It might still be a little too wet to plant. But if we don’t do it now, we might not ever get it done.

Join us as we get our English Peas planted along with some flower transplants we’ve had growing in the greenhouse.

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45 Comments

  1. I have the problem every time I plant… I run out of room lol still wanted to do leeks and peas…. but I did do 3 types of cabbage 2 types of kale 1 mustard, 2 row of 2 different types of carrots, solo beets that I love… got 6 rows 50 foot long…

  2. We planted purple hull peas and lima beans last week. They look better than they did in the Spring. North Alabama 7B.

  3. I've had pretty good luck with Lincoln peas. They only get about 30 inches tall and seem to tolerate the heat better than other varieties.

  4. Another great video. I got some AgroThrive general purpose last night 7:30 them UPS people are running behind I guess. Hope your English peas do great this time around. Old saying when the Goldenrod are in full bloom six weeks until first. They are just starting to bloom. My grandpa would say if you were not catching any fish you were not holding your mouth right. You and your family have a great day and weekend. Ps didn’t see Tyty but he was there drip tape. 🙂🌱

  5. Ok, you had me confused when you were talking about planting English Peas. When you mentioned Green Arrow Variety pea I figured what you were talking about. I live about 25 miles West of Wilmington NC. We just called them garden peas. We plant in January about 3 inches deep keep from freezing. Wonderful pea to eat

  6. My English peas are the Piggly Wiggly strain. Some times I use the Jolly Green Giant cultivar 🙂

  7. I don't always inoculate my peas. If I just recently planted beans or peas in the area in the past year the bacteria seems to still be in the soil. I love peas! English, snap, snow! I planted giant firecracker marigolds this year. They got so big and dense I have to keep cutting them out so they don't overcrowd other plants.

  8. Travis I have grown many varieties of English peas, PLS 595 is the best I have found. Johnny"s says 2 foot vines I average 3, definitely trellis. 595 is a excellent climber and produces high quality pea. One suggestion, place you rows closer to the trellis which should be only a couple inches off the ground, that way you don"t have to hand start your vines up the trellis. I raise English peas in early spring, I cant" speak to fall planting. Froze 40 pints off of a 60 foot double row. Calvin in southside Virginia.

  9. I got my peas from Johnny's last year. They were the PKT. First time I was able to grow enough peas to for us to eat a ton of them fresh and freeze a few ziploc bags. It was only a 15 ft row but it is just me and my husband. By the time I was tired of shelling peas, the plants were ready to come out. I'm in Maryland and we tend to skip Spring so a lot of cool weather veggies don't do well in the Spring.

  10. Here in Florida I always have bumper crops of snow peas, the edible pod type. I once grew Little Marvel English peas and they did quite well, too.

  11. Good luck with your peas. My Bachelor biuttons got to about 4' last year; you may find you have to stake them if you get wind.

  12. Loved the video. The psl was perfect. Lmao. We have to have a little faith.. it's still raining in southwest 0Florida…..

  13. PLS is Pure Line Seeds, the grower/breeder. 595 is just the variety ID#. They have other seed stock numbered as well. I know of a 534 and 566, I'm sure there are others. I'd have to say that sweet peas and Brussels Sprouts fight for the honor of being my least successful crop! So much so that I haven't even attempted them in a while. It's about time for another exercise in futility! 🙂

  14. Oh, forgot to mention, try pulling those vines off of your tunnel when they're still a little green. They will hold together and are much easier to remove. I pull the plant and start about half way up the trellis, just yank the crap out of them. Then, I'll usually cut them then and pull the rest from the root end of the vine. You'll get some little stubble left, but not nearly what you're dealing with now.

  15. I’ve planted Progress, Little Marvel, Wando, and pea seeds that I harvested from the previous year. I bought Lincoln peas this year, but planted other varieties instead. I’ll try the Lincoln’s next year. It says on the packet that they are good in fall gardens, which we don’t have here, but maybe they would do well for you. We can usually plant peas around St. Patrick’s Day, and we soak them the night before we plant them for faster germination.

  16. Glad you got it done! Great to see you “back” in action. 🥳 We grow a variety called “telephone Pea” it works real nice for us. I buy my seeds from a local store called Earleys. It seems to be a fairly standard variety around our parts. (Northern Canada) might not hold up so well in your sub tropical it seems temperatures this year LOL enjoy the heat, we have already had multiple Light frost days… Next week is a hard frost so growing season is over for us but I will vicariously live through your garden videos! Keep em coming🥶💚🙏

  17. Y'all look so cute working together I am glad to see y'all working together I always liked your channel with you on it but I love to see your wife working with you y'all make a good couple and love your channel and love your children they are so cute

  18. I wonder is succession planting would help your peas. Put them in between something else growing on the trellis that's near its end so the peas get some protection until the weather cools. Pull out your ending crop and let the peas keep going.

  19. Travis, I have tried to grow Mr. Big Pea 3 times this year. Spring time, rabbits ate them both times. Now, I’m waiting on them to germinate and hopefully have a fall crop. We’ll see.

  20. It is nice to see someone else plant with a trellis that was not pristine! I want my garden to look good, but sometimes it is just too hot or I am too tired (I work full-time) to do the work to make it look great and I have to be okay with good😎!!

  21. Thanks for all you do. The pair of you are entertaining, but your boys are hilarious! Love watching your shows and learning so much from you, I too am in zone 8b.
    I grew 4 different types of peas in the Spring and we had an abundance. Have some planted now but not sure we will have the same success with all this heat!

  22. It's good to see you getting up and down. I was worried about you and your back. I was hurt in a car accident and am still paying for it years later. It's good to see you yourself are doing alot better. And am glad that you and your wife are still working as a team. Bless you and your family

  23. Thanks for asking great questions Brooklyn 💕 We have the same questions too! I love y’all’s loving banter. Sounds so much like me and the my hubby 😜

  24. Wando for fall planting if temperatures are still hot. Southern Exposure Seed Exchange.

  25. Why don't you soak your peas? I soak green beans for a couple of hours I am really unhappy if my beans don't break ground in 3 days. They are still hard enough they could be inoculated after soaking with out damaging them.

  26. Whete do you now buy you drip tape and do you use the 15 mil? Am gonna try peas here in 9b Dec – Feb. Not expecting much but gonna try. Keep uo the great work. Love to see U2 together in the garden and glad your back healed up!! Great content! Hiw is the Turmeric going?

  27. Inquiring minds needed to know. Useless information to nearly everyone, but PLS stands for Pure Line Seeds.

  28. Tell Brooklyn to watch veggie boys if she wants to see no tresses or drop lines. They farm 400 acres only 80 of it is for vegetables. It's a family run business. They have a farmer's market too. Their pretty lay back like ya'll are. I enjoy watching them as I do ya'll. Can't wait to see your next video

  29. I planted some peas and they aren’t producing an abundant amount but I’m eating them when they are really young. Makes a great garden snack 😉

  30. English peas are tough to grow in upstate South Carolina. They don't Winter over very well because we get temperatures in the teens or below during the Winter. I used to plant them in February and if there was no severe cold snap they usually put on a few pods before the heat started shutting them down in May. I never had enough to preserve. I haven't grown them in more than 10 years. My cousin in Statesboro, GA, grows them during the Winter. I think he plants in late October.

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