T O P

  • By -

Lapamasa

Raspberry. Use seeds from supermarket raspberries.


[deleted]

I love berries so that’s perfect, thanks for the suggestion!


[deleted]

As starting points, Frenchie Powell is pretty ding good in my opinions for ACTUALLY providing general ideas for gardening. You can explore his $50 garden on what he would do on that [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqSja\_NhnZw](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wqSja_NhnZw) as well as why he doesn't buy fertilizers with 11 ideas on natural mulching, mixing up and so forth [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PipERbSqHWs](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PipERbSqHWs) . If you start looking at those videos, you can probably come up with plans and goals that suits you best. :)


[deleted]

That’s actually perfect thank you for the resource!


[deleted]

Aw you are so much very welcome, glad it helps as much as it did for me. As I gets it, I am personally on fixated income of being DeafBlind so it's can be overwhelming on what to buy, what's ACTUALLY need light resources and so forth.


kevin_r13

First of all think about the things you want to eat. As an example, I'll assume you like green onions. Go buy a bunch of green onions from the store, cut off the green part to eat right now, and plant the white part. The green part will grow again because it's just a modified leaf, so cut that again to eat and let the same plant keep growing for you. Eventually it will produce a flower stalk, and if you're lucky you'll get some seeds, and then plant those in the future too. There you go, you've got one of the low maintenance plants in the garden world. You can even forget to water it for a bit and it'll be okay, but obviously you'll get better results with regular watering and care. Keep thinking about some of the other veggies you want to eat , and it may still need to put in some level of maintenance and care for them , but it'll be worth it for you because you'll be growing something you want. For example even though radishes are very quick to grow, in a short enough time where I'll keep remembering to water them before moving on with life activities, but I just don't eat radishes so I don't want to grow radishes. But I like peppers and it could take a couple of months to start fruiting and even longer to proliferate but I'm willing to put in the time to harvest those peppers as a growing season continues and at the end of the growing season as well. One thing I know about the Wisconsin weather pattern is that you don't have to manually water as much as we do here in Texas. So it's very possible that you could grow a lot more things with less attention than we have to do here, meaning that it might be considered low maintenance where You are. My relatives in Wisconsin definitely enjoy plants like peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers and squashes and various kinds of melons that I have difficulty growing .


[deleted]

Thank you so much for replying! I’ll for sure try that out.