May 15, 2024

VIDEO: Last Garden Harvest Before Winter | Not What I was Expecting!


#AcreHomestead #FallHarvest #Garden2021

Instagram https://www.instagram.com/acrehomestead/ @Acre Homestead

My recipes are on Scratchpantry.com

The Dressmaker of Auschwitz is what I was listening to on audible –
One Month Free Audible Membership – https://amzn.to/2ZEDLbG

Roo Apron – https://rooapron.com/product/roo-apron/friend/Scrachpantry/?attribute_size=One+size+fits+all&attribute_color=Charcoal+Grey

Where I bought the Wine Cap Mushrooms – https://northspore.com/products/wine-cap-sawdust-spawn?rfsn=6162594.bae5a3&_pos=2&_sid=37bcc18fc&_ss=r
— For 10% off use code: ACREHOMESTEAD

Strawbale Gardening book – https://amzn.to/3jOKnv5

Freeze Dryer – https://affiliates.harvestright.com/idevaffiliate.php?id=1129&url=160&tid1=youtube&tid2=20211029&tid3=yoSM9bAh-mQ

This is where I buy my organic bulk food storage in bulk! https://www.azurestandard.com/?a_aid=5aefb8cc26

Food Preservation Supplies:
Freeze Dryer – https://affiliates.harvestright.com/idevaffiliate.php?
Redmond Real Salt – https://shop.redmond.life?afmc=Acre
9 Tray Excalibur Dehydrator — https://amzn.to/3xR9NwL
X-Large Stainless Steel Bowl — https://amzn.to/3mWKszd
Instant Pot — https://amzn.to/35Focjs
Pink Himalayan Salt — https://amzn.to/3kS9tbH
Redmond Real Salt – https://shop.redmond.life?afmc=Acre

Canning Supplies I Used:
Ball Canning Cookbook (My Favorite!!) — https://amzn.to/3w2SZlX
Oster 22 Quart Roaster Pan — https://amzn.to/2SjodX0
Stainless Steel Strainers — https://amzn.to/3eaM8As
Presto Pressure Canner — https://amzn.to/2Riy3YJ
Canning Equipment Essential Supplies Kit — https://amzn.to/3eafXkv
Pink Himalayan Salt — https://amzn.to/3ue5b2

Links are affiliate links, but I will only recommend items I LOVE and use daily with no extra cost to you, and it helps support the channel! Thank you for your support!

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: Last Garden Harvest Before Winter | Not What I was Expecting!

  1. That dinner 'calzone' looks sooo good! I just had a thought on the sweet potatoes: what if you treat the little ones the way you would new potatoes? Ie, leave them whole and roast 'em, steam them (tossed in butter), etc, or cut them into biggish chunks in 'salads' or mixed veg. Just a thought–you obviously have plenty of kitchen creativity yourself!

  2. Those wine cap mushrooms, do they require a cool, cloudy, wet climate? I live in sunny, hot Texas, and our most successful crops are herbs, beans, peppers!!! and okra. We can also grow watermelons and cucumbers, but they need shade.

  3. Read online that they grow long and skinny because of too much nitrogen! Says not to fertilize the soil next time or add things that will add additional nitrogen. Love your videos!!❤️❤️

  4. Fingerling sweet potatoes are still delicious! You should just enjoy your harvest and use this knowledge (like you said) for next seasons crop. Congrats on your second year of gardening, you're doing better than loads of people!

  5. I’m so sorry your sweet potatoes didn’t come out very big! It’s so frustrating when gardening doesn’t work out like we hope for. I’ve had a lot of failures, but luckily enough successes that I’ve continued to persevere in my gardening. One of your issues may be the soil. Sweet potatoes like a pretty sandy soil. I live in North Carolina and pull soil samples for farmers, and everywhere that sweet potatoes are grown the fields are very sandy.

  6. They will taste great! And volunteers were a cool bonus! Focus on the process of learning. Grow with your crops. This year's washington rain has my garlic up almost knee high! I even waited to replant til after Oct 1st!

  7. They will taste great! And volunteers were a cool bonus! Focus on the process of learning. Grow with your crops. This year's washington rain has my garlic up almost knee high! I even waited to replant til after Oct 1st!

  8. Fyi. I put my green tomatoes in a wire basket with my bananas layed on top. Took 3 weeks but every tomatoe ripened. Then red tomatoes lasted great in bin another 4 weeks! I may start picking green so plant can produce more and i can store longer.

  9. I used a sweet potato in a jar of water about end of January and by time to plant had pulled off "shoots " and put it in water to further get roots started. When it was warm enough to plant out I dug a trench in my bed and put horse manure in it and hilled up over it and planted the "shoots" of sweet potatoes.about every 9"..keep weed free til the vines take over. I just dug them (right before frost) and brought them in to cure and store for the winter. Most of them were large. I had grown the purple kind. Hope you have better results next year. (Beware of mice in your patch)

  10. Hey Becky I just saw this from another facebook group just thought i would throw this to you maybe it would help your sweet potatoes …..fertilizer and patience. I learned the hard way because my first crop was bad. It took much longer than 120 days for me, I had mine in since Mid May. Use a 10-10-10 fertilizer for the first few months and switch to something with more phosphorus and potassium at the last few months

  11. I’ve been enjoying your videos. The harvest ones are the most fun! We planted a garden since we were stuck at home. We do have fruit trees but my dad always said that planting vegetables is too much work and not worth the trouble. It is a lot of hard manual labor but so much fun and rewarding. We ate lots of green beans, chard, tomatillos, tomatoes, cucumbers, yellow squash, acorn squash, calabasitas, beets, and corn. Broccoli, celery, and watermelon did not work out. Maybe next time. Lots to learn.

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