Vegetable Gardening

North Texas Vegetable Garden Update – Spring Planting March 22



North Texas Vegetable Garden Update – Spring Planting March 22.
Join me today as I begin planting our spring vegetable garden.

I show you how to plant squash, and our new trellis for my cucumbers and much more about vegetable gardening in Texas.

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Hillbilly Jilly

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Welcome to North Texas Vegetable Gardening and Cooking with Hillbilly Jilly.

Here you’ll find guides, tips and information on #vegetable #gardening, #cooking, #canning and long-term food storage.

I show you how to prepare classic comfort #food #recipes along with new recipes proven to satisfy and delight. You’ll learn how I grow all organic heirloom vegetables from seed to harvest to preparation, free of pesticides. Grown as nature intended in my Texas #garden.

#Home DIY projects, spring and fall vegetable gardening in north Texas, garden planning tips and information of all sorts are being added every week to help #people succeed as gardeners, learn to #cook and add new recipes to their cookbooks!

Learn about canning your vegetable garden harvest. We show you how to pickle jalapeno peppers, make hamburger dill pickles and much more.

I also go over in detail, how to save your seeds for next year’s garden; save and preserve your cumber, squash, zucchini, cantaloupe.

I hope you enjoy my videos – I try to bring you useful #life tips and how to guides on all things gardening and cooking.

Please feel free to leave a comment, subscribe #today, and thank you for dropping in!

Hillbilly Jilly

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7 Comments

  1. I'm in the Longview Texas area. For the last 10 years I've been working to improve a small 50 x 80 garden site on my factory lot. Started with hard packed high clay "dead" industrial dirt that a 2 bottom MB plow wouldn't even get a bite into.Example: yesterday at the same site I wanted to plant 3 pear trees. Had to use a backhoe to dig the holes and loosen the soil as hand digging wasn't even an option.After finally getting the garden area broke up I added tons of manure,compost and turned under green matter over the years and now it isn't too terrible.Just a years long process.This year I also added 6" of mulch to another area 50' x 80' to begin the garden site extension process. Mulch will break down for a year or 3 and sooner or later I'll have another high organic matter site to garden with.
    I'm guessing you do have a tractor so a hiller would be a good implement for you.
    This year I planted 40 tomato and pepper seedlings.Collards,32' sugar peas,40'cukes,12 squash mounds,30' radish,6 egg plant seedlings,40' bush green beans,and later some creme peas.
    Love your videos btw.Few people still raise a large garden: loads of work but the rewards are there.
    Amos

  2. Hi Jill!I'm glad I found a fellow Texas gardener in my zone….. you're really workin hard! That delivered dirt looked really dark and nice.I'm surprised you've got lettuce growing, mine has already matured and has the white sap in it,making it bitter.

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