Parkrose Permaculture

Parkrose Permaculture

Parkrose Permaculture is a family-run farmette on 1/4 acre in Portland, OR. We specialize in perennial food crops, unusual fruit, beekeeping, duck and chicken-keeping, and permaculture design.

Angela has been teaching permaculture and sustainable living workshops at her home for years, and now offers short informative videos to help teach those concepts and basic gardening strategies to gardeners everywhere.

Don't forget to subscribe to get all the latest videos.

My website:
www.ParkrosePermaculture.com
www.Paypal.me/ParkrosePermaculture
Venmo: account.venmo.com/u/Parkrose-Permaculture
www.Patreon.com/ParkrosePermaculture1

My Amazon Influencer Shop (I get a tiny commission from products purchased): www.amazon.com/shop/parkrosepermaculture

Follow me on Pinterest - www.pinterest.com/ParkrosePermie/
and Instagram - instagram.com/parkrosepermaculture/
and Facebook - facebook.com/ParkrosePermaculture/

Just You Wait

Just You Wait

What is a Sun Trap?

What is a Sun Trap?

Пікірлер

  • @gregzeigler3850
    @gregzeigler385012 сағат бұрын

    I might suggest to you Lovage. It has the taste of celery and will come back every year. I sent off for some Turkish Rocket seeds to try. I hope they grow. Colewort is also a plant that comes back year after year which I'm trying this year. Hope it comes up!

  • @lgerha01
    @lgerha0115 сағат бұрын

    That's super cool and super creepy. I thought of Sharp Objects immediately when they mentioned a dollhouse!

  • @lisadixon5886
    @lisadixon588621 сағат бұрын

    I cant believe the US is giving weapons to Israel to commit genocide The horrors unflicted on innocent civilians in Gaza is beyond horrifying, such inhumanity, such barbarity- yet the US actively enables them to do this I will never understand this evil ( I am Australian and my own government will not condemn nor sanction Israel which is disgusting as we are a US ally,)

  • @AnnetteLasike-fh5my
    @AnnetteLasike-fh5my21 сағат бұрын

    Thank you for your instructions. 30 years ago I planted 100, 4 ft trees, 5 ft apart around 3 sides of my yard. They are beautiful and I get many compliments about them. I have noticed that they block almost all the noise from neighborhood. However, I have neglected the middle of my bushes. I never knew how to trim them. I have asked many people how to prun them. No one does them the same way. I am so happy I found you! I will be checking in with you from now on. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. By the way, you have a great voice and you speak beautifully. 😊

  • @mariacavallaro177
    @mariacavallaro177Күн бұрын

    I just got a load a month ago. They will send you an email saying they are coming. Now, the guys showed up just as my email alert went off. They were super nice!!

  • @catharinephoto
    @catharinephotoКүн бұрын

    We have to boycott, divest from and sanction Israel until all people have equal human rights. Israel is an apartheid state.

  • @ZombieGirlie
    @ZombieGirlieКүн бұрын

    I don’t think enough people talk about how the famine and lack of medical care in Gaza is not just a result of Israel’s actions, but it was Israel’s goal. Every death in Palestine right now that is the direct result of famine/hygiene/lack of health care access is a murder by Israel.

  • @thejuliakitchen
    @thejuliakitchenКүн бұрын

    Hi when you reuse videos from another platform and don’t tag the creator on this platform how does that make you look? How can I “go back and watch” the other video without a link. I’m interested in permaculture but I’ll look elsewhere and block you. Lazy bish

  • @morcocaine
    @morcocaineКүн бұрын

    As a toxic masculine white male who identifies as a disabled heterosexual black woman who has practiced permaculture for years, I respectfully disagree with this lady's ideologies. People like the lady in this video are far more concerned with racism and being a victim than the ethnicities and groups they are " supporting and fighting for". She feels the need to squeeze her opinions into any little crack she can find. Hopefully she's not an elementary school teacher 🤥

  • @pattimatson678
    @pattimatson678Күн бұрын

    I planted a persimmon in a small orchard in a house we only lived in a few years. We had large crops of fruit soon. It did have full sun. I planned to plant another in our new place and of course don’t want to wait that long.

  • @pattimatson678
    @pattimatson678Күн бұрын

    This was on top of Cooper Mt. in Beaverton, OR so the same zone.

  • @KaspiansTravels
    @KaspiansTravelsКүн бұрын

    No. I don't care if it's "art", Satanism, or something pervy, owning the bones of strangers is demented.

  • @stevenabel1232
    @stevenabel1232Күн бұрын

    No. Feels a bit too out there to be trusted.

  • @rush9560
    @rush9560Күн бұрын

    Leave it to a white progressive to cut off a black person speaking, without even crediting the original poster (so that we could see the rest of what was being said) in order to inject themselves in the conversation- going on to "warn" everyone about "right wingers". And then posts at the top that she's deleting r*cist comments...

  • @justinwest4923
    @justinwest4923Күн бұрын

    Motherfucker. I mean, Isreal is a concentration of the US and its methods...

  • @KyraHobbit
    @KyraHobbitКүн бұрын

    Yes! But only if you get to see the final result in the dollhouse!

  • @jojo-tl5ei
    @jojo-tl5eiКүн бұрын

    Didn't know about mint struggling in pot, that explains why mine isn't doing well. Was afraid to plant it due to spread. Wow that is a tall mint. Thanks.

  • @ElisandeWalters
    @ElisandeWaltersКүн бұрын

    sigh, the USA (and my country, Germany) both are unlikely to face this for a number of long standing policy reasons and due to the fact that Biden seems tot hink he can simply legislate away the fracturing of the "Wurlitzer" and "retake" the narrative... I am actually devastated at both, the fact that it is unlikely that the USA will change its position in a timely manner BECAUSE it will endanger significantly the results of the next election even THOUGH the other "candidate" clearly is not going to have a different approach. basically the next election isn't so much an election as it is extortion. I used to scoff at ppl saying the dems are the ppl who are loosing willfully, but right now.... ? right now the higher up at the DNC are delusional... why will democracy break over the support of a genocide I wonder O.o sigh...

  • @shaunsshelf
    @shaunsshelfКүн бұрын

    The fact that ppl still don’t get this (both our Zio elected officials and jabroni Zios on the internet) is so mind blowing. I cried just watching this. We must let our righteous anger fuel Palestinian liberation. None of us are free until we are all free ✊🏽

  • @kimjones2056
    @kimjones205620 сағат бұрын

    What would you do if someone kidnap you child and declared war on your country.

  • @shaunsshelf
    @shaunsshelf17 сағат бұрын

    @@kimjones2056 you are deeply unserious. Indiscriminate bombing was never going to bring those hostages back. Not only are they likely bombed to death, they have also been shot and killed by the IOF (confirmed by the IOF themselves, so y’all can’t claim propaganda). So goodbye

  • @tammymayer
    @tammymayerКүн бұрын

    Paul Wheaton, a leader in Permaculture, talked about the toxicity of cardboard back in 2017, before the 2023 chicken bedding study came out. He explains why we should not use cardboard in our gardens in this clip: kzread.info/dash/bejne/ln2FqaeJaMS5e7Q.html

  • @pippabuchanan1792
    @pippabuchanan1792Күн бұрын

    Came for the permaculture but oh my goodness thank you for the recommendation for migraine botox as I am on day 5 of what I think is hemiplegic migraine...

  • @pippabuchanan1792
    @pippabuchanan1792Күн бұрын

    also, this explanation is beautifully and thoughtfully argued. So much of what is taught in a PDC (herb spirals, guilds) is there because they are marvellous teaching tools which embody principles and observation and understanding about canopy levels and moisture levels and plant growth styles and functions.... However, if they are taught as The Permaculture they just get learnt that way and replicated.

  • @justinarnold7725
    @justinarnold77252 күн бұрын

    Voodoo magic

  • @mudotter
    @mudotter2 күн бұрын

    Check with Ruth, the posting might inspire her and she'll want to keep them. My daughter ended up with mine, hers, and her brothers.

  • @PatriciaBullard-y8k
    @PatriciaBullard-y8k2 күн бұрын

    My clock fell off the wall and the chains came out with the weights. How do I out where do the chains go inside the clock???? HELP!!

  • @katiejude14
    @katiejude142 күн бұрын

    This feels like the modern day equivalent of meeting a fae in the woods.

  • @hendyappleton5701
    @hendyappleton57012 күн бұрын

    I say do it, but I embrace the Portland weirdness. :)

  • @celiawaddell4526
    @celiawaddell45262 күн бұрын

    Yes. As long as there are no rituals.

  • @saradorgan971
    @saradorgan9712 күн бұрын

    Yes! I went to art school, and one of my friend's senior BFA Jewelry projects used teeth and human hair. She set the teeth and felted the hair. And because the hair came from people who dyed their hair bright colors, it was really bright. 👌

  • @jul.escobar
    @jul.escobar2 күн бұрын

    I would not- you and your child's dna is in there. cool way to preserve and also destroy in a sense the teeth is to work with glass artists, they can add your teeth to molten glass and make you a cool cup or ornament. The teeth do a cool fizzy thing when they hit the hot glass. Breast milk in glass has a cool interaction too, I know a lady specifically does the breast milk glass work. She also does teeth on occasion.

  • @BlackCoffee4Me
    @BlackCoffee4Me2 күн бұрын

    Do NOT give your teeth or your children's teeth to a stranger. I wish I had my family's teeth 😢 what a sweet heirloom

  • @adrichapoy6525
    @adrichapoy65252 күн бұрын

    Affirmative! What could go wrong 😮

  • @drylandfish1765
    @drylandfish17652 күн бұрын

    I had a bunch of my baby teeth in a little jar in a drawer for like 40 years. Then examined them a few years ago and found they'd degraded into tiny pieces! Who knew baby teeth needed some preservation? All except for the ones I kept in my jaw for 50 years until they also wore out and had to be replaced with expensive synthetics.

  • @kdj24370
    @kdj243702 күн бұрын

    I just built a Costco shed this past weekend. Our experience is almost verbatim - from the early delivery to the miscuts/warping to the door not hanging right. Just the bolting to the concrete pad took an entire day. The whole thing was beyond frustrating for me, and we ended up paying about $1000 in extra tools/supplies/etc., which I wasn't prepared for. Glad it's built/over, but dang that was frustrating!!

  • @monicamcallister9673
    @monicamcallister96733 күн бұрын

    Very informative. Thank you!

  • @zianitori
    @zianitori3 күн бұрын

    as a penal abolitionist i dont have much of an attention span towards law stuff anymore so thanks for breaking this down really coherently

  • @TheSmartestManonEarth
    @TheSmartestManonEarth3 күн бұрын

    I love chinese lantern. Not the seeds nuch tho

  • @aquetesabeuhlala
    @aquetesabeuhlala3 күн бұрын

    Podré plantarlo en una maceta en mi jardín? Para controlar su crecimiento. Lo compré siendo muy ignorante. 😭 Mi jardín es pequeño

  • @flowerpixel
    @flowerpixel3 күн бұрын

    It's funny bc I can't draw anymore, I have nerve damage in my hands and I haven't in 15 years but I still think like Ruth. My dad was literally a cartographer lol

  • @85jacob85
    @85jacob853 күн бұрын

    Ooo we don't have those fruit flies in New Zealand from what I can see.

  • @BronwynLucas
    @BronwynLucas3 күн бұрын

    Greetings from Australia. Enjoyed this very much. Diversity and whole of life approach…no apologies necessary. Thoughtful. Onto the side garden. Many thanks.

  • @SanitysVoid
    @SanitysVoid3 күн бұрын

    I got a bee suit to remove nests on my property where they are a danger to people waking in and out of the home, any suggestions? My suit seems really thin for something thst is supposed to protect me.

  • @mudotter
    @mudotter3 күн бұрын

    Ha ha ha. I am with you. Identifying a plant and forming a more intimate relationship with how and why it exists is how I find meaning and placement in the natural world. I am also an artist, as well as a certified horticulturist. Creatively, I am focused on the patterns and colours in the natural world, and want to bring those into my art, rather than being scene oriented. As a neurodivergent, I have little to no desire to render faces in art. People are not an inspiration for me.

  • @bowler8
    @bowler84 күн бұрын

    I have a lilac which I planted 22 years ago. It blossoms every year as I trim it after it blossoms. This year it was leafing out but the leaves were very pale green and twisted and then they all turned brown and shriveled, You can imagine how upset I was. It has some new leaves growing mainly at the top. It has thin branches on the old ones that look like new growth but no buds on some. What worried me was that I just pulled up a huge chunk of trunk from the middle of the lilac, dry and dead. I live in an HOA and they want something done about the condition of it, and I don't think they'll wait until a whole season has passed. We are in 90 heat at the moment, so it's not a good time...can you help?.

  • @thomasjefferson6
    @thomasjefferson64 күн бұрын

    Japanese/Chinese chestnuts were brought to America because they were easier to harvest. American chestnuts grew to more than 100 feet in height and more than 12 feet in diameter. Trying to shake down chestnuts from an American chestnut was more difficult than getting them from the orchard-tree sized Asian chestnut trees. The blight was brought to America accidentally, but even if those who brought Asian chestnut trees to America knew that some of them were affected with blight, they probably wouldn't have thought much of it. Since the blight didn't seriously harm Asian chestnuts, there was no reason to believe that the American chestnut would be seriously affected, either. Since the American chestnut was the largest, most massive of all chestnut trees, it was easy to think that, if anything, the American chestnut would be even less vulnerable to blight than Asian chestnuts.

  • @rainbowconnected
    @rainbowconnected4 күн бұрын

    That is a confusing way to act and hard to interpret as anything other than wishing to see others struggle. "Just you wait" is a lot different than saying something along the lines of, "That time in parenting was hard for me. Here's some things you might want to be aware of and what I learned from it that might help you and your kid(s) have an easier time." That would be passing on potential wisdom and help. "Just you wait" offers nothing of the sort. It's just mean. It has the same vibe as when I hear people tell me that getting old will inevitably suck, even though I've made very different choices about my health than they have and have seen plenty of people who don't think getting old sucks. I know 90 year olds with the energy and spirit of a 10 year old, so other paths do exist. I suspect that's what it's really about. Defending their poor choices by pretending and projecting that there's no other way for things to be.

  • @honeydew4576
    @honeydew45764 күн бұрын

    The covering idea is more about how Christ covers us with His righteousness.

  • @pattimatson678
    @pattimatson6784 күн бұрын

    I love seeing self learners shine. Thank you for sharing on this important topic.

  • @Moose2418
    @Moose24184 күн бұрын

    Thank you! I was looking for this information. ❤

  • @ysmeine8
    @ysmeine84 күн бұрын

    I am sorry you had to deal with unkind words. Even if we don't hold the same values as some it can be difficult to read them. I hope that you are able to set them aside and know that you have a purpose in what you have created and that not everyone will agree. Thier mindset is limited by an idea that has gone on for too long, one that has created damage with too many chemicals that are washed into our streams and rivers, killed off our polinators, and more. I bought my house a few years ago and I am very aware to the crisp clean lines and expanse lawns of the houses on my street. Not everyone appreciates the productiveness and bounty like we do. Luckily, my direct neighbor doesn't mind it too much. My yard was mostly empty when I moved here. I do try to control the front yard some with mostly flowers herbs and fruit trees. I do know that when everything is mature like yours things will look different. I have tried to be intentional with placements, but I am definitely the odd house on the street. It does look a little wild with the wild flower border on the outside edge of the fence. But they add privacy and softness to the harsh lines and food and shelter for nature. My backyard is full, sometimes overflowing. In the late summer, even the paths are full of pumpkin vines. So you kind of have to tiptoe through them. The abundance of fruit trees, berry bushes, and grape vines add privacy. This year I noticed new insect varieties that have been attracted including fireflies which were becoming rare here. And a type of nonstinging wasp that lays its eggs in tree stumps. Sometimes I wish the groundhog wasn't so comfortable in my yard that he thinks my garden paths are his bathroom.

  • @U.Surnamé
    @U.Surnamé4 күн бұрын

    I live near Klamath Falls. There are apparently zero requests within 30 miles. Am i going to get anything?