May 15, 2024

VIDEO: Organic Garden, The Road Less Traveled


Organic gardening that is blossoming into a food forest. Don’t be a zealot and learn from successful people, mold their ideologies into the system that works for you.

13 thoughts on “VIDEO: Organic Garden, The Road Less Traveled

  1. Great advice. I happen to do just that. I do a little back to Eden, a little Ray from Praxxus channel, and a little John Kohler. Plus many other organic gardeners, yourself included. Who is the Seth person you mentioned? Never heard of them.

  2. James,  Another great video.  Love Bill, Geoff and Sepp's techniques. 

    I'm doing more and more Polyculture.  I was talking to a friend on the phone and she said "How do you find your food" I laughed and stumbled for an answer. I guess it's apiarian gardening a little from here and there. 
    Eric

  3. Awesome. In Oklahoma. I harvest one squash if lucky before the vine bore kills the plant. I will try spacing them out with herb next year. Do you grow dill from herb?

  4. Awesome garden. It'd be interesting to have a better idea of how much yield you're getting like you mentioned about the courgettes.

    I noticed that your peach tree foliage is really healthy. I have a dwark peach in a pot and it's leaves always get curly and drop. The second round of leaves is slightly healthier but tree remains stressed and unable to fully recover for the rest of the season. Do you do anything special to you peach trees?

    Btw, I see plenty of lawn, do you pan to take over with your edible garden : )

  5. You were talking about blossom end rot and adding lime —-It is caused because of a magnesium deficiency –and you need to add epsom salt for that (magnesium Sulfate) It dissolves in water and you can get it to the roots quickly. Lime is calcium.

  6. Awesome! Looks like you're way ahead of the curve for corn (knee-high by the fourth of July). We have a very few acres on our new-ish (we've had for 3 years now) land purchase. I'm thinking of asking permission from my wife (b/c that's the way things are) to dedicate one acre to a system that looks alot like this — fruit trees, annuals, support species, and guilds! It's currently over-run by pine tree saplings, golden rod, and poison ivy. Once we get through the remodel/maintenance/upgrade process for the house I'm sure permission will be granted.

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