Cottage Garden Flowers, Permaculture Veggies

A busy weekend in the garden! Come hang out with me in my veggie garden while I share a bit of the method to my madness and prep the beds (currently full of cottage garden flowers) for tomatoes and peppers.
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Пікірлер: 27

  • @nicholasryan5401
    @nicholasryan5401Ай бұрын

    Beautiful looking garden, Its the bees knees.

  • @traryvery8851
    @traryvery8851Ай бұрын

    Beautiful Angela. The poppies are gorgeous. Raining today where I live which is bringing me joy because I live in a dry climate.

  • @bwhitedpencilbox889
    @bwhitedpencilbox889Ай бұрын

    I recently found your channel and really appreciate it. I you weave the conceptual education into explaining your daily tasks in a way that brings it all down to earth and makes it interesting and understandable. Thank you!

  • @ParkrosePermaculture

    @ParkrosePermaculture

    Ай бұрын

    🥰🥰🥰

  • @traryvery8851

    @traryvery8851

    Ай бұрын

    Well said 🥰

  • @chienchien
    @chienchienАй бұрын

    Ahhhhhh thank you for finally helping me ID nipplewort. It's all over my garden and I've only been able to get to "aster family" on my own and it's been deiving me nuts.

  • @MonoiLuv
    @MonoiLuvАй бұрын

    Just tucked some pepper plants beside my ornamentals on my curbside garden to enjoy the heat. Can't let a "hellstrip" go to waste

  • @elysenapoli6395
    @elysenapoli6395Ай бұрын

    I'm in year 3 of my permaculture garden and I'm so pleased with the once sparse annual and perennial flowers I started in my garden the first two years. It's really filling in this year. I like that you give us permission to pull a few of them out to plant our vegetables. I wondered how my garden will look in the coming years with even more spread of the self seeded flowers. That's a good point to leave some to go to seed for the cycle to continue. I'm not at that point this year, but I can see it happening next year.

  • @laraharding849
    @laraharding849Ай бұрын

    I'm so glad to hear you do this... I've been doing something similar and feeling a bit guilty about it. I will now go gaily forward and lean into this practice😂

  • @undefinednull5749
    @undefinednull5749Ай бұрын

    As for your Tripod problem, I suggest you to look into Octopus type tripod instead (because it has four? bendy legs but they can wrap around anything tightly). You can attach it even to a stick and stick the stick into the ground wherever.

  • @michelebuisson6317
    @michelebuisson6317Ай бұрын

    Thanks for reminding me that I wanted to get Love in a Mist! …and yuck on the smoke, I wondered who was burning :(

  • @itme7685
    @itme7685Ай бұрын

    I’m trying a self seeding flower called Meadowfoam, or also known as Limnanthes or Poached Egg Plant. I heard about how nice it was and then found out it’s also native to Oregon. If my grass lawn can be replaced by wildflowers, I’d be pretty happy. California poppies I’ve seen naturalized in my area slightly west of Salem. Maybe add a little clover or plantain or something similar that is perennial and short growing so I don’t have to completely rely on annual self seeders for my lawn.

  • @jessicabowers4811
    @jessicabowers4811Ай бұрын

    I didn’t know Portland could be a zone 9!! That’s fascinating.

  • @growinginportland
    @growinginportlandАй бұрын

    I have a birdies beds for my vegetables. I like having my vegetables grow in a certain contained area. Wish I could grow flowers like you. I planted so many flower seeds all over my property this spring none of them grew out. But I’ll keep trying. Thanks for sharing all my best.

  • @RaquelitaPajarita
    @RaquelitaPajaritaАй бұрын

    My newly growing front yard food forest was gifted with a massive amount of native yarrow. it grows everywhere, loosens the soil and is great chop and drop fodder, plus bees LOVE it and it can also be medicinal. I just added this year Douglas Meadowfoam, Meadow Checkermallow, Calendula and Borage. Now I am excited to add those poppies (so beautiful!) and Love-In-A-Mist. Between all of these in a south facing bed I am trying tomatoes and peppers for the first time. I hadn't thought about squash on the ground. I'll do that too! Headed to Tony's next week when it cools down a bit. Thank you so much for sharing your experience.

  • @hopeofdawn
    @hopeofdawnАй бұрын

    Due to the rainy cold spring we had the arugula and lettuce came up gangbusters in my garden plot, along with the cover radish and lacey phacelia I'd planted - since it was too cold to plant tomatoes (and the beans I tried to plant just rotted and died), I just let them go. And now my garden looks a lot like yours - I've just chopped out enough of the other green stuff to make room for the tomatoes and make sure they're not getting shaded out. It'll be interesting to see how well they do - in the meantime I'm growing a bumper crop of bees!

  • @kalirussell5982
    @kalirussell5982Ай бұрын

    I love this idea so much! I'm definitely going to implement it next year. I always let the weeds grow until planting time anyway, so i might as well let it be pretty!

  • @publicdomain1103
    @publicdomain1103Ай бұрын

    Great info gal.

  • @kitchenGardenofficalchannel027
    @kitchenGardenofficalchannel027Ай бұрын

    Wow beautifull sharing❤❤❤👭

  • @undefinednull5749
    @undefinednull5749Ай бұрын

    Here/in Europe no one really eats the flowers of radishes either. Also not sure why. I guess people are just impatient and compare the root size to the amount of flowers. But can't you eat the root after it produces flowers?

  • @joanneoverstreet72
    @joanneoverstreet72Ай бұрын

    😊💚🌱🌻🐝

  • @novampires223
    @novampires223Ай бұрын

    Beautiful.. thank you

  • @pricklyplants
    @pricklyplantsАй бұрын

    Nigella damascena seeds can also be used as a spice very similar to the usual crop species N. sativa btw. My veg patch also has a bunch of these, haha.

  • @ParkrosePermaculture

    @ParkrosePermaculture

    Ай бұрын

    I have always been told that due to the fact that they contain Damascenine, which is neurotoxic, there isn't a safe quantity to consume.

  • @jamaica5930

    @jamaica5930

    Ай бұрын

    I love all of your gardening/ permaculture videos- but this one was especially good. Thank you

  • @undefinednull5749
    @undefinednull5749Ай бұрын

    Hey Angela, So when you say that you don't want the Motherwart herb there but in that chosen spot, then why don't you replant it accordingly (instead of just destroying the growth) ?

  • @ParkrosePermaculture

    @ParkrosePermaculture

    Ай бұрын

    Because I already have enough elsewhere. It's not destroying anything. It's repurposing it as mulch. Also Motherwort doesn't transplant well. It's best to start from seed.