Edible Gardening

Gardening All Year Round | Homestead Tour of Cold Weather Harvests



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About Us.
Byther Farm is a small organic homestead, being designed and managed using permaculture practices. We aim for self-sufficiency in fruit and vegetables for increased self reliance and better resilience to the modern world. I recognise that we are unlikely to be truly self sufficient, but do the best we can. I share our home with my loving husband, Mr J and our cat, Monty.
We are a fifty-something couple who live on a smallholding in Carmarthenshire, Wales. We are going green and creating a gentler, cleaner and more healthy life for our family.
Having had a highly successful smallholding in Monmouthshire, we hope to recreate the abundance at our new home. There will be a large organic kitchen garden with no dig gardening raised beds and young food forest in which to grown our fruit and vegetables.
We keep a few sheep and Aylesbury ducks.

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20 Comments

  1. Hello from the Venezuelan Andes. Try fermenting Yakon. Grate it and salt it. Very tasty. To reproduce Yakon you use the reddish coloured crown, not the tubers.

  2. After a growing season in which I did rather poorly at keeping up with my garden and making use of what I had, I’ve turned the chickens and ducks into the garden area and am looking forward to a better season next year! At least I can feel as though I’m nourishing the birds, they are enjoying themselves, and they are doing some pest patrol and fertilization. Thanks for the informative video!

  3. Thanks for recommending Asturian a few years ago – i've been growing it ever since, and along with Taunton Dean Kale they've become the 'workhorses' in my garden, pretty much all year round. Couldn't be without either of them!
    Also very much hoping for a bumper Yacon harvest in the next few weeks.

  4. Great to hear from you. I love your videos Liz 🤗🤗. You and Huw are great together and I especially like watching what your sowing now videos x

  5. Wow… now I have to add voles to the list of potential critters wanting to eat crops before I do! 😳😩

    Shame about the parsnips. Interesting to see your purple sprouting broccoli. I featured mine in my last video. I’ve been stunned at how large it’s grown.

    Interesting to see the dwarf Jerusalem artichokes. I’d been put off trying them for fear of their height.

    You have so much lovely food growing still. What do you grow under cover over winter?

  6. great I like a garden that's productive all year round who says you have to put it to bed, didn't know there were shorter varieties of Jerusalem artichoke this makes sense because I grew them years ago and they were about 5' to 6' but lost them, bought some new ones last year and these have reached 8' to 10', I like the screen they make

  7. Liz bless you for the tour, you looked absolutely bloody freezing! I love that pink jumper on you but made my shiver you didn't have a proper coat on!

    I always used to get confused as i thought both types of artichokes were from the same plant. They are great if you have the space for them but i for what you get, it doesn't seem to be high yielding.

    Have you tried dwarf green curled kale? It isn't as cow food tasting as i thought it would be.

    Finally managed to pull out the beetroot, radishes and turnips and reset the left side bed for the garlic, after removing the tomatoes in piece meal. I have been out for the past month or so with the rona. It's going rife around the schools atm according to the school office. I had to go on antibiotics so i haven't been much fun lately, so have been playing catch up. I was so far behind that when we went to friends for the fireworks, i wondered why the petrol was going so fast and then i had realised that we forget to remove the really big bags of compost from the boot!

    Anyway, its on the bed now and the garlic has been planted. I used half of our A4 crate of worm casting as to be honest it really doesn't need anything else and probably nothing next spring too, with the high levels of nitrogen i noticed in the soil. I would rather add any next year if i feel it needs it but i think with a bit of leaf mulch from my Dads we will be good to go.

    So disappointed with my late potatoes! I have 3 large fabric pots, each with 2 chitted potatoes and only one plant survived from the rainy horrible weather! So not quite the festive season haul i was hoping for but should have some for christmas day and maybe leftovers for boxing day if they are still ok!

    We also harvested some sprouts that have come early, so i roasted those with the turnips, beets, a potato, carrot, rosemary and garlic all from the garden. I also boiled up some beetroot leaves and baby turnip leaves/ stalks. Tesco had an offer on salmon tails, so we had that with some more garlic and carrot leaves as a garnish. I find the leaves taste like celery/parsley.

    I pickled the rest of the beets and white radishes with some shop bought onion and left over veg for Christmas.

    I am hoping to bring in the herb window box into our utiliy area that connects the house to the garden so i can transplant some parsley, dill, coriander etc. It gets quite a bit of sun there.

    Anyway, hope it isn't too wet there!?

    Just waiting for this last runner bean to get really big for seeds and hope it doesn't get nibbled on or mushy before i cut it back, like you said. I have been growing sugar snap peas but they haven't done much yet. Last year was too early and too hot and this year might be too late but will see.

    Protecting the spinach and pak choi from the pigeons with some old net curtains and small bamboo canes, until i can think of something i can resource/ reuse to stop them eating them. We have a very thicc collar dove pigeon in our garden atm!

    Also watched our local squirrel bury his nuts in some containers and then wash his face on our wet lawn. He has no shame….

    Best wishes from London x

  8. I just got some Jerusalem artichoke tubers, going to put those in pots as the people I got them from allowed the "chokes" to overtake their gardens.
    This is the first year I will eat some, so going to research how to avoid the gassy outcome and enjoy them.
    I put out seedling parsley, going to coddle them for a bit.
    I don't have voles, but squirrels that dig around everywhere. I lost quite a few seedling but the remaining one might actually grow. 🙄

  9. Garden is looking great! I always seem to miss the best moment to grow things like mustards or rocket so I never get any. They either bolt or just don't grow. I do still have a small patch of salsify, and it surprises me that I don't see that veg in more winter growing videos! I agree it's a mess in the kitchen but it tastes so wonderful.. Just as good as sunchokes but without the gas 🙂

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