Vegetable Gardening

Vegetable Garden Tour Early-May 2021: Zone 6a, Ohio



Welcome to the first vegetable garden tour of 2021!
I am growing in Zone 6a, Ohio and focus on growing things I love to eat (vegetables, fruits & herbs), with a few flowers thrown in here & there- primarily for the pollinators.

I grow a vegetable garden at my home and share in the work of the larger vegetable garden at my parent’s home- In this video I share what’s growing now & plans for the 2021 gardening season at both locations.

00:00 Intro
00:32 Strawberry Bed
01:00 Raised Beds
03:12 Why Row Covers?
05:24 In-ground Beds
10:29 Expanding- Outside the Fence
11:08 No-Dig Potato Bed Experiment Update
12:37 Plans for Garden Location #2
13:17 My Gardens at Mom & Pop’s
15:23 What’s in the Greenhouse?

#zone6gardening #vegetablegardening #ohiogardening

47 Comments

  1. Thank you 😊 This was the first time I have seen all your garden space at one time. I love it! Please do a garden tour every week. You’re inspiring me to grow more. I planted kohlrabi for the first time because of you 👍🏻

  2. Where did you get the garden netting? I grow in zone 10, so mostly need it for bunnies and buggies. Like that it can be seen through. Thanks.

  3. Your channel just got suggested, so I watch, omg your garden looks awesomely A..M..A..Z..I..N..G🥰🥰 new subbed

  4. A good trick to warm up your soil is actually cover crops or let it grow weeds. It's a thing that's not very well known, but plant roots are warm coz they shelter billions of bacteria and other soil life, which warm up your soil. I've noticed last year that if I plant in beds that are full of wood chips, the plants get a late start. But if a lot weeds have grown in this bed, with the woods chips, and that I weed out the bed and plant in this, I get a much stronger start for my crops. Farmers around France who do "living soil gardening" IE with a thick layer of mulch all year round and no tilling, usually use commercial black plastic tarps, coz it warms up the soil quickly. But that's not an option in most private gardens.
    Just like you though, my cabbages have a huge number of pests, but mainly cabbage shield bug (eurydema ornata) and pigeons who eat the leaves. Netting is too fragile and expensive for me, so I only grow cabbages in the fall and winter, when those pests are gone. I find though that a good trick against pest, if you have room in your garden, is to plant what they eat as cover crop. For example, slugs love brassica leaves. So you just sow canola as cover crops and they'll eat that. I tried it and it works. If your rabbits like chard, maybe let a few grow to seed, and you'll have a huge number of seeds to make a bed full of them for the bunnies. I usually find that the more plants you have, and the more biodiversity you have, the less pest problems you get. Of course it's very hard to do in some areas… I would love a pond in our urban community garden for example, but it's impossible.

  5. I'm amazed at how big your spring crops are compared to mine. I'm in zone 6a new hampshire and I planted a lot of lettuce and spinach and carrots in mid March and they are well behind yours. Did you start in the fall or something? What is your secret?

  6. I’m in Ohio and just found your channel. We just bought a house that has enough room for me to start a small garden and I’m so scared lol

  7. That looks amazing! I am a beginner gardener and live in Ohio as well. When did you start growing for this year? Did you start indoors and transplant?

  8. Would you interested in making some raising animals for meat videos? We are working on re-design fences for raising animals in the future this year. We had 2 cattle last year but didn't end well… so we are hunting for other meat options then decide fence off for long terms!

  9. Great video! This has me so excited for spring. Can you tell me where you get the metal that you use for your hoops? I would like to try using those the spring to keep the critters and bunnies out. Thanks for the great videos! I’ve been watching several of yours lately.

  10. So happy I found you! We are neighboring states(Indiana), and this year struggling with the bi polar weather.
    Your garden is beautiful

  11. I love your videos.. I'm also in zone 6 in WV.
    I was wondering, where did you get your wire hoops? I also have rabbits and need to get the netting cover to keep them and the cabbage moths out. Also, how wide are your long garden rows? I'll keep watching.

  12. I just found your channel. I enjoyed this garden tour. I am wanting a greenhouse like you have, do you know what kind it is?

  13. Hello Jenna, Richard Hart again. I now seek out your videos because your explanations are accurate and simple to follow. However, I would like to know if you have compost piles and is your garden completely organic. I am sure if I further pursue this you probably have a video on it. I also just ordered the fabric covers. I am jealous of the size of your garden, I only wish I had that much room. Thanks again.

  14. I know it's simple but show me how to make the raised beds you use. They look simple, logical, and economical.

  15. Great episode! I’m a new subscriber and was wondering what is the brand name for the netting you used to covered your veggies? Thanks!

  16. Hey Jenna, how do you get oregano to grow large. Every time we plant it the size never changes . Do you have any tricks for oregano?
    Thanks again !

  17. Gooseberries bring back a memory from the 1950's. My mother made a pie of them, and after dessert, my younger sister said (always polite!) "I liked the pie. But I didn't like the cherries you put in it,"

  18. Thank you for sharing your garden with me. I just love how it’s all coming together and growing so nicely! I love to garden and I also make garden videos. I in my 3rd year gardening. I have so much to still learn. I’d love it if we could learn more from each other! Happy gardening 👨‍🌾 🌷🌼🌻🌺🌸🌹🐝

  19. I noticed you don’t have any weeds in your planting area. What is your best tip to keep garden weed free? I mulch with straw but still manage to get weeds everywhere

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