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Winter is nearly here – is your garden ready for it?
Preparing for the colder months ahead will keep overwintering plants and your hard-working soil safe and productive.
In this short video we’ll share some incredibly simple, inexpensive ways to get your garden ready for the first frosts of winter and all the cold weather that follows.
If you love growing your own food, why not take a look at our online Garden Planner which is available from several major websites and seed suppliers:
http://www.GrowVeg.com
http://gardenplanner.almanac.com
http://gardenplanner.motherearthnews.com
and many more…
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If you’ve noticed any pests or beneficial insects in your garden lately please report them to us at http://BigBugHunt.com
I solve this problem in a unique way. You see the deer eat everything i plant in the spring except the weeds n the frost doesnt bother those. So I'm safe from the frost.
Don't forget to lag your garden tap, Jack Frost will be nipping around this weekend! I got myself a water butt in the summer, should I drain it down for the winter?
You stood in the cow manure. #impressed
Thanks for the good information
Please explain what a "frost" is and when it happens. Is it the same as freezing temps?
Instead of tossing a replacement window, I use it as a portable cold frame for leaf lettuce. It works in fall and spring. Since leaf lettuce is hearty, we'll see if the window can keep them growing throughout the colder months.
Good information…..and you are pleasant to watch and listen to! Thanks.
I've put the aged cow manure onto my beds today that werent green manured… Thanks for the reminder, tom
I need a little greenhouse…says Wandy!
The best thing about winter, besides pretty snowscapes, hooning around with an awd or 4wd vehicle, and a nice wood-burning heat, preferably from wood you harvested and processed yourself, is that it makes spring about ten times better.
I'm growing in grow bags in pools with 1in of water in them. Right now I only have collard greens and cabbage in them for my 4 by 8 modified pool I figure I can cover with plastic like a hoop house but was wondering since its always water in them and it's off the ground if covering with plastic will work and I was wondering how long into the fall/ winter will my collards grow? I know cabbage won't hold up to the cold as well as collards I've gotten to pick quite a bit of collards since I've planted them but waiting on the cabbage head to actually get big enough to pick at what temp should I give up and pick the head of the cabbage to keep from losing them to the cold? I know it's alot of question but it's my first yr growing anything by the way my sweet potatoes harvest was awesome I had really big ones so for a first yr I'm pretty happy with the outcome and thank you for you vids they helped a lot.
Thanks!!!!!!!!!!
Strange times. In evergreen England there's frost, and in my once "eversnowed" White Russia (aka Belarus) it is +15C.
“You can lettuce know in the comment section below”.
I always like this channel quick tips no drama. Simple information. Subscribed.
Thank you for some more valuable … and timely information, sir.