Organic Gardening in Georgia


The garden on May 16th, before the growth takes off. Info: Figs are easy to start by planting a small new branch and keeping it water for a month.

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9 Responses to “Organic Gardening in Georgia”

  1. studiosanctuary on July 18th, 2010 at 1:03 pm

    Love the bird song-paradise

  2. Wonderful garden. Here in Athens the squirrels eat all my figs. I’ll try your method and plant a new tree and maybe they will share! My pistachio tree is 6 years old, no nuts yet. My muscadines are all vine & no fruit. I’ll watch for your next video.

  3. thats an awesome backyard

  4. Great vid brother, lots of good ideas in there too! Thanks for your time in sharing your garden . Peace

  5. Great little vid. I’d be interested in that recycled shower-water system you use to water your garden. On your rain water barrel- why no filtration? Seems like a lot of gunk would be in the run-off from the roof. Keep up the good work.

  6. Excellent. Lot’s of good ideas.

  7. loved it, please follow up on this

  8. Figs should live there. They will grow best if planted on the south facing wall of a building that has plenty of sun (the roots are aggressive house foundations). Once the trunk is about three years old it will stand a hard freeze of 15 degrees of a day or two. Start a new fig tree by burying a 3 foot new branch at a 30 degree angle with 6 inches above ground. Keep moist of two months and you have a fig tree. contact me for more tips.

  9. looking forward to the folow up…the garden looks good! I like the shower/water recycling system. would figs do well in the mountains here in western north carolina…not a particulary high elevation in macon county?

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