We decided to try something different with our dragon fruit: grafting four varieties onto one plant. The result? A Frankenstein dragon fruit that’s as fun to grow as it is to look at. 🧟🌱
Luffa is one of the most fun and useful plants to grow. You can eat it when it’s small, let it climb to make your garden look beautiful, and when it’s fully grown, use it as a scrub brush or shower sponge. The key to growing luffa is starting the seeds indoors early. The seeds are big and tough, so gently scrape or clip a tiny bit of the edge to help water get inside and make them sprout faster. Once they sprout, plant them outside only when it’s warm, and there’s no chance of cold weather. Luffa loves a long, hot season. If you want to use luffa as a sponge, let the fruit fully mature. It should turn brown and feel dry and papery. Peel off the skin, cut the luffa into pieces, and it’s ready to use. For extra creativity, you can put the luffa pieces into homemade soap for a cool exfoliating soap bar.
Want to grow giant onions? 🧅✨ Here’s how: 🌱 Gather your tools: onion starts, a trowel, gloves, and a slow-release organic fertilizer high in nitrogen (for leaves) and phosphorus (for bulbs). 📏 Measure 8" from the side of your raised bed and dig a 4" wide trench. Fertilize the trench, cover with soil, and plant onions 6" apart, 1" deep, 3" from the trench. 💧 Keep the soil moist, fertilize only in the trench, and watch those layers build into massive bulbs! P.S. This method works for other allium crops too—like leeks, shallots, and garlic! 🧄
New to gardening? Start with herbs. 🌿 They’re easy, low-maintenance, and save you $$$ on groceries. Plus, you can make your own spices, teas, and seasonings right at home. What’s your favorite herb to grow?
It might sound strange, but painting young fruit trees has made a huge difference in our Epic Orchard. We’ve planted over 40 fruit trees, and using an all-organic “paint” from our friend Charles at IV Organics (not sponsored) has helped keep them healthy. Trees can get sunburned, just like we can. Sun damage makes it harder for them to move water and nutrients, and it also makes them more vulnerable to pests like borers. Now when should you paint? 🖌️ Ideally, when you plant the tree. Cover the main trunk and major branches, especially on the southern side, since that gets the most sun. This works well for citrus, avocados, cherries, peaches, plums, nectarines, and more. And don’t worry—the paint is breathable and safe for the tree. 🌿 Have you tried this before? Let us know in the comments ⬇️
I've tried to grow peanuts for years without much success. I even hid an old YouTube video called “My Pathetic Peanut Harvest,” where I grew just five peanuts and roasted them in a tiny kid-sized cast iron pan. It wasn’t a great day for me. BUT—@jacquesinthegarden had a big harvest, so at least someone on the team figured it out! Peanuts aren’t actually nuts—they’re legumes. Their flowers shrink, turn into “pegs,” and push into the soil, where the peanuts grow. It’s one of the strangest ways a plant grows, at least for something we eat often. For a good peanut harvest, you need a long, hot growing season. Who knew peanuts had such a wild way of growing? 🥜
Two years ago we planted some giant sunflower seeds, and they grew massive—about 15 inches across. 🌻🤯 Instead of letting the seeds scatter, we harvested them, boiled them in saltwater, roasted them in the oven, and tossed them with olive oil and ranch seasoning. The result was a delicious, fresh snack that tasted even better than store-bought. If you’ve got sunflowers, definitely give this a try! 🌻✨
Pruning fruit trees can feel terrifying—what if you mess up and ruin years of growth? But after using this strategy on peaches for 3+ years, we’ve had so many peaches we have to give them away. 🍑✨ Here’s the pruning method we swear by: 🌿 3 D’s – Remove anything dead, diseased, or damaged first. It’s the easiest (and least stressful) place to start. 🌳 Open Structure – Peaches thrive with an airy, open interior. Remove crossing branches and those shaded inside the canopy to improve airflow and fruit quality. 📏 Lowering the Canopy – A shorter tree = easier harvesting! Even at 6’4", I struggle to reach the top, so I trim it down to 6-8’ for easier access. ✂️ Thinning Cuts – Too many buds = too many peaches = snapped branches. Cut back 30-50% of the length on overgrown branches to reduce fruit load and keep your tree strong. Yes, some cuts may seem extreme, but trust us—your tree will be healthier, stronger, and loaded with delicious peaches! 🍑💪🏼
We’ve never grown broccoli this big—over 1.5 feet in diameter! Normally, when you harvest broccoli, you let the plant continue to grow so you can get a few side shoots of “mini-broccoli,” but in this plant’s case, even the side shoots are massive!
My 1/3-acre suburban garden is STACKED right now...30 types of lettuce, rows of veggies, fruit trees, and even an ice cream bean (haven’t eaten that yet, let me know if you’ve tried it yourself). If you’re growing something TOTALLY new this year, let me know down below ⬇️
Starting your first garden? The key to success is growing crops that are easy AND fast. These 5 groups of crops will give you a quick harvest and boost your gardening confidence. 🚀🌱
Ever walked out to your garden and found it totally dug up? @jacquesinthegarden went through the same thing. But he figured out who the culprit is and how to stop it. 🚨 Here’s the fix: red crushed chili flakes. First, he moves the soil back, covers the roots, and sprinkles these bad boys everywhere. Next time the digging pest comes through, they’ll get a nose full of spice and rethink their plans. 💥🌶️ It won’t last forever though, so keep reapplying when they strike. Lesson learned. 👌🏼
Before Epic Gardening was a thing, I was slinging trays of microgreens to high-end restaurants in San Diego. Growing these tiny powerhouses was my first taste of mixing plants + business, and I’ve been hooked ever since. Microgreens are easy to grow, packed with nutrients, and ready to harvest in just a couple of weeks—perfect for beginners or anyone short on space. 🌱