Tips

Grow Your Own Food 2 — Food Production Gardening Tips (NEL ep. 14)



In this episode of New Earth Living, holistic teacher Evita Ochel shares another grow your own food episode. This one features information and inspiration for taking accountability and responsibility for some of our own food production, gardening tips, personal gardening updates and experiences, and a tour of the garden.

Previous Grow Your Own Food Episodes:
#1: Benefits of Growing Food (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFdrGGNIP04)
#3: Starting in the Spring (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8n9SxcFKN0)
#4: Grow Beauty, Love & Joy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1a07bNYt5-o)
#5: Harvesting Tips (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLscNvsz6JY)
#6: 8 Garden Tips After 8 Years (https://youtu.be/-ZucahPi8eg)

13 Comments

  1. read about mulching from Ruth sorry forgot her full name, she is very famous about mulching it will help your earth to get better and richer. good luck!

  2. Very nice and informative video. Looking at your list, howwas the corn you grew in your garden? Very sweet? Will you add soy beans to your list?

  3. Looks great. You're right about the flavor of fresh vegetables and fruits, far more taste. With a greenhouse you can even start earlier (depending on climate).

  4. It's so nice to see an update of "Growing Your Own Food!" Looks like you've had quite a successful growing season by looking at all the variety of plants featured in your huge garden! It's true that diversity and harmony among the different kinds of plants brings a sort of balance with nature and the way many plants can live together and benefit from. Many many gardeners too often create this sort of "mono-culture" where perhaps one type of plant dominates an acre of land. Per say, a corn field or just a huge land of nothing but strawberries. No variety of different plants, just one kind of thing. Diversity and harmony simply points out anything and everything together that shares the same space, I reckon. With this rinky dinky amount of yard that I have, I have tried to add a wide range of plants together within the confides of such a small space. By far, things here in my garden seem to thrive well since there is some kind of balance among such a limited space that I've provided for the garden plants. No more mono-culturing for this gardening novice since I paid a good level of attention to your tutorials and the grand tour of your beautiful garden! I'll tell you what, we've had an incredibly hot summer here in the Midwestern region of the States. Although most of my vegetable plants loved the inferno of the sun, others wilted and nearly died because the temperatures were so intense. On average, it can get up to over 105 degrees on any given day in June towards the latter parts in September. In winter…Just like the Arctic. Loved your video which inspired my "vegetable variety garden!" 😉

  5. Location. I'm in extreme northeast America. I'm just sad bc I've attempted gardens and not had good success. I've tried awesome organic fertilizers and all. 😞

  6. Very informative and nice presentation.I do appreciate your holistic approach. By the way, is compost enough to grow cauliflower and cabbage like yours as they r hungry crops ?Do you consume all your produce or sell?I’ve just subscribed you channel.

Write A Comment

Pin