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The Art of Nutrient Harvesting 

Huw Richards
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In order to maximise what you can achieve from your vegetable garden, you need nutrients! This video shares the art of nutrient harvesting which is a way to help you make the most of every single element needed for growing success, as well as why I compost some of my crops rather than eating them! There is no waste in a garden, only nutrients expressed in different forms. Happy International No Dig Day by the way! Find out more about the day here: charlesdowding...
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5 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 158   
@barbsnyder1352
@barbsnyder1352 Год назад
I do "bokashi" . When it's ready I simply bury it in my beds. It's all kitchen and garden scraps. Works beautifully, my soil is wonderful.
@carolinescrivener7783
@carolinescrivener7783 Год назад
Great video! Mother nature doesn't think twice about dropping perfectly edible food/fruits on the ground to enrich next years growth, and neither should we!
@QuizRox
@QuizRox Год назад
I love the "nutrient bank" analogy. Makes so much sense.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Awh thanks Dennis!
@ThoshaMoodley
@ThoshaMoodley Год назад
Really it’s incredibly effective!
@cynthiamartinez5884
@cynthiamartinez5884 Год назад
I completely agree with composting perfectly good fruit. I came to this conclusion early this year when I was worried about having too much when a plant produced at it's peak. Then I reasoned that the worst case scenario is I compost it and have those nutrients for next year. It's not waste if you compost rather than going to the landfill.
@pedrosgarden
@pedrosgarden Год назад
Absolute great tips! Looking at gardening as a constant movement of nutrients really puts food waste in perspective. Throwing edible stuff in the compost bin or feeding it to the chickens is completely different to throwing it in a waste bin and seeing it end up either in landfills or badly managed municipal composting. The cost of transporting food waste to treatment facilities has an environmental cost as well as an economic one, don't forget. The best nutrient circularity we can have is the one where the nutrients don't leave our property. The one that doesn't leave our neighbourhood, the one that doesn't leave our municipalities, etc...
@clairemcconway6266
@clairemcconway6266 Год назад
what's also relevant is the growing process and what went into that...things brought in from outside, irrigation, etc. In Huw's case he uses rainwater and recycles nutrients in the form of compost, so there is no wasted water used in growing something that wasn't eaten if it goes into the compost pile and no poisoning of the earth with chemical fertilisers/fossil fuel powered farm machinery. The elephant in the room though is the wasteful municipal sewage process and nutrient loss and water wastage that involves.
@pedrosgarden
@pedrosgarden Год назад
@@clairemcconway6266 Well said. That's exactly right!
@anahidkassabian4471
@anahidkassabian4471 Год назад
I completely see your point about composting edible produce, and if I were gardening in another setting, I would wholly concur. But in my setting in NW England, I'm not close to making all the compost I need, so I'd rather give my 'overages' to a food bank. That seems to me the best way to feel good about the time and resources that go into my garden and the abundance it gives back in return.
@Reindeer_jay
@Reindeer_jay Год назад
I think as long as it’s not going to landfill you’re all good!
@ml.5377
@ml.5377 Год назад
I live in the Peruvian Andes, so I can grow food all year long. Once you learn how to work with the dry and rainy season and the sun, a constant garden is possible. Compost is a challenge so I am a lazy composter who relies on worms and gets nice humus. Coarse particles after sifting are used as mulch. Rice hulls and wood shavings are used to cover seeds and seedlings or as mulch. I also ferment weeds, rabbit poop, etc. for fertilizer. I do direct seed unless the birds are too much of a problem... and they can be a real nuisance. Have a 2x2m greenhouse for basil, peppers, tomatoes, hierbaluisa, etc. Having a garden is an adventure filled with constant learning and adapting.
@richardfrankland8183
@richardfrankland8183 Год назад
Just like to compliment you on not only the content but also the presentation. You have the gift of making things easy to understand and do, it's always inspiring to listen to, wherever we are in the world. This one in particular is great. Thanks so much.
@eve66able
@eve66able Год назад
Not just regular compost, but also vermi compost and BSF composting are wonderful help with all the garden needs.
@cynjader1914
@cynjader1914 Год назад
Great info, as always! I'm glad you mentioned tossing surplus harvest into the compost when other opportunities for 're-homing' are exhausted. I have felt a little guilty about that in the past, but ever since your video where you connected weeding to nutrient harvesting I'm no longer reluctant. It's all good :) So grateful I found your channel!
@mariaroost5231
@mariaroost5231 Год назад
Ciao Huw! Thank you for each and every video you make. Your channel literally changed my view of gardening and my life. I live in a very different climate but I apply many of your tips and they work just great. The videos you share about other gardeners are also extremely inspiring and stimolating! Well, I just want to THANK YOU for making my life better!🤩 Greetings from sunny Sicily!
@jack-ye6pc
@jack-ye6pc Год назад
I have no problem putting 'good' food on a compostheap. In fact I grow stuff especially for compost, like broadbeans
@tinkeringinthailand8147
@tinkeringinthailand8147 Год назад
Spot on Huw :) My home made compost is so good I almost want to eat it myself LOL.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
I understand the feeling...like earthy chocolate cake haha!
@hadassahhaman7550
@hadassahhaman7550 Год назад
😄
@GentrysGarden
@GentrysGarden Год назад
Great video. I started chopping up extra veggies from the garden and adding them to the compost. Glad for a confirmation that it's a good thing. I used to throw away tomato, potato, and squash vines. I bought come long handled shears (so I don't have to bend over). I put the vines in a tote and chop them up then add them to the compost. Great way to use garden waste.
@jackriver8385
@jackriver8385 Год назад
One of my neighbours has a salad patch right outside her garden, next to the street, using space that would otherwise not be used, and adding more green to the street. I cycle past it almost every day and it's so wonderful to see the plants grow 🥰
@BigManjr
@BigManjr Год назад
This is one of your best video's so far! Thanks so much Huw! I LOVE your holistic approach! Just brilliant🙏
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Wow thank you that means so much!!
@KatesGarden
@KatesGarden Год назад
Happy No Dig Day!
@cassieoz1702
@cassieoz1702 Год назад
I use my chickens as an intermediate step in nutrient cycling. It particularly reduces my guilt at not eating everything.
@UnitedCuisines
@UnitedCuisines Год назад
Man, watching you makes me wanna start gardening! ...yes, if only I had more time.
@that_auntceleste5848
@that_auntceleste5848 Год назад
Maybe start with just a couple plants in containers for an easy win without much time invested. ♥️ It feels great to grow even a bit of what you eat.
@UnitedCuisines
@UnitedCuisines Год назад
@@that_auntceleste5848 I tried it with two pots of tomatoes last year: they didn't make it, due to a few days of really heavy rain and them not being covered, I think. Made me sad.
@that_auntceleste5848
@that_auntceleste5848 Год назад
@@UnitedCuisines aww that can be such a bummer. Did you have holes drilled in the bottom of the pots so the water could run out? That's key. Lots of water is okay then. Maybe try herbs like oregano and thyme next year, they are easier than tomatoes!
@josiebridges3583
@josiebridges3583 Год назад
What a wonderful episode, Huw, making it simple for me, at least, since I garden as a hobby but lately to limit buying produce grown with pesticides. No more experimenting and I will be keeping it basic, an area for salad, for example. Thank you.
@chichestermaritime8174
@chichestermaritime8174 Год назад
Hi from S. Portugal. I can't compost in quite the same way as you with bins as the work in turning it is too heavy and the long droughts and high temperatures make it almost impossible to retain the necessary moisture. So I take one bed and into it go all the kitchen scraps mixed with straw, cardboard, paper towels etc and then in spring I cover the compost bin with a layer of soil that I take from another bed and into it I sow butternut squash seeds. They adore all the nutrients and the bed doesn't require as much watering as others. I then use the bed from which I robbed the soil as the next compost bed and so forth. For garden waste I chop and drop or place the old plants under a straw mulch where they fast disappear. If I have too many veggies I barter them for eggs, milk, cheese or different veggies to those I'm growing. It's a different sort of nutrient harvesting. Thanks for such interesting videos.
@bhalliwell2191
@bhalliwell2191 Год назад
Benjamin Franklin observed that time is how we measure life and if we love life we therefore ought not squander time. I observe it's *the* very most precious resource and the one we can't produce more of, so we'd better, as Franklin also stated, "...be up and doing, and doing with a purpose for industry does not wish, and those who live upon hope shall die fasting." And I believe firmly that gardeners, whether career gardeners like yourself or "hobby" gardeners like myself who are aiming for as much food autonomy as possible and the most healthily and safely grown foods as possible, are in the best of positions to comprehend this and to integrate it into their thinking and their philosophy.
@marking-time-gardens
@marking-time-gardens Год назад
And if we are in no position to grow a garden it behooves us to support those who do. Not everyone can cut hair or build houses but we all can share our gifts with one another. Bartering is a good thing too.
@keithnotley2440
@keithnotley2440 Год назад
Happy NO DIG DAY Hew..... and everyone! Always look forward to and appreciate the content of your vids. Your presentations, have evolved over time to be now, of the highest quality....... congratulations on all your success due to the outstanding effort you "produce"! All the very best Hew, from Melbourne , Australia. 😊👍😊🍀
@dannygooyer5926
@dannygooyer5926 Год назад
Also the appletree feeds itself with its own leafs and apples
@51rwyatt
@51rwyatt Год назад
Totally agree with the winter veggies point. In the summer I don't even pay much attention to the pests on them because by fall the pests are gone and the plants really get going. Except cabbage, the pests during summer can really take out the head.
@Marra7777
@Marra7777 Год назад
A great all rounder video. This video can probably save someone loads of time reading and digesting several books. A master gardener
@CormacHolland
@CormacHolland Год назад
Happy No Dig Day everyone!!
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
And to you! :)
@paulettagyurik2644
@paulettagyurik2644 Год назад
God bless 🙏🙏🙏
@PhilC74
@PhilC74 Год назад
Bank accounts and a nutrient bank! What a comparison and so perfectly right. Very good analogy that Huw. Well done and it really hammers the message home.
@Slenka
@Slenka Год назад
Huw! I found in local bookshop your latest book translated to czech language (my birth language), I´m totally blown away, congratulation!
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
So pleased you found my book! Hope you enjoy it! Thank you :)
@melindaedgington9925
@melindaedgington9925 Год назад
I run a daycare so I never have a glut of anything. Thanks for the time saving tips. It is also nice to know about the winter crops. I am still experimenting with these.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
You're very welcome! Best of luck with your growing :)
@dudeusmaximus6793
@dudeusmaximus6793 Год назад
We are doing many of the same things you cite here. We've made a big effort to organize and simplify the garden into a more efficient setup like you discussed. With that and the perpetual loop JADAM and KNF principles we picked up from your channel, we are consistently producing top notch, very nutritious food in abundance without working ourselves to death during the garden season.
@riverdalegardens544
@riverdalegardens544 Год назад
Excellent video! I like the bank account analogy! I live in upstate NY 5b and your content is actually quite applicable for my garden. Thank you 😊
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
That's awesome! A lot of tips are applicable they just need to be perhaps slightly adapted :)
@jeannamcgregor9967
@jeannamcgregor9967 Год назад
What a brilliant way to see the big picture! Thank you! I try to think that way when I put anything that would be hard for me to compost, like woody bits or thorny rose clippings or seedy weeds, into my city compost bin. I can then go to the spot where the city returns those as finished compost and load up my car for free, so nothing is wasted!
@ecocentrichomestead6783
@ecocentrichomestead6783 Год назад
There's also "carbon harvesting" where we grow plants for they type of organic matter it produces.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Absolutely love that!
@michaelcarter7027
@michaelcarter7027 Год назад
Huw, you're brilliant. And generous without constraint in your advice. It's a pleasure to watch you, and your advice is very helpful :)
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
What a lovely comment! Thanks so much :)
@margieperse9490
@margieperse9490 Год назад
Excellent advice.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Thank you!
@Randeb86
@Randeb86 Год назад
So thankful for your videos, I’m learning so much, you’re the best!❤
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
So glad you are finding them useful!
@lysmalls658
@lysmalls658 Год назад
Huw you give me the knowledge I need to garden with Confidence
@ourcozygarden
@ourcozygarden Год назад
Thank you for these very helpful tips Huw.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
You are most welcome!
@Andromeda2976
@Andromeda2976 11 месяцев назад
Thankyou so much for your valuable info, such an inspiration and all the blessings for your beautiful garden. In Amsterdam we have Seedbanks, however they are only for weeds. 🙏
Год назад
You´re back!Glad to see your garden is still goiong strong, even in November.
@deanablythe9394
@deanablythe9394 Год назад
Thank you for all your thoughts on this video, you make a lot of sense which helps me and others look at things in a different light, keep up the good work.
@dn744
@dn744 Год назад
Excellent advice 👌 👍
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Thanks!
@tamrahawkes3170
@tamrahawkes3170 Год назад
Freezdried zucchini is amazing to add to so many things.
@theclumsyprepper
@theclumsyprepper Год назад
Time is definitely an issue for me as I work 40-50 hours a week (on top of my other obligations). It's difficult to find time for all the garden work, harvesting and preserving food.
@tammybyrd1054
@tammybyrd1054 Год назад
Great video! Thank you! I agree on composting what is not used in the garden. It's not waste. This is evident in nature. Not everything is used and it falls to the ground and becomes nutrients again! I grow somethings I don't even care for so others may have but it there is more than anyone wants it goes into the compost. It's not wasted at all! It's money in the bank like you said! I can save seed (trying to get better at that!) so free, my soil is enriched without buying things so free, I am feeing myself from my garden so free! All involved is time and some work and that's my therapy and exercise to no need for a gym and a psychiatrist so free!! lol What more could you ask for?! And if you can harvest rain water also, all the better and free!!!!! It's a win win all the way around! The garden is beautiful! I will start to focus on seed saving and more Winter veggies next year too! Love the potatoes in a bag idea! Thank you!
@MrSteen12
@MrSteen12 Год назад
I really like this video, mainly because of the many idéas about saving time. I can see, why the metal containers are good, but the old ones made out of wood are so much nicer, better looking, prityer.... :-). Steen, DK.
@peace4peaceful
@peace4peaceful Год назад
I put straw on top of my compost. If not the compost gets dried out..in Oz. Should I compost on top of the straw mulch or move it aside when adding compost during bed prep There's no break for me. It's 12 months a year flat out veg. 👍
@cherylhowker1792
@cherylhowker1792 Год назад
happy no dig day .... I actually understand most of what you said today,and it made sense to me.which I agree alot of stuff people say I don't always get or I get part of it wrong. But I thing I fully understand this and I'm gonna save it to watch again so I can do more of what you say. To make my garden better and more food for my family,not at my house but we grow here as others gardens are not the size or face south like mine does so my garden is the best for growing veg and fruit. Its only new to us in this last year really. So hopefully we will learn more and get better as we do. Thanks Huw
@irishcottagerenovation9900
@irishcottagerenovation9900 Год назад
Great video, I love the bank account comparisons, that has been lodged in my mind now. Totally agree with your composting surplus food how right you are. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Awh great I really appreciate that thank you!!:)
@GARDENER42
@GARDENER42 10 месяцев назад
I remove roughly 400kg of produce from my beds every year, say 800kg with the unwanted parts (which go into my compost bays).. From elsewhere, I add 200kg of shredded cardboard, 200kg seaweed 1,000kg of lawn clippings, 200kg of shredded hedge clippings/wood chips, 200kg of assorted weeds/spent bedding/stuff other people don't want. That adds up to about 2.2m³ of finished compost plus the wood chip I put on the paths, spread over 125m³ I seem to add far more than I take out but what I get is absolutely better tasting than commercial produce from supermarkets.
@winterkonig4684
@winterkonig4684 Год назад
Your garden is beautiful, Huw, i envy you and your tips are excellent. The new garden year could start tomorrow with the sowing. I can barely wait for it. All my vegetable plots in my little garden are planted with winter vegetables. I look forward to it every day, when I see how it is still growing. Best regards and all the best from Austria, Vienna.🌷
@hbrws813
@hbrws813 Год назад
Another excellent, informative, professional video for us. Thank you, Huw!
@David-xh9cw
@David-xh9cw Год назад
Seems so simple but I love the idea of the mixed salad bed, I struggle to sow enough successions of salads in modules, it gets very faffy! I could probably just keep direct sowing throughout the season and would always have abundance even once the slugs get their share. Will be doing this next spring.
@annettemartensson4523
@annettemartensson4523 Год назад
Thanks Huw, so pedagogy let’s hope more people follow this good way of living👩‍🌾
@littlemogocreek
@littlemogocreek Год назад
What a great video, packed full of tips. I've been feeling overwhelmed while just in the planning stages of my future vegi' garden. There is some much information out there of what to grow, when to grow and how to grow that it can just seem to hard at times. Knowing there is a more refined approach is very refreshing. Thank you Huw. Cheers. Duncan.
@IVMRGREENXX
@IVMRGREENXX Год назад
always a pleasure to watch Huw thank you
@ArtichokeHunter
@ArtichokeHunter Год назад
maybe it'll hold me back in gardening but i think i can get enough nutrients for compost without wasting good food. it's an interesting mindset but i don't think i can get there as long as hunger and nutrition continue to be problems in our communities. of course it would also be easier to feel ok composting good food if i were growing a ton of it.
@potagermalo
@potagermalo Год назад
Superbe vidéo bravo 👍 👍 👍 👍
@joaniestraw5075
@joaniestraw5075 Год назад
Such a beautiful video - a visual feast for each of your viewers. I just love the way you break down and share important points in such a clear, concise way.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Very glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching :)
@rowanwhite3520
@rowanwhite3520 Год назад
Another awesome video! Thank You!
@de.moslimagids
@de.moslimagids Год назад
Thanks again for such a a lovely video! Tips I really needed
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
You're so welcome! :)
@cepamoa1749
@cepamoa1749 Год назад
hi thanks for a new video but FYI the volume is particulary low on it. I must raise to the max to hear you.
@rickthelian2215
@rickthelian2215 Год назад
Happy No Dig Day😊
@steve20664
@steve20664 Год назад
Oh no I've been digging the dancing queen all day .....
@drcbeartooths
@drcbeartooths Год назад
Another terrific story of flowing with and for the most important aspects. Thanks. And Huw: did you really slip in "winter crops are CHILL?" LOL! from southern USA.
@emilybh6255
@emilybh6255 Год назад
So iis it just sweet potatoes that need to b e cured after they are harvested to get them to develop the ideal flavor? You wouldn't be able to leave sweet potatoes in the soil like that and take them when you need them would you?
@pretty-lil-cowboy
@pretty-lil-cowboy 6 месяцев назад
Great tips!
@heatherpfeil2939
@heatherpfeil2939 Год назад
Give edible food to a local soup kitchen or leave on a table at the curb with a free sign, this allows others to enjoy garden fresh eating who may not be able to grow (or who’s harvest didn’t turn out like mine 😂).
@derek-press
@derek-press Год назад
I am actually 50/50 on huw's views about composting edible food ,it's a bit of a "oh no don't do that "thing,.. where we live (we are only 5 houses on a small lane) we give share and take garden produce from each other and there is ALWAYS a way to preserve most vegetables my wife just last weekend made about 20 jars of red cabbage and apple,cooked and preserved,they will be passed around the family and friends, great for Christmas dinner
@theclumsyprepper
@theclumsyprepper Год назад
@@derek-press I agree Derek, there are many ways to preserve food rather than chucking it in the compost.
@ninemoonplanet
@ninemoonplanet Год назад
Weather this year (no temp above 10°C until late June) meant I ended up having to completely change what I could grow. Unfortunately peppers still haven't produced fruits. Drought throughout August, into September, meant those types of plants just struggled. They ended up becoming compost. Planning for next year is creating havoc with seed purchases. Are we going to see a warm spring or another one where it remained so cold that even starting or direct sowing wasted much? The compost bin got well supplied, I didn't.
@EljNorton
@EljNorton Год назад
A fantastic and informative video, Huw. The slow motion segments were entertaining as well, haha. All the best to you. I have been enjoying your work for years. Cheers from New York.
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Thanks so much! So glad you enjoy my videos :)
@Su-du7pm
@Su-du7pm Год назад
Hello Huw. Some videos ago, you shared the use of wood from sheep in your garden, specifically in your compost or around some plants to prevent freezing. My question: how long does it take to compost the wood? Now I have 9 sheep and 9 lambs. Thank you very much.
@Ihsn422
@Ihsn422 Год назад
MashaaAllaah.. love it
@thinker646
@thinker646 Год назад
You might find curious and maybe even helpful and interesting, the overall premise in The Humanure Handbook by Joseph Jenkins.
@sarith2658
@sarith2658 Год назад
Your videos are inspiring 💚 Thanks a lot
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Thank you! :)
@trish3580
@trish3580 Год назад
Thank you for this video - putting the 5 steps of gardening abundance all together in one place! I would love to keep the winter harvest in the ground but...we have rats (forest rats) in BC so although the weather allows us to keep things in the ground year round, I've carrots, beets, potatoes, etc...and once they find a source they totally clear it out in a night :) Maybe in the future you will have a video on how to devise covers that are impenetrable to them. Also the beds etc you sell on your website are amazing...will you have a distributor in Canada any time soon? thanks so much
@melindaedgington9925
@melindaedgington9925 Год назад
Rats oh my! I hope they don't find my garden.
@daviddeininger2938
@daviddeininger2938 Год назад
You need some cats to keep the rats in check. Lorraine
@jcdmobil352
@jcdmobil352 Год назад
Just a quick question to other viewers: Even when I turn my phone or tablet on full volume, the audio on Huws videos is extremely soft compared to all other videos on RU-vid which I never watch with fully turned up volume. Has anybody else noticed that? I sometimes even need to wear headphones to understand what Huw is saying. 🤷‍♀️
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
I'll look into this for you! Thanks for letting me know🌱
@heatherpfeil2939
@heatherpfeil2939 Год назад
Yes, I have the same problem. I turn the volume all the way up and turn on subtitles.
@dannythomas5403
@dannythomas5403 Год назад
No problem with volume here
@theclumsyprepper
@theclumsyprepper Год назад
Same here. I find it hard to hear Huw as well.
@SpatchG
@SpatchG Год назад
The audio sounded fine to me
@ermidacabrera8796
@ermidacabrera8796 4 месяца назад
Hi, not sure if it’s been asked already. When u said keeping the potatoes in the container in the wintertime, do u leave the container outside? We have a pretty cold winter with snow. Just want to clarify. Thanks. Great video
@belly3778
@belly3778 Год назад
Do you now recommend direct sowing? I thought you used mainly modules to plant out stronger plants, I have followed your advice on this. It makes sense what you say about direct sowing but in my experience everything gets eaten 😳. What’s best please?
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
I never didn't recommend it, there is a time and a place for both:)
@hollydimig3998
@hollydimig3998 10 месяцев назад
You mention that you can cut crops at the base and leave the roots to decompose. I didn’t know this. Question: is it ok to put roots of plants in your compost bins too?
@brandelladoyle
@brandelladoyle Год назад
How do you process seaweed before introducing its nutrients into your garden? I'd love to take advantage of this resource, but have concerns about the potential impact of sea salts...
@veena4245
@veena4245 Год назад
What zone is your garden in? We are in Boston, USA, zone 6b. Thank you for the super informative videos.
@666bruv
@666bruv Год назад
Forget wandering down the chemistry pathway, it's the liquid carbon pathway and the microbiology mutualistic relationship
@pmd7914
@pmd7914 Год назад
Regarding cutting off at ground level and letting the roots rot in the ground. Are there any veges to avoid doing this with? I've noticed broad beans tend to regrow if cut low. Thanks
@landaliveourlittletinyhome7958
Thank you ! We live in the US in zone 5. Our ground freezes solid. Would it be feasible to leave leeks and parsnips in all winter and harvest as we need them? Might be tricky to get them out of frozen soil. Does your ground freeze during the winter in Wales?
@marking-time-gardens
@marking-time-gardens Год назад
North of us some gardeners wait until early freeze up and then they put a heavy cover of leaves or straw over the beds and a tarp over that. From what I have seen it worked pretty well for them. Here I am blessed to be able to do just a light cover over mine. Plus my family eats through everything very quickly LOL!
@Robbo0090
@Robbo0090 Год назад
@15:30 would it be a good idea to let any fruit or veg or salad that you cant consume go to seed then harvest the seeds then compost the material for optimal nutrient recycling and genetic familiarity with the garden and local climate conditions?
@georgespiropoulos4892
@georgespiropoulos4892 Год назад
Hi Huw I have a question regarding your compost bins, what material are they? Treated Pine? Over here in Australia they say arsenic levels in treated pine leach out into the soil and affect crop, your thoughts on this? Cheers, new subscriber btw😊
@zat6442
@zat6442 Год назад
Extra veg can be shared with neighbours or food banks ?
@janegoodwin1823
@janegoodwin1823 Год назад
Doesn't the salt in seaweed create a problem for use in your garden?
@naimac2744
@naimac2744 Год назад
Could send surplus food to a food bank?
@paulinemorris5186
@paulinemorris5186 Год назад
What are your thoughts on supersoil?
@derek-press
@derek-press Год назад
hi, what are your views about brewed coffee and paper coffee filters? I have been putting them on the compost for years after being told by my neighbour and never thought about it, but then at some point I looked/ search it on the Internet if it was actually good or not and some say it's good somebody else say no-,,just wondered what your views are
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Hi Derek - my views are the are a great compost bulking ingredient! :P
@derek-press
@derek-press Год назад
@@HuwRichards cheers and thanks ,love the channel!
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
@@derek-press thank you I'm very happy to hear that!!:)
@skittlesskittles7577
@skittlesskittles7577 Год назад
👍🏻👍🏻
@Marie-yx5ie
@Marie-yx5ie Год назад
Hi Hugh, do you grow mini Watermelons? In Wales? I live in Dublin Eire, could I grow mini Watermelons? 👍😉🇮🇪☘️
@justinharpold2892
@justinharpold2892 Год назад
All my extras we can't eat or give away mostly go to our chickens and them back to the garden
@haseebdailyvlogs2207
@haseebdailyvlogs2207 Год назад
Good joop Like 👍
@gilbertceballos6734
@gilbertceballos6734 10 месяцев назад
can I compost my hot peppers
@dannygooyer5926
@dannygooyer5926 Год назад
Why do you remove the leafs and dont you let them laying there as mulch? 2:18
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
I've got a cover crop sown underneath thar the leaves will block from growing as well:)
@atlaskeeting5408
@atlaskeeting5408 Год назад
What are your thoughts on permaculture?
@HuwRichards
@HuwRichards Год назад
Incredible yet often misunderstood or overhippiefied
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