This Actually Worked! (Strawberry Experiment)

This Video is from the Youtube channel: “Off-Grid with Curtis Stone”. 

 

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About Curtis Stone:

Curtis is one of the world’s most highly sought-after small farming educators. His book, The Urban Farmer, offers a new way to think about farming𑁋 one where quality of life and profitability coexist. Today, Curtis spends most of his time building his 40-acre off-grid homestead in British Columbia. He leverages his relationships with other experts to bring diverse content into the homes of gardeners and aspiring small farmers from around the world. Learn more at FromTheField.TV.

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  • @LunaBookout-j5k says:

    Thank you for your attention to detail! Your videos are always top notch! 💝🐱

  • @MarianoBrunner-r7j says:

    Very high quality content! I look forward to new videos from you! 💚🍓

  • @billlandon2160 says:

    Did you say 108 degrees F?

  • @GimmeADream says:

    Prickly lettuce is a strong painkiller but it looks very much like the sow thistle, which is what I have here on this property. I’m hoping some dirty bird will drop some prickly lettuce seeds somewhere close by, lol.

  • @whereswendy8544 says:

    Strawberries like to have friends around them.

  • @iamwendyiam says:

    Very cool! I started some new garden beds this year accompanied with wild strawberries and the wild strawberries are taking off everywhere as a ground cover. I love it.

  • @zenjamin6262 says:

    When I start stalling or getting lazy I watch Curtis and it works everytime back outside I go !

  • @Boringcountrylife says:

    Enjoy the warmth while it lasts!

  • @michaelboom7704 says:

    Must keep that in mind as I would have pulled all the extras.

  • @kjata77 says:

    Great video, love ‘guerilla growing’ and casting seed to see if things come up. I used to do that a lot out and about when seed packs were 10 for $1USD. To note though, that is not electro-culture. It’s a lightning rod stuck in a garden bed. YT is filled with channels claiming to teach electro-culture but they are spreading 100% B.S. (Curtis isn’t doing that, he’s just sharing here.). Please, Curtis & others, research electro-culture. It 100% works but is complex. 🙂

  • @lorenbush8876 says:

    Are the strawberries huge or just the leaves and the plants? It caught a glimpse of something that looked like strawberry leaves that were huge and more than a foot off the ground, my perception may not have been right but that’s what it looked like, the mullein didn’t look that large. Thanks

  • @elizabethscott7660 says:

    Strawberries are native to forest floors. Anything imitating their natural environment will ensure they thrive.

  • @donmcleod8307 says:

    You touched on a really important point, soil exposure. Keeping your most important resource covered, keeping it being nitrogen fixed, keeping the carbon being pumped in and the minerals being pulled up, all by cover crops, is the easiest, cheapest and best practice.

    Have you read Soil by Matthew Evans? There are many books and resources on Regenerative agriculture, welcome to the club. 😁

  • @TheNewMediaoftheDawn says:

    Chop and drop all that stuff down late summer, except for the strawberries and place it around them as a mulch, maybe 1-2 hrs work. Will look awesome and produce a great crop next year and build soil.

  • @breaking_bear says:

    Great video! Wild lettuce and milk thistle are also medicinal. The seeds of milk thistle can be ground into powder and eaten to detox your liver. Also, milk thistle root can be eaten like carrots and is vitamin rich. Wild lettuce can be made into tea, and I can’t remember what it treats, but it’s good stuff!

  • @OrganicHomesteaders says:

    Great video! Love discovering stuff like this!

  • @welfaregrin says:

    42° Celsius is 107° Fahrenheit good lord!

  • @brettcastaldo3321 says:

    I never weed my strawberries and every single year they do great but when people see it they say you need to weed them and then usually follow up with how bad their strawberries are doing this year, meanwhile I’m growing more then I can handle.

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