The Natural way of growing big vegetables! gardening

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Uploaded by on Feb 19, 2011

Organic Gardening, Beekeeping and Seed Swapping Network
http://workwithnature-info.webs.com/
On how to grow a big pumpkin see:
http://workwithnature.hubpages.com/hub/Grow-giant-pumpkins
Learn how to grow giant vegetables. Using only natural growing systems. This system is more than just organic gardening, it takes nature as it's example and duplicates her way of growing plants. gardening mycorrhizal fungi

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  • I noticed you had a Mason type jar with a special lid for your puffball spores. Do you store the spores year round in that jar? I'm asking because we have some puffballs that "bloom" in the fall and I would like to try your technique next year. Thanks for all of your great videos, too!

  • @WarrenRCG I do, but I usually keep them in a dark place. I do not use giant puffballs for this though. I just buy the mix. I do try to grow them ones in a wile in some cow manure. But it is very much hit and miss :)

  • Awesome vid! I do have a question. Are all fungi good for plants? Cause I recently discovered a tiny thin stem with a spider-web top that appears to be a type of fungi on one of my pots and I was worried it might kill my seedlings in the pot. I've looked online but was not able to find it to recognize as a good or bad thing. So I removed it as a precaution. So my question again is, are all fungi good for plants? Or are there only specific varieties?

  • @ShonitaMG Hey there :) 80% of all plants form a symbioses with fungi. So generally there is nothing to worry about. If the fungi is on a wooden pot then it is eating your pot, that's all. Even if it were to be a harmful fungi, it would have done the damage already as the mushroom you see is only the fruiting body. The large part of the fungi is in the ground. With lots of fungal strands going through the soil.

    Hope that helped you. If not let me know.

  • Thank You. I did not know that.

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  • How do you get so many worms

  • I see. Yes! Thank you. It was in a Jiffy Pot. Now I feel bad that I tossed out the poor "fun-guy" (fungi) lol! Thank you for the insight. I won't panic the next time I see another fungus growing near my veggies. Thank you again!

  • @BackyardDiscoveryCo Do and let me know how you got on ;)

  • @Teddybearcop48 No as it is anti bacterial. Honey would hinder the growing microbes :)

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