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Curtis Stone runs a commercial urban farm called Green City Acres out of Kelowna, BC, Canada. His mission is to show others how they can grow a lot of food on small plots of land and make a living from it. Using DIY and simple infrastructure, one can earn a significant living from their own backyard or someone else’s.
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Is there a reason why you keep silage tarp for a month vs shorter timeframe? Weeds germinate much faster than any crop so why having 10 or.more beds not in use longer than needed? THANKS!
I'm wanting to start market gardening using the 30" bed system but I don't have the funds for a walk behind tractor or other earth shaping tools yet. I understand the benefits of furrows and having the beds raised, but would growing on flat ground (paths and beds at same elevation) work while I save up for the bed making tools?
Nicely explained Curtis
More space If I stick with my 5' bed, less foot/wheel path adds up big over 6acres. Only big reason I have thought of changing is stepping over the bed, we work beds in two side. But I would have to open more land to accommodate loss to paths, as we plant as dense.
Just curious, what are the dimensions of the blocks?
Have fun in NZ!
Curtis – How are you keeping wildlife out of your beds?
Thank you for the good video. Very helpful.
SoundSmith's tutorial on market gardening is much better
I wonder how well 30" beds would work in a non-desert climate
Well that's good for a young man, but I'm old and crippled. Stepping across the beds doesn't work for me. Fighting a walk behind tiller for a few hours and I would be in traction. I sit on a tractor and never drive on the beds. I plow a 7 " deep furrow around the perimeter when I plow, which is about every 3 years. I use a rainflow plastic mulch layer with drip tape under it. Tear out the old in August and rototill the beds after adding compost and manures. I use Glyphosate to keep the weeds down. Always drive in the walkways and I can drive the pickup right down the rows. I shovel right out of the truck, no wheel barrow needed. Those are for young guys. You jump around like a rabbit, I'll just drive there.
Awesomeness!
If a block of 10 beds is "50 to 80 feet" wide as you state, then the walkways must account for 25 to 55 feet of this. This does not seem to match what I see in the video. Can you check these figures, please?
Nice talk for farmer good after have book
You know, he didn't actually give any good reasons to specifically use 30in beds over other sizes. Why not 48in beds? Can still reach the center, may not be able to walk over them, but can grow more in less space and every time you step over a bed, you risk damaging a plant or multiple plants if you lose your balance and fall. Plus, not every plant is going to be short enough to step over.
Your voice reminds me of rick if hed be sober and a gardener.
I feel like it's so much waste to cover the block for several weeks after harvesting. I don't really get why you cannot plant just after harvesting. You had no weeds with the previous crop so when you've just harvested why would weed come before you plant again?
I like your point of view.
Then how big are your walkways
Market gardening- use the rocket jumper
Hi Curtis, I'm new to gardening and have a question in regards to using plastic as a boundary for the garden.
How do you get it to stay so tightly on the ground without having to have mulch or anything holding it down?
Sorry if it's a simple question, but this is the first time I've seen someone do this and I realized it's something I could actually greatly benefit from.
Also I just hit the sub button 😀
Cheers
The worms and insects are coming to the surface for the same reason that fish in stagnant aquariums are at the surface. they are seeking oxygen, and the tarp is smothering them.
I Wish I could do a market garden, but being a renter in one of the most expensive cities in canada makes that near impossible 🙁
Hi sir 966536437074
I’m doing 32” beds and 32” walkway, walkways covered with woodchips. It’s amazing
I've tried to do 36" beds with 12" walking paths, but since my poor drainage requires me to hill up the beds, I end up losing a few inches on either side. Where the beds slope functions neither as bed space nor as walking space.
How wide is the ideal walkway?
Really good points, I’ll cover my empty beds with weed mat tomorrow and will cover the perimeter with weed mat too. Feeling one step closer in the battle with weeds now thank you!