Start a Lazy Garden From Scratch | NEVER Weed/Water Again!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 พ.ค. 2024
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0:00 Intro
0:25 Lay Cardboard
3:54 Let's talk about raised beds
4:53 a word from our sponsor
6:29 Building up the bed
12:00 Soak, and then soak some more
14:05 Let's talk about plowing
16:34 Screen your compost
19:41 Spread the compost
21:05 Optional products
24:25 Screen top dressing
27:26 Apply top dressing
28:54 Lay mulch pathways
30:14 Plant!
36:26 The result
MORE ABOUT ME
I'm Anne of All Trades. In NASHVILLE, I have a woodworking, blacksmithing and fabrication shop, a selection of furry friends, and an organic farm. Whether you've got the knowledge, tools, time or space to do the things you've always wanted to do, everything is "figureoutable."
I became "Anne of All Trades" out of necessity. With no background in farming or making things, I wanted to learn to raise my own food, fix things when they break and build the things I need.
12 years ago I got my first pet, planted my first seed and picked up my first tool.
My goal is to learn and share traditional techniques and skills while showing my peers how to get from where they are to where they want to go, how to do the things they are passionate about, and what can be done TODAY to engage their own community and grow deep roots.
Whether it's carving spoons, making my own hand tools, restoring my antique truck or growing heirloom tomatoes, the farm and workshop definitely keep me busy and support - whether financially through Patreon, through shopping my affiliate links, through buying merchandise, plans or project videos, or even just liking, commenting, and sharing my content with others helps me GREATLY to keep producing quality content to share.
Get a better roadmap of how to grow deep roots and live the life you want by subscribing to this channel and be sure to check out my blog for even more info anneofalltrades.com
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I'm a white 60 yr old male living in the highest crime area of KC MO. trying to bring people together through creating and maintaining a Community Garden. I live alone +1 dog, well below poverty level. So I am now very encouraged because your videos are awesome. Thanks ❤️
You're an inspiration. I love that you're reaching out for community.
Most adult men find that prohibitively difficult. In fact I read that the majority of men have no friends, because they don't know how to make them, in adulthood. That's so sad.... Community is everything! How do you do outreach ?
Oh my goodness, if this is the lazy way to garden, I don't have a chance.
amazing! best of luck to you. It's hard but necessary and important work and I admire you
It is the only answer to this sick world we live in. I did it in la and fed my house and tons of others who just walks by
Move out ,man. Grow op and move to Montana. Frank was right. Become a dental floss tycoon and stop lamenting your pathetic big city limitations.
My son lives in a neighborhood in the city, it has small front yards and small fenced in back yards. What I love is his neighbor and several more on his block are putting gardens out in the front yards! I love it! And they share with my son! ❤
That's the kind of place we all want to live! Good neighbors make for a great life.
Some places in Central Florida have become like this I would love neighbors like that and a neighborhood like that, stuck in an HOA down South for now.
I was just pointing this out to my husband today when we went into town! It started with just a few front yard gardens and now every other yard is putting one in. I have a bunch of extra tomatoes (Paul Robesons 🤤) so I'm going to hand them out and hope the trend becomes epidemic.
There's also "guerilla gardening"!
@@jeas4980 YES!
I think you are very brilliant & have put a lot of thought, time & effort into becoming a Lazy Gardener. With that said I am a 71 year old Women with two prosthetic hips & when I was your age I had wonderful productive vegetable gardens. Although I think about having that big garden every Spring I just don’t have the energy at this point to be a Lazy Gardener. I’m getting tired just watching you prepare to be Lazy Lol. More Power to You!!
Oh sweet one, just get some lawn chairs and put a bucket on it for your plants! Please don't give up gardening in some way shape or form!❤from KS.
You can buy a cart with large wheels and an adjustable seat. It works perfect for when your unable to stand n hoe a garden. 😊
I asked the guys at Menards if they had cardboard they were throwing away. They looked at me like I had 2 heads lol.
After they radio'd around, they finally found a manager who said I couldn't have the stuff they bundled up for recycling, but they collect it all in one of the lumber aisles, so I could check there and see if there was any.
The bin was full so I filled up my cart with it, and the lady at the checkout also looked at me like she's never seen that before lol
😅😅
Fuhgetta 'bout it.... won't matter what they think when you're enjoying your home grown veggies
Hey, who cares what “they” say haha! I just noticed today, the LIQOUR STORE HAD A BUNCH HAHA!! But have to say lotsa ink
Less for them to trash at the end of the day.
I have moved a lot and each time, I go to a grocery store or two and just ask for their banana boxes. Most times I head out with a cart full. I ask someone back near the warehouse door. It helps to go about a week in advance because sometimes they ask you to come back on a different day, but in a pinch, you can just go to a different store.
Grocery, hardware, liquor, and department stores all have lots of boxes.
Hugelkultur and permaculture could solve the world’s hunger problems in a very short time. Good job Ann please continue to spread the word in a fun and informative way about these amazing agricultural techniques. 👍
Hunger isn't an issue with lack of supply. It's largely a problem of lack of distribution. And of course capitalism, where excess crops are destroyed (oceans dumping) instead of being distributed to the hungry --because distributing them would lower global prices. 😢
People don't go hungry today because of a lack of food in the world. In fact, many farmers toss out so much food that is perfectly good. Why? Because it's not profitable to sell it at certain prices. People starve today in front of warehouses full of food. They are excluded because they lack money and the food is private property. The purpose of producing in this system isn't meeting needs, but making as much money as possible. People's needs are only taken into consideration insofar as they can be used to make profits.
@@MyFocusVaries I think you misunderstood or maybe I didn’t convey my thought properly. I meant that if more people understood and adopted these techniques on a personal scale and large scale we would be able to combat global hunger much easier. As far as Capitalism being the reason for famine I’d say the problem would not be resolved by adopting Socialism or Communism if that’s what you’re implying, but rather being more self sufficient so that corrupt governments don’t have the ability to determine who gets food and who doesn’t. Distribution wouldn’t be a problem if you grocery store was your own back yard. I definitely agree with you that there shouldn’t be monetary incentives to destroy perfectly good food.
No. Its not that simple.
💯
Chip drop never worked for me. What did work was calling all the local arborists each year and asking them to not forget about me if they happen to be doing any work in the area. Now I get several dump truck loads of wood chips and all the free firewood I need in the middle of the city. The squeaky wheel gets the grease.
Makes me regret the 12 bags of wood chips I just bought from Menards lol
How often do you re-cover with wood chips? Should I start reaching out now, or just finish? I'm betting I only need 100 sq ft or so more of wood chips to cover.
But if I'm going to need more every year, I might as well start piling it up
I'm patient. I keep renewing my chip drop. :)
Yeah, my first time on ChopDrop I got a load really quick. But now it's to the point where I've renewed my request three times without a drop, where I can get on a list with a local arborist and they'll have chips for me in a couple weeks. I'm sure some of them just don't want to deal with the hassle that chipdrop can create sometimes. Some folks are needlessly picky about what kind of wood it is, where they'll let a truck drop it, etc, and they have to bounce between multiple possible drop sites before they find someone that will take their load.
Right ! The one and only time we got chip drop from the electric company that clear trees and brush from under power lines we introduced sumac and other noxious weeds 😞
I just asked my local arborist for “clean mulch”… should I not have done that? Will any mulch do? By the way I freaking love you and your videos! I just recently found you and you are amazing and I wish you were my neighbor lol
I’m in SE Ohio!
I've used cardboard in gardening before to kill weeds and avoid tilling and somehow it NEVER came to my mind that I could just pile organic matter on top to start planting immediately. Thank you so much for sharing this information.
And in most situations, if you use a thick enough layer of mulch, you can skip the cardboard. Light exclusion kills lots of weeds. Persistent perennials perhaps not.
I tried this with grass and it came back even stronger lol.
@@GardeningwithDave yup, Grass is waste of time.
@@GardeningwithDavehappy to hear it works
I am growing potatoes, lettuce string beans right in the cardboard box. I am 75 and cannot walk in my yard so I decided to use the box, with coia dirt, along a fence so I can hold on. They say it will work.
I just love your personality and the way I can seriously tell you care about other gardeners and you are HUMBLE! I love that! Thank u for your genius
Thank you for sharing your mental health journey and struggles. We should never be ashamed of caring for ourselves, be it our minds, and/or our bodies!
Great gardening bed preparation, too! I've never seen anyone else be so thorough and yet simple to understand! ❤❤❤❤
Absolutely and the more we help each other the quicker the baddies lose and we win
Persnickety. This word is not used enough. Nicely done. Thanks for the suggestions!
I am envious of your space. I am disabled and used gardening for my mental health and because of my problems using the sifter screen was killing me. I also do vermicomposting and had 300 gallons of worm castings I needed to sift. I got sick of shoveling and then sifting. Look up a trommel. I made one using 2x4's, caster wheels, 2 bicycle wheels, hardware cloth, and a buttload of zip ties. You just make a big tunnel around the bike wheels and make a frame it can rotate on. It makes sifting effortless and fast.
When I started our first homestead everyone recommended Guinea fowl. They eat all the ticks they said, it will be fun they said... I despise Guineas and will never get them again. We always had a lot of ticks, I never noticed a difference. They are SO loud, day and night. Lucky for us we only had them for 6 months because we inadvertently got bird dogs. They killed them all. Happy ending.
Hahaha oh no (or oh yes)! My first batch of guineas legitimately drowned looking up at the rain. Dumbest animals I’ve ever encountered. They do serve a purpose, but I only got these ones to annoy my husband and the joke’s on me because they live right by my office 😂😂😂
Try DIY tick tubes. Make with empty toilet paper rolls and dryer lint sprayed with permethrin. Also if you wrap your ankles with duct tape sticky side out, the ticks won’t make it up your legs. Also works for chiggers and fire ants. Good luck.
“Boy Howdy” love it! Haven’t heard that term in forever.
And persnickety! 😊
Anne you are SO REAL!! I completely appreciate your honesty about your (and my) human-ness when it comes to gardening, i.e. having lazy days, making planting mistakes and yet desiring to make the most of what God has given us on this earth. I wish I could afford to turn my whole backyard from lawn into garden.
I love your sense of humor! Along with getting my hands in the dirt, YOUR VIDEOS raise my Serotonin levels 😊. I truly appreciate all of the effort you put in to sharing and teaching us about farming and gardening. I just wanted you to know that God is using you to reach out to so many people, and I hope you know how wonderful you are. Have a blessed gardening season. 🙏
Thank you so much. I'm so glad you're here.
I am a residential gardener and just love getting in the garden every day. Very good therapy and health beneficially.
This is quite comprehensive. I made the mistake of using straight compost in my raised bed. You know, if a little is good, more is better….not! I appreciate your clarity as this would work almost anywhere one lives.
I get super irritated when people use weed barrier cloth instead of cardboard. 9 years in my present house and I continue to dig out, multiple layers of encrusted, impermeable weed fabric from my yard.
I had a mini fight with my dad on useing landscaping fabric for a project we were doing together. I didnt want to use something that doesnt work and then have to rip it out later. He used it years ago to line a gravle path and weeds where constantly growing through the fabric. Also, card board is free with how many packages we get.
It probably depends on what kind of compost are you using. I have planted for years directly into "green waste"+home-made compost and that has worked great. My record carrot (Nantes 2) has been 45cm long in deep raised bed filled with pure compost + perlite (which is inert) mix.
This was THE least lazy garden prep I’ve ever witnessed and I am here for all of it. 🤙🏼
The lazy part is you invest one afternoon doing this to avoid about 90 hours of cumulative work throughout the rest of the garden season weeding/watering/maintaining the garden ;)
@@AnneofAllTrades absolutely!! You’re such an inspiration!!🙌🏼
I am starting my FIRST garden in 15 YEARS, This year on a Serious budget (SSDI) in my full time R.V. life. I recently ordered a bunch of woven planter bags and compost bag so when I go, it's easy to pack n move. I live in Colorado on the highest mesa in the world! It's high desert buuuut this is where we grow most our FOOD not the Other Crop. Your video is EXTREMELY helpful! I Need to be frugal & have small space so you have a new dedicated listener! Luckily I'm SURROUNDED by farmers & ranchers who ❤️ to give their 2 cents & help out neighbors....i swear it's the last place like it in Colorado! I'm excited to watch more! I have questions lots of questions!😂 THANK YOU! Oddly of course i Don't pay for water or have lack of (we have snow almost yr round) but still wanna save it! Ty ty ty❤❤❤❤❤
Absolutely love this video. It touches on everything. Basic soil science, balancing the microrhizome and nutrient distribution, polyculture and companion planting. Best video I've seen in a long while.
The Guineas though! I totally feel your pain. Mine went to the auction last month. I can’t believe my neighbors put up with the noise for so long 😆
Hey Anne. I wanted to share that you can do a quick yelp search for tree trimming services. Give a few local companies a call and ask if they can drop off wood chips to your property. You would be surprised to see how many people are willing to deliver free wood chips. Don’t be afraid to ask upfront that you want to stay away from palm trees.Great video!
I really love her way of gardening 😂😂
In Sacramento, the county gives free compost during the spring and summer. It comes from the green/organic waste that households provide through the refuse pick up. Some other cities may provide the same service. Love your video, I am a Lazy Gardener myself!
I live there too. I'm trying to get my garden going and contemplating going Hastie's to get compost. Please share how to get the free compost. Thank you!
@@dianeridings7669 do an online search for Sacramento Free Compost. Its near Bradshaw and Kiefer Blvd. It is self serve and the county orders based off demand. From April - September, 24/7. No one avail to help load so bring your own containers and shovels and a helper! Have fun!!
@@dianeridings7669 Hi. Just search online for Sacramento Free Compost. It's located off of Bradshaw and Kiefer Blvd. Self Serve so there is no one there to help. You'll need your own container and shovel. It's open 24/7 from April to September and they refill on demand. It's just dumped in a parking lot. have fun!
@@dianeridings7669google is your friend:
wmr.saccounty.gov/Pages/Self-Serve-Compost.aspx
If you sign up for chip drop please watch the video the company made about why you don’t want a chip drop. In reality you probably do, but there are a LOT of factors to consider. Be sure your leaves, clippings, straw, aren’t sprayed by anything. Great video Anne! Already set up for the year, but great reference for the future.
That video is so funny!
I am a big chip drop fan, but the amount can be overwhelming for folks. We have a landscaper with skidstere, bobcat etc help move some of it around. And we have a space where the pile can stay for the year as we use the rest of it.
How can one make sure there were no chemicals sprayed on the trees, before they were turned into wood chips.
@@WillieRobertMcKassonConsulting no way to know this. But honestly, who sprays giant oak, pine or maple trees in their yard regularly? Not really a concern.
Only being sprayed with who knows what from the sky called chemtrails !!!!
The plants phone their friends😂 I love it
pro tip - a great source of tape & ink free (minimized) cardboard is framing shops, or craft stores that have framing departments. Picture frames come in large carboard folds with a couple small pieces of masking tape in my experience. This is how I get carboard big enough for me to work under my car that doesn't have all the flaps and stuff that boxes do. Also construction paper/contractors paper if you want/have to buy. Comes in rolls & has no tape/print.
Hey guys. A suggestion from NC. The post office gives me HUGE sheets of cardboard they get everyday. No staples, no tape. And they are happy to give it to you. Another tip: mow the ground down as short as possible. Then put down the cardboard, newspaper will work, and I put hay on top, even if it's rotting. I had worms at ground level the first year!
Using the logs, sticks etc is a form of Hugelkulture. Along with rabbit poo, llama poo can also be added to your garden beds without composting it.
Great vid! Tysm 😊 Lovely!
I have two pet sheep. Can I use their poop and poop/straw mixtures directly in the garden?
I don’t remember what it’s called but there’s also this thing that’s like a terracotta/clay vase that you bury in soil with the open top sticking out, and pour water in it, and it’ll keep soil wet because the terracotta is permeable so it’ll slowly leech water out into it without making it too wet but not letting it dry out
Wow I found your channel about 2 weeks ago and hoped for this. I tilled my entire garden, about a 40x60 foot plot. Made the ditches with cardboard and wood Chips and then woodchipped everything. All new wood Chips. The first ditch was alone for about a week bc we had a ton of rain. The ditch filled with water. A week of no rain and the ground was bone dry except the chips and everything near it. Crossing my fingers.
Omg the wood on the bottom (larger pieces) killer!!! Idea!!!
Hiya Anne…. I’m in Australia and my property is full of only gum trees with soil like yours.
This lazy gardening way of gardening, shown here I feel is going to be a game changer taking my gardens to next level.
I’ve managed to source on my local highway a huge mulch pile that’s been dumped by council (it’s aged mulch) and in my local town is a little forest which is rich in leaves that I’m about to go and grab a bunch.
I’ve been so disheartened in my garden, trying to grow food, however after binge watching your videos…. I have hope 😊.
It gets really hot here in summer, so this way of gardening I believe will create lush, moisture on our little homestead.
Thank you for your wealth of information that’s helping many people to also have success in providing for family🙏🏼
This woman is Amazing in every way.. what a wealth of knowledge.. Thanks for sharing Ann. Such a Blessing!
Newsprint sections work well, if you cannot get enough cardboard.
I'm new to this channel and I absolutely love it! I especially love that I have very similar climate and conditions, I'm just north of Springfield, TN. Today I am planning how to get my garden going this weekend and I thought "I wonder if Anne of All Trades has a video about starting a new garden." And here we are 😂 Thank you for documenting and publishing all this information!!
So glad you’re here!
We live in Clarksville, Tennessee, we are just starting our garden.
We are enjoying the sunshine, especially after a long winter here.
Happy gardening everyone ❤
I live real close by y'all and I am brand new and never had a garden but desperately want to learn! I lost my beloved grandma a few months ago and she was a magician with plants, I wish she was still here to mentor me. ❤ I hope I can find someone to take me under their wing, but in the meantime, these videos are a lifesaver!
Thank you goo woman for trying to encourage everyone to grow their own food and medicine. Be blessed
I moved all my food-gardens to my deck; containers and raised beds. I've had it with weeding and bending, and I'm using my tomato cages to encourage vertical growth on any kind of vine plant. So far so good. and I don't have to keep dragging hoses around so my husband doesn't snag them with the lawn mower. I get the compressed soil packs for about 12 bucks (they about quadruple in size from ~ 5 x 11 x 11, or so.
LOVE your idea of adding mushrooms!!
I have been using cardboard for YEARS. One of the best sources are furniture or appliance stores. BIG boxes - fewer cracks - make a double layer minimum. Pile your soil on top. Its wonderful. If you have really big plants you are transplanting in, you can even punch a hole through the cardboard to create a deep enough space for the plant.
Dr. Goldner has a diet that helps. It’s a healing diet which I was using to heal my celiac disease. I NEVER believed that food could help anxiety, stress and depression but… I was surprised. Therapy is also good as it’s good to have a supportive person to talk to.
Getting out and getting my hands in the dirt has always been my therapy so I understand but I didn’t know it helped with serotonin levels!! Thank you i love your content
So glad you're here.
Thank you for giving me hope that spring will come, we just got dumped a foot of snow yesterday.
Am happy to see that your hand is doing well. 😊
Great ideas! Thank you! FYI If you have a Costco in your area, ask them for those large pieces of cardboard that you see under products in the aisles. They're awesome and already flat! Some you can take off of the aisles by yourself, but they usually have a lot of them in a storage area at the back of the store. And, there's no ink on them and no cost to you!! A Win-win! Sam's and BJs may offer similar hauls! 😂👍🏽 Happy gardening!
I just got my first Chip drop recently! It was a large one, as big as your compost pile, so I was able to cover a large portion of my back yard! I was so excited!
Thanks again!
Any place that gets products delivered on pellets. I use the liquor shop. 😂
Best way to deal with weeds, ignore them. If they are not too tall, spreading, or thorny, then they really are not much of a problem. Once they get too big, then just chop or pull them then.
When mowing, leave the grass spread out on the lawn for a day or two, then you can mix the dry grass into your compost easier, without stink. In Florida's summer, I would need to mow again in 2 days anyway, so adding the bagger then would pick up the dry and mix it with fresh grass, still making it easy to blend into the compost.
The nightshade/plucking tip for root growth is so cool! Never seen that before. Great video Anne!
Thank you sooo much for this video. The best gardener i have ever watched. May God bless u , always.
Nursing homes also have tons of cardboard boxes weakly
I'm growing food in my SW Florida sandy soil this year along with maintaining all my plants and veggies in pots. Thank goodness for teachers like yourself to learn from. These techniques are working for me too down here in zone 10a.
Hi from NZ 👋thanks for all your clips I love them😍I have been gardening for all my adult life but I always learn something new💟
I totally love the gardening techniques as well. I love how you use the animals to help promote your soil. I just got done watching the video on the fruit trees and I have to dig up for my peach trees I planted last year because I seen all the stuff I done wrong. 😢
Thank you for all of your information. Most things I already know. I don’t have all those materials to put in a raised bed. Food compost is what I have to work with. Happy gardening everyone! ❤
I think you are a smart gardener. Your garden is pretty, and thank you so much for sharing your experience and knowledge!!!
I’m so thankful about how open you are sometimes about your mental health, and your feelings. I’ve loved your channel for a while because of the way you are, then you started talking about your mental stuff and it made me love it even more. I got diagnosed with so many things and just recently (at 33yo) with combined type ADHD, which explains so much of my life, and I feel like I gravitate toward people I see who may be similar. Anyway still watching. Thanks for this video. 🤙🏽
I love tomatoes 😂
I love this channel! Brightened my cloudy day here in N. Carolina
I stumbled upon your channel the other day and I am soooo glad! You're informative and entertaining at the same time :)
looks like I'm right at home I'm in North MS zone 7B so I'm definitely subscribing! I love this method bc I have tons of everything you just used to make that garden its quick easy and for me its a great way to clean up my yard that's full of twigs branches falling from storms and not to mention all the leaves I just love this thank you so so much I gotta check out more of your content
I'm lazier than this, I let our chickens weed, feed and bug eat all my future garden area. After several months of them working a space all I have to do is rake the soil into mounds and seed.
Ditto
Anne, you are truly amazing, and we love you! Thank you for sharing your incredible talents with all of us❤
I am one of those beginners referenced who is terrified of bringing in diseases with wood chips. I lost a few baby stone fruit trees to anthracnose years ago and, if I understand correctly, it also affects annual fruits and veggies as well. Please help me move past this mental block/fear since wood chips seem crucial for lazy, no dig, permaculture, etc. gardening methods!
Your video is great! The “plant highway system” reminded me of the “dust bowl” during the Great Depression. Great example of why not to plow everything😮. Tragic example of defying mother natures (Gods way) of doing things
Watched first time today…OMG the BEST and exactly what I need…me think the YT algo worked amazingly this time finding you for me. You are SUCH a lovely generous person with all the things I need now for starting a garden. 🎉🎊🥳
So glad you’re here!
I am SO HAPPY that I found your channel. I want to do exactly this. Thank you
I was so excited to know I did grow my beds exactly as you have except for 2 things, i didnt know about the mushroom spores (darn) and instead of wood chips as a top dressing i used straw bedding thats been stripped of seeds. I started my beds 5 years ago and have hard pan clay soil thats been transformed in the garden beds. I let dandelion grow because they put down a deep root that helps with drainage. I also plant my tomatoes in a similar way except I lay them in the soil sideways. So happy to see you teaching this wonderful method.
Thanks for sharing your garden video, very helpful ❤
Let me tell you! Thank you for all that you do. You’re literally my favorite person to watch!❤ Everything you do for the horses is just amazing. Belle looks so happy where she is now. She is just so stunning it hurts my heart that she has her issues. When I’m watching I occasionally think about how you said your dream was for belle to push a sleigh in the snow with you and makes me so sad for her. But she could not have found a better person than you. She looks so happy where she’s at now. I look forward to following your adventures and wish you and Kyle all the love and happiness. By the way your chandelier is absolutely the chef’s kiss in the barn 🫶
Your delivery is wonderful. My new favorite channel. I have never tried to garden but am very interested these days. Thank you for all the knowledge 💚
So glad you're here!
Wow, when you make a bed, you really make a bed! Your timing couldn't be better. My arm should be healed just in time to build beds of my own in a week or so and I'm wondering what I need to get for them. Thank you!
Best explanation I’ve ever heard!
Thank you very much 💕
I just found you , so interesting, I’ve been a conventional gardener for 40 + years I just did what the generation before me did. All that composting , screening cutting and splitting wood doesn’t look lazy too me 😅.
One afternoon of work at the beginning saves 90 hours of work throughout the season… maybe “lazy” should be rephrased to “smart,” but I think more folks relate to the word lazy.
Love the compost screen made of hardware cloth. Great video!
Thank you for this. I watch your videos many times for inspiration ❤
My wife and I live in western Indiana and deal with HORRIFIC weeds. We use the cardboard trick but didn't think about wetting it down. Thank you. We both love the feel of soil but I have to watch out for poison ivy (we have a TON of it) so I have to use gloves until we actually have good soil grounded. Thank you so much for your videos.
If u know anyone with goats 🐐 they eat poison ivy and can clean it up pretty quickly! Some areas have businesses with goats for rent to clear areas of weeds, poisons ivy, wild rose, etc.
Your such an inspiration, a true gem to the earth👍🏼💚🌍👍🏼and your THE first person to fully and easily explain to me why not to plow. It gets complicated but the way you explained is easily understood, thanks😄
Spectacular video❤ Thank you for the amazing tip's ideas you have shared with us🎉
I live in high desert northern Arizona and I use cardboard for a filler for weed stopper .yeah your right it dose break down
I love the sounds of my guinea fowl, they are so much fun! Also such great personalities!
I really like your vids, and I appreciate you advocating for mental health. 👍🏻
Perfect video for me, I'm going to do this at the end of the month! Thanks!
I love your videos! Im newish to gardening. Ive been doing just a few and inc every yr. I absolutely love my guineas. They did wonders ridding the ticks off our 4.5 acres and our neighbors yard! I find them hilarious. I was pulling 2 ticks off every child daily til i had them in the summers. For our new farm will be getting more . Thanks for all yiur tips and guidance.
You're lucky not to live in the city. What a great job you're doing and showing us with lot of university degrees still watching you and learning from you. Thanks a bunch,
Omg I love your video soooo muchhh Anne, especially the part you said 'resistsss' to buy the plants with fruit on it haha I've learned a lot from you, thank youuuu Anne.
Thank you for sharing I am inspired to go from grow bags on the deck to out in this backyard
You really cheer me up. Don’t have the bark, but good soil and got better idea of the cardboard that I used to think it was only to suppress weeds. I’ve subscribed!
Like the show. As for woodchip..I did that. Stuff grew but not very well. A year later it was well overgrown and turned into compost. I get crook for 8 weeks.
I'm now doing raised beds and pots. Some in the ground bit that will come to an end when I get the raised beds done.
The woodchip I have is now at least a year old. But I'm going with sugar cane mulched with the mower. Woodchip is for path and compost bins now. 😊
That's cute ... phone a friend -- I'm going to use that :)
Alpaca poop is like rabbit poop
I use layers of cardboard AND burlap sacks and then soil
I make biochar to add to my compost as well as retorted banana peels -- plus blended egg shells
Thank you so much for your fantastic video!!!
I found out the hard way, my current town doesn't allow cardboard to be visible...so glad to see l can cover & plant ASAP ❤️ Thanks 👍
So glad I stumbled upon your videos! Guess what I'm going to attempt this week?
You got this!
I love this quickie hugleculture raised bed! I did this with two raised beds last year. But we bought rough sawn 2x8’s enough to make two 4’x8’ x 15” ht beds. Filled with a lot of what you did here and my greens in one bed and calendula in the other did awesome! But I’ve got a lot of left over cardboard and we had a lot of trees fall over the weird winter here in New England, so I’m going to try your method this year! ❤️
I appreciate these videos so much. You make it look so easy. Thank you 🙏🏻
You are a real treasure, Anne ❤️ Love your videos.
Excellent content, thank you, from UK ❤
Thanks for all the tips.
You, Young Lady, are a Beast!! Love your channel, and have learned a lot in the short time I've been watching. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.
For large areas to cover, I have found that Appliance, Furniture stores always have huge boxes. Also, during season, Watermelon boxes are large, and much thicker than normal.
Bicycle stores also have big boxes but you need to ask in advance so they will save them for you. 👍🏻💞
Some great info there. I love your "phone a friend" analogy.
I live in the Melbourne (Aus) suburbs and we can actually get a vanload of used coffee grounds and chaff delivered for free.
A fantastic resource. Woodchip we can pick up too. (I don't use our version of Chip Drop because they drop off way more than I could possibly use.)
I'm lazy and I'm a gardener. I guess I'm in the right place.😊 Cheers!
You are just awesome... such great energy.
You are awesome!!! You teach the way I need.... Thank you, will be trying your method. I appreciate budget friendly methods...makes me able to try things too.
Its true, getting your hands dirty is a good feeling. At the end of your video I was impressed by the amount of serotonin you had on your hands.
I've heard this info before But not this good and detailed! Thank You🤗
You are adorable and informative but certainly not lazy! Tks for a great video!
Thanks Ann❤
absolutely coming back with a vegence im so in love with you as a teacher/good human. Somone passing along knowledge. You're so good.