Our channel is about our life and work on our homestead. It covers animals, food, growing plants and veges and tools & equipment. We also have a Pinot based vineyard.
Really nice to see an EDC pack without the expensive pliers and fire starters that people won’t use. The only thing I’d add to this is a small tin of Vaseline or a chapstick, I can’t leave the house without one. Great video!
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on a simple edc (no guns, daggers, socket sets, or wrenches). Looks pretty sensible to me, so I think I’ll do something very similar. 👍
I found the easiest way to harvest is to grab the branch at the very tip then pull it up to reveal all the fruit on the bottom of the branch. This way you DON'T get poked at all. Just pull the fruit off then drop the branch and go on to the next branch.
Unfortunately while California has a climate similar to New Zealand feijoa is very widely planted as an ornamental but most Californians don't even know the fruit is edible.
I grew a lot of tobacco this year in Yacolt Washington near Vancouver Washington which is several hours south of Vancouver Canada. They were beautiful plants and I bought 2 antique cigar presses so let me know when you want to make cigars and I’ll fly down!
Round feijoas with a maroon cheek and a superior flavour is the description for the Besson strain of feijoa. Its popular in france and the germplasm used my Mark Albert to create his varieties in California.
@@fredericthanron6567 No it hasn't. Mark Albert said that possibly his varieties are related to besson and the variety Marion which you get get from many French Nurseries also matches the original description. Though with NZ biosecurity, I doubt you'd be able to import
Stihl equipment is excellent, but my choice of tools for hedgecutting are the Husqvarna 522HDR75X, and a long reach attachment for a 535LK pro combi. I do have an indestructible Stihl HS81R as backup though! Nice selection of tools chap!
Thank you for the recipes. Are the small ones that could be eaten with skin feijoa bambina? Im thinking of growing them as a hedge. Which variety is best for a hedge? I have four bambina plants. Wondering how those bambine ones will as a hedge? If they are good I will need to buy a few more.