The three point hitch works great. The ripper plow attachment is a bit much 😂. Sure saved me lots of shoveling on that job and I used it again to dig a big pit🤷🏼♂️
I use seeds from Johnnys, Territorial Seeds, Hoss Seeds, Baker Creek and my own that have been saved from the last few years. Depends on which veggies you are asking about.
Hey!!! A melon is a melon, no matter how crazy it looks! hahaha Our temps are cooling off too, can't wait for Fall.... Our bugs have been awful as well and dealing with a drought with triple digits doesn't help either.... I planted about three varieties of cauliflower and couldn't harvest any of it, all trashed, same goes for collards, all trashed! This has been one of our worst growing seasons. My beans have done good and I'm starting to get squash. Have a blessed day!
I do fruit tree pruning as a side job and have collected peach pits from local trees that have good production. I just planted the whole pits directly into garden beds, then dig the sprouts up and move them to pots. I put four into the ground this past spring and they seem to be doing fine, though your young tree is really taking off. I never heard of your method before and your results speak for themselves. Do you do this with plums, pluots, apricots, etc?
@@norseman9367 I tried 40 apricot seeds. I did not stick them in a ziplock and wait for them to sprout. I stuck them in the dirt and only had 2 of the 40 seeds sprout and neither one made it. Any seed that is covered , you can break out the inner seed and it basically speeds things up. I prefer to let them grow a few months in a pot before going in the ground.
@@kcjilly2515 Thanks for sharing this unique method with peach pits. Usually put the pits in pots and they sprout well in spring as is. Seems the key to speeding up the process is removing the outer hard kernel...very carefully. Several store bought apricots with moist paper towel in fridge planted first week of June are just beginning to sprout now. Am going to check then again next week and get them into pots if they are sprouted. Good growing, and keep us updated! Randy/GA
@@cladqueen8054 she has had Covid though. Her friends laughed at me for trying to get her, but I was certain that yucky stuff would prove her wrong. She showed me 😂
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I’m growing up a garden on a property that is not mine as well. Also what is a Mexico squash? I think your video is awesome. I really like the part where you reference the smell vs. the water quality. GOD BLESS!
This is my first year growing the Mexican Squash. A lady gave me some seeds and said they would taste good. I still haven’t seen a squash on the vine and it is 20-25 feet long!
I am growing butternut squash but they are not doing well. Probably because I planted them in a lawn lol. I made a RU-vid about the experiment. Check it out
@@OneMound1 I’m not a big winter squash guy, but most squash and zucchini grows like a weed here in Central Texas from June to October. I watched a few of your videos. I tried 3 sisters a few years ago and in my opinion, it is all about how and when you plant. Corn first, once it’s a foot or so tall, squash ( or even melons), and once the corn is about two foot tall, get them beans ( or peas ) going. Thing is, it becomes a jungle and hard to harvest so for practical reasons, I choose to grow them separately. But the Indians were wise and I am glad that was passed along.
I agree with you on growing potatoes. This is my first year growing them and I used potatoes I already had. I got a few bigger potatoes, but the others look so tiny. I can use that space to grow something I know will grow.
If you were working close to the house, fill a 55 gallon drum of water and soak the ditch about 20 minutes before you want to work. That ripper will go through it all like butter. Its always easier to dig a ditch in our Ozarks soil after a rain. Most folks don't even plant a tree until after a good rain. For all the haters... "It ain't stupid if it works!"
I fight the dadgum dear as well. Here’s what I’ve found and used and it works pretty good. Get ya some sticks I went to the garden center and got a package of bamboo garden stakes you stick them in your fence so they’re standing up about a foot or 2 above the top of your fence,get real thick fishing line and go back-and-forth between your sticks with that fishing line and for some reason that’ll keep them out. If ya need more information get my number Frm Laura. Happy gardening
Thank you. It’s funny you say that, because I have some clothes line and I pretty much imagined doing just that 😂. Hope you’re getting a bunch of goodies from your garden.
As soon as I get rich! 😂 All joking aside, I would love to, but I don’t own the property and I choose to keep it pretty temporary. I may however upgrade the greenhouse at home in the future. It will definitely be an investment for me though.
I got my tomatoes in the ground March 15th. Everything is automated with timers, drip irrigation, and mist. The soil I used is free stockpiled cleanup from the ag barn, so it was fertilized and primed for growth! The only thing I did is tie them up and prune them when I couldn’t walk through them anymore. The only other thing I can say is that I planted a million plants so that I could get a lot fast because the heat is here now and I won’t have much luck for the next 2 months. The rest is up to God and He took good care of me this year! I hope yours begins coming on strong asap
Well take my word for it, the Jolene is not sweet. It’s very much like a perfect little uniform store bought tomato. I got the seeds from Johnnys because it is disease resistant and supposed to do well in the South. Sungold tomatoes are a cherry tomato variety, but they are sweet!
The bugs are getting bad! We did good on tomatoes this year for sure. I miss grazing on beans this round. I need to build some more cattle panel trellises before next season. Thanks for leaving a comment and watching.
I had to order some neem oil for our bugs...Everything looks so good, your little pepper will be just fine. Y'all are loaded on the little yellow tomatoes.... We graze on the beans, those have hardly made it back inside.
I grew so many so I could can them and store them for hard times. I don’t know how things are in Vietnam, but here in America, it just makes sense to try to be ready for hard times. Store bought vegetables is very expensive and doesn’t have good flavor.
I need to reinforce the walls around the corn. The heavy rain is eroding the dirt a bit. I’m planting crimson clover along the outside edge of the green house hoping that roots will form and stop my problem.