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Vegetable Garden in March | Homestead Garden Tour - Life Smart Hub

Vegetable Garden in March | Homestead Garden Tour

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Vegetable Garden in March | Homestead Garden Tour
How to make broad beans support
How to grow parsnips
How to grow elephant garlic
Growing perennial onions
Making a hanging raised bed

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About Us.
Byther Farm is a small organic homestead, being designed and managed using permaculture practices. We aim for self-sufficiency in fruit and vegetables for increased self reliance and better resilience to the modern world. I recognise that we are unlikely to be truly self sufficient, but do the best we can. I share our home with my loving husband, Mr J and our cat, Monty.
We are a fifty-something couple who live on a smallholding in Carmarthenshire, Wales. We are going green and creating a gentler, cleaner and more healthy life for our family.
Having had a highly successful smallholding in Monmouthshire, we hope to recreate the abundance at our new home. There will be a large organic kitchen garden with no dig gardening raised beds and young food forest in which to grown our fruit and vegetables.
We keep a few sheep and Aylesbury ducks.

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25 COMMENTS

  1. Beautiful garden! We're getting our vegetable garden going here in Missouri, USA, and making videos to share it all. Looking to connect with other gardeners to learn tips and share how it all turns out! 🙂

  2. Hi Liz. Great to see your progress. Your fava beans look strong and healthy and your standard roses are going to look beautiful . Spring is such a wonderful time and we can look forward to the longer lighter and warmer days. You have so much going on .🎉 Margaret in Cyprus

  3. Thank you for sharing Liz your garden is coming on better than mine at the moment. Q . I'm moving plots will I be able to carefully move my garlic with me I was thinking this because I watched in your video you moved your spring onions .😊 I thought Maybe there is a chance.

  4. Hi Liz. Thanks for your video 😊 Just wondering, with your garden journal that you mentioned, is it Northern hemisphere specific with the planting guides? Or could someone in Australia still use the journal? ❤

  5. It’s been a testing few months with the weather, both on the farm and the veg plot.

    Really enjoyed seeing things coming to life and what your plans for the beds are. I really need to make the most of my resources for composting here. I shouldn’t be buying any. 🫣

    Here’s to a great season for us all 😊

  6. Garden progress was extremely hard and muddy here in denmark! The whole winter my flower fields (organic flower farm) were so wet, that I couldn't enter them for most of the time. I was so glad, that we had planted the tulips and other bulbs no till, in some extra sand on top of our loamy soil (covered with additional sand and straw). That prevented us from loosing our tulips, daffodils etc. Being new to danish climate, I'm trying out all sorts and combinations of organic methods, but weather was really bad this winter. We had 2 stormfloods nearby, rain nearly every day, sun nearly never … I'm feeling like a mole, albeit a well-washed one 😅 I wish you a sunny spring and wonderful gardentime!! 🤗🌻🌸

  7. The root trainers do a brilliant job on broad beans. I bought a huge load of mushroom compost and cow manure which has matured and that mixed makes a huge amount of compost both for veg and flowers, just altering the balance for purpose. Compost bins look great thanks for sharing.

  8. Lovely video Liz, was able to use homemade compost for the first time this year and you’re right you can never have too much of it. Just received your garden journal book. Thank you for sharing. Can’t wait to use it.

  9. The opposite problem over on this side of the world – virtually no rain for the last two months but still a lovely harvest of pumpkins recently! Looking forward to seeing your garden come to life soon Liz as I grab a cuppa, sit by the fireplace and watch you garden 😊

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