November 23, 2024

VIDEO: How to Prepare Hardy Vegetables to THRIVE during a COLD Winter


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-10 degrees C to F = 14°F
-5 degrees C to F = 23°F
-3 degrees C to F = 26.6°F
-2 degees C to F = 28.4°F

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HuwsNursery is a channel which dedicates itself to teaching you how to grow an abundance of food at your home. Videos are uploaded every week and cover a vast range of subjects including; soil health, sowing, transplanting, weeding, organic tips, permaculture, pest control, harvesting and low maintenance growing to name a few.

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30 thoughts on “VIDEO: How to Prepare Hardy Vegetables to THRIVE during a COLD Winter

  1. Good suggestions Huw! More & more info out there on how to grow during winter time, thanks for your ideas/thoughts. I've added shredded paper to the garden beds before but not for winter use (veg scraps/shredded paper/bits of cardboard were dug into the garden beds). How well does the shredded paper hold up once wet by rain or snow melt (I live in a cold, snowy climate in the US, not far from the Canadian border).

  2. Greetings! I live in Albuquerque,New Mexico,USA. I want to thank you for such useful information as I'm a 100% amateur in gardening but have a nice patio to start potted veggies/fruits next month. I do have excellent resources locally that I'm just discovering but YouTube has people like you willing to share their knowledge so folks like myself can get started. Honestly, you make growing my own food look do-able, even on an extremely small scale! And I'll teach my grandkids. Anything you can tell me about growing plants in containers outside would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for making such positive, informative videos

  3. Thanks for the tips. Haven't seen that before. I live in San Diego. Ben thinking of moving to cooler climate. But when I realize how beautiful the weather is I decide to remain hear. Your message is so refresing.

  4. I got a 100 foot back garden in Kent with rich stony soil which I know is perfect for root crops!  Big problems though?  1 > it is a rented home, so if I dig up the full 100 foot long mature grown lawn I would need permission from the private landlord.. who may give it the ok, But then if I move I pay allot of money to replace the lawn since that is the law!    2 > I have town foxes using my garden as their own play area.. since they are protected by law I can't hurt or harm them to get them out of the garden?  They sleep under my next door neighbours decking and at night come into mine garden by a hole under his new fence.. they don't go into his back garden as he has a dog I don't have?    3 > Those foxes pee on every thing and crap on the lawn and now keep digging deep holes in the lawn and chew up anything in the garden they can?    4 > I have a 3 foot wire old fence around my garden so they jump over, I don't have the money to pay for a tall fence unlike my rich neighbour who's decking those foxes sleep under!    5 > The only plants I have there, is two fruit dwarf trees ( with high fencing and canes in their huge plastic tubs.. and two small high hanging wall pots with a strawberry plant ( took 8 years of trying to grow one? ) even though that wall is south facing.. and a hanging basket with Lettuce in. both do ok. And that's it?    I even brought a pricey electronic ultrasound unit with movement sensor.. but the batteries only last 1 day even using the passive setting I have the power adapter but it is only 5 meters long cable and no way to plug it in outside?    Plus they did not seem bothered by the anti-fox setting?  And tub or area not fenced off with pricey fencing will be ruined by those foxes.. So can't grow anything else.. since my money is low I can't keep those foxes out or stop them ruining the garden stuff?  They even pulled my satellite cable off the wall and chewed it through!  So that.. that no growing for me or signal for my TV.

  5. new subscriber, and just really enjoy how much you have to share. Looking forward to all of your future work and looking at some of your past ones. Thank you so much for all you are doing, and I agree, a community garden for every area would just make sense, and also bring others together, especially for the children to get outside and watch things grow.

  6. We had multiple frosts, several snows, and an ice storm. My kale and Georgia Collards are doing well even this late. I didn't think collards could grow during the winter. But they are.

  7. Thank you for using °C. I always get confused/ think first if it's in °F. And for scaling also. I use meter, and have to calculate if someone use inch. Don't mention about weight calculation. Ugh. I think 98% world population use meter, gram, celcius.

  8. Goodnight. Today looking for information I found your channel on you tube. It was a very nice discovery. I congratulate you for what you do. Although I do not speak English (what I write to you I do using the Google translator), I understood the concept. I have in Montevideo (Uruguay – a small country in South America) a small farm I am starting to implement an organic garden. I already joined your channel. I congratulate him and I will continue enjoying what he produces.

  9. Weve had a few frosts this winter, the light went on when I watched this video, some small seedlings in the ground are taking FOREVER

  10. And i heard each layer of plastic on the mini tunnels for raised beds give several degrees or zones warmer for them.there are larger tunnels that use air between the layers of plastic. I wonder if bubble wrap between the layers of plastic on mini tunnels would do a better job for winter protection. I may try it nxt. Year.take care

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