Thanks Dan! I love how you put the pups between your fruit trees oh, and I also see that you use the outer leaves to lay down is mulch in your pathways. Actually those outer leaves are also edible, some people call them cardone, it's the stalk you eat, kind of like celery, that is edible, you just de-rib it and chop it up, you can put it in soups or eat it raw :-)
I just harvested 3 today. In the past I think I waited too long and they were starting to get tough. We’re eating them tomorrow night. Thanks for the tips.
Hello this is Yiannis from Aegina island - Greece!! I would like to thank you for all your videos! We have learned so much from your garden!! Thank you so much!!
Thank you for posting about the plant. I saw one of your other recent posts and was trying to decide how feasible it would be to grow them. The info has convinced me. Now I just need to get some seeds.
Hello Dan, thanks so much for the info & lovely energy! I love your garden! ♥♥♥ I grow artichoke in the last 2 years but to be honest they're SO incredibly beautiful, majestic plants that I always feel sorry to harvest it to eat! :D Just today a friend suggested to me that maybe the artichoke in my garden wants to be a part of me & so partly & spiritually I could become the artichoke ♥ So I started looking into some "how to" info. & I couldn't land in a better place. Thanks for your time & energy ♥ Warm Blessings ♥
Nice harvest ! Love artichokes. I have 2 small plants that don't get enough heat or sun here in PNW. I hope they will eventually get big enough to have a harvest.
Oh I wish I could ask questions, I just started a dozen plants to see how many I grow. Did you know the stems are also edible? not the entire stem but about 6-10 inches from the bottom of the Bulb... It tastes a bit like the heart. Not my favorite part but many Italians like that like my mother in law...
Resourceful video, really good, thanks. Do you know if artichokes do any good in heavy clay soil? I'm gonna give it a try anyway ✌👍 Thanks again for sharing your experience
Got a few young transplants in just a few weeks ago, here in Central Texas. Think they'll produce this year or are they dormant the first year like other perennials?
I wish I could do something like this but a few years ago we decided to go low-water landscaping and chose gravel. Now we would have to move literally tons of gravel to be able to plant this kind of graden lol.
Gophers take out the artichokes throughout the year, I save seeds and plant each year, only a few out of 20+ plants survive, the rest I restart from seed. I still get more artichokes than I can eat. Do you have any gophers?
Maybe you are thinking of Jerusalem Artichoke. It is totally different from the Artichoke he is showing, and you do eat the root of the Jerusalem Artichoke.
I have no luck whatsoever growing these. I've tried for years and had no luck. The plant gets a certain size then dies. I'm doing something wrong lol. I'm trying again this year!