May 15, 2024

VIDEO: Vegetable Garden Tour | Late May in Our Organic & Permaculture Inspired Kitchen Garden


I thought I’d end May with an overview of what’s growing on in the vegetable garden. Enjoy!
Want more videos? Become a patron and get access to 2 exclusive videos a week, for only $3 a month: https://www.patreon.com/huwrichards

Follow me on Instagram: @huws_nursery
My Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/HuwsGardenNursery

My 1st Book (Veg in One Bed) http://veginonebed.com/
My 2nd Book (Grow Food for Free) http://growfoodforfree.com/

My Online Course ‘More Food Less Effort’: https://abundanceacademy.online/p/more-food-less-effort

#kitchengarden #permaculture #organic

21 thoughts on “VIDEO: Vegetable Garden Tour | Late May in Our Organic & Permaculture Inspired Kitchen Garden

  1. Excellent tour mate. Please could you do a video about your Solar Tunnel? So far there is only one source in Surrey selling it and there isn’t much information on YouTube or internet about it (not in English). I know you had it for years and it also looks like you have recently changed the cover? Please consider this request. Many Thanks, Vinny

  2. Huw, I love what you're doing and can't get enough from youre videos. Small question I live in Belgium and whatever I start sowing inside now to transfer mid march is going leggy. Any tips on what time of the year would be a good time to sow seeds indoors?? Although I am doing this on the right side where the sun hits most of the day. But ya am sure youre familiar with cloudy climates at this part of the world. Any help plz so I don't waste time and be ready before it's too late? Tons of thanks

  3. Your garden is beautiful! What do you do with all the produce? Is it strictly for your family, sold at a market or…? I’d love to have such a large garden but I’d drown in so many vegetables!

  4. I learned from one gardener (I think James P) that birds mainly like berries for the water, so he did two things: put out bird baths and painted some red rocks which he placed out a month or so before the berries developed so the birds “learned” that the berries wouldn’t give them water and then they left the berries alone once they came along

  5. I have had my greatest flea beetle struggles when I've had too much N rich compost in a bed for the crop in question to handle. You mentioned that it was drier than usual and that you were associating the intensity of the flea beetles with the drier conditions. Given the ease with which N will wash out of a bed in high rain seasons, you might be seeing a variant of what I was seeing: maybe your N is staying put and thus there's more of it / too much of it for that particular crop.

  6. I grew Shetland black a few years back and it was a great experiment for some cool spuds, but to be honest, I won't be doing it again. In Ireland blight is a big issue for this variety

Leave a Reply

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