November 23, 2024

VIDEO: Variegated Love and A Goat Named Johnson Cheese | VLOG | Roots and Refuge


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21 thoughts on “VIDEO: Variegated Love and A Goat Named Johnson Cheese | VLOG | Roots and Refuge

  1. Cottage gardens are the plant hoarder’s garden. I love them, my mom was queen garden hoarder, and we moved a lot, so we were always starting a new one! Start with your top layer, the trees like wisteria, lilac,Japanese maple, dwarf apples. Then your bushes… lots of roses are nice, lavender, rosemary, try to incorporate you perennial herbs in your cottage garden. Then lilies, irises, columbine, you name it. In the fall plant your spring blooming bulbs. Then each year fill in the gaps with your direct sow. My favorite thing was to randomly stop at a nursery and pick several 1gal plants, you take them home and place them around, move them around until they FEEL right, then plant. Make sure to leave plenty of space for a bench, bird bath, bird houses, statues and other plant hoarding accessories! You have to learn to let go on it.

  2. Deanacat3 has a wonderful Instagram and a blog called Homestead and chill. You just have to check her out. Her garden is beautiful. I Garden is wild and structured at the same time.

  3. I am curious with all of your seedling what sort of soil mix you are using. My spring planting had to all be starters as I did t realize my new climate meant things went in the ground by March first. Lol. But I am thinking ahead for the next season in late summer.

  4. For a cottage garden, experts say to over plant and then you can always take stuff out and move it because it's perennials, they move without problems.

  5. I see you have two of the Greenstalk vertical planters by the doors to your greenhouse. Their headquarters and warehouse is in my town. I have several of them on my deck and love them! I use mine for herbs and greens. I'm trying sweet peppers this year.

  6. Maybe take seeds out with you when you go to pull plants , so you can just reseed at the same time. I love doing my potatoes in bags, and the stems are so big and green that are nice to fill in an empty spot! I use the fabric bags for mine, 10 gallon

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