If I Had To Choose One Method
I am often asked the question If I could only use one of the 7 vegetable growing methods I am trialing, which one would I choose?
Help me develop these gardens and make more videos through regular contributions / redgardens
Or use www.paypal.me/redgardens as a simple, once-off way to support this project and the time and energy that goes into making videos. Thanks so much!
Part of the Cloughjordan Ecovillage, Tipperary, Ireland www.thevillage.ie
Пікірлер: 278
This is the most scientific channel on KZread on vegetable growing. I follow it with great interest. Thank you for that !
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
@maxandersen6532
4 жыл бұрын
@@REDGardens Do you think that it would be better to grow in a garden with a perimeter where one side is equal to other, or to have one long row of equal square footage in terms of pests?
@Casiusss3
4 жыл бұрын
This and Charles Dowding
@GarrettBodley
4 жыл бұрын
@@REDGardens Do you have any resources on rehabilitating urban soil? Say in nyc? What kind of testing would you need, and is it accessible by mail?
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Max Andersen I don’t really know, but I think it depends a lot more on what is surrounding the garden, and how it is managed.
Honestly this is my favorite "small" KZread channel. I truly appreciate the thoughtfulness that is apparent in everything you do Bruce. Your clear methodical approach combined with your obvious care for the land, the plants, and society makes your videos a true gem.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for that!
The most heartfelt takeaway from this was to have a garden where you enjoy spending time. While growing productively is one important goal, for most of us, gardening makes life more rewarding.
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
🙂
Yet another wonderfully detailed and great video. Can't thank you enough for sharing your intricate and thoughtful experience.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you appreciate my efforts.
I love how you’re not rigid in your orthodoxy and you explore what works for you based on the climate and land you have to work with.
I love your videos. I watch a handful of gardening KZreadrs. You, huw Richards and Charles Dowding are three of them. I take different things from each of you. I appreciate your content.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks, that is a good crew to be grouped in with!
Great video like always! With the no-dig method, i found it to be really important to compress the compost after spreading it by walking over the bed. It works like a sheet of compost mulch that way and doesn't dry out as fast, blow away in the wind or wash off by rain. It basically stays together and binds with the soil underneath. If you do it right the compost mulch will last the entire season and longer. You will also have to add significantly less compost every year. The first "investment" is crucial. Greetings from Slovenia!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
That is interesting. Will have to give it a try.
@lynnmacro3044
2 жыл бұрын
I agree, after the first year only an inch - 2/3 centimetres are necessary once a year. Charles Downing.
@monicacruz4407
Жыл бұрын
Yes, initially no-dig needs a lot of compost, but that really drops off. Tamping down is essential. Dowding* if anyone is searching
if only we all had a neighbor like you, the world would be a wonderful place.
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
😀
I've been waiting for you to come to that conclusion, no one approach makes sense for everything, a mixed approach works best and that's what we do. As you say picking one is a false choice, you can pick for example "no dig" and still get benefit from digging stones out of your carrot bed, you can grow 90% of the plot in straight lines of mono-culture crops and still interplant where it makes sense, you can grow 75% annual plants but still have 25% of perennials around the borders etc : All the best - Steve
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
We'll said. Thanks.
I feel quite lucky to have found not only a gardener with a similar mindset to me, but one with advice directly relevant to my climate. Thanks for all you do :)
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you found my channel!
I love all the deep thinking and analysis you put into your gardens and videos.
always interesting to go back and watch some of the older videos!
@REDGardens
9 ай бұрын
That would be interesting, and a bit weird for me!
This channel is so high quality, its unbelievable.
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Thank you, Bruce! This is a great summary of what you've been exploring for these past few years. Your videos are a great contribution to the movement, particularly this one. I'm looking forward to more.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
I am very impressed with the quality of crops you grow, they look soooo lush and well kept! You sure are doing a great job, both in the garden and in your videos
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much!
"If I had to choose one method" .... I would do all ;-) I so agree with your nuanced answer. Having followed your videos for a while, nothing came as a surprise and I really follow your reasoning. It's so good to hear you explain the nuances, rather than say "X is the best" without taking context into account, just for the fun of getting 1M youtube views. Thank you for taking the time, time and again, to meticulously measure, show and explain all these nuances. Great job!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Haha, yep, I would do it all! Thanks!
You're my new favourite channel. Can't believe it took this long to find your stuff. Great videos.
Bruce, I appreciate the sincere comments about your concern for all of humanity's well being, and also sustainability at the local level. Your content is well thought out and very useful in my own small efforts to encourage food sovereignty in the rural community where I live. Thank you.
perhaps the best gardening channel on the tube?
@REDGardens
2 ай бұрын
Woah, thanks!
So concise, you don't babble that's what I love about this channel you get to the point very quickly
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks, I figure I don't want to waist people's time.
This is the video I’ve been looking for all day. Thank you 🙏🏽
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Yay!
I can't wait to have a green house. Winter growing would save me a lot of money on fresh veg in the winter. Salad greens especially. Bush beans and bush peas are are great companion crop for taller slower growing summer plants. They grow and finish first and you can chop and drop the plants as a nitrogen rich mulch. I've begin implementing practices from all of your gardening methods with no dig being my primary method. I only dig where I'm planting root crops.
Great video as usual. Thanks again
I enjoy and learn a lot from your videos. Thanks. It must take a lot of planning and time.
Excellent Overview of techniques and philosophies - thank you!
Always interesting and worthy of my attention. Thank you.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Great video.
If I had to begin tomorrow I would watch this a few times and glean the best practice methods you have developed!! Thanks!!
Hi love the way you narrate your day videos, am from Trinidad
I'm impressed! Logical, objective and comprehensive. Thanks.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Very useful. Clear info and very helpful. Thanks
Very interesting discussion. Thanks Bruce, always look forward to your videos
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
You are an inspiration for me to question what I have learned now that I started growing vegetables for my own consumption. I got into gardening through permaculture, and I needed to explore other ways to go about it. Thank you for being out there.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad I could make a small contribution to your journey!
Great video
Your videos are very useful! I´m very glad, I found this channel. I´m watching since 9k subscribers and I really like your content. Keep it up!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you found my channel, and are still watching!
I've been growing in a mostly no-dig manner, but I want to add in most all of Steve Solomon's soil testing and ammendment advice (the extensive method).
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
It is an interesting mix, or refinement, to not simply assume that the compost is all the garden needs.
I'm so glad I found this channel today!! I am starting my first farm soon and I am doing my best figuring out which farming method would be best suited for me. Your videos are a great resource for me to learn and understand the differences which will hopefully allow me to find success with my farm more efficiently. Big thanks and wishing a good season in 2022.
Your comments and ideas are always welcome! I share these videos with my local organic garden community. Thanks for your work!
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
Awesome, thanks for sharing my videos!
I’ve been watching from near-beginning and it seems like you could just about answer it this year. Fantastic job Bruce!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks 👍
Your sharing of your knowledge is helping me to feed myself and occasionally have a little to spare for my neighbours and friends. I only have a small garden out front of about 15 X10 meters available but through the confidence you share, I hope to put my small back garden to food production with a home built poly tunne forl next years growing season. Please do keep helping in the way you do.
Your work is greatly appreciated! Thanks for keeping us all up to date on all your findings :) I have have a KZread chanel too but lately feel more like doing the work than making videos of doing the work ☺🐛 Happy growing and keep us in the loop :)
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I know that feeling. Sometimes I wish I could simply grow food, and not have to keep track of everything, and film anything that might be useful in the future, and constantly be thinking about the next video!
@healthyrootsstrongwings538
4 жыл бұрын
@@REDGardens Surely you've got a nice routine down😃! You could even mãke a video about how you go about making video's 🤗 Anyway happy days and thanks again!
Another great video from RED Gardens. Please do make a update about your latest conclusions about the composting system of yours.👍👍👍👍
I genuinely get so much out of your videos. Thank you for the doing the hard work! (From far north New England, I need all the help I can get!)
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks, and good luck!
excellent as always. Great vision you have.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
I just discovered your channel and have subscribed. Your comments are very thoughtful. Thank you.
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you found my channel!
Great cadence, shots, content and editing. I'm not even a gardener but I'll subscribe. Thanks!
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
thx. you seem like a kind soul.
Love your videos. So much to learn
Think it depends on location. Poly tunnel in my area will cook everything in it no matter on ventilation. Great video, lots of info.
Wow! I am thoroughly impressed by your well thought out answer. This is rich content - thank you
@REDGardens
7 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great content, brother!
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
Glad you think so!
Been refreshing for new videos, I can't get enough of your content
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you like them! Sorry for the delay in getting the next one out. It is filmed, but I still need to edit it. Hopefully will be out this weekend.
I'm impressed. Great video
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
🙂
Excellent informative video as usual.
Love your projects!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
A really excellent video, thank you! Would you consider another video going further into your ideas for a hybrid approach using different methods at different points in the garden's "succession"? Just what you said here is brain-expanding stuff. I'm very curious about the potential for creating a simple start-up system where people could get a harvest of storage crops (winter squash, potatoes?) as the yield of a first-year new garden space, while helping to prepare the soil for higher productivity the following year...?
@noahsas7795
4 жыл бұрын
such a good idear 😌🤙🏼
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
I think there is a lot to that idea, and is kind of the basis of the Simple Garden approach that I developed, though I haven't taken that to the next level of developing a succession of steps to develop a growing space.
Good information Thank You...
Your an absolute champion mate, good on you
@REDGardens
7 ай бұрын
Thanks! 😁
Fascinating! Thanks
I have been wondering what you have been up to! Thanks for another great video. Please upload catpions 🙏🏽
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
I will try to get the captions uploaded soon, it is something that I have fallen behind on in these past fey busy months.
Thank you!
Very genuine observations. .n theories
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Spent this season in 90F and 1 or 2 thunderstorms every week. Plants grew vegetation like a jungle, tomatoes split and sweet peppers had rot spots in multiple places. Next year I will build a Greenhouse tunnel-like yours and feed my raised beds compost.
The space of the tunnel ist just great. It is very high and broad. Passive water system would be good I think.
@REDGardens
Жыл бұрын
Yes, that would be good.
New gardener here. Last year I tried the "Square Foot" gardening method in my raised beds. It was a mess. This year I'm going to follow the "Succession Gardening" practices limiting each bed to only 2 types of vegetable plants: one vertical and another spreading.
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear about the mess, hope this year is more successful for you.
Thanks for a thoughtful video. I live in a similar environment in Scotland and have over the years increased protection for my crops but used glass rather than plastic and use greenhouses and mini greenhouses. Though maybe more expensive in the short term no worries about having to recover and disposing o f plastic waste. I worry about the amount of plastic membranes now in use which all degrade leavening fibre in the soil which cannot be cleaned up so called weed control fabrics don't work long term but I expect they are promoted because someone is making a lot of money.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
I would love to shift more towards glass houses. Plastic is a bit of a worry for me, but I find the polytunnel plastic to be the most durable and useful of all the plastics that might end up in the gardens. The ground cover fabric does really need to be managed well.
Excellent video, and excellent channel in general. I've only got a relatively small area for growing vegetables (3 raised beds each of 0.9m x 3.6m so approx 10 sq m in total) and I've been making my own compost for quite a few years which I use on these beds but I read Steve Solomon's book in the autumn, got a soil test, have remineralised the beds and am changing my approach to how I make compost (which is really vermicompost) by, in effect, adding 4-6 litres of a version of COF into each of my compost bins (I have 5 of the 'dalek' type of bins). It is interesting that you find the Extensive Garden to have the tastiest harvests (possibly because they're the most nutritious?) as that's pretty much the point of Steve Solomon's approach. I'm optimistic for great results in 2021. Keep the videos coming - they're excellent and inspirational.
I grow mainly no dig but I do agree about the amount of compost required. It is hard to get it and does limit some people, it certainly did prove problematic for me in the initial setup years. On the one hand I sometimes wonder if the same amount of compost would be needed even if I was double digging, to ensure there was sufficient nutrients for intensive cropping but I think there is obviously more to it than simply the nutrients in the soil. For example, the ground needs to be inna relatively friable condition for the plants to grow and this simply takes a lot of compost to provide that and or some time to allow the worms and organisms to work the soil. Great video!
I’m going to try a combination approach using square foot gardening which crosses intensive and poly culture whilst attempting to keep it as no-dig. I can’t wait to start (as soon as my youngest stops walking all over the soil and pulling them out) next year. Live in north Oxfordshire.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Hope it works out for you!
Thank-you. A lot to discuss here.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Thank you for coming to answer your "research question" and as usually the answer is "it depends". And you answered the follow up question as well "what does it depend on"?.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Yes, "what does it depend on" is a crucial question to answer.
I just have a roof (2000 sq ft) to work on. I have just started. But your advice and experience is valuable. From your talk extensive method in grow bags seems to be the answer.
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
Excellent. Hope you grow lots and learn more!
I'd agree, absorb knowledge and mix different techniques for the climate your in. I just started a garden, used intensive for base, then added 12,000 lbs compost on top and tilled base and compost togeather for a 10"-12" layer, 36'x48'. So far things are growing great. Started direct sow May 21st through June 11th. It's been a cool wet spring, morning temps low 40's to low 50's.
Even though i personally might not use this information it is comforting to know that it is out there. We need to rethink how we feed the world and I think this is part of the solution.
@REDGardens
Жыл бұрын
Thanks, I agree!
Hi Bruce, thank you for this latest video. You start by favouring your polytunnel, for intensive, high yielding, season extending & personal protection / comfort. All the same reasons that I've erected a cheapy polycarbonate greenhouse. I don't know whether you have had experience of a greenhouse as well as your massive polytunnel, but I'd like to hear your views as to your comparative experiences if so. I'd purchased my cheapy polycarbonate 8ft x 16ft greenhouse as opposed to a polytunnel because:- 1). The side guttering collects water into a water-butt (I live in very dry Colchester, Essex) as the facility to collect water in the summer is valuable to me. 2). I've heard that although twin-wall polycarbonate has a shorter life than glass )& I could not afford glass anyway), it should outlast the polythene of a polytunnel. 3). Gale propelled objects can fatally damage the polythene of polytunnels, where-as the polycarbonate should be a tad more robust when clobbered during high winds. 4). Twin-walled polycarbonate might be a tad better insulator during the cold winter months, thus hopefully providing better winter growing conditions? Your thoughts please Bruce? And any thoughts from others that read my amateur comments? Regards as always, JohnnyK.
EXCELLENT conclusions, Bruce. Garden according to your climate, plot size, and material and time resources. Observe the garden and figure out what works for you, one size does not fit all. I too use a hybrid of no dig, polyculture and tiny polytunnel, on my small site, and did do some digging first to clear debris. I am amazed by the abundance produced in a short space of time.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I think there is so much to benefit from various hybrid methods, that evolve over time.
Another great video, thanks so much
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Thank you, sir.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
As always, it's all about the "context". Great video and thank you for sharing.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, context.
@danielfisch655
4 жыл бұрын
RED Gardens 👍🏽👊🏽😷
YESSSS! Our world NEEDS more local, sustainable, and healthy food.
Sir, I will flow your methods, video is excellent, You are the best.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
:)
Great video. I've been waiting for a comparison video for a while now 🙂 I'm happy to see your channel growing! One suggestion.. your title could be tweaked to get alot more views. Eg "What garden method works best" or No Dig vs Double Dig and other methods.." something like that. I've been watching your videos for a long time and understand the title but someone stumbling along your video wont have any idea and might not be interested.. just a friendly tip! Thanks for the video.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tip. I struggle with the titles, and try to find a mix between a title that followers of the channel will understand and appreciate, and titles that grab attention of others.
I have been watching a lot of you videos with great interest and there's something that I have noticed. You mostly seem to plant your crops in line with the length of the bed. I mostly plant perpendicular to the bed. To me it feels more efficient when removing weeds and I feel like I have to bend over the plants less when removing weeds. I also felt like I could make the beds wider, loosing less "path-space". But I'm not using a seeder and I guess that you have good reasons to do this "your way", I'm really interested what the your reasoning / ideas are on this. :-)
Heck if I only had one garden channel to watch you rock man
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Haha
There is exactly one unique method for each of us, it is "Everything you do, all together" let it be tempered by knowing what each of the plants do, and letting them do those things, and in knowing that it's the plants that grow, and we grow by listening to them.
@REDGardens
2 жыл бұрын
:)
Really appreciate your efforts to get this info to the world Bruce. I'd be interested in your labour input analysis for these gardens. i.e. How many man hours a week does it take to keep 1,5,10 families in vegetables. For clarity, I am into whole food plant based science, which recommends eating more vegetables... especially leafy greens i.e. 0.5kg a day (8 cups raw) of non starchy vege per adult (not potatoes)...so 7kg/wk for 2 adults, and say 4kg/wk for 2 younger kids = 11kg/week I would suggest a variable mix of rocket, baby spinach, collard and mustard greens, kale, tomatoes, cucumbers, radishes, red cabbage, string beans, beetroot, carrot, onions.
I can’t wait to get some land so I can do a poly tunnel garden. It’s pretty darn cold where we live I just had to cover my garden on June 9th because it got down to -2 Celsius
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
That is a late frost! Where are you based?
@TheogRahoomie
4 жыл бұрын
RED Gardens Vanderhoof, British Columbia and ya that’s a late frost even for us.
good explanations, again. i still havent setup a greenhouse and often end up throwing out a late (hopeful) crop of beetroot, for example. which partially grows and then completely stalls when cooler weather comes, which is unpredictable here. i'm definitely over adding massive amounts of compost, which is both intensive and problematic in our heat, and is often gone part way thru season, collapsing soil structure.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
That is interesting about he soil structure collapsing. What kind you have? Clay?
@Chris-op7yt
4 жыл бұрын
RED Gardens : mostly clay and silt. when organic matter (compost) breaks down, it becomes also silt like in size and most of it gone in three months. most avid gardeners in my zone see similar results, with deeper soil completely dried out and season harvest cut short. that's why maybe need a watering system and/or inorganic mulch or something, as hand watering daily is not good enough. organic matter only makes things worse in these harsh conditions. greenhouses (if not an oven) help a lot around here, for people that have them. hot windy days in summer of near or over 40 degrees Celsius, knock crops around.
Your graph @ 1:19 made me laugh! -9C after New Years is a sign it is time to put the winter coats away, 0C it time to put the spring coats away, and 7C is the beginning of shirt free weather, and 18C is time to clean the air conditioner, 35C is drink plenty of water at work, 38C is time to call it quits...
You're farkin' AMAZEBALLZ, my man!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
I agree that there is no single method. It would depend on the type of soil you have, the type of crops you have and also the weather/rainfall. We have clay soil, it's extremely hard to work with, no dig methods do not work and double digging is required for any root type vegetables such as carrots. Personally, I would choose double dig and the polyculture, mainly due to polycultures being more pleasant to the eye than motonomous gardening, but also partly due to the fact I want to upgrade to a permaculture garden... which also incorporates trees (fruits, nuts etc) Love your vids. Keep it up!
@Marialla.
4 жыл бұрын
You are so right that one size does not fit all! Not only soil/weather/crops must be considered, but also personal issues of time/garden space/money to invest/physical strength and energy and mobility/and values that the garden seeks to fulfill. Everyone's circumstances are different, so every gardener must choose wisely from all the techniques and methods suggested to find their own personal best approach!
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Agreed!
Hi from Tasmania! Re polytunnel s& pollination: do the pollinators get in, bees, beetles etc? Great videos, best I have come across, will make a donation as appreciate your work! Best wishes
Just stumbled on your channel. Amazing stuff. What are your thoughts on Aeroponics and Hydroponics? Or do you have a video on those topics already?
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
I don't have a video about those, but would like to try both some day.
Have you ever used a "light meter" to see how many lumens/foot candles of light come through the polytunnel as the year progresses from winter to winter during the growing seasons? I was out with my meter today to see how much light I was getting in my garden area, to see if it was worth the cost to install my own polytunnel.
Thanks for caring and sharing. You are the change truly aware people want to be. Check out Morley Robbins to understand why magnesium and copper sulfate are so important to add in to the soil. It takes bacteria to help plants absorb minerals, so that means the microbiome needs to be on point, too.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion.
Very thorough video.Question regarding vegetable taste... Do you think that UV exposure to plants could have an affect on the flavor? I find the greenhouse vegetables less tasteful than the garden ones. Yes the soil/amendments are the same, although the greenhouse plants are in containers. Thank you for your thoughts/experience.
@REDGardens
3 жыл бұрын
That is an interesting question. I suspect that the taste difference is due to the differences in exposure to wind warmer temperatures. Less wind means that the plants don't need to put in as much effort to strengthen the stems, and more heat means they grow faster, and I imagine both of them physical changes will impact taste, but i am not certain of this and there could be other factors.
Very interesting, but I don't really understand what the "extensive" garden is, I guess you explained in other videos.
How do you feel the other gardens would do if you managed to use the same amount of organic matter as the no dig garden. Assuming you could get hold of the organic matter and some help barrowing / digging it into the site?
I too love my polytunnel. The only thing I can think of to improve it is two polytunnels...
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
Right choice, am in the middle of putting my polytunnel up this week.
@REDGardens
4 жыл бұрын
Have fun with the polytunnel growing!