November 21, 2024

VIDEO: 7 Gardening Myths Debunked: Common Gardening Advice That Isn't Right!


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Gardeners love sharing advice with each other and local knowledge can be invaluable when starting a garden.

However, some commonly shared ‘facts’ are actually myths which have little or no basis in reality. In this video we expose 7 of the most common gardening myths and explain why they’re wrong and how to tackle the problems they claim to solve.

From ways to deter slugs to how to stake fruit trees, better solutions exist than the common advice that is given. By identifying these pitfalls, you can save time and and avoid the disappointment of failed plants or a disappointing harvest.

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.motherearthnews.com
http://gardenplanner.almanac.com
and many more…

29 thoughts on “VIDEO: 7 Gardening Myths Debunked: Common Gardening Advice That Isn't Right!

  1. As always, I enjoyed your helpful tips. However, your comment about adding cardboard to the bottom of the compost pile worries me. Cardboard is made with a variety of glues and there's no telling what else it has come into contact with before reaching your home. Personally, I do not recommend it.

  2. Oh, dear. I've been teaching the gardeners at the community garden to leave the roots of the peas & beans in the ground when the plants are finished.  Can't be all bad as the roots will rot over the winter,

  3. Love the tips.  Have used cardboard in the compost and I am of the opinion it works though,  Used toilet rolls as planting pots for beans to which rotted away in the soil.  The beans were not a success and was told it could be the glue used.  Not sure about your Good Friday myth as it is a movable feast and based on moon phases as are most St Days and festivals going way back before Christianity and other faiths.

  4. The best ever 100% guaranteed deterrent for slugs is an electric slug fence. Search it here on YT. We did it last year and will do it again this year. For the first time,  I didn't lose all my crops to the little buggers.

  5. Interesting video. Although in this video you have contradicted the advice that was in the container gardening video about putting broken pots in the bottom of the container. Just thought I'd give you a heads up.

  6. I have had several "Professional"/"Expert" Gardeners and Agricultural Experts give the following advice:

    1) About putting a "small"/"thin" layer of stones or pebbles in the bottom of pots to help with drainage.  I believe this is for "inside" plants. The Key is a "Small"/"Thin"Layer of stones or pebbles!

    2) leave the roots of Peas and Bean Plants in the ground and till the whole plant into the soil after the harvest. Or pull the whole plant out and put into the Compost pile!

    So now I am Confused as Ever! SO are ALL the EXPERTS All WRONG?

  7. Back in the day when I worked on a worm farm (as a disguised care giver for the aging owner) Mr. Bob would collect empty liquor boxes, cut them up, and shred them for his worm beds. They provided insulation and he swore the worms loved the glue. Whatever, he had great worms! We could throw a fresh fish head, and guts in the worm bed and the next day all traces, including a smell, would be gone. Love those worms.

  8. I recently heard that chopping the beans before they flower, and leaving the roots in place is the best way to use them for nitrogen (composting the plant would be good too). If you time it right, you can then transplant something on either side of where the bean was and let the new plants enjoy the undisturbed soil containing all those nitrogen nodes from the bean roots and intact mycorrhiza (beneficial fungi). Im going to try that next season.

  9. Hmmm … thought I had avoided most of the myths. Got sucked into the one about leaving pea/bean root "nitrogen nodules" in my garden and composting only the tops. Never really researched whether this made sense. Thanks for clarifying.

  10. Well done. Yep, egg shells and slugs, sadly had to figure that out the hard way. :(. Copper also didn't work, not even on pots. I tried both strips and a copper mesh I made from a copper pot scrubber. Neither worked. We have some voracious buggies!

  11. Fucking rights buddy!
    I solved my slug nightmare by feeding them a bumper feast of cucumber off cuts and ocer ripe tomatoes and peppers at dusk every day during the summer months.
    They came on the exact same time every evening… then devoured their favourite foods …lay around drunk and sated, then slipped away to sleep until the next day..
    My Pots and Troughs never saw a single slug in 3 years…

    WORK WITH NATURE. .no truer phrase spoken

  12. Cool thing about the drainage layer. Because of the way the PWT behaves, being dependent on height of the medium and not its size, if you add an inch or two of rocks to the bottom, then scoop out a cylinder in the middle (that will be filled with dirt), you end up with majority of roots above the PWT and you significantly increase the surface area of soil exposed to oxygen (always a good thing).

    It's a little bit of extra work, but it alleviates a lot of problems.

    You can make heavy soils drain better by just sticking a substantial wick in the bottom of the pot. It will act as part of the medium for PWT purposes and the pot will drain accordingly.

    All of this is moot if you use a potting medium with good drainage and/or good capillary action. The "should or shouldn't I use stones because of the PWT" question, imo, is answered with "if you're worried about it, it's really time to upgrade your potting mix."

    I need to experiment with the effects of an evenly distributed air-soil relationship (rocks at bottom of pot) vs. localized (no layer). I can't get over the hunch that more accessible oxygen, as well as the soil not having to gulp the water in, has to make a difference. I never added the layer for drainage – I didn't start in horticulture until 2005 and everything was a peat blend by then. Drainage wasn't an issue. Distributed air-soil exposure in mixes average-to-heavy mixes
    though – gotta be something to that.

  13. Is it true or false that egg shells in the soil will help sertain plants due to the calsum inside the shell? or if u boil the shells to make a type of egg shell tea for the soil /compost heap or anything else you can use it for

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