Vertical Gardening Made Easy

August 9, 2010 by  
Filed under Gardening Videos


www.EasiestGarden.com This is a system we designed to grow vertical gardens in less than 4 square feet that is easy to build, easy to maintain, and most of all affordable! Very little technical skill is required, and with a very affordable investment, a basic knowledge of tools and a few hours you can build a vertical garden to grow dozens of pounds of strawberries, lettuce and herbs right on your patio!

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  3. Creating an Attractive and Productive Herb Garden the Easy Way
  4. Vegetable Gardening For Beginners – 6 Easy Tips To Start You Off
  5. Late Summer Garden: Easy and Cheap Gardening Tips

Comments

25 Comments on "Vertical Gardening Made Easy"

  1. userss00 on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 7:06 pm 

    @HowToDrillAWell well said.

  2. hablerz on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 7:25 pm 

    @magog1138 If u gave away free food and electricity u would probably die in a mysterious car accident.

  3. lslavychecker on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 7:33 pm 

    I can see future in it special for herbs…

  4. GreenNerd420 on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 7:56 pm 

    @noaa2337 How the fuck do you propose someone could grow corn using this system? And why?

  5. rcacad on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 8:12 pm 

    Im starting an investment group to build neighboorhood house/buildings to do this. Its all a non tiered investment and all profits are % shared by those who= bought into the plan after all the cost analysis was done. The food would be sold at the local farmers market OR out of an old shutdown business. Any takers? Ive seen some incredible terraced indoor hydroponic piping grow rooms that people say allows them to never buy food. What about the whole house or designed new building? is it do able?

  6. MRTHATSFAKEANDGAY on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 9:06 pm 

    @MRTHATSFAKEANDGAY BTW we use PVP for drinkin lines

  7. MRTHATSFAKEANDGAY on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 9:34 pm 

    @HowToDrillAWell we dont use soils of PVC for drinking lines today…thats not allowed by the state cos its toxic. we use PVC for seuer…thats all. peace

  8. HowToDrillAWell on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 10:31 pm 

    @noaa2337 It doesn’t work for corn or any crops that require a large root system; just lettuce, herbs, flowers, strawberries, etc. If you want to grow those, you’re better off with our self-watering container garden system, which you can see in my other videos. That’s how I grow mine.

  9. noaa2337 on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 11:23 pm 

    it would be better if you included a pic of full grown crops. Don’t see how this would work for corn and the like.

  10. ItsTime2WakeUp on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 11:56 pm 

    Very interesting idea’s!!! Thank you for putting this video out there. Some times people who have nothing keeping them busy feel the need to nit pick at everyone else and their ideas. Very creative!

  11. smoketweed09 on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 12:37 am 

    @HowToDrillAWell lol..and we all know what type of chemicals they put in our drinking water such as sodium fluoride…. and i think you’ll find that most modern underground water pipes are not pvc but nylon

  12. dalirocked on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 1:27 am 

    @mizzruble, you either can’t run a hydropinc set up or you just weren’t that good at it because you seem to just be bagging out hydroponics, hydropinics is more effective and efficient, and the failure of a crop is the fault of the grower, not the environment, and more to the point, with the way the world is going, hydroponics will be the only way to garden in the future due to soil degredation, pollution and temperature, don’t bag something out just because you can’t do it.

  13. wallnatura on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 2:14 am 

    Para los quienes les interese este típo de producto, les presentamos WallNatura. Es un nuevo concepto de jardín vertical interior que permite crear paredes vegetales para su vivienda o su oficina. Fácil de instalar, fácil de mantener. Más vida en nuestros anteriores, es lo que quiere aportar WallNatura.
    Son bienvenidos para descubrir nuestra página web : wallnatura(punto)com

  14. FishyMoe on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 2:43 am 

    @HowToDrillAWell try Aquaponics – its the same but with fish instead of chemicals.

  15. hydromikey on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 3:26 am 

    BEACH CITIES HYDROPONICS SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO CA

  16. boxa888 on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 3:55 am 

    @HowToDrillAWell hahah good one!!!!

  17. boxa888 on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 4:52 am 

    @HowToDrillAWell u know what, costco the huge conglomerate store claims organic strawberries and they are all grown hydroponically! so gizzelbuble is totally wrong. probabaly works for monsanto! thansk alot howtodrill for giving free information.

  18. HowToDrillAWell on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 4:56 am 

    @mizzrubble Planting in the dirt is a fine idea, if you happen to be fortunate enough to have enough dirt to grow in, and dirt that is good enough quality to grow good food in – and the majority of the population doesn’t have either one. I have eaten hydroponic strawberries, yes, and ones that were excellent in flavor. Bad produce can be grown in soil or hydroponically, all it takes is unbalanced nutrients and/or not enough of them.

  19. geosyntheticsworld on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 5:49 am 

    nice application

  20. mizzrubble on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 6:22 am 

    looks all like fake plastic plants. haha. soil not hydro is what is truly green. these systems require to much water and chemical nutes. electric pumps temp control. just plant some seeds in the dirt man. and then eat the tasty fruits of your labor. have you ever tasted a hydro strawberry. it tastes like h20.
    jah guide

  21. sewcow on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 6:32 am 

    LOL , leopluridean I work for a company that drills water wells for homes, pvc is the only material used by any well driller I know for the casing of the well! Big 12″ irrigation wells are the only application of steel casing I know of these days. Check it out!!

  22. megarouge2001 on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 6:35 am 

    Wow, it’s like the Jetsons’ garden!

  23. HowToDrillAWell on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 6:52 am 

    Yes, there is no proof of any leaching. After all, like I said below, hundreds of miles of PVC piping bring your drinking and bathing water to your house.

  24. HowToDrillAWell on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 7:48 am 

    We don’t do anything special. We have our greenhouse open a lot and so bugs find their way in, plus we have a fan on that blows the blossoms around. Tomatoes don’t grow in this system, (but do in our other video, self-watering container garden) And for those you just shake the vine. Root crops, and greens need no pollination.

  25. leopluridean on Tue, 10th Aug 2010 8:02 am 

    Not necessarily true or false. Some of us have wells and don’t rely on city water.

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