Front Yard Garden

Front Yard Garden Bed | Summer Inventory Tour Series 2023 | Texas Cross Timbers Permaculture Farm



This is the beginning of a series for my annual summer garden tour(done in late late spring), for 2023. This video documents the #permaculture #garden bed in my small front yard.
I mention curry in the video. The curry plant I am growing is Murraya koenigii. If you search for curry online, often you will find Helichrysum italicum, which is NOT the plant you want for Indian cuisine.
Some of the main crops in this part of the yard are Georgia Collard, sunchoke or Jerusalem artichoke, oregano, mint, watermelon, blackberry, wild onion, french sorrel, muscadine grape, rosemary, beets, turnips, strawberry, and tomato.

One thing I did not mention, is what I planted, but either died, or had completed harvest before the video. I planted WAY more beets and turnips that what survived, and I had dill growing quite well but was it wiped out mere days before the video. I had black mustard growing but it seeded before the video. Also, this was a location I planted prairie turnip in, but it was wiped out in 2 days.

This is in my relatively new permaculture nursery/ #farm in the Cross Timbers ecoregion of #Texas created by converting my grass lawn into a productive native garden .
#backyardgardening
#gardening
#backyardfarming
#rewilding

-NOTHING in any of my content should be taken as legal advise. I am not an attorney and do not pretend to be one. If you need help with the law, seek a professional, and stop listening to country-fried farmers on youtube.
-DO NOT consume anything based on what you see in my videos. Always do your own research, and seek the advice of an expert, before shoveling something down your gullet.

2 Comments

  1. This is part 1, in an update series for the summer(actually, super late spring), where I wander through every garden bed in my yard, and show everything in there. I noticed the video quality was lower than what it looks like on my computer before upload. I can only assume the low light conditions are to blame. I assure you, all future parts of the series will be done in a brighter part of the day.

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