This year I tried something a little different for shade, biodiversity, etc. I planted nasturtiums strategically throughout the 40' raised bed. I also let many dandelion volunteers remain (I've just been topping them so they don't get very tall or flower). Meanwhile I've got little sprayer heads that are twice a day for 2 minutes blanketing the entire surface of the soil. Keeping the shady weedy plants happy and seems to encourage more worms in the soil too. Turns out nasturtium and dandelion are nitrogen fixers and pest traps so maybe they're serving triple duty. The nasturtium flowers are bringing in tons of pollinators too. So far this year the garden is super happy, but we'll see how it handles the triple digits...
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
40' Raised Bed!? That sounds incredible. I absolutely love comments like this sharing your strategies and findings. We're trying nasturtiums throughout the different garden areas this year because everyone seems to love them so much and I want in on it. I admit to struggling with them but hopefully this is the year!
@fuzzytale
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead This is my third year trying nasturiums from seed, and the first time I appear to have planted them early enough to get them going before the heat here kills them, so fingers crossed for both of us
@latriciacagle4873
Жыл бұрын
I work in a garden center in the SW desert. I constantly see people who have moved from other parts of the country and try to garden in the same way they used to. They’re perplexed when everything dies. “Full sun” is one of the common misconception of planting in our climate. In general “full sun” means morning sun/afternoon shade. In areas with full sun, I use 50% shade cloth or patio umbrellas placed to provide afternoon shade. Many plants can take the heat but not the intense UV light and end up with severe burns of foliage and trunks. Another product I like is IV Organics paint for tree trunks. It can be diluted and used as a foliage spray. It acts as “sunscreen” for your trees and plants.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Oh, that's really interesting! I know a lot of the orchards around here use a tree trunk paint but I had no idea it could be used more broadly. Thanks for the tip =)
@jo-annjewett198
Жыл бұрын
Great info! I am zone 9b south Texas on the Gulf. July and August are brutal.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Jo-Ann! Hopefully we can both enjoy another mild month or two before the real heat kicks in =)
@jasminesmith8098
Жыл бұрын
Also remember to lean into growing things that thrive in heat. During a time when my tomatoes stopped producing because it was so hot, my tomatillos and peppers were going crazy and loving it.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
No kidding! One thing I've realized with the tomatillos this year is the calyx really provides amazing protection from sunscalding. Our tomato and pepper plants always get a bit discolored at times, but not those tomatillos ;)
@mendynoma4272
Жыл бұрын
I have used sheer curtains and fabric remnants from local rummage sales as shadecloth , using clothespins to secure them to baling twine rigging. Our local school is using shredded office paper as deep mulch around some of the more mature vegetable plants and it seems to be quite effective. Thanks for sharing what you have learned with the rest of us!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Oh very cool! I've used sheer curtains to help block the sun when I'm making a video. Makes sense it would help!
@CarrieNita
Жыл бұрын
I live in NE Alabama, zone 7b. We only occasionally hit triple digit temps. I have always pruned the bottom leaves off my indeterminate tomatoes. It hasn't stopped blight. To change up this year, I am planting an early crop of determinate tomatoes. Then, I am growing an indeterminate crop later.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Love it! I think timing plantings around the season can be so powerful. And fun to experiment with these long seasons, right!?
@CarrieNita
Жыл бұрын
@NextdoorHomestead Yep, there is no loss that I can see.
@felicia51617
Жыл бұрын
I've learned to do the same here in Houston. I plant determinate and hybrid tomatoes mid to late February, then succession plant my heirloom indeterminate tomatoes around the beginning of September when the weather is more forgiving.
@karliekramer7129
Жыл бұрын
This was an incredibly helpful. I'm definitely trying millionaire eggplant, sun gold tomatoes and corinto cukes next season. I'm often frustrated by gardening channels that aren't hot-weather specific that suggest techniques and vegetables that just aren't feasible here in Central Texas. Cheers!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Karlie =) I just love hearing that!!! I can't give Corinto a blanket recommendation yet (but I'll include it in a wrap up of my favorite / least favorite varieties of the season in a few months) but Millionaire and Sun Gold are absolutely wonderful. In general, I think gardening info in the United States tends to be biased towards where the big seed companies were started and are often located. And those places tend to deal with harsher winters and milder summers =) Cheers!
@bobcaldwell5810
Жыл бұрын
100% on mulching containers. Growing peppers in Southern California, it was never necessary as it never got all that hot. We moved to Western Maryland, and holy cow! I'd water in the morning and they'd be droopy by 2pm. I also used to mix in perlite for tomatoes and peppers in SoCal, but no longer do that in MD
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
I'm just always astonished at how quickly the water evaporates out of our full-sun containers come late May. I actually did a lot of gardening in SoCal in containers and you're right on the money - it was hot but not so hot that the plants struggled (we weren't too far from the coast). It's those high 90s into triple digit days that really hurt!
@tmorrison5965
Жыл бұрын
You are seriously quickly becoming one of my new fave KZitem gardeners- your videos are so helpful esp because i live in the high desert extreme climate of Eastern Washington and most gardener channels do not have the no rain extreme sun, even this video gave me some tips i have never heard before & ive been gardening for years! Thank you thank you thank you for representing us *hot* gardeners 😅
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
No problem! This one (and a couple more around hot weather) have been on my mind for a while now =) Was very fun to make. Thank you for watching and taking the time to share your thoughts - hugely appreciated!
@HamzaTheHistorian
Жыл бұрын
This is excellent advice for a gardener like me in Atlanta, GA, but I am from Minneapolis, MN, so I have no frame of reference to garden here.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
That's a big climate shift! It always takes a couple years to get the feel for your new seasons in a new location 😀
@jenniferlroberts5994
Жыл бұрын
I grow my cool crops in part shade. Morning sun, afternoon shade, then late evening sun. It works for me.
@victorp.garcia1254
Жыл бұрын
Your comments are extremely useful and sensible. Thanks so much for sharing your expertise. I live in a very hot country and was pruning my tomatoes as suggested in other videos. Now I know this is wrong, or at least it depends on other factors. Your tips are truly amazing, my friend.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Victor! So glad they were helpful =) I think the "prune young tomatoes" thing was just sensible advice that got overused and exaggerated unfortunately. In my experience in hot, dry climates at least - early foliar diseases are less of a concern than keeping the young plants happy with environmental conditions.
@ourrockydreamontheelephant4188
Жыл бұрын
We've found placing plants in pits help a lot. Thank you for sharing.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
So cool! Anasazi style? I really wanted to discuss this but didn't feel like I could do it justice. Great technique though.
@ourrockydreamontheelephant4188
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead ,it really does well to get the roots deeper and helps from wind damage. I'm in Arizona,so we have a lot of dry wind that sucks the moisture out. Heavy mulch and pits in swales seems to work.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
@@ourrockydreamontheelephant4188 I just find it such a fascinating and ingenious technique. We get a lot of wind in late Spring but luckily it tends to end in early Summer.
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your informative reply. We only have rain in winter. If we're lucky ! In my childhood it would pour for weeks on end. Now no longer. likely to rain from April through to September, our winter. Thus far we have a shower or two per week. That is sufficient to stop having to water !
@janellenelson7361
Жыл бұрын
Wow! I’ve been searching for information on this. I moved to Oklahoma a couple years ago and it’s brutal. I tried to push the same plants throughout the whole season and now I know that’s not possible at all. Im going to try that pruning tip, it really does make sense. Seriously was so so helpful, thank you!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching Janelle! *Really* appreciate the kind words 😁 As for pushing the plants, I think it will really depend on the species and variety but succession cropping really helps us. I hope it helps you too! Happy gardening 😄
@RonAndJaneThailand
Жыл бұрын
Great tips! Here in our tropical climate we deal with two real seasons. Hot and dry (8 months) and hot and wet. I grow most food in-ground but have about 20% in pots. Thanks
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thank you - so glad you like them! I wasn't sure whether to label this is a 'hot and dry' video but having done just a bit of gardening in subtropical climates I thought some of them would apply to areas with good moisture too.
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
Rocking !
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
You rock!
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
Backing you... your hot weather tips very good and real based on experience !.. In our odd climate, northern full sun is our semi to light shade, or placing beds to get sun for a few hours in the morning only. I line all my raised beds with plastic or they would desiccate, as they are 30cm high. Sunk in-ground beds rather than raised beds gave me my first successful season of leaf vegetables (chard). I dug out the beds, and placed the soil on the paths. The bed was in the shade of a building most of the day, but with open sky overhead in high summer. In winter it was a bit too dark. Grow a lot of subtropicals, south Asian and meso American plants. If you are in a slightly colder area treat them as annuals if they die off in winter when you go below 50 or 40 F. Grow most of your food in wicking beds or partially waterproof beds of some kind with a water reserve in the bottom. Use your grey water. Grey water lines from my kitchen and bathroom into the grow beds changed the face of my garden and turned the hot season scorched garden into a lush summer jungle and I can grow summer rain African vegetables like sorghum. Grow as many perennial food plants as possible whose deeper root systems can make the plant more resilient. Hedgerows keep off drying winds. Grow native food plants... of course... they will be able to cope with everything your local weather throws at them. Mulch deeply. Water on demand rather than with an irrigation system. This trains roots down into the soil. I have a website where I explore the peculiarities of growing in our odd climate. It's called greenidiom.
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
oh yes... you'll be growing some northern hemisphere summer crops in our winter down here (like lettuce and dill). But give them a good start in autumn (September) If you sow them in winter they will just sit still, until they succumb to something from lack of vigor.
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
We are southern hemisphere Mediterranean and have 4 growing seasons, lovely mild spring Sep-Nov, scorching dry summer Dec-Feb, mild dry autumn Feb-May, cool wet winter with no frost June-Aug. Northern gardening advice based on one growing season and planting out after the last frost is just such a misfit for us. Within our country there are also different rainy seasons. Not surprisingly I struggle to find gardening advice on youtube, online or in our local library that gives accurate recommendations for when to sow and plant out and deal with our own little niche climate.
@carolinekloppert5177
Жыл бұрын
Multiseasonality makes sowing regimes rather complicated. There sheer cognitive load had me beaten till I decided to only sow twice a year. Our spring and autumn are ideal, Goldilocks periods for germination and seedling growth. Anything that is more picky about germination will fall by the wayside.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Wow, that does sound like it would be tricky to find applicable advice Caroline. May I ask when your non-winter rainy season is? Otherwise our climates seem similar (if a bit reversed =). I completely understand the need to simplify sowing times. I know next winter/spring will be much busier for me than this year was so I'm already trying to think of ways to simplify. I *loved* making spreadsheets and sowing everything on different, precise days this year but I know it just won't happen next year.
@marcuspowell2510
Жыл бұрын
Get to know your growing space. Early afternoon shade from the house is perfect for my salad greens.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the reminder! I need to move our container greens to a shadier spot and see if we can get a few extra weeks =) Good tip!
@trenomas1
Жыл бұрын
Solid video, but I cannot stress seed selection enough. Finding heat hardy varieties, blending them together and collecting your own landrace of locally adapted seeds is the only way we will be able to garden into the unsteady future.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
100% I originally was going to include a few sections on seed selection and my favorite varieties but decided to save it for its own video. I don't save my seeds (outside of a bit of tinkering for fun) but I'm constantly trying to find more heat tolerant varieties that I'd like to share. Thanks for adding this note!
@trenomas1
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead Totally. If you want the best seeds for your context I suggest looking into Landrace Gardening. It's a book by Joseph Lofthouse about community horticulture.
@adrianaguerrero5733
Жыл бұрын
Zone 10b here and a tiny balcony with like 2-3 hours sometimes 4 of morning sun and 3 hours of hot afternoon sun ☀️ Would love to see more videos on types of things that would thrive hot humid weather. Didn't know I could plant squash in shade if it's hot?!? All these "full sun" labels are throwing me off because it's so hot 🥵 in Florida 😅
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
We'll definitely do more videos on heat tolerant varieties! I've got a bit of experience gardening in humid areas (including zone 10 and in Florida) but these days we're in a very dry summer climate so it may not all apply perfectly. Florida (at least south Florida) was definitely a tricky spot for annual veg I thought!
@RonAndJaneThailand
Жыл бұрын
Me again. Living mulch. Annuals such as calendula, nasturtium, sweet alyssum Perennial Mulches comfrey , oregano, rhubarb, thyme and white clover. I even use some native weeds here as a living mulch and purposely spread them. Dealing with such a massive area. Retains moisture, these flower so great for the pollinators, ediple flowers, keeps something in the ground and can be mowed or chopped down for mulch elsewhere or put in the compost pile.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I always consider the living mulch idea but can't bring myself to pull the trigger as I spend so much time dealing with weeds as-is. Question for you! Do you observe any more disease issues with your veggie crops grown around the weed plants?
@RonAndJaneThailand
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead don't really notice any extra disease issues. It definitely decreases the splash and run off. Not something great for smaller areas though when you're trying to get the most out of your space. We're just dealing with so much area. We use a living mulch that flowers regularly, don't know the name now but will get it later. It helps a ton with pollinators.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
@@RonAndJaneThailand Thank you! Our garden is a front yard so I'm always interested in ways to make the paths look a little more... full?
@benmandler4494
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this great video full of suggestions that are clearly based on experience and not just received wisdom. I live in Northern California where we get literally zero rain or afternoon cloud cover June thru September, temps routinely in the 90s and sometimes 100s. I really resonated with your suggestions about the different "seasons" of summer, about watering, about how people underestimate just how much mulch they need, about watering slowly, and about how "full sun" might actually mean "partial shade" for your climate. My southerly neighbors have giant trees and no part of my garden gets more than 7 hours of sun even at midsummer, way less in March or September. Still growing plenty of "full sun" plants. Some of my own learnings: - I no longer plant in containers or even raised beds. This is a luxury that not everyone has, I know, but I find that all of my plants are more resilient in the ground. We have quite clay-rich soils so that helps a lot, too. - Seed selection for heat- and drought-tolerant varieties. For example, I had almost no luck with lettuce until I discovered "Freckles", which I can grow into June with very little supplemental water and very limited pest issues. - Growing perennials where possible. Anything that has more then one season to develop a robust root structure will be more heat- and drought-tolerant in future years. For example, I grow garden sorrel for leafy greens year-round and even in August I'm only watering once every 1-2 weeks.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
You are so welcome! We're similar - 0 average rainy days during most of summer. Sounds like you already know the drill! We garden on a small suburban plot in converted front lawn space and tons of shade is just the reality for us. Triple digit weather plus shade is a challenge, but I'm committed to growing more food where we can =) I love all your tips, but particularly the note on perennials. I've learned to love those deep root systems and it's funny you mention sorrel. I think I'm going to make a full video on red-veined sorrel actually - it's just such a survivor. Ours dies down in summer and winter but somehow - like by magic - just reappears when conditions are good again. It genuinely astonishes me.
@glow1815
Жыл бұрын
I'm glad i left my Bell peppers alone and not prune it. I figured it's hot right now in Phx and it will only gets hotter. My Peppers needs their leaves to helps with shade i just take off the dead leaves. I thought about using a white bedsheets for shade i am not sure if that will be effective lol
@RonAndJaneThailand
Жыл бұрын
Another recommendation for those dealing with extremely hot conditions and perennial vegetables or fruits. I have some 6L water jugs that I get from my neighbors. I drill a hole in the lid and stuff a cotton t-shirt through the hole and I usually cut it in four strips. I cut off the bottom of the water jug or just leave it kind of like a flap to cover it in case you have mosquito problems. These jugs generally dont dry up for between 3 days To 5 days at least depending on how big or small I made the hole in the lid. I bury this jusg about 10-15 cm in the ground. Each end of the old cotton t-shirt goes near a plants roots. I plant my eggplants for example really close together with this self-watering container in between them. As the plants grow they shade out the ground and require less water overall. I know it's easier to see with pictures and video but hopefully that gives somebody a good idea. There are some store bought ones but I like making my own.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
I love it! Super affordable olla alternative it sounds like. I've tried to do the same for a few of our container plants that aren't on drip line when we go on vacation but haven't loved the results. I'll have to try your design next. Thanks!
@RonSRY
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead How the results are good. I would suggest testing it before burying it. Just to make sure it is wicking properly. Once the plants grow around them they are stuck. I also cut a little v in the four corners. I don't water the ground but water in the jug. the water just lands near all four plants. Helps with any possible splash back.
@gryphonrampant24
Жыл бұрын
love seeing the ground cherries at 6:42! one of my favorite underrepresented crops Re: Shade for full sun plants--i'm experimenting with growing some more sun-tolerant vines on tall stakes on the western ends of my tomato rows to provide increasing afternoon shade as the season grows hotter. I'm trying it with malabar spinach this year given their high heat tolerance, but if they don't do well I may also experiment with pollinator attractants like sunflowers for the same purpose. Re: breaking up the soil in your newer beds--would you be able to sow a winter crop of hardy root veggies like daikon radishes to break up soil while getting a crop? I'm assuming given your excessively hot summers you have at least somewhat mild winters.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Yay for malabar!!! I'm such an evangelist for that plant. Our climate isn't perfect for it, but I love it so much nonetheless and wish you the best of luck with yours =) As an aside, we are experimenting with using our sunflowers *as* stakes for the malabar this year. We do it with beans so I thought I'd try it with something else I love. To answer your question: YES! We made a video on this actually, but I like using cover crops with a lot of daikon for new beds over the Fall / Winter / Spring. To be totally transparent, it has *not* been a replacement for the fork, but it definitely helps.
@gryphonrampant24
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead that's delightful about the sunflowers. I'm actually using the dried stems from last year's 9ft sunflowers as those tall stakes for the malabar to climb!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Okay, that is awesome. I'm 100% saving a stalk this year.
@fuzzytale
Жыл бұрын
Ooooh, I think I'll be planting beans at the base of all my sunflowers in the next couple days! What a great idea!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
So fun! Big cosmos work well for this too 😁
@eleanoraddy4683
Жыл бұрын
Just had to relocate my most beautiful rhubarb plant out of the heat and it was only getting morning sun!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Save that rhubarb!
@tmorrison5965
Жыл бұрын
Mulch question for you- my yard has no trees for leaves, all i have is plenty of dead arborvitae around. Would that work as a mulch? Ive tried searching it up and noone has seemed to have tried it 😮
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
I'm not aware of any reason Thuja would be a problematic mulch, although I've never used it myself. There are some potential concerns around surface level acidification with using any newish tree mulch but I personally don't think it's a big issue. If it was me, I might test using it out in a couple spots. Mulch *can* be detrimental so it never hurts to be a bit cautious with new materials.
@fuzzytale
Жыл бұрын
It's too late for me this year, I can't afford more seeds, but I'm definitely going to be looking for some early producers for next year in every category. We get a LOT of days over 100 here and are already into a week straight of low to mid-90s, and I always struggle with that mid-season die-off/dormancy/flower drop in a lot of my plants. I do have some shade cloth, but I'm with you on it being a pain, plus I don't have quite enough for everything that needs it and more hasn't really been in the budget. I'm hoping I can make it work for my tomato bed this year, if I can figure out how best to mount it on my horse-shoe shaped single line PVC trellis, though. And I planted all my peppers where they should get afternoon shade from one of my pea/bean trellises, so here's hoping. (Trying to comment on all your vids as they come out since I think that helps the algorithm? Y/N?)
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
I feel ya! My seed spending was silly this year. Just gotta hope it pays off in less dropped flowers and unproductive plants! I really hope your pepper placement works out for you! I don't think I've nailed it on ours yet. They are a hard plant to time for me as they grow best later in summer but then struggle to ripen in time. I do think the comments help and I just want to say it's so nice to have viewers like yourself engaged regardless of how the video does. It's a bit of a narrow topic but something I think about.... A lot 😀
@fuzzytale
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead I think it's a super useful topic for a lot of people, honestly, just need to get it in front of more people. I'm up at the base of the Sierra foothills outside Sacramento, so it's very useful and very timely for me, though apparently it's going to cool off a bit for us again next week (yay). I don't tend to have trouble with pepper production, but man is sunscald an issue on those and the tomatoes (and the tomatoes have been almost useless for large chunks of the summer for me here b/c of the flower drop from the heat. Was it you who suggested going out at the crack of dawn and tapping the flowers to try and pollinate new ones before the heat of the day kills off the new pollen or did I see that elsewhere? Either way, I'm going to try it this year, though it's a pain since my garden isn't at my house--I have 5 10x20 plots at a community garden in our development, which are only a couple blocks walk away, but at 6am it feels like miles XD
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
@@fuzzytale Yep, that was me! But definitely use an electric toothbrush to make the job faster - it's so darn effective! I don't think it needs to be the crack of dawn (or I'd never do it!) but I do try and make it happen when temperatures are at a comfortable range for pollen to be effective. Also, that's so cool you have a community plot! We tried to get into one in our last place and the waiting list was just enormous. I looooove them.
@fuzzytale
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead We're super fortunate in that the private community we live in has a community garden for residents only, and a lot of people let their plots go during covid and then never came back to them, so I've slowly accumulated vacant plots over the last 3 years. A couple friends and I have finally started a concerted campaign to get people to pick up the empty plots and get them back in production, though, b/c it's just so sad seeing them empty and full of weeds. Last year there were at least 16 empty plots, but we're down to only 5 with no one working them now... I think 2 of them are supposedly claimed, but no one's shown up to do anything with them yet. Huge improvement, though!
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
@@fuzzytale That's wild! I've never seen community plots go unused. Good on ya for getting them cared for.
@TheStrayBuffet
Жыл бұрын
I recently started shredding cardboard and adding it to some of my soil. Do you have any experience with this?
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
Heya! What's your goal with the shredded cardboard? Mulch or adding carbon?
@TheStrayBuffet
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead Two short term goals, I am trying to reuse or recycle everything that comes on to my property and secondly, I am using it to bulk up the flowerbeds in my backyard. Eventually, I would like to use it to add carbon in my vegetable beds, but I don’t have the knowledge yet for that. Hopefully by fall though.
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
@@TheStrayBuffet I love the recycling message! I don't put cardboard directly in my soil because it has a tendency to clump and become impermeable when wet. But we do use it sometimes to create a weed-blocking layer beneath compost and mulch when starting a new bed. And shredded cardboard goes into the worm bin (shredded cardboard can be the primary ingredient in a great worm bin surprisingly). Best of luck!
@TheStrayBuffet
Жыл бұрын
@@NextdoorHomestead Thanks for taking the time to respond. This is great news! I put down a layer of shredded cardboard, a layer of shredded leaves, a layer of broken up and decomposing branches and then manure, compost, and more soil. I am really enjoying your channel and learning a lot! Thanks again for your time
@MommyBee1589
Жыл бұрын
Man I’m in NC and it’s been COLD! It’s end of May and cold!! Wtf!?
@NextdoorHomestead
Жыл бұрын
=(. Let me tell you, I was counting down the days to Summer this year. Spring was COLD!
Пікірлер: 84