You are giving me such hope. I've been a gardener all my life, but as i get older I'm facing having to move to a retirement apartment. I would have a balcony so I'm trying to learn from you.
Hi! I'm so glad you find these videos helpful! It's a big change, I totally understand! I work with people in a similar situation to yours, who moved from houses to apartments with balconies. It will take some time to figure it all out, but I'm sure you'll get the hang of it and be able to enjoy your little container garden 🌿🌷!
As always, very inspiring video! I am especially guilty of mistake number 2: too many plants! But I am getting better with time, patience and learning take time...
Im so inspired to see how your urban garden growing. I’m making the most of my urban backyard garden. I’ve really enjoyed watching everything grow and documenting the growth in my videos. I Love to document my progress. I’m learning so much from you and other TH-camrs. I hope we can learn more from each other! I wish you an abundant harvest! 🌼🌻🐝☀️🌸🌺
Thank you for your kind message ☺️! It's wonderful that you also use your urban space to grow plants! I find that documenting it on videos is almost like having a garden journal that you can look back on, see how your garden progressed etc 😃 Good luck with your garden and your YT channel. Happy Gardening 🌿!
This is a question. I recently moved from my home with a large patio (and water!) to a fourth floor apartment with a tiny balcony and no water faucet. It turns out my balcony is very dusy and the leaves of my beautiful camellias and other plants are always dirty. I have bathed them leaf by leaf with a wet cloth but they are soon dusty again. How can I keep my plant's leaves shiny and healthy?
Wow, look at those hydrangeas coming on! ( : Dominika, another great video - wish I knew this before I started gardening; however, I learned every point through the years. And, still have many years of gardening, I kill plants because I try news plants in the garden every year. ( : More successes than losses the longer I garden. ( :
I know right 😅 These Hydrangeas are crazy, soon I will have no more space left to walk. Me too I wish someone told me these things before, hence why I made this video. But hey, as long as we keep some plants alive it's good 😊😉
Haha, you're too kind 😄! The plant behind me is called Hydrangea macrophylla (Bigleaf Hydranga). You can find a complete care guide on my channel on how to grow them in pots 🌸
Hello, top vidéo merci beaucoup pour ces explications et le 5ème point je ne peux qu'adhérer c'est en faisant des erreurs que l'on apprend et oui on a tous tuer des plantes 🙈 hihihi Passe un bon samedi et à très bientôt 🥰🌸🌿
Hi! My plant was frosted outside. I brought it inside in my kitchen area where heater doesn’t work. But after one hour my plant flowers died. How can I safe it ?
Hi! I'm so sorry to hear that 😬 Bringing your frozen plants in the middle of winter to warm indoor will do more harm than good unfortunately because that sudden temperature shock will kill it faster than the frost. It's better to keep it outside and to protect it with fleece or smith like that. Can you tell me what plant is it and how cold it is currently outside where you live?
Thanks for the tip of taking a photo of the plant with its name ! I have a question about regularly pruning plants/trees that want to grow very big, you say it's stressful and they won't tolerate it for a long time, but what about bonzais, isn't it the process ? I did that mistake, I have a eucalyptus in a pot and I think that the resulat of a lot of mistakes is that it has a long trunk/stem, I feel sorry for it but I can't take the risk of planting it in the ground (I don't know which variety it was but they can grow tall ^^', and I already have a big "Tilleul " and not that big of a garden...
Hello ☺️! Bonsai is a technique that requires knowledge and precision. The trees are trained from early on, they are cultivated in appropriate pots, in a suitable substrate. It is not quite the same as buying a few-year-old tree at a garden center and cutting its branches willy-nilly to keep the tree under a certain height. This is most likely gonna misshapen the tree and affect its health. In this case it's better to root prune every 2-3 years to slow down its growth, but here again - it's best to choose a small tree (max 2-3m for a balcony garden, and max 10m for a home garden). Eucalyptus can be coppiced - cut all the way down to just above the ground - it's often done for aesthetic reasons as the young leaves are prettier than the mature ones. This technique will also stimulate it to grow multiple stems if that's what you desire 🙂 Hope this helps!
You are giving me such hope. I've been a gardener all my life, but as i get older I'm facing having to move to a retirement apartment. I would have a balcony so I'm trying to learn from you.
Hi! I'm so glad you find these videos helpful! It's a big change, I totally understand! I work with people in a similar situation to yours, who moved from houses to apartments with balconies. It will take some time to figure it all out, but I'm sure you'll get the hang of it and be able to enjoy your little container garden 🌿🌷!
Thank you for being so clear and straightforward in providing valuable information ❤
Thank you so much for your kind comment 🥰!
As always, very inspiring video! I am especially guilty of mistake number 2: too many plants! But I am getting better with time, patience and learning take time...
Thank you! I guess we are all guilty of buying too many plants 🫣 But as you said it all comes down to patience and learning 😊
Im so inspired to see how your urban garden growing. I’m making the most of my urban backyard garden. I’ve really enjoyed watching everything grow and documenting the growth in my videos. I Love to document my progress. I’m learning so much from you and other TH-camrs. I hope we can learn more from each other! I wish you an abundant harvest! 🌼🌻🐝☀️🌸🌺
Thank you for your kind message ☺️! It's wonderful that you also use your urban space to grow plants! I find that documenting it on videos is almost like having a garden journal that you can look back on, see how your garden progressed etc 😃 Good luck with your garden and your YT channel. Happy Gardening 🌿!
Beautiful view from a beautiful garden ❤
Very useful, thank you very much Dominika😀
My pleasure! Happy to hear that you liked it ☺️🌿
This is a question. I recently moved from my home with a large patio (and water!) to a fourth floor apartment with a tiny balcony and no water faucet. It turns out my balcony is very dusy and the leaves of my beautiful camellias and other plants are always dirty. I have bathed them leaf by leaf with a wet cloth but they are soon dusty again. How can I keep my plant's leaves shiny and healthy?
Merci pour tous tes conseils !
Mais de rien 😊
Love your conclusion 👍💚
Awe thanks 😊 Glad that we agree 💚
Yes no 4 panicking is my biggest problem
Wow, look at those hydrangeas coming on! ( : Dominika, another great video - wish I knew this before I started gardening; however, I learned every point through the years. And, still have many years of gardening, I kill plants because I try news plants in the garden every year. ( : More successes than losses the longer I garden. ( :
I know right 😅 These Hydrangeas are crazy, soon I will have no more space left to walk. Me too I wish someone told me these things before, hence why I made this video. But hey, as long as we keep some plants alive it's good 😊😉
Very informative. Thank you
Thanks for your feedback! I'm happy that you liked this video ☺️
nice presentation ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
💚🙏🏼
Please make video about hydrangea plants
It's coming soon ☺️🌸!
C'est vrai, j'ai tué beaucoup de plantes par ignorance!
Tout ce que tu dis est juste!!
Ce n'est pas grave, le plus important est de ne pas abandonner et de continuer à essayer ☺️🌿
Which is the flowering plant behind you?
Also, omg you are so pretty (platonic), like a forest fairy :)
Haha, you're too kind 😄! The plant behind me is called Hydrangea macrophylla (Bigleaf Hydranga). You can find a complete care guide on my channel on how to grow them in pots 🌸
Hello, top vidéo merci beaucoup pour ces explications et le 5ème point je ne peux qu'adhérer c'est en faisant des erreurs que l'on apprend et oui on a tous tuer des plantes 🙈 hihihi
Passe un bon samedi et à très bientôt 🥰🌸🌿
Oui absolument! Il n'y a pas d'erreurs seulement des expériences 😉. Bon samedi à toi aussi 😊🌿 !
@@17m2garden entièrement d'accord 🥰
Hi! My plant was frosted outside. I brought it inside in my kitchen area where heater doesn’t work. But after one hour my plant flowers died. How can I safe it ?
Hi! I'm so sorry to hear that 😬 Bringing your frozen plants in the middle of winter to warm indoor will do more harm than good unfortunately because that sudden temperature shock will kill it faster than the frost. It's better to keep it outside and to protect it with fleece or smith like that. Can you tell me what plant is it and how cold it is currently outside where you live?
Thanks for the tip of taking a photo of the plant with its name ! I have a question about regularly pruning plants/trees that want to grow very big, you say it's stressful and they won't tolerate it for a long time, but what about bonzais, isn't it the process ? I did that mistake, I have a eucalyptus in a pot and I think that the resulat of a lot of mistakes is that it has a long trunk/stem, I feel sorry for it but I can't take the risk of planting it in the ground (I don't know which variety it was but they can grow tall ^^', and I already have a big "Tilleul " and not that big of a garden...
Hello ☺️! Bonsai is a technique that requires knowledge and precision. The trees are trained from early on, they are cultivated in appropriate pots, in a suitable substrate. It is not quite the same as buying a few-year-old tree at a garden center and cutting its branches willy-nilly to keep the tree under a certain height. This is most likely gonna misshapen the tree and affect its health. In this case it's better to root prune every 2-3 years to slow down its growth, but here again - it's best to choose a small tree (max 2-3m for a balcony garden, and max 10m for a home garden). Eucalyptus can be coppiced - cut all the way down to just above the ground - it's often done for aesthetic reasons as the young leaves are prettier than the mature ones. This technique will also stimulate it to grow multiple stems if that's what you desire 🙂 Hope this helps!
So pretty u r😘