Fruit and Vegetable Garden in Austin, TX - #1
Loading...
4,584
Loading...
Uploader Comments (evanmcgrath)
see all
All Comments (12)
-
Nice garden, you know that the big yellow flowers are edible and tasty.
-
nice garden
-
Very good video. You have the voice and dialog of a radio/tv host on a sunday morning gardening show. Perhaps you could add in a little crocodile hunter element in the spirit of Steve Irwin. You must have used quite a nail gun for that project
-
Oh yea, you could also use some turtles in that garden.
-
What an excellent video. I am very impressed with the presentation. You should really consider a career in broadcasting.
-
wow i hope i can have one like this in the future. the way you set up the watermelons was genius!
Loading...
Hi. I live in North Texas and I would like to grow a veggie garden. You have such a bountiful garden! I was wondering about your growing season. I can't seem to get anything started because the heat just kills everything. When do you set plants out? When do you call it quits for the summer? Do you do late season (late Aug-Sep) plantings? If you do, when do you have to call it quits in the winter? Thanks!!
kishabynum 1 year ago
@kishabynum
Yes, the summer heat will kill just about everything but peppers. Rule of thumb, I try to plant my spring garden on President's Day (around mid-Feb). By June/July, the heat will kill most of your plants without a ton of water. I use rainwater until I'm out and then just call it quits for the summer. Then, around mid-to-late Sept, I'll plant a winter crop with things like lettuce, swiss chard, brocolli, potatoes, and anything else that likes the cold weather. Hope this helps!
evanmcgrath 1 year ago
where did you get the materials to build this enclosure? were these all grown from seeds?
Klubkid69 2 years ago
Hello,
Not everything was grown from seeds, but most of it was.
I think the cauliflower, brocolli, and strawberries were from starter plants from a local nursery.
It is actually a pretty simple setup. Used a few 4"x4"x12' boards to make the raised bed. Then used standard chicken wire and 1"x2"x8' boards to border the wire. Everything was bought from a local hardware store in Austin.
evanmcgrath 2 years ago