Borage is turning out to be a nice cover as well. Along with tomatoes and nasturtiums. I usually coat my annual areas with grass and leaves so these will all contribute to that biomass. Bees love it and the soil loves the shade. Grows nonstop for the chickens to eat.
Got a question or maybe a recommendation for a video and I've seen them in other videos you have done When the growing season is over this year I'm wanting to move my tomato plant and jalapeno plant into my basement on a grow table with lights heating pads whatever it needs to stimulate the growth to continue to get even some kind of harvest over the fall in winter months I know you've shown shop lights but just was curious if there's any other suggestions for doing this kind of project
You can take suckers off tomatoes or peppers and root them in water, plants and grow all winter. Peppers you can actually dig up and trim the roots way down and the stems down to nodes and keep the same plant growing. I prefer to grow orange hat tomatoes indoors. You can grow full plants in 4" pots
I worked a bar in NOLA in 2005 and they had just found out about PBR ha was selling it $5 a can. I told the staff up north you can get a 30 pack for the same price 😅
@@FastGardeningMichigan ducks herd. I'd not free range ducks it's a waste of effort and time. You can basically train them to go anywhere. That's the best part about ducks.