I've been binge-watching all your videos. We're fixing up a hundred year old farmhouse on 3.5 acres, which we're trying to figure out the best use of. You guys have been just the inspiration I need, as well as practical information. I wish we could have done this while our kids were young, but hey... it'll still be a great place for them to come and bring the grandkids. I feel so overwhelmed at times. That's where you guys have been so great to tune in to. I am reminded that it's a process. Thank you for sharing your lives with us!
Really- just so beautiful. Beautiful people, beautiful kids, beautiful home, beautiful gardens. Love this sweet sweet family. What a blessing that they share themselves with us.
Just discovered ya'll's videos, watched several. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE! I WILL "eat them up" (!) So much is familiar to me. I had a 1/4 acre wildlife yard for many years. Much smaller scale @ I worked it myself, husband not interested & I didn't market anything.. but had plenty veggies & shared, so had them, herbs, flowers everywhere. Beautiful birds, critters. I worked HARD for many years when not at secular job. Might have on overalls & flowered garden boots, hat w/ under chin strap, perhaps paired w/ very thin peasant cotton top or lace cami. It was my therapy, my solice, my peace, my exercise, beauty, my canvas (very creative) & the way you talk about home..cozy, clean, good food, refreshing...lovely homestead ya'll have & family, love, love! Life has changed, got rare genetic illness, older, had to change structure of my life so no longer do all that but I can get my "earthy, feminine, creative, contentment, etc., from enjoyment from your u-tube videos. Haven't yet caught which state ya live in. What were both your backgrounds? A teacher &....., from Alabama, where do you garden , cultivate & raise your family now? Keep it up! Love it!
Love, love, love your family and ways. Makes me wish I could have some garden. I grew up with helping my Grandparents in their garden. I can still see them out there and smell the land!❤️❤️❤️. Oh what lovely memories!❤️
Love how you show making breakfast and with the kids first before you go out to the garden. And I like the back and forth dialogue between the both of you in the garden.
So nice to see your update! I’ve been missing your videos. Your garden is beautiful, your hard work is paying off. Trial and error is what it’s all about. My garden continues to be an experiment every year.
I really enjoy seeing people do and learn things that I took for granted as a kid. My parents grew up on farms, my aunts and uncles still had one and we spent lots of time on them. Their teaching is so valuable, wish I had recorded them. They had to garden organically, no money for fertilizers or pesticides during the depression. Organic kitchen waste to the chicken pen. The chicken pen was scraped in the fall to be composted with the leaves from the trees and grass clippings. The spring was time to spread the compost over the garden. Amazing....of course, in Texas, your compost cooks pretty quickly in the 100 degree heat...:) I actually watered mine...
Your breakfast look yummy! Love your honest way of gardening, love your relax way of doing things! Your children are beautiful and so sweet, you are doing a great job with them...beautiful family!!
I love your garden and learn so much from you. You have one of the most beautiful gardens I have seen. Enjoyed seeing those cute kids. My favorite part is watching you cook your magic. A few new cooking videos would be fabulous. Hugs to the family❤️
Oh thank you for sharing your failures too! And showing "lived in" spaces in the home. It helps knowing I'm not the only one that doesn't have it all perfect. The Market Garden is just gorgeous! I've already got plans to expand ours. And have definitely learned which crops are worth dedicating more space to, and which to not plant as much. 😊
Right there! "... honestly, I just want to get started with the chores..." IKR! Breakfast is important, but often you feel like hitting the ground running, but then sadly run out of steam if you skip Breakfast.
Love this video and as a new gardener in the PNW I so appreciate every thing you share! So cute to see your family just digging in there with you. I haven’t ventured to that side of the state yet. I have all kinds of bolting stuff and I just left for two weeks. Love your cabbage! Amazing.
Love the realness, and advice, in this vlog! Thanks! Good to know about the cabbage plastic/tarp! And Shaye, you are NOT ALONE: my tomatoes go cray cray every year and my lettuce bolts! ;)
Everything looks great Shaye! This was our first year gardening in Tennessee (from Florida...Vine Living Farm) and it totally threw me off planting calendar-wise. I LOVE the LEEKS!!! Thanks for inspiring. :) This homesteading stuff is hard work mentally and physically so encouraging each other is so huge! God bless guys!
Oh my! All those cabbages! I'm in Alaska and the moose love to come into our garden, break our fence, and eat our cabbages right before we harvest them...I've tried covering them, etc., but so far the moose are winning.
I think you harvested more in that basket than I have all summer so far. :( Such an amazing garden. Since I will never have place like that I get to vicariously garden through your videos and I suspect many others do the same. God bless and keep up the great work. The kids made me smile when they were coming in for the breakfast bell.
I really enjoyed how you and your husband went through the garden and assessed how you did for this season, you both really lift each other up that’s awesome! I’m really familiar with what you guys are going through garden wise I can really relate. Thanks 4 sharing 🙂
Love the garden! It’s our first year in Eastern Washington. Our market garden is coming along. We love our arugula and radish. So easy and fast. Our red cabbage is doing well in the caterpillar tunnel but has a little bug pressure.
I love the potager, I love permaculture but a market garden absolutely rocks for lots of produce. I'll be mixing it up. My potager is all sketched on paper. I'll have culinary and medicinal herbs galore then market garden. Wahoo. Thank you for sharing your real life with family, beautiful messes and beautiful garden. Xxoo
I've seen it done where you make a TP on each end .Feed a pole end to end on the TPs. From there hang string over each 🍅 plant. Let the tomatoes grow up the string. It might be worth a try for less frustrating results. Juicy Fruit gum down in the Voles Holes. One half stick. Good luck this year! Jo Jo in VT
Great content, as always! I'd say for the first year on that market garden plot, things seem to be doing quite well. Picking okra naked like that kills me! I'm in long sleeves and gloves when I go after the okra and cukes, and often wish I was in the squash plants! Really enjoy your work, glad to see you vlogging again!
artichokes are actually a two year crop. They come back the next spring and will produce hardcore. There is also a way to trick artichokes into producing the first season in short time by changing the temperatures they are in ie, putting them in a cooler
I loved the free beer tomorrow back and forth. It sounded like the conversation every gardener has had regarding tomatoes. Some years you do get 'em pinched and staked and think Martha Stewart could visit, so long as she doesn't show the carrots or lord knows what else. Course some years life just happens and you have the Brandywine jungle. Thanks for the video.
Nice to watch and hear what you found, good and bad, about your market garden setup. We have been watching Curtis Stone for some time and his methods inspire. We will be starting a new garden in a new home come next year. Current residence only allowed for a small raised bed garden but new house we have acres to work with and want to do a similar setup to yours. Keep up the good work, wish ye well.
Next year try sprouts plant in my and leave in the ground part way into winter they taste better after the first frost. you should have placed your veg beds across the fall in your land so the water soaks into the land and does not run down and away. I will look on your tube for some good helpful videos.
A little late, but have you tried a "Florida Tie" to control your tomatoes? I think Johnny's has a video on it. If not, Vesey's does last time I checked.
I don't spend a lot of time with my tomatoes. Definitely no pruning. They are a jungle and full of tomatoes. I excuse myself by telling myself I'm simply growing them "naturally". What could be wrong with natural?
If you could do all your videos from the garden with that view in the background! Seriously breathtaking!! Your garden is lovely too💗 I like Stewart’s motto “free beer tomorrow” 😂
You need Farm cats - kittens you can train to grow up with your ducks and chickens but will happily attend your vole problem. Little Terriors are also good.
Oh my okra in the south gets 5 ft high. I’m binge watching and I love the rainbow hair color! I have bern the same until this year I went natural and am white headed!
Good luck with the voles, I have been farming the same plot for 30 yrs and still struggle with them. They love Sweet Potatoes as well. I have been setting up poison stations this yr, that cats and dogs can't get at.
We’ve been binge watching and really are enjoying your gardens. You don’t mention where you are or what zone? That would be helpful in terms of what, we, your viewers can grow too! Keep up making videos!
Ants do not eat collard greens. Flea beetles do. Ants eat some of the Flea beetle larva. Spray with Peppermint leaves ground in the food processor with a couple of drops of peppermint oil. They don't know they are collards!
Ineluctable Smith could also be aphids if she saw a lot of ants. They have a symbiotic relationship. Ants get the blame for a lot of aphid destruction but they are after the aphid secretions.
Everything looks great! I’m in Las Vegas, and can never get any squash because of squash bugs. There are hundreds and hundreds on the squashes and melons.
Looks super good! I’m trying to grow a garden as well and I haven’t really been that successful. Instead of doing a bunch of different crops, maybe I should do a lot of one? Don’t know but keep up the good work!
If you could please share what the stuf was that you put down to discourage the little critters. Thank you so much for any info you or anyone can give me.
WHAT A FANTASTIC SHOT OF HAPPY TO START MY DAY!!! Love your channel and garden. But you folks need to share the VOLE CONTROL formula you used. Would love to see if it works on my gophers!!! need to expand my garden but will be tempting fate here in the high desert mountain area of Northern NM. if you don't tell me I will have to man the garden with a Whip and chair to ward off the wee beasties...or get a ferocious kitty! ;)
What was your herbal vole treatment? I have only some community garden plots but the garden is surrounded by forest (I live in Seattle area but just east) and trying to grow root crops gets tricky b/c of the voles. I can tell you that If you want to protect dill from rabbits/etc plant it between onions. I did that this year. The onions might have been smaller (or just responding to closer planting or less sun in the area) but the dill was epic.
You are a gorgeous, talented SUPERWOMAN!!!! I STUMBLED ACROSS YOUR CHANNEL EARLY THIS MORNING AND I'M SO GLAD I DID!!! You are an inspiration to me and thousands uppn thousands of others. I have so many questions to ask you. This is a really personal question and I don't want to offend you...how much did it's cost you to get the land, house and start the farm? Are you and your husband Washington natives or did you move there from somewhere else? What advice would you give a family of 5 with little to no experience looking to start a homestead/farm? How much money do you think I would need to invest to start? Thank you for your videos though 😊. I love them and I hope you continue to share them. 💖
Hi!! Can you help me...the leeks that you planted...this year or last fall??? I planted mine in late spring and they are lovely, but still quite small in comparison to the ones you showed on this video...do I let them go until fall??? Thanks.
In watching this video, I wanted to suggest that you might check out Hollis & Nancy's Homestead. He has excellent information on how to grow a great number of items and when to harvest them. His videos show step by step directions from seedlings to harvest.
Thank you, you two, absolutely great year of gardening (so far). So what kind of vermin repellent did you use? I have a chipmunk condo established in my rock wall. I think voles too. The chipmunks are cute as all but the need to stay out of my garden!! They must learn!
BEST video to date. It's really nice to get a bit of "A Day in the life" as a viewer. I would bet you'll start getting more subscribers when people start seeing more of your real life mess😉. We need the good info, but invest & stay as we get to know you (just like blogging).
Is the plan to sell the produce from the Market garden? There seems to be so much. Gardening is such an awesome experience, hard work but always worth it, even if with the failures. Looking forward to the next vlog.
I've been binge-watching all your videos. We're fixing up a hundred year old farmhouse on 3.5 acres, which we're trying to figure out the best use of. You guys have been just the inspiration I need, as well as practical information. I wish we could have done this while our kids were young, but hey... it'll still be a great place for them to come and bring the grandkids. I feel so overwhelmed at times. That's where you guys have been so great to tune in to. I am reminded that it's a process. Thank you for sharing your lives with us!
So so beautiful! Always remain Proud of yourselves for we sure all sure are!
Really- just so beautiful. Beautiful people, beautiful kids, beautiful home, beautiful gardens. Love this sweet sweet family. What a blessing that they share themselves with us.
Indeed indeed!!!❤️
Love to see children doing chores. Love your gardens.
this is what family should look like - fun, full of love! God bless this family!
Everything looks great, Shaye! Love watching the dynamic of you and Stu interacting. He’s the man! Love his reflections. Ha!
Just discovered ya'll's videos, watched several. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE! I WILL "eat them up" (!) So much is familiar to me. I had a 1/4 acre wildlife yard for many years. Much smaller scale @ I worked it myself, husband not interested & I didn't market anything.. but had plenty veggies & shared, so had them, herbs, flowers everywhere. Beautiful birds, critters. I worked HARD for many years when not at secular job. Might have on overalls & flowered garden boots, hat w/ under chin strap, perhaps paired w/ very thin peasant cotton top or lace cami. It was my therapy, my solice, my peace, my exercise, beauty, my canvas (very creative) & the way you talk about home..cozy, clean, good food, refreshing...lovely homestead ya'll have & family, love, love! Life has changed, got rare genetic illness, older, had to change structure of my life so no longer do all that but I can get my "earthy, feminine, creative, contentment, etc., from enjoyment from your u-tube videos. Haven't yet caught which state ya live in. What were both your backgrounds? A teacher &....., from Alabama, where do you garden , cultivate & raise your family now? Keep it up! Love it!
I was born and raise on a farm in Brazil...I love to watch your live at The Elliott homestead. Thank you for sharing with her public.
Always inspiring! There’s a thread of kinship is us gardeners that keep us seeking knowledge from each other. Grazie!
Love, love, love your family and ways. Makes me wish I could have some garden. I grew up with helping my Grandparents in their garden. I can still see them out there and smell the land!❤️❤️❤️. Oh what lovely memories!❤️
Love how you show making breakfast and with the kids first before you go out to the garden. And I like the back and forth dialogue between the both of you in the garden.
So nice to see your update! I’ve been missing your videos. Your garden is beautiful, your hard work is paying off. Trial and error is what it’s all about. My garden continues to be an experiment every year.
Nothing in the world sweeter than daddy fixing baby girl's hair!
I really enjoy seeing people do and learn things that I took for granted as a kid. My parents grew up on farms, my aunts and uncles still had one and we spent lots of time on them. Their teaching is so valuable, wish I had recorded them. They had to garden organically, no money for fertilizers or pesticides during the depression. Organic kitchen waste to the chicken pen. The chicken pen was scraped in the fall to be composted with the leaves from the trees and grass clippings. The spring was time to spread the compost over the garden. Amazing....of course, in Texas, your compost cooks pretty quickly in the 100 degree heat...:) I actually watered mine...
Best video yet everyone eating together. The kids helping clean the kitchen , making there beds , laundry. And you have a Beautiful market garden.❤️
I love this video! Simple life, simple things, love, people, who enjoy day. My soul feels so nourished watching all this!
Your breakfast look yummy! Love your honest way of gardening, love your relax way of doing things! Your children are beautiful and so sweet, you are doing a great job with them...beautiful family!!
I love your garden and learn so much from you. You have one of the most beautiful gardens I have seen. Enjoyed seeing those cute kids. My favorite part is watching you cook your magic. A few new cooking videos would be fabulous. Hugs to the family❤️
Oh thank you for sharing your failures too! And showing "lived in" spaces in the home. It helps knowing I'm not the only one that doesn't have it all perfect. The Market Garden is just gorgeous! I've already got plans to expand ours. And have definitely learned which crops are worth dedicating more space to, and which to not plant as much. 😊
Preserved gallons of greens how? Canning? Fermenting? Other. Thanks for keeping it ALL REAL!!!! LOVE IT ALL.
Right there! "... honestly, I just want to get started with the chores..." IKR! Breakfast is important, but often you feel like hitting the ground running, but then sadly run out of steam if you skip Breakfast.
Very true!:)
Love this video and as a new gardener in the PNW I so appreciate every thing you share! So cute to see your family just digging in there with you. I haven’t ventured to that side of the state yet. I have all kinds of bolting stuff and I just left for two weeks. Love your cabbage! Amazing.
Love the realness, and advice, in this vlog! Thanks! Good to know about the cabbage plastic/tarp! And Shaye, you are NOT ALONE: my tomatoes go cray cray every year and my lettuce bolts! ;)
Everything looks great Shaye! This was our first year gardening in Tennessee (from Florida...Vine Living Farm) and it totally threw me off planting calendar-wise. I LOVE the LEEKS!!! Thanks for inspiring. :) This homesteading stuff is hard work mentally and physically so encouraging each other is so huge! God bless guys!
Kelli we're in East TN from coastal NC. It IS totally different! Learning curve for sure! Shaye is so inspiring.
That's a great looking market garden! Loved going through everything you're growing. Seems like it was definitely a success!
Oh my! All those cabbages! I'm in Alaska and the moose love to come into our garden, break our fence, and eat our cabbages right before we harvest them...I've tried covering them, etc., but so far the moose are winning.
Whoohoo! Kitchen footage! :) I love watching you guys cook with your harvested ingredients and make espresso! That's the life! ;)
I think you harvested more in that basket than I have all summer so far. :( Such an amazing garden. Since I will never have place like that I get to vicariously garden through your videos and I suspect many others do the same. God bless and keep up the great work. The kids made me smile when they were coming in for the breakfast bell.
I really enjoyed how you and your husband went through the garden and assessed how you did for this season, you both really lift each other up that’s awesome! I’m really familiar with what you guys are going through garden wise I can really relate. Thanks 4 sharing 🙂
It's awesome that you give your young children chores I'm sure they'll grow up to be responsible adults
Sweet! This is living! it's what life is all about and you guys are doing a great at it
Love the garden! It’s our first year in Eastern Washington. Our market garden is coming along. We love our arugula and radish. So easy and fast. Our red cabbage is doing well in the caterpillar tunnel but has a little bug pressure.
My favorite video so far! So real! Thank you! I do well with tomatoes so I suggest planting lots farther apart and staking them.
I love the potager, I love permaculture but a market garden absolutely rocks for lots of produce. I'll be mixing it up. My potager is all sketched on paper. I'll have culinary and medicinal herbs galore then market garden. Wahoo. Thank you for sharing your real life with family, beautiful messes and beautiful garden. Xxoo
Thank you for sharing a genuine real view of the successes and how gardening can just get away from a gardener even when you are working hard
I've seen it done where you make a TP on each end .Feed a pole end to end on the TPs. From there hang string over each 🍅 plant. Let the tomatoes grow up the string.
It might be worth a try for less frustrating results.
Juicy Fruit gum down in the Voles Holes. One half stick.
Good luck this year!
Jo Jo in VT
Great content, as always! I'd say for the first year on that market garden plot, things seem to be doing quite well. Picking okra naked like that kills me! I'm in long sleeves and gloves when I go after the okra and cukes, and often wish I was in the squash plants! Really enjoy your work, glad to see you vlogging again!
artichokes are actually a two year crop. They come back the next spring and will produce hardcore. There is also a way to trick artichokes into producing the first season in short time by changing the temperatures they are in ie, putting them in a cooler
Grow your tomatoes on cattle panels held up with t-posts. Easy to tie them up, prune, and harvest.
I loved the free beer tomorrow back and forth. It sounded like the conversation every gardener has had regarding tomatoes. Some years you do get 'em pinched and staked and think Martha Stewart could visit, so long as she doesn't show the carrots or lord knows what else. Course some years life just happens and you have the Brandywine jungle. Thanks for the video.
It’s great to see kids doing chores
Beautiful family & A lovely garden!
Your garden looks amazing. Have an awesome weekend, Andreas on Off Grid Sweden 🇸🇪
Nice to watch and hear what you found, good and bad, about your market garden setup. We have been watching Curtis Stone for some time and his methods inspire. We will be starting a new garden in a new home come next year. Current residence only allowed for a small raised bed garden but new house we have acres to work with and want to do a similar setup to yours. Keep up the good work, wish ye well.
So fun to save hatched egg shells.
I’m so inspired by your videos. They are so beautiful.
Use cattle panels with stakes once they’re up and growing. Weave the vines through the sections as they get taller and it works great!
Next year try sprouts plant in my and leave in the ground part way into winter they taste better after the first frost. you should have placed your veg beds across the fall in your land so the water soaks into the land and does not run down and away. I will look on your tube for some good helpful videos.
Ha ha! I love it! I say it every year, i will prune and trellis the tomatoes..... maybe next year.
A little late, but have you tried a "Florida Tie" to control your tomatoes? I think Johnny's has a video on it. If not, Vesey's does last time I checked.
I don't spend a lot of time with my tomatoes. Definitely no pruning. They are a jungle and full of tomatoes. I excuse myself by telling myself I'm simply growing them "naturally". What could be wrong with natural?
Gosh I'm Binge watching my neck hurts but it's so worth it!!!
Its a learning experience, for you and us, because we learn from you. Thank-You.
If you could do all your videos from the garden with that view in the background! Seriously breathtaking!! Your garden is lovely too💗
I like Stewart’s motto “free beer tomorrow” 😂
Artichokes are perennial. You could try them in the cottage garden to see if they prefer that spot. :) lovely video
Great video. I don’t know why I am just finding your channel, but I have subscribed and look forward to exploring your videos. Thanks
For sure, insect netting FTW. Looks good, you all!
Next year is always next year! Haha, I love it. What a sweet family.
So beautiful to see! Thanks for sharing ❤️❤️
Another beautiful video!! Your videos are my absolute favorite. Great work!
Enjoying your family videos 👍
It's beautiful to look at, yes. Thank u for sharing. Can u guy's do a house tour. I love that old charm.
You need Farm cats - kittens you can train to grow up with your ducks and chickens but will happily attend your vole problem. Little Terriors are also good.
Yey you're back. I missed you.
Yes was a blessing to watch.💓
Oh my okra in the south gets 5 ft high. I’m binge watching and I love the rainbow hair color! I have bern the same until this year I went natural and am white headed!
You say there is always a next year...but only God know....anything can happen.
Beautiful place you have.
Good luck with the voles, I have been farming the same plot for 30 yrs and still struggle with them. They love Sweet Potatoes as well. I have been setting up poison stations this yr, that cats and dogs can't get at.
Sounds like a delicious breakfast! I would call that a breakfast hash! : )
Love your cooking ideas, would love to have a house tour tho! it looks so down to earth!
We’ve been binge watching and really are enjoying your gardens. You don’t mention where you are or what zone? That would be helpful in terms of what, we, your viewers can grow too! Keep up making videos!
Ants do not eat collard greens. Flea beetles do. Ants eat some of the Flea beetle larva. Spray with Peppermint leaves ground in the food processor with a couple of drops of peppermint oil. They don't know they are collards!
Ineluctable Smith could also be aphids if she saw a lot of ants. They have a symbiotic relationship. Ants get the blame for a lot of aphid destruction but they are after the aphid secretions.
Beautiful garden! Beautiful gardener!
I have heart felt enjoyed all your videos.ive been binge watching.😊💓 every1..
Good job and wonderful place!
Everything looks great! I’m in Las Vegas, and can never get any squash because of squash bugs. There are hundreds and hundreds on the squashes and melons.
Looks super good! I’m trying to grow a garden as well and I haven’t really been that successful. Instead of doing a bunch of different crops, maybe I should do a lot of one? Don’t know but keep up the good work!
If you could please share what the stuf was that you put down to discourage the little critters. Thank you so much for any info you or anyone can give me.
I watch this video at breakfast time and I haven't had breakfast yet now I'm really hungry 😁
WHAT A FANTASTIC SHOT OF HAPPY TO START MY DAY!!! Love your channel and garden. But you folks need to share the VOLE CONTROL formula you used. Would love to see if it works on my gophers!!! need to expand my garden but will be tempting fate here in the high desert mountain area of Northern NM. if you don't tell me I will have to man the garden with a Whip and chair to ward off the wee beasties...or get a ferocious kitty! ;)
What was your herbal vole treatment? I have only some community garden plots but the garden is surrounded by forest (I live in Seattle area but just east) and trying to grow root crops gets tricky b/c of the voles. I can tell you that If you want to protect dill from rabbits/etc plant it between onions. I did that this year. The onions might have been smaller (or just responding to closer planting or less sun in the area) but the dill was epic.
beautiful! beet and turnip greens are my fav!!
Try a cowhorn okra. They don't get as tough as a variety like crimson spineless.
..and you have to pick EVERYDAY!
You are a gorgeous, talented SUPERWOMAN!!!! I STUMBLED ACROSS YOUR CHANNEL EARLY THIS MORNING AND I'M SO GLAD I DID!!! You are an inspiration to me and thousands uppn thousands of others. I have so many questions to ask you. This is a really personal question and I don't want to offend you...how much did it's cost you to get the land, house and start the farm? Are you and your husband Washington natives or did you move there from somewhere else? What advice would you give a family of 5 with little to no experience looking to start a homestead/farm? How much money do you think I would need to invest to start? Thank you for your videos though 😊. I love them and I hope you continue to share them. 💖
I also have had a momma quail problem! They come out of no where!! 😂
What a great video!!! Keep it up! Can't wait to see what becomes of "there's always next year" Awesome channel. Wish you guys were my neighbors!!!
Hi!! Can you help me...the leeks that you planted...this year or last fall??? I planted mine in late spring and they are lovely, but still quite small in comparison to the ones you showed on this video...do I let them go until fall???
Thanks.
In watching this video, I wanted to suggest that you might check out Hollis & Nancy's Homestead. He has excellent information on how to grow a great number of items and when to harvest them. His videos show step by step directions from seedlings to harvest.
Thank you, you two, absolutely great year of gardening (so far). So what kind of vermin repellent did you use? I have a chipmunk condo established in my rock wall. I think voles too. The chipmunks are cute as all but the need to stay out of my garden!! They must learn!
BEST video to date. It's really nice to get a bit of "A Day in the life" as a viewer. I would bet you'll start getting more subscribers when people start seeing more of your real life mess😉. We need the good info, but invest & stay as we get to know you (just like blogging).
Great video!
No drip lines! Jeesh . . It's probably a full time job just watering that garden. Looks great though. Keep up the good work.
Have you ever tried cattle panels for your tomatoes?
How do you preserve your beans? And do your kids actually enjoy eating them preserved?
Beautiful garden!
Hi, thanks for the video. Do you have any collard green recipes?
Great channel and great couple
Is the plan to sell the produce from the Market garden? There seems to be so much. Gardening is such an awesome experience, hard work but always worth it, even if with the failures. Looking forward to the next vlog.
Tomatoe jungle? Cool!
O did the greenbeans from Johnny's family too and they never make it to a pot and eaten raw for breakfast... Lol