep hoping.
I feel where your coming from. I hope to in the near future to generate the opportunity for 2-10 people to help me in my ½acre regenerative farm. Just built a modest yet modern rammed earth house, green house is next....
As a community we need more interconnectedness, diverse contribution in resource and agility....then this is a staple in many contexts of local economies. 🤞
If you came, you’d likely be speaking French within weeks.
That was great, thanks! Can't wait for more
Thank you J B ! Much more to come 😉
Beautiful aerial shots of a beautiful farm. Thanks so much for this tour. Eagerly looking forward to part deux. And major props to whomever is responsible for the amazing videography. And, JM, as someone who's followed you for years from afar via your book (loved it -- consumed it -- told so many others about it & you) and the few past videos with you and the few articles written with/about you, I'm very glad for your success. This farm, as I understand it, is very much your brainchild. I'm glad to hear that your original farm and this one are both surviving -- and I very much hope they're both very thriving. Best Regards.
Still loving the new videos, thanks for taking the time to make them! I'd love to see more of the animal integration on FTQ.
Stay tuned, episode about the animals coming up in two weeks!
@@TheMarketGardeners fantastic!
Thanks a lot for your time and video content!
Thank you for watching Mark! We're having a blast making these videos
I really like this layout. Wow. Great farm bud!
Thanks Red 😊
Impressive and very Inspiring
YEAH!!!! THIS IS HOW IT'S DONE!!!!
Thats Fantastic great Wow ein klasse Liebe Grüße aus Deutschland
Danke schön 😊
This place looks like paradise for me, awesome farm
We feel the same way. It's a beautiful place 😊
@@TheMarketGardeners the nursery is insane
The crop you asked if anyone knew is sunchokes. Here in japan that is my main crop! I dedicate about 5 acre per year to those and they sell at about 8 dollars per kilo!
If spaced to about 40cm apart (in row) and in raised beds I get an average of 4.5-5 kg per plant and harvest around 400kg per day from October until April.
WOW! that's awesome, thank you so much for sharing 😊 💪
Wow! 5 acres! it's my dream to visit growers in Japan. One day I hope!
@@jeanmartinfortierprivate There aren't many organic farms here, unfortunately. Our farm is organic and I am the only non-Japanese farmer in the region as far as we know. We are actually planning on down sizing this coming year since it is too much work load for me and young help is extremely hard to find. But, your always welcome to come visit!
@@eightosaurusspelunk1598 Where are you in Japan ?
@@francoisveillette2306 Natori Miyagi
so organized!
Ce sont des Topinambours!!! J'ai en dans mon jardin cette année pour la première fois! Petite question concernant la conservation... Est-ce que c'est mieux de les garder au frigo une fois récolté?
J. M.
Director
🇨🇷🇨🇷🇨🇷👍
Hopefully there will be an English version soon. All the best.
Hi Sean, the video is in English. Enjoy!
😂
Beautifull like always. Is Topinambur ?
That carrot washer at 12:09 is simply amazing. Carrots are without a doubt my least favorite to harvest and wash.
That look like Jerusalem artichokes? Or sun chokes?
jerusalem artichoke. wondering how you plant the water on this farm. not a word was mentioned about it.
i knew it was sunchokes in a fraction of a second lol. next season im going to try to start breeding with some varieties i found growing wild. love that plant.
Merci, bon video !
Notre plaisir 😊
Amazing approach!! Cheers from Victoria
What a great video and an even better yet training farm! We are so excited about your apprentice program - such needed in our world! Great job guys. I know that it's a thankless job many times, but you have friends in Panama who highly appreciate you! Come visit us sometime soon if you can.
Thank you SO much for the comment! 😊
What are the air tubes on the ground of the greenhouse for?
can you do a video or a description of how you built your hedgerows and/or simply a list of the plant groupings in them? you've mentioned them a lot, but i haven't seen a detailed layout of them, thank JM
Thanks for the idea! It's in the list for things to do in future videos 👌 😊
@@TheMarketGardeners awesome, so happy to hear that-thank you!
Hey, JM, are you still doing compost tea, and what's your take on its viability on a commercial market garden? (note: not expecting an answer here, just hoping you'll cover this in a future video...or book, course, whatever).
love the videos.
and we love making them! 😉
What do you heat the greenhouses with and how do you insulate them?
Very intersting project. What I don't get, if they aim for a greener production, why they use so much plastic foil? Is this foil on the outside beds used once or reused for many years?
This is where the balance between market gardening and permaculture comes in, and the "not perfect" aspects of it. Using 0 plastic would be amazing, but we also need a farm where we can pay all of our employees well for their work, so we are simply doing the best we can to find that balance, and for now, this is where we are at! And we reuse as much as possible! Thanks for the comment Micha 🙂
@@TheMarketGardeners Thank you for the detailed answer. Would black sisal or linen sheet do the trick? Would that be possible or is that too expensive or not working in general?
Jerusalem Artichokes 😍. Did you create a barrier underground to stop them from spreading?
Do you think that the school systems would benefit by hiring people in using land like this to feed the school systems. As well as teach students who are interested in doing this. They could do it like a trade school. As well as have a summer camp for teenagers to do this.
Farm To School programs are certainly on the rise and we think that's awesome! They take a lot of work to implement and get going but I think we will continue to see more and more schools and farms connecting and making programs like this happen.
verything is great, but what I see critically is the amount of plastic that accumulates as micropalstic in plants - isn't there a better solution, for example with mulch?
08:30 togetherness
Just knew it was Fartychokes
I think that's Jerusalem Artichokes?
Re : the mystery plant. Jerusalem Artichoke?
If I were 30 years younger? I would so be doing this.
In my view permaculture is mostly about wilding the landscape. You know, in the manual there is a chapter on trees. But even Mollison compromised with other's ideas post manual. Good luck otherwise in trying to keep this particular civilization in food, which is impossible.
Interesting view but permaculture is more than just wilding the landscape
@@saulibus1 Allowing natural succession is the most important aspect only because humans have and continue to alter the landscape cutting burning and poisoning the landscape. Intentional wilding, as you put it, is close enough to there is nothing happening I can type is not happening.
Biointensive growing is for small groups to keep humans from cutting the wild areas down, not buying food but growing food, which is not suppose to be for sale. End the sale of food and there will be such a scramble!
Permaculture A Designers' Manual is about taking care of ourselves along with wilding - plant trees - in short. Look it up.
LOL BUBLE and washing machine? Fkin cool
Those look like sunchokes @ 5:20
Hey i have an oldwwashing machine maybe i could give it to you guys just need to figure why it doesnt spin nemore
Jerusalem artichoke of course
👍👍👍
sober october 😂😂 blaze up pappy
Jerusalem artichoke!
Sunchoke???
Wonder if your income slash work is sustainable srai nice den avoir plus toutes les fermes ici on trop dmonde qui y travail deja.. donc c pas la main doeuvre qui manque
sun choke?
What is "Sober October"?
It's the practice of having no alcohol in the month of October!
This is how a TH-cam quality video should be made every time. The video really leaves the wannabe homesteads on Yu-ho-Tube with an identity issue. More of this kind of video is on the wish list.
You do realize this farm is owned by a billionaire, right? Seems like "proper videos" are not a big budget item for billionaires.
@@thomaskumpf8912 LOL I did not know wise guy, but it does not affect my experience of the quality video. It's far better than the turbo-junk the wannabe homesteads upload every other day just to get advertising revenue. The billionaire behind the adventure is named André Desmarais, a wise guy too.
Hey money can't buy everything and in this case, certainly not the spirit of this farm !
@@jeanmartinfortierprivate at least you guys do a great job, I'll give you credit for that. Too many people would've wasted this opportunity.
👍🇺🇦
Is this the Salatin type method, where interns & people pay you to come and do manual labor to help your bottom line?
No, the apprentices are paid 15$ and hour and get free housing as well.
Jerusalem artichoke
Why is "work really hard" is considered something good? This so American. Why not "having a good time", "feeling home", "find their passion"...
Sounds like a miscommunication! We do not believe that working hard just for the sake of it is a good thing, but we do believe that successful market gardening requires hard work and very good planning and self-discipline. For this reason, we want our workers to experience what it takes to do high quality and high yield market gardening. This way they will know what it will takes to start their own project, and whether or not it is actually something they want to do! Make sense?
@@TheMarketGardeners hello and thank you for trying to bring more sense into the matter - I can see your best intentions here. My criticism is more systemic - for me, a healthy modern life means that we spend a lot of free time with family an friends and enjoy cultural activities. Unfortunately, even In community supported agriculture, people work 12 hours and more to manage their farms. This doesn't seem like a solution to me. People should live a long and healthy life AND work passionately on what they love to do - high yields and profitability may be a nice side effect. I know that this is necessary today, but it's not a nice vision for the future.
@@abdebee3221 Perhaps you could visit the farm, and explain how they can make a good living by only working 3 hours a day? What’s your secret?
@@canadiangemstones7636 I never said this - objection: speculation..
I say: with all our knowledge and technology, we meant to ease our lives. But all we aim at is increasing our productivity. So in the end, we all work the same or even harder, we don't have time for family and friends or extended holidays, we have no time to prepare quality food. So what is the real profit in the end?
topinambur
artichoke