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Companion Planting VS. Interplanting: Differences, Examples, and Strategies for Both 

No-Till Growers
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What is the difference between companion planting and interplanting? Understanding that and how to use each is the goal with today's video!
In this video we cover: companion planting examples, interplanting examples, intercropping examples, trap crops, attracting beneficials, flea beetles, aphids, and more.
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Root Complimentarity site:
images.wur.nl/digital/collect...
Citations (at least I think this is most of them):
-3 years study in Spain. orchards: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
Marigold tomato study: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
-Borage and Aphids: www.researchgate.net/publicat...
-Sweet alyssum and predator insects: www.sciencedirect.com/science...
-green garlic and cucumbers: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
-Intercropping weed suppression meta analysis: Annual intercropping suppresses weeds: A meta-analysis
Improved photosynthesis in pepper with garlic: www.pakbs.org/pjbot/PDFs/45(6...
Meta analysis on reducing yield losses to pests and diseases: nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/d...
Cereal and fava bean: link.springer.com/article/10....
Flea beetles and okra and sorghum: agris.fao.org/agris-search/se...

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14 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 352   
@williamcash8855
@williamcash8855 Год назад
We Indians plant what we call the three sisters we plant sweet corn when it gets about 6 inches to 12 inches tall we plant pole beans between the corn stalks then squash between the rows
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Год назад
Completely neglected to give credit and appreciation to the many indigenous interplanting practices (such as three sisters) in this video. Thanks for the comment!
@eulaapostolopoulos8158
@eulaapostolopoulos8158 Год назад
😊❤😢😢😢😢😢😅😅❤😂😂😂 😢😮😮😢
@midnull6009
@midnull6009 Год назад
What Indians? And only a certain types of corn, beans, and squash can be grown w/in a certain region. Else it wont work because of location/climate. Also, do yo know why? The reason behind it?
@williamcash8855
@williamcash8855 Год назад
@@midnull6009 I'm Apache and Cherokee I learned the practice from my Apache Grandma I have seen work
@williamcash8855
@williamcash8855 Год назад
it work with different types of corn and beens but the only squash that I have tried is yellow çrocked
@seena6163
@seena6163 Год назад
Doctor turned regenerative and organic urban- micro farmer here. Absolutely love your science based approach. Just fantastic. So much misinformation out there spread by "cut and paste" blogs and websites. The humor is a welcome addition, too. Thank you for what you do!
@thehermitdruid
@thehermitdruid Год назад
I’m sorry is that a thing and how can I do that for a living? Dead serious.
@seena6163
@seena6163 Год назад
@@thehermitdruid Well, not sure if it's a thing, but depending on where you live, and how big your lot is, you can make decent money. I don't really do it as primary income, but it supplements my SS. There's lots of info out there on Urban gardening. Even if you don't make a living from it, it really can reduce your grocery bill!
@thehermitdruid
@thehermitdruid Год назад
@@seena6163 yeh this is what I do already, by a living I meant I thought there was programs for regenerative urban gardening initiatives, tbh there might be and I just need to look it up. Thanks :)
@seena6163
@seena6163 Год назад
@@thehermitdruid I'm pretty sure, depending on where you live, that there are. I'm in NYS and there are all kinds of supportive initiatives. Best of luck to you!
@thehermitdruid
@thehermitdruid Год назад
@@seena6163 there has to be something like that in Toronto if not I need to find a way to start lol
@MynewTennesseeHome
@MynewTennesseeHome Год назад
It's reassuring there are others that mix and match to see what happens. I always say, "I'm just trying to confuse the bugs" 😁
@adrianteresa98
@adrianteresa98 Год назад
I had a really cool "accident" by planting spinach over cilantro and they are growing together beautifully! It seems like they are happy together because my cilantro is so tall but still healthy and dark green and not bolting... So cool!
@scottbaruth9041
@scottbaruth9041 Год назад
My daughter was concerned that there were ticks all over the cats bed in our garage. I checked, and it was a hatch of Harlequin bugs. I'm not ready to declare cats are a trap crop for Harlequin beetles yet, though it was strange.
@rachellemazar7374
@rachellemazar7374 Год назад
I love the Living Soil Handbook
@DoubleQz
@DoubleQz Месяц назад
I am new to this. There is so much to learn. Im taking my baby steps.
@MeowMeowKapow
@MeowMeowKapow Год назад
I also, accidentally, did a double-seeding this year, too! My purple cayenne plants absolutely refused to germinate, despite MULTIPLE sowings, both indoors, and outdoors after I got desperate, under a sawed off soda bottle for that slapdash greenhousing affect. Three or so months of attempts later, I gave up and kinda forgot about them almost immediately because my ADHD is hella bad. Shoved a leek scrap into the ground to regrow it, halfway pausing after I did because I was like "Wait, isn't something supposed to be maybe here?" Couple weeks later and MAGICALLY, there's a purple cayenne seedling sprouting literally RIGHT up against the base of the leek! There's no way I could separate them without hurting the chili plant, and after all that hassle? Yeah, I'm not risking it. So, this is the year we're going to test just how compatible cayenne and leeks are! hahaha.
@jasonhatfield4747
@jasonhatfield4747 Год назад
I planted a 1/2 acre native perennial/prairie patch on our property before I planned on farming vegetables. I'm glad I did, not just for the benefit to wild life, but also for the benefit to our vegetables now. We have an insanely robust population of pollinators and birds here as a result of all these native forbs and grasses. Everyone should try to incorporate at least a small patch of native perennials in their yards/gardens. These plants really do wonders. I didn't expect such dramatic results.
@Kayenne54
@Kayenne54 Год назад
All my pre-1989 research on these topics always said, wherever possible, to have a "wild corner" or segment of your garden, (or farm) where whatever was natural or seemed beneficial would grow, and encourage insect and associated wildlife/birdlife as well. Not everyone has that luxury of course, but even in a small suburban garden, one little corner which is left as original would help, I'd think. Perhaps native shrubs or bushes, if trees were out of the question...you've found out from practical experience how much difference that makes. One of my gardens was right next to some rainforest, so I didn't have to do anything, but others I've always left things well alone on one corner (and of course, I never use toxic sprays and artificial fertilizers to mess with the soil life). One place I was living at, I had to import garden worms. After a few years, they'd naturally "escaped" from the beds, and were everywhere. The ground was so hard in that particular garden, I had to do "no dig gardening" and decided it was the best thing ever, and would never dig again.
@demetrajohnson571
@demetrajohnson571 4 часа назад
I just started huge garden. At first I was completely overwhelmed to have fifteen hundred Square feet to plant. I just take it one bit at a time. Interestingly enough, I have employed a bunch of these methods. Basically, I picked them all up on youtube. But I've aimed To companion plant and interplant plus interdispers with herbs in flowers for pest control and around the outside fenced perimeter of my garden. I've started to plant lavender sage. Sunflower. It's my first year i've got about 40% of it planted And just assembled some beehives. I don't expect it all to be successful, but so far so good❤
@growbig27
@growbig27 11 месяцев назад
Not a market gardener, but this year I have planted purple sprouting broccoli between my tomato plants and the pigeons seem to have not noticed them. Keep the growing need info coming, with love from the UK.
@natalie7204
@natalie7204 Год назад
Heyo just want to shout out the original North American intercropping system, the Three Sisters. Corn (i've also used sunflowers in corn's place), pole beans, and vining squash. I've never used it in a commercial context but in a garden it works so well (probably something to do with its centuries of continious use)
@icecreamladydriver1606
@icecreamladydriver1606 Год назад
Luetine for the eyes is extracted from marigolds. You can eat the flowers. Very nutritious.
@stephanieh8089
@stephanieh8089 Год назад
Thank you for the link to the university root images! I have been wondering how to determine root compatibility for a while now, and you've just made it easy for me. You are awesome - keep up the great work!
@Ann__333
@Ann__333 Год назад
All the science talk got a subscription from me. 😊
@KelikaRanke
@KelikaRanke Месяц назад
Loved this video-thank you! We "fill in gaps" often on our farm and I always thought a "Real farmer" would never do this so I'm stoked to know that this is actually a practice others find benefit in, especially with carrots! geez that germ rate is a stab in the heart sometimes! We fill in salad mix gaps with lettuce head. After your 2nd sometimes 3rd cut of salad the head is ready. We also let random things seed especially cilantro and dill to encourage beneficials and those 2 are challenging to grow sometimes so rouge dill helps when trying to fill orders. :) thx again! your videos are helping grow so much food!
@glenagarrett4704
@glenagarrett4704 Год назад
Subtle shade + disingenuous sarcasm = funny. Not many people can pull it off this well. Makes your videos entertaining as well as educational.
@rachellemazar7374
@rachellemazar7374 Год назад
Jessie, I’m viewing from the San Francisco East Bay Area, I have two little 4x8 raised beds and I love your book and your videos. This one is full of advice that I will use. It amazes me how your farming advice can help a home gardener like me.
@cliveburgess4128
@cliveburgess4128 Год назад
I just recently noticed that Dill seems to attract Aphids, interesting idea on the double seed block planting!
@keelanbanks6171
@keelanbanks6171 Год назад
Really excited to see what happens with the double planting!
@gabrieldewitt3852
@gabrieldewitt3852 4 месяца назад
Dude, you are an amazing plant nerd! Awesome farm! Each video I see if yours is informative. Keep it up! I wish I had more space to grow like you.
@vitamartinenko4747
@vitamartinenko4747 Год назад
Love your videos, they are so useful and informative, thank you! 🌱
@hellomeoww
@hellomeoww Год назад
Ah! I'm doing a dill/lettuce interplant right now... Basically scattered dill seed in between the rows right after transplanting the lettuce. Not sure how the timing will work out but it'll be cool if it works! The lettuce is about 2 weeks away from harvest and dill is about 1-2 inches tall at this point.
@janetwise3248
@janetwise3248 Год назад
Good morning, I just have a little garden with 3 x 6 foot beds and find that planting perrenial herbs like oregano or thyme in the corner of the bed works well as their blooms attract lots of pollinators. And I don't have to replant them each year.
@kathynix6552
@kathynix6552 Год назад
I like this idea I do have oregano on one corner but I planted thyme in the middle.
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Год назад
Oh yeah, thyme is a really good one! I love watching those tiny flowers fill up with bees/flys/insects.
@SeeStuDo
@SeeStuDo Год назад
Great tip.
@cpnotill9264
@cpnotill9264 Год назад
Awesome Janet! Try the perennial bronze fennel if you haven't. Oh my the tiny insects LOVE it and the flowers and seeds are the sweetest thing I have ever tasted! Yellow tiny flowers against the feathery foliage is just beautiful. 🌱👍
@janetwise3248
@janetwise3248 Год назад
@@cpnotill9264 thanks for the tip, always looking to try something new.
@rafaellaburkley
@rafaellaburkley Год назад
I love how informative your videos are
@elmartell5724
@elmartell5724 3 месяца назад
Never seen your stuff before, but you're hilarious so I'm subscribing 😂😂 I'm sure you're a good gardener too
@MaryLeeGaffin
@MaryLeeGaffin Год назад
Incredibly helpful info, saved to favorites for future reference!
@cherylbertolini3140
@cherylbertolini3140 Год назад
Good morning, another great video thanks for shearing, have a wonderful week.
@cedrichassell7902
@cedrichassell7902 Год назад
Love your comments and information ❤
@qwerwerterytrtyutyuiyuiouiop
@qwerwerterytrtyutyuiyuiouiop 11 месяцев назад
plenty of new fascinating and useful info I learned from you here, thanks very much!
@amys3168
@amys3168 Год назад
I bought your book while ago and I’m always surprised when you mention the information is also in your book, because I haven’t seen that chapter yet. I just have to recognize that I’d love to be an avid reader, but I don’t have to ability to just do it (adhd.) So, thank you for the video format as well. I am able to watch your video and then when attempting to implement something I look it up in your book. Many thanks!
@claudinedecarlisle8647
@claudinedecarlisle8647 Год назад
Thanks! Interesting and informative video. You've given me several options for my garden this year. Love the outro. And yes I did buy your book.
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Год назад
Amazing, Thank you so much for the support!
@justaregularguy6971
@justaregularguy6971 Год назад
Random next video .. but I’m not mad it’s playing actually perfect to what I’m doing / want to do 🧐👌🏾👍🏽
@OldForestWitch
@OldForestWitch Год назад
I wish I could like each section of this video separately. It needs much more than just the one thumbs up.
@ijahdagang6121
@ijahdagang6121 10 месяцев назад
The plants are all very lush and fresh.. I love them. I wish you success and always be healthy...
@5ivearrows
@5ivearrows Год назад
Glad to see I'm not the only one with electric fence surrounding my market garden with thousands and thousands of dollars worth of produce growing in it. I have the added bonus of certain wild hog presence in the immediate surrounding area, including in the same pasture the garden is in.
@danielaggeler9263
@danielaggeler9263 Год назад
Thank you. A lot of information to absorb in the time allotted. I am thinking about some of the same methods you introduced. Good video.
@stephenbeck6410
@stephenbeck6410 Год назад
Looking forward to the results on interplanting directly in soil blocks…
@winterroadspokenword4681
@winterroadspokenword4681 Год назад
Lots of great humour in this video!
@sweetpeasbackyardgarden1236
Great video! I'm definitely going to experiment with a few of those strategies. Creating biodiversity has worked wonders for my garden. Over the last two years, I've added marigolds, sunflowers, berry patches and sweet peas.
@matttibbitts8198
@matttibbitts8198 Год назад
Thank you for the info!
@albertosuarez4933
@albertosuarez4933 Год назад
Awesome info, you always give me good ideas for trying new things! And yay for plantomorphism! :D
@user-px2sn8pr5t
@user-px2sn8pr5t 16 дней назад
this is a cool episode. i am wondering how to apply this to my hydroponics
@ArizonaBorn1358
@ArizonaBorn1358 Год назад
Thanks! No questions. You cleared up confusion and provided ideas.
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Год назад
Great to hear! Thank you
@williammaxwell1919
@williammaxwell1919 Год назад
I had a small backyard vegetable garden, that did not facilitate growing large patches of a single crop. One strategy I used was when I removed a plant such as a lettuce, bok choy, tomatoe etc (& if there was space and I'd had the forethought to raise succession seedlings), I'd plant something else; generally entirely random with entirely random results. But if you don't try you will never fail; therefore, your learning will be limited. Part of the "zen and the art of gardening" is learning from "the good, bad and ugly" results. Mistakes and accidents are the cutting edge teachers of critical new learning.
@manolopapas
@manolopapas Год назад
Great video. Thank you
@RawOrganix420
@RawOrganix420 Год назад
Thanks for the info on trap crops. I’m having serious issues with spider mites in my medicinal herbs garden year after year. I’m definitely going to do some research now! Thanks so much for the inspiration.
@carissalizotte8977
@carissalizotte8977 Год назад
Super cool idea of sowing two different seeds in one block! I need to order the book… love your content! 🙌🏽💚
@user-wx1eb5ws4x
@user-wx1eb5ws4x 10 месяцев назад
Your videos are much much helpful thanks for the information.. I am following you from Libya.
@etiennelouw9244
@etiennelouw9244 10 месяцев назад
I just started square foot gardening as an experiment and interplanting is another idea for my suburban veggie patch. thank you.
@hyperionhiker6320
@hyperionhiker6320 Год назад
Here in France, my neighbor gardener planted cilantro with his fava beans and had tremendous success. I tried potatoes and peas this year. So far, the potato beetles are attacking my aubergine plants instead ... good thing they're slow and they don't like savon noir (black soap or Castile soap).
@ljgerken
@ljgerken Год назад
Yes, I mix a couple of tablespoons of castile soap, specifically peppermint, in a gallon of water and spray it right on the plants. No harm to plants, but the bugs don't like it.
@vyaramarinova2300
@vyaramarinova2300 Год назад
Aubergine and potatoes are from the same family, that's why they are attaching the aubergine. They are confused
@zestygurl
@zestygurl Год назад
❤ agreed. Cut & ✂️ paste aspect is sharing resource research information to Allow the other person to understand where you found that knowledge from to then check ✔ ✅ that resource to ensure it's correct helpful information or bogus. Just how science has always worked. To show the resources borrowed is what we encourage in college or other schools if I'm not mistaken? When writing a research paper for example? Online to link transparent wise you have copy * paste to credit the original source materials not to imply the article is legitimate or not only hypothesis to consider. Helps flushing out that incorrect information out there in the process. Grew up on a farm basically so, college has been this planet made more sense than going into debt to learn at an institution that has been very toxic society, from my perspective, enjoy getting paid to learn. ❤
@TaZerrHD
@TaZerrHD Год назад
You always make me smile, and sometimes even laugh ❤
@SethCarignan
@SethCarignan 4 месяца назад
This is the first video of yours I have watched. Wow. We have very similar mindsets. ❤
@montacookinglifestyle
@montacookinglifestyle Год назад
Good farm design ever. Thanks for your idea and very interesting
@willc4922
@willc4922 Год назад
love your humor
@corinne7126
@corinne7126 Год назад
Bought your book, it is awesome and thanks for the videos
@susanprather1142
@susanprather1142 Год назад
I was always told marigolds kept deer away. And learned here resantly to plant basil with tomatoes to keep bad insects away. I'll have to try both and see what happens. It's all so interesting. Love watching your channel. We always learn so much.
@bhalliwell2191
@bhalliwell2191 7 месяцев назад
I had read that a border of marigolds around the garden would keep *rabbits* away. Nope. Planted a border of marigolds as closely spaced as the marigolds would tolerate and the local rabbit/s ate them, then went back to their burrows *in* the garden. (They or it had a secret entrance---I think---into and a toboggan kind of exit away from the garden, running at the welded wire "trellis" enclosing the kitchen garden and then sliding on their bellies to go underneath it and get outside the enclosure.) But I do sincerely wish you good success with marigolds or anything else strongly scented, if deer are your garden marauder. Out local deer aren't deterred by much of anything and they are both very determined and very clever. All the best to you!
@francescaurban8985
@francescaurban8985 4 месяца назад
Thank you, thank you, thank you from the Southwestern Arkansas total plant nerd!!! 🥰💚🌳🌻
@ajb.822
@ajb.822 Год назад
Thanks, as always, for your videos ! So, watching to the end... this super nerd definitely wants to try this at home ! Especially the cilantro or dill with lettuce.
@stonemountaincreations3459
@stonemountaincreations3459 Год назад
Thank you!
@tutortani
@tutortani Год назад
Wow amazing what a nice plant. 👍👍👍🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨
@catracampolieto8989
@catracampolieto8989 Год назад
Seed starting 2 different crops at the same time in the same cell....BRILLIANT!!! I'll try that next year. Thanks.
@gingerydelights3554
@gingerydelights3554 4 месяца назад
Have you tried it yet? If so with what? I'm about to sow some red Romaine with Cilantro and see how it goes
@Sencman1
@Sencman1 4 месяца назад
What are the results I would love to know
@lupinsensei
@lupinsensei Год назад
Thanks for all of your content Jessie (apologies if I misspelled your name). I grew up on a small farm and your content takes me back. I understand just how much I underestimated my fathers knowledge (he was a no tiller organic dude). I didn’t take the time to learn much in the way of growing back then, so I’m playing catch up with you. Team Nerd ❤✌️
@kolokithas7865
@kolokithas7865 Год назад
Great video!
@ThongsamayXai
@ThongsamayXai Год назад
so nice gardening
@robertbell4604
@robertbell4604 Год назад
Thank you for putting out these weekly videos. They are amazing
@chefcarlosrodriguez
@chefcarlosrodriguez Год назад
@notillgrowers Thanks for all this, incredibly valuable, and entertaining content. Edutainment at its finest!
@janebennett9062
@janebennett9062 Год назад
I always love your channel
@bharatkukreti8449
@bharatkukreti8449 Год назад
Interesting and informative video. Above that lot of useful contribution from the learned and enthusiast contributors. My thanks to them as well for sharing the experience and knowledge. For pest repellent / management, outer bed can be make that of lemon grass- I see this pest simply dislike its pungent smell. If still pest ingress, one can use Neem oil or lemon grass oil spray to take them off.
@deannewilliams3321
@deannewilliams3321 Год назад
Very interesting!
@PPH-GARDEN
@PPH-GARDEN Год назад
Companion planting and intercropping are very useful and save time as well as space and cost. If the combination of suitable plant species will bring high yield efficiency. Thanks for sharing
@martinengelbrecht5384
@martinengelbrecht5384 Год назад
Thank you Mark, missing you, glad you have a pet bird!
@ljgerken
@ljgerken Год назад
Early Spring when I get flea beetles, I have planted radishes and bok choi among my tomatoes as a trap crop. Works every time to keep them off of my tomatoes.I also plant borage to attract aphids, but it's sad to see them get overcome with them, so I am trying to add more umbel flowers to attract ladybugs, etc.
@SeeStuDo
@SeeStuDo Год назад
Lime Balm works as well as Borage and is a perennial. Also, you don't feel as bad tearing some out to get rid of aphid clusters.
@ljgerken
@ljgerken Год назад
@@SeeStuDo I've heard of lemon balm, is that what you mean?
@SeeStuDo
@SeeStuDo Год назад
@@ljgerken No, Lime Balm. Grows more like a mint.
@bettyperrin4251
@bettyperrin4251 Год назад
Lemon balm grows like a mint also
@SeeStuDo
@SeeStuDo Год назад
@@bettyperrin4251 It spreads and grows back early, not as aggressive as mint, but similar. My Lemon Balm stays put and is slower to come back in Spring. That’s what I meant.
@waynesell3681
@waynesell3681 Год назад
On the learning curve!
@susanhaynes4502
@susanhaynes4502 2 месяца назад
Great info
@hrplanttrees
@hrplanttrees Год назад
Hello brother Your vegetable garden is very beautiful👍
@hollicarlton3512
@hollicarlton3512 Год назад
Thanks!
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Год назад
Thank YOU! 🙌
@abdelazizmhammedi5028
@abdelazizmhammedi5028 11 месяцев назад
am a fan of yours and of ur channel, thanks a lot,,, ur follower from somewhere in the algerian desert
@Sky-Child
@Sky-Child Год назад
Saving this to watch later as I was JUST thinking about this when wondering if I should plant asparagus and strawberries together and how best to space them
@carolinablonde88
@carolinablonde88 Год назад
Your videos are as hilarious as they are informational. Love your sense of humor. The only issue I see with cilantro in your lettuce is for your cilantro hating customers like me. My husband harvested cilantro, then tomatoes and brought them both inside. I washed the tomatoes and could still taste the vile cilantro contamination 🤢 It ruined our spinach crop one time too just by growing near it. Some cilantro had reseeded itself near the spinach bed and I could taste and smell it on the spinach. Now we keep it totally separate
@Bentleybabygirl
@Bentleybabygirl 11 месяцев назад
This is so pretty like the row beds look so unreal man great job
@protanaman1887
@protanaman1887 Год назад
Informasi yang sangat bermanfaat.Terimakasih Banyak🙏
@expat2023
@expat2023 Год назад
From 🇷🇺 with ❤!
@ClareAndAlec
@ClareAndAlec Год назад
6:10 I really enjoyed this slight tangent
@mary-anncarleton7578
@mary-anncarleton7578 Год назад
Beautiful
@kaylaporter6698
@kaylaporter6698 3 месяца назад
The "return to making what video?" earned you a subscribe
@jeanniebair4103
@jeanniebair4103 3 месяца назад
Love your channel bought your book…Oklahoma gardening is always a challenge. Squash bugs and vine bores are killing me every year!
@theresakelly3747
@theresakelly3747 10 месяцев назад
Got my book❤❤❤
@VeryMiley
@VeryMiley Год назад
Excellent topic and discussion. Thank you from a fellow garden nerd
@sandrabeauchamp4207
@sandrabeauchamp4207 Год назад
Beautiful everything my dear friend blessings always amen 💯♥️🙏🙏🙏
@user-qf2ps5pp5f
@user-qf2ps5pp5f Год назад
Thank you very much, this is super interesting. I'm a beginner gardener with just one bed which was previously kept bare (it's full of ants and the soil is quite degraded) so I'm trying to put as much cover as possible and bring back the insects. I would like to suggest to include the doi of the publications instead of the links, as it would be easier to copy them out for later reading - the links are all cut off in the middle and dois are shorter.
@JamesCooker-no8ud
@JamesCooker-no8ud Год назад
Hello How are you doing today
@kindhempco.6126
@kindhempco.6126 Год назад
Good companions support you ❤
@enzolescure5833
@enzolescure5833 20 дней назад
6:30 Touché
@teenytinydiva
@teenytinydiva Год назад
😆😆 Really enjoyed.
@dumbgeorge1
@dumbgeorge1 11 месяцев назад
Thanks
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers 11 месяцев назад
Amazing, thank you!
@rosehavenfarm2969
@rosehavenfarm2969 Год назад
So interesting, Farmer Jesse. Thank you! we have had Japanese Beetle infestations the last few years. In a very non-study way, we found in one of our little gardens, that those awful beetles LOVED the marshmallow herb and horseradish leaves, but never touched the nearby feverfew, lemon balm, or chives. I don't think I've ever seen those dratted beetles on bronze fennel or dill, either.
@renatehaeckler9843
@renatehaeckler9843 Год назад
This year I mixed a bunch of spare seeds and planted them in a row - spinach, arugula, kale, mizuna, collards, bok choy, carrots, and turnips. Some of them put on very fast spring growth and others start slowly, so I've been able to harvest from that row continuously for almost a month and it's still going strong. Next time I may leave out the kale and collards, in the shade of the faster growing plants the slugs feasted on them and they disappeared, and I may add leaf lettuce, cilantro and radishes, but I'll definitely do this again.
@Grateful_Grannie
@Grateful_Grannie 3 месяца назад
Sounds great. I might add Borage.
@aileensmith3062
@aileensmith3062 Год назад
Another great video Thank You! We are attempting to do some companion planting this year as well as a bit of interplanting. See no reason that both would not be beneficial. A LOT more flowers this year in and around our garden. Should that not be(e) beneficial well the Bees from our hives will love them!
@ladyryan902
@ladyryan902 Год назад
Just found you. Ive been putting onions garlic n leeks in n around all my gardens for years ( pap did it so i figured there must be something to it) i also cant stand having open areas as i harvest n just plop something in the spot again been doing it for years now im looking at videos n science to make the harvest bigger. Lol guess pap was onto something 😊 so getting your book!!
@TibtheBear
@TibtheBear Год назад
dude, you're so fucking rad
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