November 21, 2024

VIDEO: How to Grow More Food in Less Space


Valuable techniques for getting the most out of the Garden space you have.

Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/2z7NIRQ

Amazon 30 Day FREE Trial! https://amzn.to/2X8kutT

https://teespring.com/stores/jps-store-5

https://www.facebook.com/vegetablegardentips

https://twitter.com/JamesPrigioni

https://www.instagram.com/jamesprigioni

25 thoughts on “VIDEO: How to Grow More Food in Less Space

  1. Great content, I would really appreciate more information on your prune stake method as that is the direction I was planning on taking with my tomatoes this year.

  2. Whats good about having limitied space, is we can spend more time and attention to the plants. Once there is a ton of plants and space, you cannot devote as much time to them

  3. i have 8x6m backyard and i planing on planting veggie and fruit on container plus small fish pond along the side line. i heard that fish pond water is good for fertilizing the soil

  4. Hi James have you considered growing some bamboo of your own? There are timber bamboos in the phyllostachys family which are exceptionally thick, strong (look up bamboo scaffolding!), and fast growing, and those same timber bamboos are favoured for edible bamboo shoot production. Also they look incredible as some can grow culms that are several inches thick after being established for ~5 years. I think they are a great addition to a permaculture garden – a fast growing source of both food and construction material!

    The incredible thing about bamboo when compared to wood, is that bamboo culms grow to their full size in one season, then never grow again. This means that a 50ft tall 3 inch thick bamboo cane can grow in 2 months on a well established timber bamboo like phyllostachys vivax. If you're worried about invasiveness, you can control their spread by planting it on a mound surrounded by a ditch as the rhizome stays in the top 12 inches of the soil and will poke out into the ditch if it tries to leave its area and you can cut it off.

    I think you would love it!

  5. Hi James. We just started watching your videos a d we noticed that you have red plastic cups spread around your garden. What are they for? Love your work by the way and your garden looks great. Thanks Robin.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *