Our fall vegetable transplants are ready in the greenhouse and fall planting in the backyard garden will begin very soon! But first, we need to determine where we are going to plant all these vegetables.
We’ll start in the greenhouse where we need to start a few more onion varieties, leeks, and culantro. We’ll show you how we know our fall transplants are ready to go from their trays to the outside garden.
Then we’ll take a walk around the “Dream Garden” and tell you our plans for all six of these backyard garden plots this fall. We’ll also explain how we are determining which vegetables we’ll plant in our new raised bed garden vs. our in-ground garden plots.
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42 Comments
First Rate Travis! Thanks, Chuck in Jensen Beach, Florida
Looks great !! Have a bountiful harvest!!
Great update on the greenhouse and your raised beds. Excited to see how those raised beds perform! Also glad to hear that you were spared Ian’s wrath.
Please let us know if you get any germination from the culantro seeds.
This channel is what I've been looking for. I watch epic gardening, James P. and Self Sufficient Me. Being a Georgia boy myself here in Midwest Georgia and a Dawgs fan, this channel just seems custom tailored!
Need an edit. You could've filmed in the Green House with the wind blowing. Now, you hit the house. Hahahahaha. Eaglegards…
When do start putting some fertilize to your tray onions?
Yes, we do a hybrid system. Raised beds for all of the compact stuff, and in-ground for big things like corn, potatoes, tomatoes, and pumpkins. Hey, I wanted to ask you when do you plan to end the bigmater contest?
Glad to see a raised bed segment to the channel. I’m sure I’ll be learning a few things or getting ideas for later. I have two 4×4, six 4×8 and six 4×12 beds plus the conventional garden I inherited when I bought my house. The garden gets sweet corn as primary crop and this year a section of watermelon. Probably do exactly the same next year, just rotate plots. Currently a few inch high cover crop of tillage radish, seven top turnip and some Austrian winter peas.
Raised beds get everything else but I’m usually a bit less varied than I could be. Salad garden, radish, potatoes, garlic, onions, green beans, tomatoes. Did Swiss chard that produced all year and will try to winter it. Root crops, carrots, beets, fall turnips and cool season stuff. Always do my brassicas in the fall to ease the bug pressure. Usually do cabbage and some broccoli plants. Sowed Vates collards this year but had (I think) Georgia collards last year I really liked and could see a difference in from the Vates.
Garden 2022 as a whole was not that great. Too hot or something was off. Maybe operator error this year. Only thing that was absolutely crazy was okra and second year asparagus. Overran the freezer with okra! I’m making gumbo once a week for a couple more weeks to get rid of what I don’t want to freeze. Life is tough!
Are we not letting the beet drop this season? An if one was to wanna drop tha beet, would you come direct or transplant? An when droppin tha beet it’s all about timing. So what’s the timing?
Did I understand you to say you pulled your sweet potatoes already? I thought they were harvested after the first frost.
I'm having a problem with wireworm feeding on my sweet potatoes. Do you have any suggestions on how to get rid of them?
Trav, culantro is a warm season herb and to my understanding, doesn't tolerate direct sun. Also extremely slow. Although I've not grown it yet. I got seeds earlier in the season and was planning on growing it indoors until next spring. Ijs
Travis, will you still be putting on the top soil in the raised beds to top them off and give the seedlings a head start?
Locke the idea to plant all Garlic in one bed.
I’ve planted some left over potatoes in horse manure and it’s bedding , so here’s hoping, but the large container one is extremely green a health, which I topped up with more manure and bedding to hill them.
Don’t need no water plenty of rain
When I first started, I would grow shorter, more compact veg in the raised beds too…tall stuff in ground. Now days it's whatever I feel like. It all works good. I have even grown sweet potatoes in them and just let them cascade over, keeping them mowed off…it all works.
Raised bed: carrots, onions, garlic, celery, bell peppers, bush beans, spinach, kale, cilantro, parsley, rosemary, short flowers.
In ground: peas, corn, tomatoes, brassicas, squash, potatoes, pole beans, dill, asparagus, tall flowers.
(It will be fun watching your fall/winter gardens grow while I’m inside painting walls, crafting, puzzling…)
Check out bumblebee junction they have both. raised beds and in ground gardening .In ground corn, watermelon, pumpkin, field peas,Okra and Brussels sprouts.They also bought a big round water tank from tracker supplies to use for their sweet potatoes. They bought those 15-20 gallons containers for their potatoes. Check out a simple life he knows potatoes
Sorry that was simplifying gardening for container for potatoes
Yeah…i bought curly parsley for blue swallotail from the dollar store…turned out they are all flat leaf…not happy…i just wonder if the swallow tail will like it…i had five catiplliars and two plants they ate up way way too quick…hope they make it…i should be able to really.feed about 200 next year…easily…if the drought breaks…our historic wettest month has turned into the dryest!! This has gotten really bad at our place as almost every storm has parted and MISSED US..LAST THREE for sure
I also had found a old pack of dill and got 2 outta about 200 seeds..but two more than i had before.
Im a seed hoarder…there i confessed. My first time admitting it publically..im pushing 80 and have always been…as long as i can remember
I have one raised bed, right outside my kitchen door. In my experience, there have been many vegetables that have done very well. The best producers were carrots, onions, bush beans, peppers and any greens. I’m looking forward to watching what you do with yours.
I have always thought that it would be helpful to plant bush beans in a tall raised bed for ease of harvest.
Great video! Where are your Georgia Collards?? ❤
FYI MUSTARD OIL has gone out the roof almost $20 for a gallon . IN ASIAN STORES
My dad and I grow both in ground an in raised beds made from sheets of DUROCK that are split down the middle. We have no real rhyme or reason behind what goes in the beds vs in the ground. Uusally larger planitngs we will put in the ground. I follow/combine the practicies of Charles Dowding and others like yourself. So great to have this cotent available for us new farmers. Thanks Trav looking forward to getting another Fig tree from you, our Mary Jane seedless or whatever is doing great.
My parents grew Culantro in Dominican Republic year round. I think it doesnt bolt I might have to grow some so I can unlock my childhood lol
Hi Travis, could you please explain the difference between drip tubing and drip tape?
Looking good as always Travis. I too am needing to do some additional onions seed planting. I do have a hybrid setup garden. About 40 or so 4'x8' raised beds and then a larger area in the back. I use the back for stuff like corn, butter beans and peas. That is where I did the potatoes last year. I will be planting a cover crop back there this fall which leads me to my question. I'm in zone 8 like you and was wondering when would be a good time to plant my mustard cover crop? As far as the raised beds I plant many types of peppers. Tomatoes also go into them along with lettuce, kale, onions and other items. Keep those excellent video's coming.
I think it would be interesting to grow the same crop/variety in a your raised bed and in-ground garden. I am also curious what you discover in how to manage the raised beds vs. in-ground plots like water and fertilizer. I have gardened in large containers a bit the past few years and have no experience with in-ground gardening due to gophers. I think this content will be very interesting to follow. Thank you for trying the no-till and now raised beds…plus the raised beds look quite nice. Love the channel.
On my farm deciding what to plant in the raised beds vs what to plant in ground is very simple. If it’s a flower or something my wife wants to grow it goes to the raised bed. If it’s something I want to eat it goes to the in ground garden.
Easily my favorite channel by far. Thanks for the great content Travis
Glad you took my recommendation on the Culantro hope it works out. We did do better this year here in Michigan with our Culantro. maintained high 80's this year few 90 degrees days but dry.. Keep us informed!
I am building a green house for the wife she is from Honduras said that the Culantro is like perennial not sure I can make it last thru the winter here..
I have 4-6×9 raised beds and a 24×70 row crop garden. For my cold weather things, I mostly broadcast sowed the lettuces, mustard, turnips and especially the carrots in the raised beds. Maximum yield and harvest / thin as I go. Looking forward to seeing what your yields are. I
SW FL here and yeah. It wasn't fun. Heck it's still not fun. We're alive and our house is safe so we're thankful.
Looking good boss
Another great video, Travis. I never thought about the compactness of fall and winter crops, but it does give you the ability to plant more in smaller places. Love the raised beds.
Always like your videos..thanks for all the great gardening info! Have you ever grown horseradish? Maybe something else to try in the raised bead.
I have tried it with minimal success in my sand soil and hot weather. I keep trying new things to get a good crop so I can make some sauce- horseradish/cocktail-for oysters etc.
It would be cool to see how you would do the horseradish in a similar climate I know that in some places it probably would grow like a weed.
KInda off topic. Ive been doing gardens for more years than I would admit. I still struggle to get plants out of 6 cell seed trays. I notice you use ones with 32 or even more cells. Can you show us how you get plants out of those large planters one day?
It would be much handier if I could use the big seed starter trays. Im probably not letting them dry enough before removing, or probably something simple but man those big trays dont work for me.
What about shallots? How do you plant shallots?
Can you put tomato cages on yellow squash to save space?
Watching you on Blinda and Chuck. I swore I subbed to your previously. Good thing I popped in tonight so I could sub again.
👍👍👍👍👍
Apparently you aren't going to talk about raised beds vs. in-ground gardens.
Woohoo a whole plot of garlic I'm envious!! I've been looking for seed garlic for about a week!! The storm tore my front garden to shreds but the crazy eggplants are coming back and fruiting! Now if I can figure out to get broccoli to germinate😄