Backyard Garden

Growing Food in Urban Small Spaces – Urban Gardening



Growing Food in Urban Small Spaces guest video by Luay of Urban Farm and Kitchen. This video is the first in the Humans Who Grow Food and Robin Greenfield series. Humans Who Grow Food features stories of home gardeners, farmers and community gardens across borders and cultures.

Follow Luay:
Website: https://www.urbanfarmandkitchen.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urbanveggiegarden @urbanveggiegarden
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urbanfarmandkitchen
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOseIOjjJju2NdgjoYO9bZA

Follow Humans Who Grow Food:
http://facebook.com/humanswhogrowfood
http://instagram.com/humanswhogrowfood @humanswhogrowfood

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https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZKyAx6P3p31nluTG7uamw

Edited by Daniel Saddleton http://www.hiphikersmedia.com

Robin Greenfield’s work is Creative Commons and this content is free to be republished and redistributed, following the terms of the creative commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 license. Learn about Creative Commons and see the guidelines here: http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0


Robin Greenfield is an activist and humanitarian dedicated to leading the way to a more sustainable and just world. He embarks on extreme projects to bring attention to important global issues and inspire positive change. 100% of his media income is donated to grassroots nonprofits.
His YouTube channel is a source to educate, inspire and help others to live more sustainable, equal and just lives. Videos frequently cover sustainable living, simple living, growing your own food, gardening, self-sufficiency, minimalism, off the grid living, zero waste, living in a tiny house and permaculture.

Find Robin Greenfield on:
Website: https://www.RobGreenfield.org
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RobJGreenfield @RobJGreenfield
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RobGreenfield
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/RobGreenfield
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RobJGreenfield @RobJGreenfield

Help us caption & translate this video!

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25 Comments

  1. This video is the first in the Humans Who Grow Food and Rob Greenfield series.
    Humans Who Grow Food features stories of home gardeners, farmers and community gardens across borders and cultures.

    Follow Luay:
    Website: https://www.urbanfarmandkitchen.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/urbanveggiegarden @urbanveggiegarden
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/urbanfarmandkitchen
    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOseIOjjJju2NdgjoYO9bZA

    Follow Humans Who Grow Food:
    http://facebook.com/humanswhogrowfood
    http://instagram.com/humanswhogrowfood @humanswhogrowfood
    http://humanswhogrowfood.com/
    https://twitter.com/humansgrowfood
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZKyAx6P3p31nluTG7uamw

  2. I'm putting my totes in a row like you did in an empty area I didn't notice before. Thank you for an inspiring video.

  3. Very nice. I really want to grow more food this year, so appreciate every kind of inspiration… With a war going on not too far away from here, we can already feel the impact on supply chains… so best thing to do is to be prepared and become as self-sustaining as we can.

  4. Outstanding!!! Not only functional and productive, but simple and beautiful as well!! How do you amend your soil? Do you keep a worm bin or compost pile? Many thanks for the inspiration!

  5. I think my favorite example here is the waist-high "salad bar". I am wondering what you mean by "pest pressure" and how raising the bar would help. I can see that in my rainy climate having a salad bar of this type would be incredibly helpful with regard to keeping the greens out of the rain (and therefore prevent them from getting splashed with mud) and also away from the slugs.

  6. What do you fertilize the tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini and greens with, and how often? Thank you

  7. Online Family, be sure to use an anonymous name on YouTube especially because we are talking about prepping and pantries.

  8. This is lovely and inspiring! If you can do all of this in Toronto Canada, that’s amazing!

  9. Definitely given me ideas to incorporate in my urban growing community. I'm gonna used raised beds as a fence line in the front to connect with my neighbourhood.. Appreciate

  10. How much sun do you get in your backyard? Our problem is that we only get about 2 hrs full sun. The neighbour's have large trees that they won't cut down.

  11. Your community garden must really be located in a good part of the town or city. We were stationed in the state of Washington and I was gonna rent a plot. But gardeners weren’t even able to harvest their own crops since people would steal them unfortunately. But you’ve given me a lot of inspiration and ideas on how to start my garden. My space is about the same as yours. Thank you for sharing.

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