Create a highly productive, self-sustaining, low maintenance vegetable garden bed by emulating a permaculture food forest.

Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds: https://www.rareseeds.com

Here are links to some of the seeds used in this garden bed:

Claytonia (aka miner’s lettuce):
http://www.rareseeds.com/miners-lettuce/?F_Keyword=claytonia

Mache (aka corn salad):
http://www.rareseeds.com/corn-salad-dutch/?F_Keyword=corn%20salad

Radicchio:
http://www.rareseeds.com/rossa-di-verona-radicchi/?F_Keyword=radicchio

Tatsoi:
http://www.rareseeds.com/tatsoi-green/?F_Keyword=tatsoi

Mizuna:
http://www.rareseeds.com/mizuna-green/?F_Keyword=mizuna

Red Veined Sorrel:
http://www.johnnyseeds.com/p-7309-red-veined-sorrel.aspx

Spinach:
http://www.rareseeds.com/gigante-d-inverno-spinach/?F_Keyword=spinach

Carrots:
http://www.rareseeds.com/cosmic-purple-carrot/?F_Keyword=carrots
Video Rating: / 5

Advice on Starting Your Own Calgary Vegetable Garden

Rod Olson from Leaf and Lyre Urban Farms gives advice on things that grow well in Calgary, and they should know! They run a small business selling the produce they grow from gardens around Bowness. Read the full article here: http://calgary.isgreen.ca/outdoor/gardens-outdoor/advice-on-starting-your-own-calgary-vegetable-garden/

Emulate a Permaculture Food Forest In Your Vegetable Garden

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23 Comments

  • Andrea Johns

    I like Seed Savers Exchange for open pollinated varieties as well as Baker Creek. Seed Savers produces a member directory in which anyone who has seeds to trade or barter can list contact info. Seed Savers is working very hard to identify and maintain viable stores of heirloom vegetable and fruit varieties. You don't have to be a member to purchase from them but if you do choose to become a member there are discounts available for purchases. (I don't work for Seed Savers. I promote them because I feel their mission is vital to maintaining unadulterated seed stock)

  • Jody Lee Drafta

    Wonderful video, once again. Learning a lot from your channel. Question: do you grow anything in the bed in rows? I know you've said you don't grow one kind of plant in one area. I have a 3' x 8' cold frame and a 4' x 8' raised bed built as in your videos. What I see in your garden in terms of spacing is very different from the instructions on plant packages. I would love to get more out of the small space I have and am wondering – do I just plant sorrel, mizuna and other in 'patches' rather than rows? How close can I leave the plants? Thanks very much.

  • B Cook

    FYI, the link at the end to see 3 months later doesnt work anymore. Or, at least, not for me.

    "This page isn't available. Sorry about that.
    Try searching for something else."

  • Suburban Stewards

    I think this is one of my fave clips from you Pat, less scripted , more grounded , shows more of the man than a "show" …. Talking about an issue close to my own heart , was very refreshing to watch this clip (Y) 😀

  • Alexandro Herrera

    Awesome video man! I am trying to include many of these green species in my garden as well. I live in Taos, NM also Zone 5. Thanks for making these videos.

  • Liberty Garden

    Do you have any rodent problems, rats in particular, eating the berries or fruits?  I don't mind them eating, but I'm a little concerned for my house becoming rodent magnet.

  • Kalleidoscape

    Why is there so much emphasis on only growing perennials in a permaculture garden, when annuals also exist in nature and can re-sow themselves every year?

  • Elle BC

    Our little dog is practicing "chop and drop" permaculture with our late-late season tomatoes. He only likes to eat the red ones, so he drops the unripe ones all over the backyard. We had ALL of our tomatoes this year as volunteers from the 2013 season – and they were in weird places, like in the middle of pathways. I had to laugh at your comment about how we don't try to grow pumpkins or corn or tomatoes this way – letting tomatoes seed themselves sure results in a tomato takeover! We transplanted all the little seedlings to real beds and just let them go nuts over the lawn instead of trellising them up. In the heat of summer, some of the ripest romas were found almost underground, burying themselves in the lawn underneath for cool earth and shade. These plants must just grow everywhere in the wild – who wouldn't want to photograph the natural tomato forest? #foodnotlawns   

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