"I believe that and I think it's true" gonna be my new line when i haven't fact checked the last thing that came out of my mouth
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
It just makes sense :)
@francestaylor9156
Ай бұрын
There was an Adam Savage line like this in MythBusters: "I reject your reality and substitute my own." One of my all time favorite lines lol.
@BrokeFarmer2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on 400k
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@epicgardening2 ай бұрын
Are the tree collards gone though? Please Jacques, please...put them out of their misery...
@Ash-fd8ww
2 ай бұрын
😢😢 where will the cabbage moths go....
@BiancaZombie
2 ай бұрын
Ha ha @@Ash-fd8ww
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I'll never give them up!
@angdolonkon
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden long live the tree collards!!
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden🎶 never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down ... 🎵
@brycelathrop16042 ай бұрын
Speaking from experience, if you don't put something down under that new raised bed the roots will actually grow up into the bed and you will be having the same problem all over again. Ask me how I know
@kimpaynter
2 ай бұрын
Oh no 😢
@sambito702
2 ай бұрын
Yup! Always put down thick cardboard. I always lay down the box it came in, whatever recycling I have available, then branches, soil, and compost
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I will be digging a channel and applying root barrier in the winter when the rains start again!
@shamancarmichael53052 ай бұрын
The refresh looks great! I especially appreciate the new raised bed design and construction! As a partially disabled person, that is a bed even I could put together. That might just be a game changer for a lot of folks!
@TheGardenFamily2 ай бұрын
Lots of hard work there Jacques! I really like the new style raised beds but I'm partial to wooden raised beds =). I'll also add the only mulch I like more than fresh straw is 1 year old composted straw from straw bale gardens. We do 40-50 bales a year so all that organic matter gets added back in. Thanks for taking us along on the garden reset!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is a cool little side bonus of having the straw bale gardens!
@mumstheword82 ай бұрын
When i lived in a townhouse/row house i was planting in these plastic milk crates that I lined the fence with. Well I had a spruce tree in the yard and when i moved and went to load up the milk crate the roots from the spruce tree started to grow up and in the crates!!! I couldnt believe it! i had a hard time pulling up the crates and that was only from 2 years of being there. tree roots are crazy! Lol. Garden is looking great! Hopefully all that work will help you for the next couple of years!
@FrozEnbyWolf150
2 ай бұрын
That's a good point. Tree roots will grow in every direction, including up, if given the opportunity. If you're installing raised beds over existing tree roots, there's a chance the roots will find their way into the raised beds unless the bottoms are completely blocked off.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I've heard of roots shooting up into containers and beds. For sure expect that here eventually! Then I actually have to deal with it
@barrybridgeford530
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden I've used a battery powered reciprocating saw equipped with a long "pruning blade" to cut down below & along a single shovel blade depth narrow trench, to "prune" the tree roots heading into my raised beds.
@ulla.umlaut2 ай бұрын
I have a maple tree on the boulevard a couple feet downhill and across a sidewalk from some raised beds. Within two years of install, the nearest raised bed was about a third maple tree root by volume. Top to bottom on a 1.5 foot tall raised bed you can't dig more than a few inches because the tree roots have bound all the soil together. Trees are gonna get what they want!
@ceecee-thetransplantedgardener
Ай бұрын
This is my issue. And I have no other place to move the bed.
@andrewhammill61482 ай бұрын
The rutabaga's look like punk rockers with Mohawks. LOL.
@KelseyIsARose
2 ай бұрын
I was thinking Mr. T 😂😂😂
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Haha amazing
@carissalizotte89772 ай бұрын
That new cedar bed looks SO sweet! Would love to get one at some point.
@veronicadoggone56602 ай бұрын
The cedar bed looks fantastic! I have a dozen birdies beds and I love them. I've had to move them 3 times and it's just so simple. But man I like the cedar look 😃
@FaceEatingOwl2 ай бұрын
Ohhh… tearing up, not tearing.
@bethb8276
2 ай бұрын
The English language can be tricky. I wound the bandage around my wound. 😉
@widehead1234
2 ай бұрын
Most language is like that
@gardengatesopen
2 ай бұрын
I'm just happy y'all are using punctuation! (It's so much easier to read.)
@Braddy_Daddy
2 ай бұрын
No he’s crying on the inside
@JosePineda-jn8jk
2 ай бұрын
@@bethb8276you wound it around your wound? That doesn’t make sense… 😂
@potatoslayer81392 ай бұрын
Ever thought about installing root barriers along the perimeter to prevent the intrusion of the tree / hedge roots into the garden? Would be a one a done type of job rather than having to periodically trench and prune out the invasive roots.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I should have mentioned it but I plan on doing it in the winter after the rain softens the earth and most of my plants aren't in the way!
@TaxEvasion777
Ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden I’m sure you have a different idea but stone pavers can help and typically people have old ones lying around that don’t match anything new
@terrivance87502 ай бұрын
Jacques, Definitely liking the wood chips over the straw in the pathways. Have to admit, though, I'm biased--I use wood chips for my pathways, too. Couldn't beat the cost--got a truck load for free when a neighborhood took down some very old oaks. 😁
@GrowsGoneWild2 ай бұрын
Those are some big roots 👀
@pascalxus2 ай бұрын
hey, i have a bed that looks just like that except much much cheaper looking. but it's the same basic design. and mine only has 3 slats on the side.
@dinacasey70342 ай бұрын
I've anxiously been waiting for another post from you! And here you are!! Yippee!!!
@rivitraven2 ай бұрын
Kale looks delicious i would keep it.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I have another huge kale patch otherwise I agree, honestly I should have just saved it regardless
@8601784322 ай бұрын
"I just believe it and I think it's true" 🤣🤣🤣 I love it
@kimberleychapman84162 ай бұрын
WoW, the amount you did in a day! Amazing + thanks for the helpful advice. 😊
@VashTown2 ай бұрын
I dunno about you, but I love when I get to use the mattock at full power.
@tpen8912 ай бұрын
I know how you feel. Most of my in grown garden have so many roots from a pecan tree and vines weeds. I use a broad fork to break and pull up as many roots as I can. However, I just ordered 8 more Birdies beds. Up to 17 beds with the great buy 3 get one free.
@CanadianChick10002 ай бұрын
Lovely reset, and wow, how much do I love that new raised bed concept!
@ahnanda682 ай бұрын
Do everything turn turn doin a great job 💪 keep on truckin motivation is high it's looking good!
@mcgritty88422 ай бұрын
Jacques’ back on the block!
@adigmon2 ай бұрын
I’ve had a great bean year so far! I picked 3 lbs yesterday. I grew several varieties but the haricot verts I planted are the most prolific I’ve ever seen!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is awesome, I am very much looking forward to a big bean harvest!
@refarmer15742 ай бұрын
Oh, my goodness! I just had to pause when you started showing those roots! We had areas of our garden last year, including grow bags, where things just did not do well, even though things grown in the same places previously did fine. In the fall, when clearing out grow bags, I found they were filled with tiny roots that had grown up from below. This spring, I reworked what had been a squash hill that failed, and it was full of roots, including large ones. The nearest tree is some 15-20 ft away. Currently, I'm reworking low raised beds into what will be their permanent positions and, at one end of all the beds, I'm finding more and more roots. They are all from some Chinese elms that had self seeded, along with some maples, in a raspberry patch. The raspberries were transplanted long before we moved out here, but the saplings were allowed to stay to form a (not needed) wind break (I roughly measured and calculated out that these trees lost about 1200 sq ft of garden space!). The maples are not doing this but as we have been reclaiming and amending the old garden area for the past 5 years, these Chinese Elm roots have been working their way into the softer, improved soil and stunting the things we plant! I never imagined that this would become a problem in the garden!
@BrokeFarmer2 ай бұрын
Nice looking raised beds
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I am super happy with them!
@rachellemazar73742 ай бұрын
Great job, I’m very interested in which plants you use in your native pollinator patch. I’m trying to establish one by my vegetable garden here in the SF East Bay Area.
@APrettyGoodChannel2 ай бұрын
Wooden beds looks fantastic and easy to put together. Somehow ironic that you guys got excited about and picked up the Birdies design from Australia, but then made a version with American wood which I find really exciting and want as an Australian.
@BuildingLifeBudgetsWithKim2 ай бұрын
Awww Jacque! I'm so sorry those citrus trees caused you so much work! So happy you are going to love having them re-done though!
@grannyfisher38632 ай бұрын
Good video. I look forward to seeing this patch as it develops. 👍
@pencey2 ай бұрын
The new raised bed is stunning! Nice work on that garden update.
@frankbarnwell____2 ай бұрын
Great example to the root of the problem. Many years ago I relocated a grape plant closer to 4 others. It had 2 long, 6ft, roots down in a crease through fairly clayish soil. It lived after the move, but probably should have put the new grapes around the old. Learned a ton about the ground, though.
@nancylafferty83622 ай бұрын
Much better! Love the new bed!
@carollyn88852 ай бұрын
Would it make a difference to put a piece of metal to block the roots or would the roots just go over under and around it?(For the citrus tree, not the hedge. The hedge looks intimidating.)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I actually did just that last year with metal flashing but it apparently wasn't enough :(
@glendaross692Ай бұрын
Jacques, you will still have root problems with the raised bed. I have raised beds because of mesquite and fig tree roots. I actually put pavers down under the raised beds and I STILL get roots growing up in the beds. The garden redo looks great!
@francestaylor91562 ай бұрын
Slugs are why I started doing cabbage in containers instead of my raised beds. It’s been good so far. Problem is containers get hotter than in-ground. Looks like I can only do cabbage in the fall here in E TN.
@roelven1282
2 ай бұрын
trust me .. .slugs WILL find the cabbages and any other food for them in containers as well .... lol .... i got 96 containers in total (all between 45ltrs - 120ltrs) ... and slugs have been spotted ...everywhere ;) muhahahaha .... funny parts is (for the slugs) ... even my 3 ft high raised beds i got ... still are a hurdle slugs still can cross ;)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough I only lost like 3 out of the 15 cabbages I put to severe slug damage.
@francestaylor9156
Ай бұрын
@@roelven1282 - yah the raised bed slugs had to cross rough concrete blocks to get to my cabbages and they still did it anyway. Crazy. Also, I noticed little tiny baby slugs in the grow bag cabbages so it does look like they will find a way lol. XD
@mariapina19732 ай бұрын
the garden looks awesome 🙂🌻
@veronicamarquez2762 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips about the roots. I’m having the same problem.
@sultanofthesun20722 ай бұрын
I love blob gardens 😂
@jesswelsh98382 ай бұрын
Hi Jacques 👋 it looks great, good job! Thanks for the video, happy growing 🌻💚
@jujubee73512 ай бұрын
Wow you are a hard worker! Good job, that raised bed you put together is beautiful!
@marktoldgardengnome41102 ай бұрын
Nothing personal Jacque, but the 1st thing that came to mind regarding this wayward garden area was Rod Serling's voice saying, "You're traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead - your next stop, the Twilight Zone!" lol 😲 tyfs
@Phalaenopsisify2 ай бұрын
Nice and fresh! And you know what? If it doesn't work out with the root situation you can always plant more trees and berry bushes!
@purplehatfarm5338Ай бұрын
With wood chips you can scatter mushroom starter under it and get mushrooms popping up…just needs to be damp enough!
@francestaylor91562 ай бұрын
Isn’t it almost always like that though. It’s always more than you planned lol.
@joshi_ru2 ай бұрын
Filderkraut! That‘s a variety from the southwest of Germany where I live!
@RealBradMiller
2 ай бұрын
It is so neat looking! "Ich habe einen clubfooß!"(the only German I know!)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Is it one you traditionally make sauerkraut with?
@watermelonraintv2 ай бұрын
the wood chip does look much better on camera. thank you for doing this for us :)
@barbebrown77532 ай бұрын
Looks great!
@nahomic1012 ай бұрын
The garden looks great! Can you do a video about growing beans? I have tried to grow them for three years and haven’t had much success.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Ill add it to the list of ideas!
@katie.r.vannuys2 ай бұрын
That raised bed is really stunning!
@earthisflat2 ай бұрын
Good video 👍 I have a passion vine and a chiltipin pepper plant in my 3 ft by 8ft raised bed which gets full unstructured sunlight the passion vine is in the middle of the bed and my idea was to try to create a canopy with the passion vine, but was just wondering what might be some good crops to inter crop with those that could grow great under the passion vine? 🤔
@noahmiller61152 ай бұрын
That's a nice looking bed. I expected Kevin to pop out like Night of the Living Dead.
@lindamurns12452 ай бұрын
That seems to be the way ! You think you're doing a simple task and mother says "no you're not " lol!
@xaviercruz47632 ай бұрын
Would surely be nice to find a garden like that in the wilderness be let go to seed and populate a natural area. Such a treasure of varieties!
@Mark7232 ай бұрын
No beans about it: the soil is the culprit!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
💯 we got some and soil to blame
@waterbitten
2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 good one.
@beingsneaky2 ай бұрын
You need a trench digger to better them N doing it by hand and much faster. Will shred the roots deep down. a wide one or narrow one? Wider, the better, I guess, though. And diug a trench around the perimeter of the garden.
@kimpaynter2 ай бұрын
Those new cedar beds are gorgeous
@lakereflection73862 ай бұрын
Oh i want that cedar bed its so pretty when put together
@kfetter90462 ай бұрын
Those rutabagas looked like puppets with mohawks, LOL!!!🤣
@KyleTheFountain2 ай бұрын
That black Shepard in the background is a beautiful dog
@barbaradavidson1950Ай бұрын
I have had to build platforms for my raised beds. Every 2 years I was having tree roots invade the beds and having to dig and cut them out. Now they can't grow into them.
@suepowlesland85412 ай бұрын
Put some eyes on those rutabaga and you got a Muppet😅
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Hahha
@vandthebees92492 ай бұрын
Should have put weed block beneath that new raised bed. I have tree roots that invaded my raised beds too.
@gnargnar19922 ай бұрын
Looks good Jacques! I highly recommend lactid acid bacteria serum (LABS) as an easy KNF recipe to alleviate phosphorus toxicity.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I will look into it!
@teresaedwards36592 ай бұрын
Nice to see you!
@sigmundblank74032 ай бұрын
Fork it all !
@pintsizestories1962 ай бұрын
Raised beds with bottoms the only way to tackle tree roots.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
For sure the best options, I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again!
@Plantandpeoplecarer2 ай бұрын
I love sugar cane mulch, it’s readily available in Australia and it’s cheap
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is cool, I wish we had a local waste product
@judymckerrow67202 ай бұрын
Thank you Jacques. 💐💚🙃
@lawrenberghanson44012 ай бұрын
Uh oh! It looks like you have a jumping worm at @2:29, Jacques! Watch out for those worms. Good job on the refresh!
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
I wondered about that when I saw that worm in the compost.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Hmm, I am going to have to look closer, hopefully it was just an adventurous worm.
@blinkitphotographyАй бұрын
This season I've notice a lot of my drippiness stopped dripping. One line works while orders drip lines, only 1 or 2 drip hole is working. I do have filters on every drip irrigation. So any tips on how to clean the drip lines?
@Gardeningchristine2 ай бұрын
Millennial gardener put a couple layers of weed fabric under the raised beds to keep out rodents and tree roots. Do you think it’s a good idea?
@julipolito77612 ай бұрын
Jacques, do you treat all the beds with neem cake? Can you, as a preventative? I, too, struggle with nematodes. I’ve used it for the first time from your suggestion, last year. Thank you!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I pretty much do with any sensitive plants or in areas where I know it has been an issue.
@Not_Seth_Rogen2 ай бұрын
Does correctly composting scraps and old plants get rid of the risk of former plants germinating and popping up in a later season, or will you always run the risk of a tomato or tomatillo growing at some point?
@Benweis12 ай бұрын
Why didn't you insert a root-barrier when you had already dug up the whole path? In case it's just missing knowledge: there are barriers especially for that purpose. They are normally used to stop plants from spreading, like bamboo or peppermint, and taking over parts of the garden they're not wanted in. You could use that to limit your citrus tree.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again all along the boundaries of my garden
@gangofgreenhorns26722 ай бұрын
If kale is bolting it would have had to go through a cold period right? They're biennial.
@laurielangley23062 ай бұрын
GO BEANS! And, um, why does it seem you have to work TWICE as hard as Kevin???
@mrstoneybrew2 ай бұрын
Do you do anything to your eggshells before throwing them in the compost.?
@PlantObsessed2 ай бұрын
Yeah worm compost. Worms rule 👍🏼🪱😁
@jennifermedina5146Ай бұрын
Hi Jacques, I have been unsuccessful at making enough compost of my own and was wondering if there is a place you trust here in San Diego to get compost? Have you tried City Farmers?
@cantnv12 ай бұрын
Where can I find that Lincoln log planter!?!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Link in description!
@teresastewart97602 ай бұрын
What is the tall plant in the background of your raised cedar bed that has the tall stalks of blue flowers?
@Idontwantachannel67
2 ай бұрын
Echium
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Pride of Madeira!
@user-hn8zb6tq6b2 ай бұрын
Hey my man
@KelseyIsARose2 ай бұрын
Those rutabaga look like Mr. T
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
hahaha amazing!
@lukewoolsey8362 ай бұрын
Have the nematodes worked for the grubs? I’m struggling with them.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
They do if applied regularly at the right time. For now most of my grubs seem to be concentrated in my raised beds where I never applied nematodes
@lornaj3310Ай бұрын
Where are you that you get slugs??? Or cabbages?
@louisamichelleloll2 ай бұрын
Have you ever had any issues with herbicides in your manure compost? It’s something I just found out that I’m dealing with it and I have no idea what to do aside from wait 3 years
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
A friend had this issue with compost she had brought in! It killed her dahlias before she realized the problem. I've heard it's less of an issue with chicken manure, but it's one of the reasons I'm trying to find organic alfalfa as an alternative. I'm curious to hear if there's anything to be done besides wait it out
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I went with an organic based manure so in theory they shouldn't be eating any herbicide laden foods
@user-nlvmruu2 ай бұрын
why do some beds have wood or metal and some are just in the ground?
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
It is all preference really. The ground beds are harder to maintain and work on since they are so low. Wood looks great for some metal looks great for others. Metal will last longer than wood, by at least double, but it comes down to preferences here!
@SpareBedroomGardens2 ай бұрын
Full bean?? Was that a Jeff Acuri reference?
@Ash-fd8ww2 ай бұрын
🌱🌱❤❤
@mmmsshenanigans94222 ай бұрын
I love my woodchip mulch but i also wish i could comfortably walk around barefoot. I still walk barefoot but i have to walk slowly so i dont skewer my feet lol
@valeriesjeans2 ай бұрын
Won’t they just grow back? (Roots)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
They for sure will, I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again!
Пікірлер: 153
"I believe that and I think it's true" gonna be my new line when i haven't fact checked the last thing that came out of my mouth
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
It just makes sense :)
@francestaylor9156
Ай бұрын
There was an Adam Savage line like this in MythBusters: "I reject your reality and substitute my own." One of my all time favorite lines lol.
Congratulations on 400k
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Thank you!
Are the tree collards gone though? Please Jacques, please...put them out of their misery...
@Ash-fd8ww
2 ай бұрын
😢😢 where will the cabbage moths go....
@BiancaZombie
2 ай бұрын
Ha ha @@Ash-fd8ww
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I'll never give them up!
@angdolonkon
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden long live the tree collards!!
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden🎶 never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down ... 🎵
Speaking from experience, if you don't put something down under that new raised bed the roots will actually grow up into the bed and you will be having the same problem all over again. Ask me how I know
@kimpaynter
2 ай бұрын
Oh no 😢
@sambito702
2 ай бұрын
Yup! Always put down thick cardboard. I always lay down the box it came in, whatever recycling I have available, then branches, soil, and compost
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I will be digging a channel and applying root barrier in the winter when the rains start again!
The refresh looks great! I especially appreciate the new raised bed design and construction! As a partially disabled person, that is a bed even I could put together. That might just be a game changer for a lot of folks!
Lots of hard work there Jacques! I really like the new style raised beds but I'm partial to wooden raised beds =). I'll also add the only mulch I like more than fresh straw is 1 year old composted straw from straw bale gardens. We do 40-50 bales a year so all that organic matter gets added back in. Thanks for taking us along on the garden reset!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is a cool little side bonus of having the straw bale gardens!
When i lived in a townhouse/row house i was planting in these plastic milk crates that I lined the fence with. Well I had a spruce tree in the yard and when i moved and went to load up the milk crate the roots from the spruce tree started to grow up and in the crates!!! I couldnt believe it! i had a hard time pulling up the crates and that was only from 2 years of being there. tree roots are crazy! Lol. Garden is looking great! Hopefully all that work will help you for the next couple of years!
@FrozEnbyWolf150
2 ай бұрын
That's a good point. Tree roots will grow in every direction, including up, if given the opportunity. If you're installing raised beds over existing tree roots, there's a chance the roots will find their way into the raised beds unless the bottoms are completely blocked off.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I've heard of roots shooting up into containers and beds. For sure expect that here eventually! Then I actually have to deal with it
@barrybridgeford530
2 ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden I've used a battery powered reciprocating saw equipped with a long "pruning blade" to cut down below & along a single shovel blade depth narrow trench, to "prune" the tree roots heading into my raised beds.
I have a maple tree on the boulevard a couple feet downhill and across a sidewalk from some raised beds. Within two years of install, the nearest raised bed was about a third maple tree root by volume. Top to bottom on a 1.5 foot tall raised bed you can't dig more than a few inches because the tree roots have bound all the soil together. Trees are gonna get what they want!
@ceecee-thetransplantedgardener
Ай бұрын
This is my issue. And I have no other place to move the bed.
The rutabaga's look like punk rockers with Mohawks. LOL.
@KelseyIsARose
2 ай бұрын
I was thinking Mr. T 😂😂😂
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Haha amazing
That new cedar bed looks SO sweet! Would love to get one at some point.
The cedar bed looks fantastic! I have a dozen birdies beds and I love them. I've had to move them 3 times and it's just so simple. But man I like the cedar look 😃
Ohhh… tearing up, not tearing.
@bethb8276
2 ай бұрын
The English language can be tricky. I wound the bandage around my wound. 😉
@widehead1234
2 ай бұрын
Most language is like that
@gardengatesopen
2 ай бұрын
I'm just happy y'all are using punctuation! (It's so much easier to read.)
@Braddy_Daddy
2 ай бұрын
No he’s crying on the inside
@JosePineda-jn8jk
2 ай бұрын
@@bethb8276you wound it around your wound? That doesn’t make sense… 😂
Ever thought about installing root barriers along the perimeter to prevent the intrusion of the tree / hedge roots into the garden? Would be a one a done type of job rather than having to periodically trench and prune out the invasive roots.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I should have mentioned it but I plan on doing it in the winter after the rain softens the earth and most of my plants aren't in the way!
@TaxEvasion777
Ай бұрын
@@jacquesinthegarden I’m sure you have a different idea but stone pavers can help and typically people have old ones lying around that don’t match anything new
Jacques, Definitely liking the wood chips over the straw in the pathways. Have to admit, though, I'm biased--I use wood chips for my pathways, too. Couldn't beat the cost--got a truck load for free when a neighborhood took down some very old oaks. 😁
Those are some big roots 👀
hey, i have a bed that looks just like that except much much cheaper looking. but it's the same basic design. and mine only has 3 slats on the side.
I've anxiously been waiting for another post from you! And here you are!! Yippee!!!
Kale looks delicious i would keep it.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I have another huge kale patch otherwise I agree, honestly I should have just saved it regardless
"I just believe it and I think it's true" 🤣🤣🤣 I love it
WoW, the amount you did in a day! Amazing + thanks for the helpful advice. 😊
I dunno about you, but I love when I get to use the mattock at full power.
I know how you feel. Most of my in grown garden have so many roots from a pecan tree and vines weeds. I use a broad fork to break and pull up as many roots as I can. However, I just ordered 8 more Birdies beds. Up to 17 beds with the great buy 3 get one free.
Lovely reset, and wow, how much do I love that new raised bed concept!
Do everything turn turn doin a great job 💪 keep on truckin motivation is high it's looking good!
Jacques’ back on the block!
I’ve had a great bean year so far! I picked 3 lbs yesterday. I grew several varieties but the haricot verts I planted are the most prolific I’ve ever seen!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is awesome, I am very much looking forward to a big bean harvest!
Oh, my goodness! I just had to pause when you started showing those roots! We had areas of our garden last year, including grow bags, where things just did not do well, even though things grown in the same places previously did fine. In the fall, when clearing out grow bags, I found they were filled with tiny roots that had grown up from below. This spring, I reworked what had been a squash hill that failed, and it was full of roots, including large ones. The nearest tree is some 15-20 ft away. Currently, I'm reworking low raised beds into what will be their permanent positions and, at one end of all the beds, I'm finding more and more roots. They are all from some Chinese elms that had self seeded, along with some maples, in a raspberry patch. The raspberries were transplanted long before we moved out here, but the saplings were allowed to stay to form a (not needed) wind break (I roughly measured and calculated out that these trees lost about 1200 sq ft of garden space!). The maples are not doing this but as we have been reclaiming and amending the old garden area for the past 5 years, these Chinese Elm roots have been working their way into the softer, improved soil and stunting the things we plant! I never imagined that this would become a problem in the garden!
Nice looking raised beds
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I am super happy with them!
Great job, I’m very interested in which plants you use in your native pollinator patch. I’m trying to establish one by my vegetable garden here in the SF East Bay Area.
Wooden beds looks fantastic and easy to put together. Somehow ironic that you guys got excited about and picked up the Birdies design from Australia, but then made a version with American wood which I find really exciting and want as an Australian.
Awww Jacque! I'm so sorry those citrus trees caused you so much work! So happy you are going to love having them re-done though!
Good video. I look forward to seeing this patch as it develops. 👍
The new raised bed is stunning! Nice work on that garden update.
Great example to the root of the problem. Many years ago I relocated a grape plant closer to 4 others. It had 2 long, 6ft, roots down in a crease through fairly clayish soil. It lived after the move, but probably should have put the new grapes around the old. Learned a ton about the ground, though.
Much better! Love the new bed!
Would it make a difference to put a piece of metal to block the roots or would the roots just go over under and around it?(For the citrus tree, not the hedge. The hedge looks intimidating.)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I actually did just that last year with metal flashing but it apparently wasn't enough :(
Jacques, you will still have root problems with the raised bed. I have raised beds because of mesquite and fig tree roots. I actually put pavers down under the raised beds and I STILL get roots growing up in the beds. The garden redo looks great!
Slugs are why I started doing cabbage in containers instead of my raised beds. It’s been good so far. Problem is containers get hotter than in-ground. Looks like I can only do cabbage in the fall here in E TN.
@roelven1282
2 ай бұрын
trust me .. .slugs WILL find the cabbages and any other food for them in containers as well .... lol .... i got 96 containers in total (all between 45ltrs - 120ltrs) ... and slugs have been spotted ...everywhere ;) muhahahaha .... funny parts is (for the slugs) ... even my 3 ft high raised beds i got ... still are a hurdle slugs still can cross ;)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough I only lost like 3 out of the 15 cabbages I put to severe slug damage.
@francestaylor9156
Ай бұрын
@@roelven1282 - yah the raised bed slugs had to cross rough concrete blocks to get to my cabbages and they still did it anyway. Crazy. Also, I noticed little tiny baby slugs in the grow bag cabbages so it does look like they will find a way lol. XD
the garden looks awesome 🙂🌻
Thanks for the tips about the roots. I’m having the same problem.
I love blob gardens 😂
Hi Jacques 👋 it looks great, good job! Thanks for the video, happy growing 🌻💚
Wow you are a hard worker! Good job, that raised bed you put together is beautiful!
Nothing personal Jacque, but the 1st thing that came to mind regarding this wayward garden area was Rod Serling's voice saying, "You're traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead - your next stop, the Twilight Zone!" lol 😲 tyfs
Nice and fresh! And you know what? If it doesn't work out with the root situation you can always plant more trees and berry bushes!
With wood chips you can scatter mushroom starter under it and get mushrooms popping up…just needs to be damp enough!
Isn’t it almost always like that though. It’s always more than you planned lol.
Filderkraut! That‘s a variety from the southwest of Germany where I live!
@RealBradMiller
2 ай бұрын
It is so neat looking! "Ich habe einen clubfooß!"(the only German I know!)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Is it one you traditionally make sauerkraut with?
the wood chip does look much better on camera. thank you for doing this for us :)
Looks great!
The garden looks great! Can you do a video about growing beans? I have tried to grow them for three years and haven’t had much success.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Ill add it to the list of ideas!
That raised bed is really stunning!
Good video 👍 I have a passion vine and a chiltipin pepper plant in my 3 ft by 8ft raised bed which gets full unstructured sunlight the passion vine is in the middle of the bed and my idea was to try to create a canopy with the passion vine, but was just wondering what might be some good crops to inter crop with those that could grow great under the passion vine? 🤔
That's a nice looking bed. I expected Kevin to pop out like Night of the Living Dead.
That seems to be the way ! You think you're doing a simple task and mother says "no you're not " lol!
Would surely be nice to find a garden like that in the wilderness be let go to seed and populate a natural area. Such a treasure of varieties!
No beans about it: the soil is the culprit!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
💯 we got some and soil to blame
@waterbitten
2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 good one.
You need a trench digger to better them N doing it by hand and much faster. Will shred the roots deep down. a wide one or narrow one? Wider, the better, I guess, though. And diug a trench around the perimeter of the garden.
Those new cedar beds are gorgeous
Oh i want that cedar bed its so pretty when put together
Those rutabagas looked like puppets with mohawks, LOL!!!🤣
That black Shepard in the background is a beautiful dog
I have had to build platforms for my raised beds. Every 2 years I was having tree roots invade the beds and having to dig and cut them out. Now they can't grow into them.
Put some eyes on those rutabaga and you got a Muppet😅
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Hahha
Should have put weed block beneath that new raised bed. I have tree roots that invaded my raised beds too.
Looks good Jacques! I highly recommend lactid acid bacteria serum (LABS) as an easy KNF recipe to alleviate phosphorus toxicity.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I will look into it!
Nice to see you!
Fork it all !
Raised beds with bottoms the only way to tackle tree roots.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
For sure the best options, I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again!
I love sugar cane mulch, it’s readily available in Australia and it’s cheap
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
That is cool, I wish we had a local waste product
Thank you Jacques. 💐💚🙃
Uh oh! It looks like you have a jumping worm at @2:29, Jacques! Watch out for those worms. Good job on the refresh!
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
I wondered about that when I saw that worm in the compost.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Hmm, I am going to have to look closer, hopefully it was just an adventurous worm.
This season I've notice a lot of my drippiness stopped dripping. One line works while orders drip lines, only 1 or 2 drip hole is working. I do have filters on every drip irrigation. So any tips on how to clean the drip lines?
Millennial gardener put a couple layers of weed fabric under the raised beds to keep out rodents and tree roots. Do you think it’s a good idea?
Jacques, do you treat all the beds with neem cake? Can you, as a preventative? I, too, struggle with nematodes. I’ve used it for the first time from your suggestion, last year. Thank you!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I pretty much do with any sensitive plants or in areas where I know it has been an issue.
Does correctly composting scraps and old plants get rid of the risk of former plants germinating and popping up in a later season, or will you always run the risk of a tomato or tomatillo growing at some point?
Why didn't you insert a root-barrier when you had already dug up the whole path? In case it's just missing knowledge: there are barriers especially for that purpose. They are normally used to stop plants from spreading, like bamboo or peppermint, and taking over parts of the garden they're not wanted in. You could use that to limit your citrus tree.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again all along the boundaries of my garden
If kale is bolting it would have had to go through a cold period right? They're biennial.
GO BEANS! And, um, why does it seem you have to work TWICE as hard as Kevin???
Do you do anything to your eggshells before throwing them in the compost.?
Yeah worm compost. Worms rule 👍🏼🪱😁
Hi Jacques, I have been unsuccessful at making enough compost of my own and was wondering if there is a place you trust here in San Diego to get compost? Have you tried City Farmers?
Where can I find that Lincoln log planter!?!
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Link in description!
What is the tall plant in the background of your raised cedar bed that has the tall stalks of blue flowers?
@Idontwantachannel67
2 ай бұрын
Echium
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
Pride of Madeira!
Hey my man
Those rutabaga look like Mr. T
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
hahaha amazing!
Have the nematodes worked for the grubs? I’m struggling with them.
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
They do if applied regularly at the right time. For now most of my grubs seem to be concentrated in my raised beds where I never applied nematodes
Where are you that you get slugs??? Or cabbages?
Have you ever had any issues with herbicides in your manure compost? It’s something I just found out that I’m dealing with it and I have no idea what to do aside from wait 3 years
@MyFocusVaries
2 ай бұрын
A friend had this issue with compost she had brought in! It killed her dahlias before she realized the problem. I've heard it's less of an issue with chicken manure, but it's one of the reasons I'm trying to find organic alfalfa as an alternative. I'm curious to hear if there's anything to be done besides wait it out
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
I went with an organic based manure so in theory they shouldn't be eating any herbicide laden foods
why do some beds have wood or metal and some are just in the ground?
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
It is all preference really. The ground beds are harder to maintain and work on since they are so low. Wood looks great for some metal looks great for others. Metal will last longer than wood, by at least double, but it comes down to preferences here!
Full bean?? Was that a Jeff Acuri reference?
🌱🌱❤❤
I love my woodchip mulch but i also wish i could comfortably walk around barefoot. I still walk barefoot but i have to walk slowly so i dont skewer my feet lol
Won’t they just grow back? (Roots)
@jacquesinthegarden
2 ай бұрын
They for sure will, I plan on trenching and adding root barrier in the winter when it rains again!
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