In this video, I share the best vegetables to plant in November. Fall gardening season turns into winter gardening season in November, and now is the perfect time to start seeds for cold hardy crops that thrive in frost and cold weather. These fast growing, cold hardy vegetables will produce big harvests with such little effort, you’ll regret not planting these 10 crops in November right now!

Don’t stop growing a garden just because summer is over! Growing a winter garden is fun, rewarding, and easy since there are usually no insect pests or diseases. Investing a little work in the garden now will produce big harvests all year!

How To Build A PVC Hoop House: https://youtu.be/81ri2YEBNZc?si=L_VK5DeRhn7NHQWo
More Vegetables To Grow In November: https://youtu.be/TOjiRbwBqYY?si=80gGWJinCuBbMpUY

Seeds featured in this video can be purchased** here:
Music Garlic: https://fxo.co/IlIW
New Red Fire Lettuce: https://www.pjatr.com/t/8-12781-345111-269073?url=https%3A%2F%2Fterritorialseed.com%2Fproducts%2Flettuce-new-red-fire
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Giant Caesar Romaine: https://amzn.to/3HMIVsl
Spinach Collection: https://amzn.to/4nsi2so
Southern Giant Mustard Greens: https://amzn.to/3JtniOl
Bok Choy: https://amzn.to/4gHp4rB
Nantes Carrots: https://amzn.to/45OpS93
Cherry Belle Radishes: https://amzn.to/4mZMDhf
Lacinato Kale: https://amzn.to/43zY3kq
Curly Kale: https://amzn.to/3Lcd062
Dazzling Blue Kale: https://fxo.co/J2qY
Georgia Southern Collards: https://amzn.to/3UGc23t
Cilantro: https://amzn.to/3J79Uja

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
0:00 How To Grow In November Weather
2:16 November Crop 1: Garlic
5:33 November Crops 2 & 3: Lettuce & Spinach
8:46 November Crop 4: Mustard Greens
10:01 November Crop 5: Bok Choy
11:09 November Crops 6 & 7: Carrots & Radishes
13:57 November Crops 8 & 9: Kale & Collards
17:51 November Crop 10: Cilantro (Coriander)
19:27 November Gardening Tips
21:11 Adventures With Dale

If you are looking for crops for planting in November for maximum harvests, want to learn about growing fruit trees or want to know about the things I grow in my raised bed vegetable garden and edible landscaping food forest, are looking for more gardening tips and tricks and garden hacks, have questions about vegetable gardening and organic gardening in general, or want to share some DIY and “how to” garden guides and gardening hacks of your own, please ask in the Comments below!

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ABOUT MY GARDEN
Location: Southeastern NC, Brunswick County (Wilmington area)
34.1°N Latitude
Zone 8B

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© The Millennial Gardener

#gardening #garden #november #vegetablegardening #vegetablegarden

What’s going on, gardeners? It’s hard to believe, but November is already here, and that will not stop us from growing things in our vegetable garden. November is a shockingly great time to plant things out in our garden because the weather is generally calm and mild, and the pests and diseases have gone away almost entirely. So, on today’s video, I am going to show you 10 awesome crops that you should plant in November right now for the best late fall and winter garden of your life. If you’re new to the channel, please subscribe, hit the bell for notifications, and check out my Amazon store and Spreadshop links in the video description for everything I use in my garden and awesome custom apparel and gear. Over the course of this video, I will be mentioning different varieties of the crops that I’ve been growing in my garden and have had great success with. If you’re interested in where to buy those seeds, I will place direct links down in the video description for your convenience. As a point of reference, I live on the southeastern coast of North Carolina, zone 8b. But the truth is that hardiness zones do not matter when growing an annual vegetable garden. They’re only applicable to perennials. All that matters when growing an annual vegetable garden are our first and last frost dates as well as our average temperature. But truly, they don’t even matter because everything I’m featuring in this video is very tolerant of frost and freeze. The actual limiting factor this time of year is the lack of strong sunlight. It’s the short days and the low UV index that can cause problems. Our more demanding crops can stall this time of year due to the lack of photosynthesis. That is what makes the 10 crops in this video so amazing. These are fast growing crops that can photosynthesize despite the lack of intense sunlight. But just in case it’s a little bit chilly where you live, I recommend you do something like build a PVC hoop structure over your garden beds like I have right here. And then you can just cover them with an agricultural fabric to keep the hard frost and freezes off. And that will keep them growing deep into January, February, maybe even all throughout the winter and into the spring. I’m using an insect netting currently, but you can just swap that out and clip a frost fabric over it. I’ll link to a video both above and down in the video description that will show you how to build one of these PVC hoop structures in only about 20 to 30 minutes. Crop number one is the king of all winter crops and the one crop that nobody has any excuse not to plant and that is garlic. There is maybe nothing more critical to grow over the winter than garlic because garlic needs the cold weather accumulation, the chill, the veralization of the cold throughout the winter to form nice big bulbs. There are two different types of garlic. Hard neck garlic and soft neck garlic. Hard neck garlic generally grows between zones 3 and 8, but truthfully it’s so cold hearty you could grow it all the way down to zone one into tundra. Your soft neck garlic tolerates warm, mild winters much better and can be grown from zone five to zone 10. But truthfully, there is a trick that allows you to grow garlic down in the tropics or grow any type of garlic no matter where you live. Most of us watching this video are going to be in zones five and warmer. So, for that reason, it’s going to be easier for a lot of us to grow soft neck garlic because it doesn’t require nearly as much cold vertalization. But I find hard neck garlic is spicier and more robust. And where I live in zone 8, we have marginally mild winters where if we have a warm winter, it could be too mild for hard neck garlic to really grow large. Yet hard neck garlic is all I grow. All of this garlic that you see right here is my leftover harvest from last June. I still have pounds and pounds and pounds of it. So what I do is I eat the small and mediumsiz heads of garlic and then I save the absolute largest ones for replanting next year. And that is what you see in here. This is a hard neck garlic variety called Musk and it is one of my favorites. So in order to get chill on my hard neck garlic, I take the largest cloves because the largest cloves that you plant will make the biggest heads the following year. I’ll roll it up in a paper bag. It has to be paper because paper breathes. And then I will pop it in the refrigerator for about four to six weeks to put cold chill on it at refrigerator temperatures. And that will accumulate the chill hours I need to plant them in my garden. Now, if you live in a place that gets almost no chill, say Miami, or you live in another country in the tropics, well, you can refrigerate them for 8 to 10 weeks, and then you can just plant them no matter where you live. And even if it never gets cold, they’ll get the appropriate amount of cold vertalization. So, if you use that trick, you can grow garlic nearly anywhere. Seed garlic heads can be a little bit expensive, but if you save the largest ones, you’ll get such a huge harvest, you won’t be able to use it all, and you can just replant year after year after year. So, it’s really only a one-time investment. Garlic stores for months. But, of course, you could always go to the grocery store and just buy heads of garlic there. Break the cloves off and plant them in the ground and they’ll grow just fine. You’ll get a nice garlic harvest. The varieties they carry in grocery stores are very mild. So, I do think it is worth the investment to get really robust specialty varieties of garlic to get the super strong ones. But if you don’t want to spend $ 20 to $30 for seed garlic, you can just go to the store and buy them for 50 cents ahead and plant them. Awesome. Crops two and three that I strongly recommend you plant in November are cool season lettucees and spinach. Now, the beautiful crop of lettuce that you see right behind me is a Roma variety called Giant Caesar. But most green Roma varieties are not very cold hearty. Even a light frost can damage them and cause the tips to turn brown. So, if we were to get a light frost, I would cover this with agricultural fabric. So, unless you live in zone 9 or warmer, I don’t recommend you growing romaine lettuce all throughout the winter because it’s just not cold hearty. It’s more heat tolerant than it is cold hearty. And your larger heading lettucees like those, well, they take a lot more solar energy to grow. So, if you live at a high latitude, you may struggle to get enough sun intensity to grow big heads of Roma. That’s why I recommend you grow red leaf lettucees. They are much more cold hearty and they can grow quickly with a fraction of the amount of solar intensity. And I have tried so many of them over the years. My favorite over the years have become the varieties New Red Fire, Marvel of Four Seasons, Rouge Diver, and Red Sails. All of these varieties have been basically bulletproof where I live. Zone 8 Winters are no match for them. And with an agricultural fabric pulled on top of them, they can easily survive temperatures below 15°. The varieties New Red Fire and Red Sails are really good to grow in rows and cut and come again harvest where you just snip the leaves as they appear. New red fire can make a decent head given enough time and solar energy, but it’s a really good leaf lettuce. If you want to attempt to grow larger heads, I think your best options are Marvel of Four Seasons and Rouge Diver. specifically Rusever. It’s a red Roma and although it’s not as robust and texturally equivalent to a green Roma, this is probably the best you’re going to find for a super cold hearty heading lettuce. At least that’s what I found. Spinach is even more cold hearty. Temperatures below 10° are pretty easy for established spinach plants if you pull a row cover over them. They’re actually more heat sensitive than cold sensitive. So, I have to wait until now to plant my spinach because they’re very bolt-rone. So, what varieties you choose, you should base on your latitude and your average temperature. If you live in a warmer place where you get more solar energy, it’s probably a good idea to pick something that is known to be bolt resistant and has a higher days to maturity like this giant noble or like a Bloomsdale spinach. However, if you live in a colder climate, that 43 days to maturity, well, it may grow too slowly for you. So, something like this, this has a days to maturity that start as low as 28 days. So, this is maybe a better solution for somebody that lives at a higher latitude with colder winters. So, you really want to be choosy with your days to maturity. If you don’t get a lot of solar energy, pick an earlier maturing variety. If you get more solar energy, you live at a lower latitude, pick something more bolt resistant because if you have Januaries where you’re liable to be 45° one day and 65 the other, that can actually cause your spinach to bolt. Crop number four that you simply must plant in November has become my favorite newly discovered green since I moved to the south 8 years ago, and that is mustard greens. This is the ultimate flavorful winter stewing green. This is great in soups, stews, and sautes. They have flavor for miles. But what I love most about it is not only are they super cold hearty, but they grow so fast. Particularly this southern giant curled variety right here, even in the dead of December when the UV index and the days are the weakest and the shortest. They put on huge leaves. So, we can grow this practically anywhere. Now, I will say this variety right here will start taking damage at about 20 degrees Fahrenheit, but again with a row cover over them. We took no damage at all multiple nights in the teens night after night after night. And while they did start to turn a little bit purple, which the the plants can sometimes turn a little purple when it gets really cold for a very long period of time, but as soon as it warmed back up, it put on nice new growth. And I was picking mustard greens all throughout the winter. If you want to try something super flavorful, super delicious that you’ve maybe never tried before, give mustard greens a try. They are just an absolute delight to grow. Crop number five that you simply must plant in November is a new discovery for me as well, and that is bok choy. I tried growing bok choy for the first time ever last year, and it absolutely blew my mind. I was dissuaded from growing bok choy because I was told it was only cold hearty to about 25° F. And here in zone 8b, we get multiple nights in the teens almost every year. Nonsense. With a row cover on top of them, they easily sat through five nights in the teens, covered in ice and snow with absolutely no damage. And what was amazing about them was despite the coldest December and January I’ve ever had in the 8 years that I’ve lived here, they formed huge heads with ease. So, this is something that can grow very, very large, even in places that get very limited solar energy. And these are so awesome, so versatile. They are amazing in soups, stews, and sautes, anything Asian inspired. This is one of my new favorite greens. And if you’ve never tried growing them, you simply have to try them because they’re a delight to grow. They’re so versatile. They’re so tough, just delicious. Crop six and seven that you simply must plant in November are my two favorite root crops. albeit for different reasons and they are carrots and radishes and that is what you see planted in this bed right here. Now the reason why it’s so important to grow carrots in the fall and the winter is because the sweetness of carrots is inversely proportional to temperature. That means the colder it is when they mature, the sweeter they will be. Carrots that mature in the late spring and the summer when it’s hot, they tend to be fibrous and starchy and not very sweet. But when they mature in the late fall and the winter when the temperatures are coolest, their sugars are concentrated and they are so much more tender. They’re also a breeze to grow. They require little to no fertilizing. In fact, with carrots, less is more. If you give them too much fertilizer, they’ll grow big green tops, but the root development will suffer. So, they’re kind of a set it and forget it crop. But most of all, they’re one of the most cold hearty root vegetables that you can grow. Easily tolerating temperatures around 0 to 10° Fahrenheit uncovered, but they can survive below zero with an agricultural fabric or some type of protective cover on top of them. So, you simply have to grow them. They’re delicious. If you’ve never had a winter harvested carrot, you’re missing out. Now, radishes are not nearly as cold hearty as carrots are. They’re only cold hearty to around 20° Fahrenheit. And if they fluctuate in temperature too much between freeze and thaw, they may split on you unless you cover them with an agricultural fabric. But the real reason why we grow radishes is because of how fast they mature. They will go from planting that seed to ready for harvest in only about 3 to 4 weeks. So, if you live in a place where you just don’t get that solar energy and you feel like nothing will grow, well, radishes break the mold and you can get some really, really beautiful radishes instantaneously. It feels like they germinate in only a matter of days and they’re ready for harvest in only a matter of weeks. And again, just like with carrots, fertilizing them, less is more. You can put a little bit of an organic 555 the time you plant the seed, but other than that, don’t give them anything else or else you’ll grow big radish tops, but the bulbs will suffer. The way I recommend you plant your radishes and your carrots throughout the year is to basically just sew successive rows. Instead of planting a very, very large bed where everything comes to maturity at the same time and you don’t know what to do with your harvest, just sew a little bit of a row at a time. Plant 6 to 10 radish seeds every week. Plant anywhere from a 4 to 6 foot row of carrots every month or so. That way you can have a continual harvest throughout the fall and winter. That is what I like to do. Crops eight and nine are kale and collards. And I’m lumping them together because they are the most cold hearty of the brassacas. They can tolerate temperatures down to 10° Fahrenheit, maybe even colder with a row cover over them. So, let’s start with kale. Kale has been a staple in my garden for years, and I grow now primarily two types of kale. There are your leninado type kales, and there are your curly kales. These are the two that do the best in my garden, and I grow them almost exclusively now. Although, I do like experimenting with some interesting hybrids like this dazzling blue, which is a really beautiful looking loinado type. So, I’m growing this as well. Now, years ago, I used to grow red Russian kale. Your red Russian and white Russian kales are thought to be the most cold hearty of the kales. So, if you live in a very, very cold climate, you may want to give them a try. But, I’ll tell you what, here on the southeastern coast of North Carolina, we tend to have warm spells during the winter. And when we get those warm spells, I always found my red Russian kale would get attacked by worms or caterpillars or aphids. And I never had that problem with the loinado and the curly types of kales. Probably because the ruffled crinkled leaves were just kind of a turnoff to them, but I’ve always had less issues with pests on those varieties. And I also find them to be more tender. So that’s a personal preference and they do better in my climate. But you can switch it up. Try all the different varieties of kale. See what performs best where you live. But the one bit advice I strongly recommend you follow is that you isolate your kale or at the very least don’t interplant it. And that is because kale is a biionial. I used to plant my kale with my broccoli, my cabbage, and my other brassacas. But the problem is your kale will continue to grow all the way into the summer. And your cabbages and your broccoli and cauliflower and things, they’ll be ready in anywhere from 2 to 4 months. So I would have half my bed turned over and I I’d have all this kale growing all over the place for months and months and months and that would kind of ruin that raised garden bed. It would take up real estate. So I’ve learned to basically grow my kale in isolation because it’s going to grow longer than any of my other winter crops. And that’s what you see right here in this small raised garden bed. I have my dazzling blue and my dwarf blue curly kale varieties. and they are going to grow all the way until probably June or July until the pests get them. The only thing that I’ve interplanted with them is Brussels sprouts in the back because Brussels sprouts also take forever to grow here. They probably won’t be ready for harvest until something like April and I can deal with that amount of bed turnover. Just consider how long your crops are going to take and how long they’ll live when planting them. It often shocks gardeners to learn that collard greens are actually even more cold hearty than kale. I know I told you that they were both good until about 10 degrees Fahrenheit or so, but the truth of the matter is expect a little bit more cold tolerance from your collard greens. So, if you can grow kale just fine where you live, collards are going to be no issue at all. Now, that being said, collard greens grow much more quickly, especially this variety right here, Georgia Southern. This has been an absolute dream to grow and it grows so fast so I can get big leaves and big heads even in the dead of winter when UV index is lowest and I’ve never had it take any kind of cold damage at all. So if you want to try something new or you love collards, I strongly recommend give this variety a shot. But that being said, your collard greens are not as longived as your kale. So, for that reason, I interplanted all of my collarded greens with my cabbage and my broccoli and my cauliflower because they will have similar lifespans. They are not going to make it into the spring. So, all of these crops are probably going to be harvested by March and I will be able to turn this bed over without issue. And crop number 10 that you simply must plant in November is one of my favorite crops that I have to wait all year to grow because this is the only time of year it will do well here. And that is cilantro. I know those of you that have that genetic anomaly that makes cilantro taste like soap probably just threw up in your mouths a little bit. But I absolutely love this stuff. I go crazy for it. And I can finally grow it this time of year because this stuff is the most heat sensitive stuff you can ever grow. I mean, temperatures in the 60s will cause this stuff to bolt. I can really only grow it from November to March. Even March is pushing it. So, when the cold weather finally sets in, I just have to go crazy planting cilantro. Cilantro is super cold hearty and very easy to grow. Temperatures at 10° or lower are really no issue with this. I’ve never had a cilantro plant die where I live here in zone 8. It grows all throughout the winter. And again, it’s one of those things that can grow very quickly despite not a lot of solar energy. So, it’s a good plant to grow that can put on growth when a lot of things can’t. It’s also very easy to grow. Cilantro, also known as coriander, has very, very large seeds. So, you can just direct sew the seeds half an inch deep. They’ll germinate very, very quickly. and they’re just a piece of cake to sew. They basically have no pests, no diseases. They laugh off the cold. If you want to try growing an interesting herb that maybe you’ve never grown before, give cilantro a try. Or if you’re a cilantro nut like I am, go crazy with it. Plant it everywhere. And that right there are 10 awesome crops that you can plant in November right now. Now, just to be clear, these aren’t the only 10 crops that you can plant in November. I think they’re just 10 of the most important and most versatile because they’re some of the most cold hearty and they can grow when there isn’t a lot of solar energy. But if you live in a milder zone or you get more solar energy or you just want to try some other things, well, there are dozens of different crops that you can plant. A couple of years ago, I made a much more comprehensive video, 24 crops that you can plant in November. I’ll link to that video both above and down in the video description if you want a more comprehensive list of things that maybe take a little bit longer to grow or they’re just less popular vegetables that aren’t as common. So, I wouldn’t put them on a top 10 list like this. But that being said, I sure hope that you did find this video helpful and informative. If you did, please make sure to hit that like button, subscribe to the channel, and please ring the notification bell so you’re notified when I release more videos like these. Again, for all of the seeds I featured in this video, I place direct links down in the video description for your convenience for everything I use in my vegetable garden for growing plants this time of year. That’s all linked in my Amazon storefront. So, expand the video description, click on the Amazon storefront link, and you’ll see everything that I use in real life in my yard and garden. And if you have some time, please check out my brand new website, the millennialger.com. I just started it up. I’m going to turn it into a blog and put all sorts of useful information there. And I also have custom merch that you can purchase through that website if you want to support my channel. Thank you all so much for watching and I hope to see all of you again on the next video. Well, I’m here cleaning the espresso machine and someone is bothering me. Does Dale want a papuccino? Oh, he must want one. So, we’re just going to take a little bit of milk, about an ounce and a half, and then put a pinch of cinnamon in it. And then we are going to put it on the cold froth. And we’ll make Dy his papuccino. And the froth is done. And we have a beautiful little papuccino in here. Oh boy. Doesn’t that look good? Very good, Dale. Wait. Okay, buddy. [Music] Let us know how it is. I think he likes it. You got to finish it before the vacuum gets here.

46 Comments

  1. What crops are you planting this November? Let us know in the comments! TIMESTAMPS here:
    0:00 How To Grow In November Weather
    2:16 November Crop 1: Garlic
    5:33 November Crops 2 & 3: Lettuce & Spinach
    8:46 November Crop 4: Mustard Greens
    10:01 November Crop 5: Bok Choy
    11:09 November Crops 6 & 7: Carrots & Radishes
    13:57 November Crops 8 & 9: Kale & Collards
    17:51 November Crop 10: Cilantro (Coriander)
    19:27 November Gardening Tips
    21:11 Adventures With Dale

  2. You’re in you goober. I added you to my master list. You’re the best. Your garden is fantabulas. A lot to learn.

  3. I planted garlic, carrots and Brussels sprouts last week. I’m ordering mustard greens and radishes today.

  4. "What's growing on?". Pete with Green Dreams started opening with that years before. Just sayin'…

  5. Be aware of the oxalates in spinach. I stopped eating it. Not all veggies are healthy for humans.

  6. Planting my winter garden. Spinich, lettace, carrots, leaks, cauliflower, broccoli, peas, garlic, onions and celery. Potatoes get planted in January.

  7. Did you know that the genetic mutation regarding cilantro is actually people who DON’T taste soap?

  8. ************************************************************************************************************
    I subscribed your channel. THANKS for your GOOD ADVICE ! I'VE BEEN DOING GARDENING FOR ABOUT 35 YEARS. YOU CAN ALSO GROW DIKON RADISHES. YOU ARE WRONG ! DIKON radishes are more HARDY than CARROTS ! A few years ago, I READ from a JAPANESE SEEDS COMPANY – Kitazawa seeds company located in CALIFORNIA SINCE 1917, it said that DIKON radishes could grow up 100 kilograms ! WOW ! WOW ! WOW ! I am originally from TAIWAN, WE HAVE GOOD WINTER DIKON radishes, too. the KOREAN RADISHES are also VERY WINTER HARDY, and the size is LARGE.

    {{{{{ LEEKS are most hardy plant in NORTH AMERICAN, AMERICA & CANADA, one time I read about this ! }}}}}}}}

    FOR HERBS: OREGANO is most hardy in my MD home garden, MINTS, LEMON BALMS, American chives, CHINESE CHIVES, green onions, shallots, LEEKS, etc. grown in plastic covered tunnels vegetable beds would be good choices, too.

  9. THANK YOU- Great selection and summary of Nov Options especially considering solar fluctuations. AND Puppicino time with Dale

  10. You got the dynamics right about market consolidation. Shareholders of corporations are not satisfied with “normal profits” (i.e. profits =cost of capital) but want more (“economic profits”). If shareholders are only getting normal profits, it would make more sense just to loan the corporation money – same return on capital for less risk. In a competitive market, the only way to have profits above cost of capital (“economic profits”) is innovation – better products or a better way to make products. 

    What if you are not that clever and cannot think of any innovation? If you can’t beat the competition just get rid of the by buying them out merging with them. With many competitors, everyone is a price taker, not a price maker. If one company tries to sell above competitive market price, their many competitors collectively have enough spare capacity to replace the production of the price hiker. Consumers will all buy from the market price competitors and the price hikers sales go to zero. However, if there are only three or four producers of a product, then a price-hiking company can get away with it because it is unlikely that the it’s two or three competitors have enough spare capacity to replace the production of the price-hiker, so they are likely to just follow suit and join the price hikes. The free market is destroyed and becomes a captured market – captured by a de facto oligarchy.

    Market capture and economic oligarchy was a big problem in the 19th century “Gilded Age.” Laws were passed to fight the oligarchy and restore competitive free markets or highly regulate market were that was impractical (natural monopolies such as electric power providers). This worked for a few decades but pressure was put on government to weak enforcement of pro-competition laws and to allow more mergers and acquisitions. We are now back in a new Gilded Age of capture markets.

  11. I just found your channel this year and have loved following it!

    This year I’m following your recommendations for fall planting.

    Can you please make a video outlining more specific info about growing with ag fabric? When to install/vent/etc?

    Thanks for your channel!

  12. I’m trying a chaos garden bed next year. Where you throw in a ton of mixed seeds (putting tall full sun in the sun, and shade behind them), and seeing how it works. Will be MUCH different than the square gardening method. Will be interesting to see! Planting all the cold varieties now before our winter hits. We are zone 4/5 up North in Canada closer to the Tropic of Cancer so we see less intense sun all year. Also, we can use the shade we get here from the direction of the sun which you can not use in main summer months in Southern growing areas as the sun is directly above you when near the equator. Vice versa in Deep South closer to Tropic of Capricorn.

  13. My husband HATED cilantro. He said it tasted like soap too. Weirdly enough, after changing his diet and going full health nerd, he loves it now. He can eat it in sandwiches even. He used to not eat my salsa because of the cilantro… and now he can eat it strait… so wild how your body adapts to things.

  14. Do you ever use landscape plastic and if you do when? I’m in Columbia, SC zone 8b. Per your suggestion I did purchase the landscape fabric and I’m surprised at how thin it is. So far my strawberry plants are growing great but we have not yet had a frost.

  15. I tried a raised bed. Soon I had veggies growing and was so excited. The next day they were all gone! Rabbits!

  16. Just took a break to eat lunch and am currently turning my beds getting ready to plant. These recommendations came at the perfect time!

  17. Let’s go gardeners! 🚀 Here is the list: Garlic, Lettuce & Spinach, Mustard Greens, Boo Choy, Carrots & Radishes, Kale & Collards, Cilantro. ❤️🌱

  18. Which of these crops, besides cilantro, are to be direct sewn? I feel like we should start before November if some should be started from seeds indoors?
    Thank you for this video!! Quite informational!!

  19. I got hardly any fruits over the summer in my greenhouse – TOO HOT!!
    Yes, I opened it up and used a shade netting!
    Suddenly, in October I started getting food!!
    I have so many tomatoes all of a sudden!

  20. I plant cabbage, spinach, onions, garlic and chives in the fall.
    Let the leaves cover them.
    They overwinter very well, even covered with snow and I get an early crop!! No insects to bother them.

  21. My only problem is the hose from the hydrant freezes. The hydrant is fine! Is drains so it can’t clog with ice.

  22. I let two carrot plants from the previous year go to seed this summer and now, I have thousands of baby carrot plants I have to thin and give to the chickens all winter!! They overwinter very well!!

  23. My citrus is sprouting flowers and leaves. Never happened before. I live in North east Florida. What should I do? And can I grow spinach in pots?

  24. Bought the recommended 0regano republic seed pad. The only one that you recommended was the mustard seeds.
    Would you recommend the lettuce, chard, bok choy in this pack.
    With predicted early frost would you wait until this passes or plant seeds ASAP.
    Pls respond

  25. The massive amount of valuable information, facts, experience, fine details, methodology ~ AAAH-MAZING! ❤❤❤ Thanks so much!

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