What do you think of think about this method of growing garlic? Don't forget to press the button "Subscribe ❤" and "Like 👍" !! Help me Share this video with your friends. Have a nice to @all ❤❤❤
Жалко, что всего семь плошек, так интересно было смотреть как сначала каждую плошечку по семь раз покрутил, потом каждый кирпичик из трёх десятков, а потом каждый зубчик продемонстрировал ... Ну оооооочень интересно . А по сути "коту делать нечего-он яйца лижет"
You can cut few bigger leaves and put them in soup or any curries like cilantro too. Leaves can be used to garnish chicken curry, noodles soup or anything. Leaves smells so good and make the dish delicious.
Thank you for sharing this video! Can you please answer a few questions so that I can try this at home: 1) The soil you used, did it have any specific nutrients? 2) Why use the bricks with holes in them? 3) How frequently did you replace the straw? 4) Did I see weeds in the area when you were harvesting the grown garlic plant? Do the need to be uprooted? 5) Did you use any fertilizer (organic or otherwise) after planting the pods in the soil?
No sé porque y de dónde sacan malas hierbas, la naturaleza producen hierbas. .hasta son medicinales y algunos les llaman ..malas hierbas..!!! Viene de las "Ingeniería" las llamadas malas hierbas ..
1, soil mixed with coir and cow dung 2, I used bricks to surround the garlic planting site 3, I change the water every 3 days 4, you should pull weeds for garlic 5, if necessary, you should add NPK fertilizer to make the garlic grow bigger
Wonderful video.... good crop of garlic too. And yes snip those greens waste not want not. It is all edible. Love this simple method... going to use it. Thank you so much. Simplicity is always a winner. But will build a deeper bed for the soil and growth.
I love all you videos, but i wish you can make a bit faster, no need to show us how to cut all of these containers, you can show one and the rest faster paste. Keep up those beautiful videos and thank you for sharing your knowledge
That’s what the fast forward button on RU-vid is for. Why don’t you stop ragging on people that are putting up great content and figure out how to use the platform yourself to go at the speed that you wish.
@@Jannie227 Because nobody needs to watch something half a dozen times in a row, maybe that's why? Why are you ragging on people leaving polite comments instead of learning how to use the platform to stfu?
Bad instructions though, no need to hack up the garlic at all, don't plant in water, put one clove, not the whole head, into the DIRT so the top is two inches underground. Water, start in the fall and harvest 7-8 months later. Notice they separated the cloves later anyway? Just separate them to start with instead if traumatizing the plant by cutting the roots and top, planting in water, separating, planting in dirt, and yanking up after 4 months too early
@@recoveringsoul755 Thanks for sharing a different or more appropriate method. It's great to know various methods then be able to decide which is a better option to use.
We plant in the fall but you can never grow too much garlic. Good to know it’s not too late to plant more! FYI- straw is critical to keep moisture in and weeds out. Chopped straw works best for our garden, especially against weeds. Question- will this work for hard neck garlic as well? We love getting two harvests, scapes and bulbs.
No need. Planting garlic this way is a waste of time and unsustainable resources (styrofoam). No need to cut clove tops or bottoms. Just plant them directly in the soil. Hardneck or softneck.
Now I know what I did wrong when I first tried this. I watched a video that didn't show cutting the little bottoms off the each clove and I only cut the top off. It never grew any roots. I thought maybe I had some garlic with anti-sprouting chemicals on it since it did nothing. I usually just plant the cloves of garlic directly in the soil and it grows just fine. November planting to harvest in early summer. I accidentally pulled one the other day in April and it had a small but perfect head. Only another couple of months to go. I will try this method again for fun.
If your goal is to have fresh garlic greens this is ok. Should have placed one clove per cup. That way it could grow normally and quadruple its size and still get some green leaves for cooking. I’ve grown Garlic successfully for 30 years and gotten my Hardneck Garlic to grow just as big as the Softneck Variety.
They don’t like to be crowded. Meaning weed free. Plant them 4-6” apart. They like well aged manure. I live in a northern climate where I plant my Cloves in August and harvest at the end of June. And make sure to cut the Flower stalks. I throw the flowers in my soups and stews to give a mild Garlic flavor. If you don’t cut the flowers the Cloves will stay small, you want them too expand and fill out.
They don’t like to be crowded. Meaning weed free. Plant them 4-6” apart. They like well aged manure. I live in a northern climate where I plant my Cloves in August and harvest at the end of June. And make sure to cut the Flower stalks. I throw the flowers in my soups and stews to give a mild Garlic flavor. If you don’t cut the flowers the Cloves will stay small, you want them too expand and fill out.
Thanks so much for sharing your garlic growing method. Sp very helpful. I will try to star growing my own today. My family does it a lot of garlic. God bless.
Метод интересный. Мне уже более 80 Ле. На даче не работаю. На зелень от чеснока выращиваю в ведре. Когда пышно, срезаю и молю. Попробую этот метод . Спасибо!!
Thank you for sharing your easy doable know-hows in growing our own basic vegetable in our little backyards in recyclable containers! God bless you! 🎉👏🏻🇵🇭😛🙏
Interesting idea, however I have plenty of success just planting the cloves in the soil and keeping them moist. I live in garlic country in CA and I just do it the way all the farmers do and it works! Still this may give some a jump start and maybe you get to harvest sooner. My harvest is alwaysf 7-8 months later. Plant in November, fertilize on St. Patrick's day, harvest in late June early July.
Since you live in a perfect place to grow just about anything, I use to live in Cali. Anyway, now I live in Washington State and November is wet and ground freezes often. We just had what I hope be the last freeze a couple of weeks ago and is March. What do you recomend to do if grown cold in November? Any help/suggestions will help. Thank you
@@margaritaherrera3669 I have a friend in central Oregon who planted over 4000 elephant garlic bulbs in late October. She mulched the field with leaves (they have a lot of trees) and the garlic sprouted just fine and weathered the freezes thus far. Garlic is frost hardy but the mulching really helps she tells me. I think the key for her was planting in October. The variety of garlic is a factor too and I only have experience with the california early strain of garlic which is a soft necked variety that we harvest in late June. Good luck.
@@margaritaherrera3669 Garlic actually grows BETTER in cold climates. It is planted in October and overwinters in the ground, being harvested the following summer.
Buen día para todos 😊❤️ gracias DIY crearlo que todos lo deberíamos hacer en este tiempo difícil mil Gracias por enseñar este vidio tan hermoso te saludo desde Cali valle Colombia 🇨🇴👍❤️
the instrumental music at the beginning was really beautiful!Garlic is the first thing I learned to grow, many decades ago! It's fast and easy, and a great payoff ☺️
If you think *THIS METHOD* is better than simply planting bulbs in your fall garden? I can only guess what you've been smoking that makes you such a HAPPY GARDENER! This way is NOT better. (but it is fun for kids I guess)
@@oregonpatriot1570 *Tastes and colors are not debatable, and unfortunately we can't please everyone even if we did to all, that's why we killed JESUS CHRIST, he's too good, so why so much hate towards this video from you? Why is your vocabulary offensive? If this is a way for you to be interesting or get attention NEGATIVELY, please change and remove this comment you posted which also has a negative impact on the statistics of this beautiful video, thank you*
@@happygarden_ Holly cow! _Someone needs to spend some serious time on a _*_SHRINK'S COUCH!_* You've got some issues, and I suspect it's a mixture of liberalism and not enough red meat! *SEEK HELP*
@Oregon Patriot You are not going to force everyone to love and hate what you want, reread your comments, and also reread those of other viewers, there is only for you who are negative on this beautiful content, make an introspection of yourself, take a few minutes and ask yourself: why am I like that? Unpleasant with others, envious, jealous of the content of others...
Great step by step nice show, it takes 4 months till harvesting time, rel ated on my experienced back home, maybe this will be my project when I go back to my homeland
I grow my onions and my garlic by simply breaking the garlic cloves apart and plant them directly into the ground and I get nice large delicious garlic bulbs and keep one to start the process again later in the year. where I live I can get three or four crops in a year.
Nice video. I don't know that I would have cut the tops like you did because they will grow without cutting them. Even in very cold climates, you can plant unsprouted garlic and it will grow in the following spring. This is a great idea if you have garlic you want to plant in the spring and have ready that same season, but the bulbs will be smaller overall.
Merci, je ne pensais pas qu'il fallait autant de mois pour pouvoir faire la récolte 👍👍 Je vais essayer avec 2 seulement dans mon petit appartement 😊 Merci 🙏🙏🙏
remplis une vieille marmitte de terre/terreau et plantes y l'ail. Le Styren est cancérigène, c'est abérrant de proposer de jardiner avec du polystyren... Pourquoi pas cultiver dans un réacteur nucléaire et manger directement du pcb et des perturbateurs hormonaux...
@@lindashankle9645 this year I got 130 plants…same with 🫑 peppers 🥒 cucumbers and 🌶 chillies. Each slice in small pot of compost. When plants are about one inch repot in larger ones and the then the final pot. Great success and satisfaction. 👍
@@rogerjob2780 wow, thanks! That makes since because seeds in my compost bins sometimes start sprouting. I actually made a screen shot of your response so that I can make sure I have the instructions on hand for future reference, and I'm printing it for my binder. Thank you so much.
@@lindashankle9645 this year I had great success with my extremely hot 🥵 chillies 🌶 and plum tomatoes 🍅 might concentrate on those next year. I don’t seem to be able to send a photo on utube. Can on Facebook
4:50 Wait, you showed us how to cut a hole in the 6 lids, how to place the lids on each of the bowls, how to trim each of the 6 bulbs, how to set each bulb inside each of the lids, how to fill the 6 bowls, but you only showed tipping the water out for 4 of the bowls. How do you tip the water out of the other 2?
put cloves in the soil such simpl and easy thing, just the cloves need to be deeper like 5cm if the garlic grow to shallow, the harvest will be very poor...
Did you notice that the roots are only coming out of the base of the cloves that were not cut away? The base of each clove is the root stock and should be left intact. No need to cut off the tops either as they produce the shoots that become the stem and leaves. Go individual uninjured cloves (however you want to grow them) and they will make their own bulbs that will contain from 2 to 12 cloves in the shortest time possible.
Perhaps you can help me please... I don't understand the purpose. Ultimately he planted each clove individually, but it didn't give more garlic, he just pulled the same clove if garlic out of the ground 7 months later. Correct??
@@krisski6453 Each clove is an individual plant (seed) capable of forming 4 to 8 leaves. The peduncle (base) of the leaf becomes a clove, in and of itself, over the course of the growing season. The bulb is comprised of (usually) 4 to 8 cloves although modern industrial agriculture can use chemicals and modified strains of garlic to produce bulbs with more cloves. If you reduce the root tip of the clove, it will produce fewer leaves and cloves, as he did. Not the best way to grow garlic IMO.
I was thinking about the same. After many months, the single-clove garlic grew into a small bulb with a few cloves... too much effort but too little result. I wonder if it is becuz the soil did not have nutrients for the garlic to grow.
@@pingdanshifu Garlic is full of nutrients because it impoverishes the soil. Thus, fertilize heavily (compost, manure etc) plant in new soil every year and in a sunny location. Water regularly but sparsely. Nothing better than fresh, local garlic. :)
А сажала в том году под зиму, у меня в этом году выкопала чеснок на ура тьфу-тьфу. Дома сажать не буду место просто нет, а чеснок уже посадила на улицу под зиму. Спасибо за информацию.
There is categoric Green garlic, no onions, If you do not know how green garlic look you should not comment, The video is perfect how garlic grows,,sorry you should apologize for your comment
Nice system for growing garlic. I did not understand the very beginning of the operation.. you cut the base off the garlic plant in the beginning... is that correct ?
I have never seen this done with garlic before, it goes against everything I know about gardening because you are cutting away the growing tips and damaging the cloves basal plate, yet the method works!...Steve...😃
@Green Side Up. With some plants it works very well to stress them. Plants want to live into the future. Their way to do that is to produce seeds. She stressed the garlic cloves, and they went into OverDrive to produce their children for the future. Sometime read the book The Secret Life of Trees. It is an eye opener.
@@libbyworkman1666 @Libby Workman I've heard about that. I cut my okra plants because I was tired of reaching to the high tops for the harvest. After wacking the plants down to half the size, the plants struggled to stay alive and produced multiple branches and produced more okra. My sister explained the theory of a plant struggling to live after damaging it. I was about to dig them up and realized that I had a gold mine of okra. Thanks for you input, and I'm going to read the book "The Secret Life of Trees."
Great video. I missed to plant garlic this season and now is cold already, freezing temperatures. This will be an option for early spring and have some garlic. Thank you!
Hello! I enjoy the video. I do have a question, where did you get the original garlic bulbs? Can I use grocery store garlic bulbs? Also after harvesting the garlic, do you let them dry out for a few days or can they be used right away? Thank you for responding to my questions. Keep up the good work. 😊
Thank you all for answering my questions! Much appreciated. I think I will check at the nursery and see what they have. Might be my best bet! Once again thanks! Have a wonderful day/night. ☺️
Unlikely that grocery store garlic will give you a harvest unless you buy organic. Even then, you're not getting the best garlic you could get for home growing, but it will work. Conventionally grown garlic is irradiated to keep it from sprouting. Every now and then, Mother Nature wins, but give yourself better odds. Organic, it will give you *some* harvest, and if you save the largest bulbs for next fall, you should gradually get bigger bulbs. It takes 8-9 months to get mature garlic, not 4 months, as this video implies.