Power Planter Augers – https://bit.ly/3JdEMu4
Planning Out Our Brick Patio! – http://bit.ly/4020V5E
Two Days Down at the Garden Center for New Plant Loads! – http://bit.ly/3JA3qGY
Seed Starting: 1,000+ Annual Flowers! – http://bit.ly/3mJ08YW
Dahlias: Taking Them Out of Storage + Pre-Sprouting! – http://bit.ly/3ZXBXnU
Greenhouse Tidy Up (+ Planting Freesias & Finishing the Dahlias)! – http://bit.ly/3yxxooy
27 Comments
Im the first to comment yoohoooo 😄. Thanks Laura for all the garden advice really helpful and im also inspired by you with my Garden Vlogs here on my youtube. Thank you again and follow me too guys 😅😅
Good morning! 🌻🐝
Good morning from Delaware GA friends😊
Goodnight from Sydney AUSTRALIA
Good Sunday morning! After my Bible and coffee, I look forward to you!! God continue to bless ya!!
Hi laura I'm a huge fan of yours 🥰 I am watching from Philippines, You have no idea how much you inspire me to love my plants more! Believe it or not I've been planting since I was 5 years old and I am amazed how beautiful your garden is. Thank you for inspiring me and other people as well please continue making your videos 💚
💙💚🌿🍀🍃🌿🍀🍃🌿🍀🍃💚💙
Happy lunch time from the U.K.!!!!
Good morning, Laura and Aaron, from Windermere, Florida zone 9b USA 🇺🇸 🌞
I'm watching and listening and laughing at your appreciation of hooks on the table so you can reach for the hose without bending over 🤣 At 72 years old I need hooks everywhere🤣
I love your innovation for the Grass patch so Samantha can have her Nic-Nic!💓
Happy Gardening Everyone 👩🌾👍💓
❤️Peggy❤️
the hair looks better no orange.i think the hilites should not be near your face because it steals from your beautiful eyes
You could put a round or square sunken seated area in the brick patio, as you planned to put seating in any way, so it would save on the cost of additional furniture, and add another dimension to that area!
Good morning! 🌻
Long in the tooth – as we age gums recede. 😁
Wow. I’m stopping the video at the point you’re discussing trying yews. I have suggested them several times in the comments in the past and I kind of got the impression that you didn’t like them, since you never acknowledged the idea. We had beautiful yews all around our yard on the farm where I grew up outside of Nyssa. They were there for many years and as far as I can remember, there were never any issues with them. (For anyone wondering why this is significant, Nyssa is the next town over from Laura and Aaron. Approximately 12 miles or so as the crow flies. Same climate and soil conditions)
I won shrub madness one year, the prize had been two hydrangea, I was so effusive in my email (because I had never won anything) that PW sent me four instead! Also, regarding the brick patio area, what about leaving it open for the kids to ride their bikes on until later and then maybe one of those large square sunken ponds like great British gardens are known for? Maybe some koi in there…
some animals like goats have teeth that keep growing so when they ere old and or wise they are called long in tooth
"Long in the tooth" I believe is a horse analogy signifying age. Often horse's teeth need to be floated, as they get sharp and can effect they're chewing and how well they take in their food. Not sure that the teeth actually grow longer, though.
Our gardens didn't do well in sw Missouri either. It was so hot and weird that all of the plants dropped their blooms.
Long in the tooth comes from horses.
What about adding a car port on the side of the barn next to the chicken coop?
When are you up potting geraniums ? Would like to see update please. 42:36
marajuana is the giving plant
Mahogany splendor hibiscus definitely blooms….they are so beautiful!
Love starting my morning with Laura and Aaron. 🌸
Long in the tooth…has to do with horses. As they age their teeth get longer. So, back in the day when horses got old, they would say the horse is long in the tooth.
“Long in the tooth” The expression came from the figuring out a horse’s age by checking their teeth. Horse teeth continue to grow (slowly) and the “longer” their teeth are, the older they are. So that becomes a phrase that implies old age or a long time passing.
It also has to do with the expression, “Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth”. In other words, it’s not very gracious to check a gifted horse’s age. The same way it’s not polite to ask the price of a gift.
Long in the tooth !?!? I think it’s because peoples gums reseed with age!? I don’t know, that’s what I thought 😂