After growing you can compost the growing medium or add to worm bin. Do not reuse growing medium because the previous roots will decompose and create mold and fungus. This video was 3 weeks worth of work. How did you like the video?
They will not grow gain, Start again from another batch and do not reuse the growing medium again either. The previous roots will decompose and cause mold and fungus. Add growing medium to compost pile or worm bin.
My thing I like best about this channel is how easy to follow and thorough the information is. Most channels spend too much time just talking instead of getting to the point, making the videos super long and leaving you wanting to tell the person "shut up and get to the point". Definitely one of my favorite channels.
Just started growing simple things like chives, green onions, and "living lettuce" ... want to try micro greens, and this video is better than the other 20+ ones I watched!
Thank you for this tutorial. I've been sprouting mung beans and sunflowers but didn't know what to do with others, this really helps! Love that you don't overtalk the presentation, like many, but stay concise, direct and on topic.
I am so glad I found your video. I have just started planting vegetables after planting trees to make my own tiny forest in the back of the land. Now time to plant vegetables for my own. Just like you said vegetables sold in the market are not safe to consume because they use a lot of chemical. Some vegetables are easy to plant but some are not especially in rainy season. Microgreen is the way out. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. And the most beautiful part is the way you make it sound so easy which inspired the newbies. Big heart from Thailand.
great video, so clearly explained, I've just started my lockdown microgreen project and the results are amazing, I could become a microgreen addict and love nibbling them all day, Ive got mustard, peashoots, cress, and radish.......these things could literally keep you alive, a good prepping item.....seeds.
one of the best videos I've seen on micro greens. Lots of quick tips that other videos don't tell you, and this video is super easy to follow. Great job! Thank you, Jag.
Hello Jag. I’m very impressed from your work. I been searching around to learn how to grow vegetables. I can see you been working very hard for your dream. I have recently bought a 10 acre land in south Texas and I move here with 3 of my children. We have decirte to name our ranch as “family dream ranch” since I had a dream of do what you are doing for the organic farm. I have wrote a book that tells about how to have a better life. And I’m working on that too. I wish you the best and don’t stop dreaming.
yes I have a picture. I have other plans for it now. At the beginning I was planing to do what you already are doing, but I have no money to start up. I’m planning to grow Bamboo now. I’m going to need to get a loan or to get and investor. There is very good money in return.
This is so cool, I can actually mix radish microgreens with the green salad, a combination that I love and get the same flavor instead of waiting for radishes to grow in the garden!
Omg, I could listen to his voice all day long. I'm excited to try and grow my own greens and I appreciate your videos! My plan is to eventually grow my own greens for the bearded dragons and iguanas in my Pet Shop :) that way I can sustain them with healthy organic clean vegetables year round
This does work well BUT you should plant some in your regular garden so the plants can have ALL the room they need for roots as well as the plant. Birds like sunflowers so you need to stay on top of when those plants are maturing or they will steal your crop... FAST ! not sure about broccoli or radishes or cress. Peas take as much room as growing them for pods... depending on the variety. They are self pollinating as well and very easy to grow. Again, don't expect a crop from your microgreen tray.
Jag I'm a fairly new subscriber. I love your videos-they are short but to the point. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and encouraging others to grow their own food. Keep the videos coming!
This may have been answered already but does anyone know if you can regrow them after harvesting the tops, like scallions, or is it a one time harvest before they must be discarded?
Great video, I really enjoyed it. I appreciate that you took the time to put this information together. I am looking forward to watching your other videos. Blessings to you!
Very helpful video! Quick question:- Does the microgreens regrow post harvesting? Or we need to remove everything from container and start the sowing process again with new batch of seeds?
I was growing sprouts in mason jars last winter. The issue I had with it was the seed coat is mixed amount the sprouts. it's like having grains of sand in there! So I decided to try microgreens and let them grow until the seed coats fell off. then cutting just the shoots, I would avoid the seed coats. Haven't started microgreens yet because I am on other projects. I have to get one project going before starting the next.
As your Sunflower microgreens are uncovered and grow to 2 inches or so, you can gently brush your palm over the tops and dislodge the seed hulls. Do this every day until harvest.
I'm good at sprouts but not so good at microgreens. If you take your sprouts when finished and put them in a big bowl of water and swish them around all the seed jackets come up to the top.
Thank you Jag for this fantastic video. The deer and rabbits kept eating my garden and I gave up. But I still had my nice LED sprouting box I had made. Thanks to you and other microgreen youtubers, my sprouting box, and my collection of grocery mushroom-trays waiting for re-use/recycle have gone to great use - providing two good trays of sunflower greens per week that bulk up my salads. I plan on increasing the rate now that I have a system down. (I bought a big bag of Black Oil Sunflower seeds "on the cheep" sold as bird-seed from the local hardware store, and to my delight, they sprout and grow great!) I also designed and 3D-Printed a tray cover that allows germinating or growing trays of greens to serve as the weight on germinating seeds. It works great and saves space. The only drawback is they don't vent well so I cannot forget to open and lightly spray regularly or they mold - but usually spraying knocks down the mold and they still grow fine. I also designed and printed a ring that makes a nice lid out of an inverted tray for darkness and height-growth ie: "leg day". When I publish the designs to Thingiverse, I will swing back here and post a link. I need to make it so people can edit them for their own brands and sizes of trays. THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU again for the beautifully produced inspiration to start growing my own food again. This is helping greatly with improving my daily nutrition, and is a fun hobby. I'm looking forward to experimenting with different seeds and methods moving forward. Your videos have been fantastic. Keep up the great work!
Thank you jag. Really appreciate it and took action and ordered the seeds and have started sprouting!!using mine in smoothies and salads and just munching
Hi Jag, I love your informative, to the point, videos. Last year, I tried growing microgreens (Mung bean and Sunflower) and also Ginger. I plan to do more experiments this year. All your trips and tips are helpful. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us all.
This might sound silly to ask but I just want to double-check. After the Broccoli Microgreen grows and I harvest the top part, will it still continue to grow continuously if I still take care of it? Or is there a limit to harvesting and soon I'll need to get new seeds?
Thank you Jag for your valuable input in this channel .. I have learned a lot ! I would like to ask what happens after harvesting the microgreens does it grow again or it will get disposed ? Thanks again .. Keep up the great videos Regards, Ghada from Saudi Arabia
1. Sunflower seeds, water these, soak these 2. pea shoots, black out with coco, soak these 3. raddish, no need to soak, no need to cover with weight 4. broccoli, no need to soak, put weight 5. watercress, soak these no need to cover
Thanks :) After growing you can compost the growing medium or add to worm bin. Do not reuse growing medium because the previous roots will decompose and create mold and fungus.
Thank you for making such informative videos. 🙂 My mum wanted to make a suggestion. If you don't mind, for people that are a little bit hard of hearing, it can be very difficult to hear the information when there is loud music playing in the video. Everyone does it, I know, but it would make things a little easier if the music was very soft, or there was not music playing while you are talking. They put loud music in movies too and sometimes it's a struggle to make out what is being said. Keep making great videos. 🙂
Agreed 100%. I'm not hard of hearing but I too find it annoying when they do that and I just quit them. You're right Jag is the best. Love his spirit, his clarity and great videos. I also love that he's health conscious and uses organic and non-GMO products and shares them with us. Usually with others, they use unhealthy products and I have to do research to find healthy alternatives. With Jag I don't have to waste time doing that. Thanks for sharing your concerns.
Thanks for making the video. Having been thinking about starting to grow microgreens instead of getting vegetables from the store. Your video does an excellent job of being easy to follow and not being overwhelming for someone new to microgreens.
if they don't regrow after cutting, why not just sprout in a jar with daily rinsing and then you can also eat the roots? Seems wasteful of part of plant and more expensive than necessary.
You typically don't want to reuse the soil. I compost all of mine once I cut the microgreens. I reuse them outside, but not for microgreens because there is potential they have pathogens at that point.
@@irondogmercantile You typically don't want to reuse the soil. I compost all of mine once I cut the microgreens. I reuse them outside, but not for microgreens because there is potential they have pathogens at that point.
Is there a nutritional difference between sprouts and microgreens? Also, are there any edible plants unsuitable for using as sprouts and/or microgreens? Just discovered your channel, subscribed immediately! (And this is the only channel I've clicked for notifications). Love your clear explanations and enjoy your enthusiasm. You are a great teacher, being both informative and inspiring.
I would recommend you promote growth by removing seed shells especially when you're working in a few day time period if it's not too hard or dangerous for the plants always good to experiment which plants it can help and hurt but it definitely will promote even and faster growth
Are there specific varieties (ex: sunflowers) which are used to grow microgreens vs ones you would grow in a garden (Ex: Mammoth variety)? I have a massive bag of organic Mammoth sunflower seeds that I harvested last year, and I can't plant them all - would like to grow microgreens with them if possible.
After growing you can compost the growing medium or add to worm bin. Do not reuse growing medium because the previous roots will decompose and create mold and fungus. This video was 3 weeks worth of work. How did you like the video?
Will they grow AGAIN even after HARVESTING ?
Or do we need to start from SCRATCH for another BATCH
Yo !!!!!
They will not grow gain, Start again from another batch and do not reuse the growing medium again either. The previous roots will decompose and cause mold and fungus. Add growing medium to compost pile or worm bin.
Come to Kuwait
Haloooo.......sir.....good advice.....
Thanks a lot
This was really good
My thing I like best about this channel is how easy to follow and thorough the information is. Most channels spend too much time just talking instead of getting to the point, making the videos super long and leaving you wanting to tell the person "shut up and get to the point". Definitely one of my favorite channels.
I gotta say, kudos to your beautiful camera work on top of a clear and straight forward tutorial.. well done. :)
th-cam.com/video/OKXy9478jZI/w-d-xo.html
Best explanation on micro greens! This absolutely gives me confidence in trying out micro greens indoors!
Just started growing simple things like chives, green onions, and "living lettuce" ... want to try micro greens, and this video is better than the other 20+ ones I watched!
Thank you for this tutorial. I've been sprouting mung beans and sunflowers but didn't know what to do with others, this really helps! Love that you don't overtalk the presentation, like many, but stay concise, direct and on topic.
i dont grow anything, but i find your voice very soothing to listen to.
I am so glad I found your video. I have just started planting vegetables after planting trees to make my own tiny forest in the back of the land. Now time to plant vegetables for my own. Just like you said vegetables sold in the market are not safe to consume because they use a lot of chemical. Some vegetables are easy to plant but some are not especially in rainy season. Microgreen is the way out. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. And the most beautiful part is the way you make it sound so easy which inspired the newbies. Big heart from Thailand.
great video, so clearly explained, I've just started my lockdown microgreen project and the results are amazing, I could become a microgreen addict and love nibbling them all day, Ive got mustard, peashoots, cress, and radish.......these things could literally keep you alive, a good prepping item.....seeds.
one of the best videos I've seen on micro greens. Lots of quick tips that other videos don't tell you, and this video is super easy to follow. Great job! Thank you, Jag.
Agreed 100%.
Hello Jag. I’m very impressed from your work. I been searching around to learn how to grow vegetables. I can see you been working very hard for your dream. I have recently bought a 10 acre land in south Texas and I move here with 3 of my children. We have decirte to name our ranch as “family dream ranch” since I had a dream of do what you are doing for the organic farm. I have wrote a book that tells about how to have a better life. And I’m working on that too. I wish you the best and don’t stop dreaming.
Wow that sounds incredible! Do you have any pictures of your land? Maybe you could turn it into a food forest!
yes I have a picture. I have other plans for it now. At the beginning I was planing to do what you already are doing, but I have no money to start up. I’m planning to grow Bamboo now. I’m going to need to get a loan or to get and investor. There is very good money in return.
@@andyvilla1av Very cool, I want to grow bamboo so bad but right now I'm just growing microgreens!
Nicely done. Straight forward , no crap in the middle. Straight to the point. Love it well done.
This is so cool, I can actually mix radish microgreens with the green salad, a combination that I love and get the same flavor instead of waiting for radishes to grow in the garden!
The best micro green video of all the ones I have watched !
Omg, I could listen to his voice all day long. I'm excited to try and grow my own greens and I appreciate your videos! My plan is to eventually grow my own greens for the bearded dragons and iguanas in my Pet Shop :) that way I can sustain them with healthy organic clean vegetables year round
Ashley Owens great idea!
Hi jack
I just tried sunflower seeds in last week . I got best results,I tried in water ... Thank you
If you've got space, grow a few of the seeds to maturity and get some more for next year!
That's what I was wondering.. we can just get seeds from it if we let it grow all the way right?
@@myrnacalderon1900 As long as the breed of plant is "open pollinated" and not a hybrid.
Thanks! exactly what I was about to ask :)
@@TW0T0M and as long as it doesn't require an insect pollinator.
This does work well BUT you should plant some in your regular garden so the plants can have ALL the room they need for roots as well as the plant. Birds like sunflowers so you need to stay on top of when those plants are maturing or they will steal your crop... FAST ! not sure about broccoli or radishes or cress. Peas take as much room as growing them for pods... depending on the variety. They are self pollinating as well and very easy to grow. Again, don't expect a crop from your microgreen tray.
I’m inlove with your videos.... you make it look so simple and easy to grow any vegetables.
Jag
I'm a fairly new subscriber. I love your videos-they are short but to the point. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and encouraging others to grow their own food. Keep the videos coming!
Thank you :) It means a lot. Glad that my hard work is being appreciated.
I love growing and eating micro greens. Happy gardening to you all.
This is my new spring/summer project
Sunflower shoots are amazing; I add them to Egg Fu Yong, omelets, beef-and-barley soup, etc. Think I'm going to try steaming them if I get enough.
Wow *_*
My salad bowls are gonna be lit now 😍
Maha Ignas sorry I can’t like that it’s got 69 likes
Rapid_Tooth 😂😂😂
Maha Ignas also I like the fact that it has remained at that for 1 year
Rapid_Tooth Yeahh. 😅
Maha Ignas lol.
Thank you for putting this video together and sharing it. Great video. Fantastic videography and editing. Informative and inspiring. Thank you!
Thank you for presenting micro greens with ideas I can actually use! The smaller container will easily fit in my windowsill!!
Thanks!! I messed up the first time but after watching this it should go well!!
This video is chock full of awesome information. Plus it's so visually pleasing. Thank you for the for you put into these videos!
I'm just about to start hydroponic and plan to grow microgreens both for self consumption and for commercial supply...wish me luck
Excellent video! Thank you so much for sharing!
This is the best video regarding growing microgreens and great for home growing. Thanks Jag:)
This may have been answered already but does anyone know if you can regrow them after harvesting the tops, like scallions, or is it a one time harvest before they must be discarded?
This is beautifully done. Thank you for promoting healthy living. Peace and Blessings to you.
Great video, I really enjoyed it.
I appreciate that you took the time to put this information together.
I am looking forward to watching your other videos.
Blessings to you!
th-cam.com/video/OKXy9478jZI/w-d-xo.html
thank you for this lifegiving info!!!!!!!
Thank you for such great information. Why hadn't"t i thought of doing such a simple task? You are such a good source to keep.
I will start today after work going to get all the supplies... excited
Very helpful video! Quick question:- Does the microgreens regrow post harvesting? Or we need to remove everything from container and start the sowing process again with new batch of seeds?
No one answered this question?!
th-cam.com/video/mOcz71WAY2w/w-d-xo.html In short, no they don't regrow
We question is answered above by Daisy Creek Farmer
Someone posted how to repurpose the old soil and waste after cutting but yeah once you cut it's done
Peas will regrow, but they aren't as nutrient rich and sometimes they are a little "woody"
That was great! I agree with your comments as well. Very sensible.
I was growing sprouts in mason jars last winter. The issue I had with it was the seed coat is mixed amount the sprouts. it's like having grains of sand in there!
So I decided to try microgreens and let them grow until the seed coats fell off. then cutting just the shoots, I would avoid the seed coats.
Haven't started microgreens yet because I am on other projects. I have to get one project going before starting the next.
As your Sunflower microgreens are uncovered and grow to 2 inches or so, you can gently brush your palm over the tops and dislodge the seed hulls. Do this every day until harvest.
@@marksmicrogreens3461 Good! I have a tray like your example with my sprout seeds growing to micro greens now. They are almost ready.
I'm good at sprouts but not so good at microgreens. If you take your sprouts when finished and put them in a big bowl of water and swish them around all the seed jackets come up to the top.
Thank you Jag for this fantastic video. The deer and rabbits kept eating my garden and I gave up. But I still had my nice LED sprouting box I had made. Thanks to you and other microgreen youtubers, my sprouting box, and my collection of grocery mushroom-trays waiting for re-use/recycle have gone to great use - providing two good trays of sunflower greens per week that bulk up my salads. I plan on increasing the rate now that I have a system down. (I bought a big bag of Black Oil Sunflower seeds "on the cheep" sold as bird-seed from the local hardware store, and to my delight, they sprout and grow great!)
I also designed and 3D-Printed a tray cover that allows germinating or growing trays of greens to serve as the weight on germinating seeds. It works great and saves space. The only drawback is they don't vent well so I cannot forget to open and lightly spray regularly or they mold - but usually spraying knocks down the mold and they still grow fine.
I also designed and printed a ring that makes a nice lid out of an inverted tray for darkness and height-growth ie: "leg day". When I publish the designs to Thingiverse, I will swing back here and post a link. I need to make it so people can edit them for their own brands and sizes of trays.
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU again for the beautifully produced inspiration to start growing my own food again. This is helping greatly with improving my daily nutrition, and is a fun hobby. I'm looking forward to experimenting with different seeds and methods moving forward. Your videos have been fantastic. Keep up the great work!
Thank you for this information, I am a vegan and this would help with the salads I make each day. ;-)
@Caldeira Yes! I was thinking the same thing. 💚🌱💚
I have always wanted to grow, watching your video's are inspiring me to start
Hello I am Sarika. Thank you for sharing this amazing beautiful video
Could you please list a list of microgreens that reproduce seeds to be regrown
Thank you jag. Really appreciate it and took action and ordered the seeds and have started sprouting!!using mine in smoothies and salads and just munching
I tried it 😊
It was fantastic
This is so smart way to grow them at home and it was very helpful
Love this video, have shown it to the kids and we have sown our first micro greens, can’t wait for the harvest, many thanks
Do you hav recepies and tutorial how u use the greens in meals? Thanks for the great video anyway!!!
They're great in salads, sandwiches and as garnish.
Bro just cut them and gulp them up straight
Be rough and tough
Great teacher and instructional video. A lot of information in a concise and clear manner.
Well done!
After harvesting, do I simply throw everything out and start the germination process again?
I’m wondering the same thing. I think he mentioned that in the description. You cannot reuse it. You can compost it though.
I was also going to ask this question
Julia Orrico that’s what he said to do, otherwise the plants are susceptible to mold from the germinating medium.
Post harvest, is it possible to regrow them ? Or we need to invest in buying new seeds and start from scratch again for next batch ?
Ordered the seeds ! Thank you so much . Love your Content!
Hi Jag, I love your informative, to the point, videos. Last year, I tried growing microgreens (Mung bean and Sunflower) and also Ginger. I plan to do more experiments this year. All your trips and tips are helpful. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us all.
Wow, I never thought of ginger microgreens. Please share how it turned out.
Can we save the roots for my rabbit and ducks for greens?
Do they regrow after harvest or you need to replant another batch?
This might sound silly to ask but I just want to double-check. After the Broccoli Microgreen grows and I harvest the top part, will it still continue to grow continuously if I still take care of it? Or is there a limit to harvesting and soon I'll need to get new seeds?
you need to use new seeds each time.
great videos and I agree with you I have been growing them for 3 yrs now thank you
That's awesome, where do you grow?
sebastian florida middle of state on the atlantic i use the front room of the house to grow, i also can a lot of food
@@tom32958 Hell yeah! that's awesome. I'm up in NY growing everything indoors
Thank you Jag for your valuable input in this channel .. I have learned a lot !
I would like to ask what happens after harvesting the microgreens does it grow again or it will get disposed ?
Thanks again .. Keep up the great videos
Regards,
Ghada from Saudi Arabia
Clear, crisp & complete guide...... thanks
1. Sunflower seeds, water these, soak these
2. pea shoots, black out with coco, soak these
3. raddish, no need to soak, no need to cover with weight
4. broccoli, no need to soak, put weight
5. watercress, soak these no need to cover
hero
Great video! I would like to know which soil exactly do you use? Thanks a lot! ;)
In the description there’s a section that says ‘growing medium’- I think that’s it
Nice video and good idea.
Can I reuse coconut coir for next sprouting ?
Thanks for your videos.
Cheers.
Thanks :) After growing you can compost the growing medium or add to worm bin. Do not reuse growing medium because the previous roots will decompose and create mold and fungus.
@@DaisyCreekFarms please tell me about lighting and what's the concern about mold?
Best video. Thankyou so much. Shall grow.cress and pea n radish😊
Thank you for making such informative videos. 🙂
My mum wanted to make a suggestion. If you don't mind, for people that are a little bit hard of hearing, it can be very difficult to hear the information when there is loud music playing in the video. Everyone does it, I know, but it would make things a little easier if the music was very soft, or there was not music playing while you are talking. They put loud music in movies too and sometimes it's a struggle to make out what is being said. Keep making great videos. 🙂
Agreed 100%. I'm not hard of hearing but I too find it annoying when they do that and I just quit them. You're right Jag is the best. Love his spirit, his clarity and great videos. I also love that he's health conscious and uses organic and non-GMO products and shares them with us. Usually with others, they use unhealthy products and I have to do research to find healthy alternatives. With Jag I don't have to waste time doing that. Thanks for sharing your concerns.
Agree. Hard to hear all the goodness through the music.
Finally a great video! To the point, nice video edits, packed with useful tips from an expert! ;) Thank you for sharing!!!
After you harvest the micro greens, will they grow back?
No, you must re grow them back
thank you so much for sharing will purchase and great tip for the coconut .. do you have any information on led lights to grow microgreen thanks
From the UK - Thank you, you inspired me!
Thanks for video. Everyone should grow these. Ive been experimenting for a year now. Success : )
What do you do with the remaining shots in the tubs after you've harvested?
The only question I have is, how long do you keep them in the sun? Do they need direct sunlight? Do you use a growing light?
Do they keep growing after cutting or do I start everything from scratch? Love your channel, keep up the good work :D
They do not, sadly. Some will if it has a few leaves to continue photosynthesizing.
Wow! I thought I needed hundreds of dollars. So easy and cheap. Thank you
I'd love to see your meals with all of these!
Yes...
Awesome job with your video thanks for sharing with us we appreciate your hard work
They are so beautiful! It would difficult to cut them😉
Ya really!!!
Imagine if trophy hunters would consider this!
I know this could sound weird but from my experience that my family eat the root too because they’re soft and nutritious just as the stem.
That's why I mostly plant for decoration
Jane Ng I’d say the root is better for you
Thank you so much! I will begin this journey ASAP.
Thanks for making the video. Having been thinking about starting to grow microgreens instead of getting vegetables from the store.
Your video does an excellent job of being easy to follow and not being overwhelming for someone new to microgreens.
Lovely. I have a problem growing plants inside, my kitchen gas stove I think kills my plants.
Excuse my ignorance. After you cut the plants, you have to throw away the rest?... or it grows up more? Thanks!
You can compost the growing medium or add to worm bin. Do not reuse because the previous roots will decompose and create mold and fungus.
Daisy Creek Farms with Jag Singh
Thank you so much! 🌞
norma martinez peas and wheatgrass well have a Perpetual Harvest
Joan Taylor thank you so much for your advice . ✌🏿💗
if they don't regrow after cutting, why not just sprout in a jar with daily rinsing and then you can also eat the roots? Seems wasteful of part of plant and more expensive than necessary.
What do u do with plant stumps after u have harvested. Do they grow back or u throw then out n reuse soil?
I was wondering that too
You typically don't want to reuse the soil. I compost all of mine once I cut the microgreens. I reuse them outside, but not for microgreens because there is potential they have pathogens at that point.
@@irondogmercantile You typically don't want to reuse the soil. I compost all of mine once I cut the microgreens. I reuse them outside, but not for microgreens because there is potential they have pathogens at that point.
@@DonnyGreensthank u
@@technocrat3428 no problem! Feel free to subscribe to my channel. I post new microgreens videos every Tuesday. I'm sure they will help you 🌱 😊
This man deserves more subs
This was about as perfect a how to growing video as I've ever seen. Well done Jag!
Thanks for up loud beautiful love and blessing
Very easy to understand! I am going to start with these 5 that were suggested. Thank you!
Is there a nutritional difference between sprouts and microgreens?
Also, are there any edible plants unsuitable for using as sprouts and/or microgreens?
Just discovered your channel, subscribed immediately! (And this is the only channel I've clicked for notifications). Love your clear explanations and enjoy your enthusiasm. You are a great teacher, being both informative and inspiring.
Thank you for subscribing :)
Yes, microgreens have 40% more nutrients than full grown plants
William Reed Yes, but I'm wondering how they compare with sprouts...
@@teresamcmurrin8672 whoops I overlooked that part. I'm not sure
Microgreens are when the plant is the most nutritious. The plant makes additional nutrients as it produces its initial l wave.
This is a wonderful video! Thank you SO much! My son and I are learning how to grow micro greens indoors and your video makes this so simple! ❤
Do you need a special seed for this or can you use any seed?
Best micro green demo ever...thankyou...
Thanks for the info. I'm planning to shoot a time-lapse of growing plants
Wonderful video perfect description of germanation
I would recommend you promote growth by removing seed shells especially when you're working in a few day time period if it's not too hard or dangerous for the plants always good to experiment which plants it can help and hurt but it definitely will promote even and faster growth
After you cut them, are they still keep growing? Or you have to discard them? Can anyone answer this for me?
Usually, if the leaves are cut off, the roots will die and decompose, so you can discard them or compost them.
Your video inspired me to grow microgreens! Thank you.
Informative with a broad outlook diy presentation,thank you
Hi i am from SRI LANKA
Nice to explanation thank you so much
Are there specific varieties (ex: sunflowers) which are used to grow microgreens vs ones you would grow in a garden (Ex: Mammoth variety)? I have a massive bag of organic Mammoth sunflower seeds that I harvested last year, and I can't plant them all - would like to grow microgreens with them if possible.
From ,y understanding, you can use regular seeds to use as sprouts instead of growing fully!
Very good information thanks
Thank you for the link to the seeds. I will definitely try this. 👍
It fascinates me when they start to sprout. Plus it is cute, with the tiny leaf.