EVERY Fruit Tree We're Growing Full Garden Tour

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g'day I'm Mike from self-sufficient men in this video I'm gonna take you guys on a full fruit and slash food tree walk around our whole property that's right over a hundred and forty fruit and food trees we grow here and I'm gonna give you a look at every single one of them so we better get cracking if we're going to fit them all in we're going to start at the left side of our property so we're in the main orchard at the moment we're going to follow the left side all around the front garden and then we're going to come back here down our main orchard follow that around to the left the back of the veggie garden and then back up to the back of our house let's get into it this is actually a second video in this series the first video was on the veggie patch had the full veggie garden walk around so if you want to see that I'll leave a link up here and also in the description below alright let's make our way over to the start point he's got the veggie garden here and we're going to start from over there at the left side we'll start here right behind the trailer don't mind that we've got to take that to the dump we've been doing some spring or winter cleaning right the first tree here is a curry tree or a curry plant the leaves are really pungent great in curries and stews dried leaves you can do a lot with this tree also has berries that are better edible I don't think you eat the seeds but you can sort certainly join these or use them in food next to it here we've got a sale on Hill berry it's got a bit of a vine coming over at the moment that's okay but it's growing nice and large the vines aren't affecting it too much I think I've got the root of it and it's dying back now but it produces these little berries they taste a bit like a fig quite nice the full of seeds really sweet seeds that matter just eat them whole like that especially when they're really ripe and they make a really good cheese jam and tropical ana apple looking a bit sad but it still produces fruit I'm going to give that a good prune this winter and get it back really good this spring fruit of the Andes I forgot to mention hidden behind this Ceylon Hill is a Pitamber I've just planted that about 12 months ago and that should grow into a nice specimen doing well on sign it's doesn't need that much watering anymore so we'll see how it goes it should grow into a nice tree next one along is the golden Dorset one of my favorite apples its fruiting a bit early at the moment it'll have another flush or a better flush of fruit coming into spring little flower profusely will cover it and we'll get some good apples out of it because the fruit fly also love apples in this region and right next to it here is this natal plum I'm really keen to see how this fruits only a small tree at the moment but look how lush it looks it's growing perfectly here right next to this avocado this is an in rural avocado this is still a very small avocado tree it's several years old though I think about five or six and we've got about ten fruit off at last year but only around three or four this season beautiful fruit on it but I think as that tree gets bigger it's obviously going to fruit better and I have grown it on a mound because we've got clay soil and I've had a hard time growing up acardo's as you might know if you've watched my videos but this one here is doing well for us and fingers crossed it'll grow into a nice big tree moving along here we've got a West Indian line these are all relatively young trees a bush lemon so a very Hardy Bush type lemon I use ooh this is a famous Japanese lemon and it's supposed to be really fragrant and a very rare fruit tree I was lucky to get this one I'm looking forward to it when it does fruit it's looking quite healthy now it was a bit touch-and-go earlier but it's looking good now got a tangerine next to it that's not going too well but I'm sure it'll come good with a bit of pruning and a bit of love especially this spring a mandarin lime that was a dwarf mandarin lime meant for pots but I've planted it out and I just wanted to see what a mandarine lime tastes like and this is an outback lime and native to Australia looking forward to getting a bit of that it should be very drought tolerant it's a young tree but it looks like it's doing quite well very different leaves on it see that see if I've still got the ticket here yeah there it is that's what the fruit looked like nothing spectacular but yeah bush tucker and that leads me nicely into around the front here but we'll get there in a minute in front of me here is a small pea camp and then this larger pecan here I'm gonna prune this back again this winter once it's dropped all its leaves because we don't want this tree to get huge the problem is pecans grow well and they fruit well and we're beginning quite a few nuts out of them but the cockatoos have now found it and they just love it and they will eat the pecans green stripped them from the trees and you can't get any and a big tree like this is really hard to met so we're going to have to keep it small if we want to get any pecans at all now coming past the pecans we're getting to our new fruit tree forest area now you might remember in the past that big Moreton Bay fig behind me that's overshadowing all these other trees has been a disaster for us we've had big branches drop in the past and I've given it a really huge prune back it's still huge but there's less branches that can cause damage and what we decided to do was use a lot of this area that was shaded out to plant in more fruit trees but we wanted to try to turn it into more of a native area not exclusively there are non natives in there non-native bush tucker plants but most of the plants in here or trees are bush tucker native to australia and we'll want to see how that works and if that can give us good fruiting alternatives at different times of the year when other fruit trees might not be available it will start at the right hand side here you can't even hardly tell what this is but this is actually a cedar bay cherry I'll get in closer there's no fruit on at the moment it's been taken over by this vine I'm gonna trim that back but look at these beautiful leaves it actually does have an excellent fruit on it but we need to work on this and get this tree up to speed it's a very slow growing rainforest tree native to northern Queensland I'm amazed at how nice the cherries are they're almost similar to a standard cherry and they have one seed as well along here I've planted out some Davidson plums that I've grown from seed this here grew these from seed from the mother plant which is over here there's one two three four that I've planted and I want them to grow fairly close together they're an up war upright growing tree and they produce a really super plum that's sour but lovely in jams and it's even just nice used in sources this here is a plum one of two that's remaining because unfortunately one was flattened by the tree the Moreton Bay fig dropped a branch that flattened our other plum that was over there this is a peach a tropical peach it's starting to flower already and in the place where that plum was flattened and dyed we've put in a few bush tucker plants these are Meridian berries two of them they should grow about a metre high they have a little berry white flowers medium berries next to it we've got a wild current that's more Australian bush tucker here is an apple that I grew from that gold endorsed at the ground by seed from seed and I'm just interested to see how this apple tree grows and if it does in fact grows from seed true to type which probably doesn't but we'll see how it turns out or maybe graft onto that I think that could be the the better thing to do and here is another Golden plum this is still working progress you can see there's crap all around the place and that's just we're just collecting our palm fronds there so that we can mulch them this area is very much under construction at the moment it used to be a garden path that went into a a bit of a love chair that all got flattened as well when these when this tree dropped branches in the storm so we've decided to get rid of that area because we didn't really use it as a garden path in a sitting area anyway we decide to use it as a more as a food area cross ornamentals to sort of share the neighbors and the street but also be productive here we've got an Australian round line this is another native line it doesn't look like it's doing great but it'll come good and here's another one these are the ones that have the caviar type flesh very good eating grading cocktails good in foods and I just love this native Lyman grows well in Australia over here isn't a native this is just another citrus but it's the Buddha's hand citrus and I've always wanted this citrus grow so well here I said this is just a recent planting looks a bit sick at the moment but don't worry it'll come good it grows that buddha's-hand fruit that you can use the rind in dishes and here is a Coco plum pigeon pea I believe that's a madrone oh I just got these plants off eBay they're all forest and fruiting trees and that's not native to Australia another pigeon pea is a cinnamon myrtle got beautiful fragrant flat leaves so you use this all it smells fantastic I could see how this would be really good in cooking he can crush the leaves up using like a herb or you can flavor foods like a spice yeah there's another current a bush tucker current and at the back here is a tamarind a large leafed tamarind and it's the fruit that you eat on this thing it's different to the other tamarind that you use as a as a Spicer in Indian cooking that's what the fruit looks like there bush tucker planned and I nearly forgot I've just planted this the other day here's another bush tucker plants in here because it does like a bit of shade so I should grow well under this fig it's a black all right moving along to the front of our driveway we've got the macadamia nut tree of course that hasn't flared yet but it certainly will soon I reckon it's growing quite well bit of a lean but it's going okay more limes a Kia apple or a couple I've got several of these they're a South African fruit tree or a fruiting shrub they still get quite large and they're taking a while to grow but they are looking quite healthy now especially since I've fence this off so the dog can't run through because otherwise he was running through and especially when the post lady came but now I fence that off so he can't do that we've got pineapples in there mixed up with of course some flowers and around the other side here is a kumquat which you can see is growing very well this kumquat tastes fantastic I mean it's a bit sour to eat fresh like that but oh boy does it go good in jams look at it just it's prolific fruit ah absolutely prolific cockatoos liked it too but thankfully they don't they're not incessant like they don't keep coming back time and time again so we don't have to keep it constantly knitted and we move across the driveway now still going back around this is a variegated leaf kumquat not growing as well but it has these cute fruits that are variegated probably needs a little TLC but I remember my mother used to say variegated plants never grow as well as the standard plants with the normal green leaves she always just used to tell me that as far as gardening goes one of the main tips if you're going to choose plants and it's probably right this kumquat here is definitely growing a lot better than this what this variegated leaf but they're essentially only a few meters apart and growing in pretty much the same type of soil next to the kumquat we've got more of those k apples or ki apples ornamental palm more of them the idea is they will get nice and large and you need a male and a female that's why I've grown so many just so that I get my chances of getting a male and a female and not just all females are all males but I also want them to fill up this area they're a thorny bush and they should keep the dog out away from the front of the the garden area tearing the place up more finger limes or native Australian limes and up the back here we've got these cherry guavas a mixture of strawberry and yellow type cherry guavas they're very tasty and a really excellent hedging plant or hedging tree and that's what I'm trying to do there grow several of them along here and hedge them together quite Hardy nice fruit working perfectly as an ornamental cross food plant and we've got more ornamentals another ornamental there but in the middle here is a bit of bit of a rainforest type tree another an Australian native and that's a birdie can plum so small plum sized fruits and should grow probably about five metres I believe coming through here we've got a for Java I didn't even realize we didn't ever plant this this was here when we got here this is known amongst these ornamentals and this ghost gum now we're getting more to the ornamentals here all of these are ornamentals except for in the corner here I've planted another bush tucker tree and this one's another type of plum it's called a native black plum and these are supposed to do quite well in the shade and it looks like it is because it'll get some morning sun but gets shaded out a lot of the time but still it's growing and it should punch through this canopy here eventually I'll prune this other tree back this ornamental to give it more of a chance a in time but yeah it's it's doing its job and filling a place where an ornamental could have been and it's going to be producing fruit in the future so we'll now move down here towards the main orchard is down this way the first tree we're going to get to is the marsh grapefruit which is one of my favs this Marsh grapefruit is just a delightful tree it produces an excellent grapefruit that's a bit of a smaller one they can get twice that size and full of juice a very nice juice as well and over here is another one of my favorite trees that we'll get to soon it's called the washing tin navel I'm glad there's no undies hanging up on the line at the moment that could be embarrassing well we'll go across the other side we'll start through this side I've got just a few small trees that's a a line that's called a sweet lime I believe it's a young plant not doing the best eaten by a few grasshoppers by looks of it but it would probably come good a seedless Valencia we've got a Valencia orange we've had a few years that's been doing great and that one's a seedless one I'm interested to see how that grows and what the fruits like but speaking of grapefruit this would have to be our favorite you doesn't look like much now because we've stripped off fruit but that's a Rio red grapefruit and the fruit is just extraordinary really beautiful I've mounted this tree up only simply because I had tried to grow an avocado here and it failed and I just decided to place this tree in that same spot and it's growing quite well as you can see lemon tree they've had a few troubles at the big and you can see how I've pruned it pruned off dead branches and that but now it's starting to come good behind it is a star fruit this is a Eureka Mandarin it's the heart of the peel mandarines but they they might be hard to peel but they are really sweet and lovely tasting we've got an Indian guava just planted there and of course our magnificent lime tree yes you can see a lot of fruit on the ground there some of them will juice some of them more a lot of them will just rot underneath the tree and give fertilizer back to the tree that's how I grow a lot of my citrus when we get a oversupply this lime tree is in fruit all year took 24 hours a day seven days a week 365 days a year this tree produces fruit so losses like this you think might be a loss doesn't really concern us that much we give plenty of fruit away to family and friends and we also use it constantly and I see sometimes rotting fruit underneath the tree like this I get the boys to scoop them up and throw them under close to the trunk that just adds back into the soil and then helps grow the tree nice and strong and you can see it's very healthy and that's our trick to keep it growing and that wasn't something you know esposa was something that that I always did but it confirmed but this method was confirmed when I actually saw ad okay on a Greek farmer in Australia a Greek citrus farmer and he was explaining how he when he ever he can't sell his produce or whenever they have a fairly poor season or they can't get for whatever reason their produce to market they'll leave it fall underneath the trees and let it right back in and he swears by that as letting that tree grow and I think if you think helping that tree grow better if you think about it logically if what was known around to eat that fruit that would be the thing that would happen the fruit would fall from the tree and it would turn back into soil and compost and give nutrients back and just keep going without any actual outside fertilizer and next to this lime is a orange this is a lanes Lake navel orange it starts to ripen a bit later than the Washington got an olive tree here another olive that - kalamata and then coming in here this is called a star gooseberry it looks a bit like a star fruit tree with the leaves but yeah star gooseberry grows into quite a large tree I believe and has lots of yellow star shape type fruit small like oh you know large cherry type I believe so I'm keen to see how that goes and that's right next to the famous Meyer lemon remember my how to grow a ton of lemons video that's that tree it's just such a beautiful tree and a wonderful performer always got fruit on it kaffir lime used mainly just for the leaves this one he doesn't fruit as much we've got another lime tree a half a lime over there but you can't see at the moment and that one does fruit quite a bit there's the Valencia orange a sunrise lime another native lime this one was developed or crossbred to give a really sweet fruit that one's a nice ripe one you can eat the skin and all you're very sweet not beer at all and they've got maybe one or two seeds you wouldn't be able to grab this back from seed I don't think like other native limes you probably could really is nice to eat like that you wouldn't think it but it is it's still a fairly young tree but that'll start growing a lot more free as well this is Hellena olive there's another Hellena olive that I grew from my cutting just wanted to try it we didn't need any extra olive so I didn't grow whole heap of amber just grew one and on the other side of this Valencia orange here you've got that calf a line that I was talking about that does fruit you can see it's got a few small fruit on it now that one's just fallen off well after you use that in cooking tonight allow me next to the lime is a Barbados cherry we've got some tamari lies several of them or three of them will so there's a light key behind it there's just a new planting here's another apple apple that we grew from seed again just experimenting see how it goes mandarin the Imperial Mandarin a tangerine I love the fruits on this thing it's amazing they're so juicy and check out the color of it really lovely I've got a bit of leaf miner in it like most of our citrus but we don't spray a lot they still produce well might look a little bit unsightly sometimes so but if it gets out of hand you just use a little bit of pesto oil on it organic pest oil and that usually knocks them off coming past the tangerine we've got another olive this one here's a Manzanillo and that one there's an Abba Gleaner which produces a small olive they do best in a subtropical warmer climate like we have here there's another Manzanillo is the Washington orange fantastic orange tree really beautiful sweet fruit and always produces every year as well next to it is a pepper plant like real pepper it's been growing for a number of years and I'm still trying to grow it it's it's not the best but I'm gonna work out a way to to grow up properly unfortunately the opossums and animals love eating the leaves so that's why I've had to protect it with that netting there's a hog plum haven't got any fruit off that just yet it's fruit at a few times but the fruit is perished when it was small but now that it's staying to mature well I think we're gonna see it fruit profusely soon and that's next to a bow and mango dragon fruit and pineapple sort of area that's a yellow dragon fruit a little coffee plant and that's fruited for the first time see the coffee berries it's going into a nice tree it likes the shaded area in the orchard we're trying to squeeze in as much as we possibly can into this orchard using every spare space here is a mango I'm not sure what variety it is we grew that from seed another native lime that's got some small fruit on it check it out is a Glenn man guy all these need a good trim to be honest and right at the back here past the bow and mango is our old banana trees you see they're still some bananas robbing up there but these trees have never been great and there's another bunch of bananas up there I got these from my uncle they grow tall the bunches aren't that fantastic and say I think what I'll do eventually is cut all these down and just keep our main banana trees that were over the other side here that you'll see soon and then basically we get down to the back of our property and nothing's going to grow down there no fruit trees although down the back neither chickens I am growing some pigeon pea down the back there because they'll act as a a nice foraging crop for the chickens and also because they just do grow down in the shade and they can be grown down there what we'll do instead of going around the back of the veggie garden we'll have to go back up this side of the orchard so that you can see the other plants on this side here's a red dragon fruit I've shown this quite a few times look at this here it's going to develop beautifully nice heavy fruit looks very healthy growing up this large trellis and we'll go back up the orchard this way and I'll show you from this side just to orientate you here I am now down the back you can see me more mangos are taking and show you this one here I showed you this up at the bush tucker area this is this tamarind the large leaf tamarind and the reason why I planted one here and one back up to the top of the front of the property in the bush area was because I was worried that that one up there might get a little bit too much of the Western Sun in the afternoon and it could perish so in insurance I bought two and I've got one stuck down here in the shade basically of these mango trees because it does like part shade it's a rainforest plant and I'm thinking this would be a nice spot for it and the soils quite moist here just naturally past that is a pomegranate and in here you've got a blood orange which is struggling at the moment it's got plenty of fruit on it it's pretty well but it's got a mold and I have sprayed it with an organic spray and you can see the city moulds dying off but it looks a bit ugly at the moment and behind this blood orange is the person and that fruit it quite well this season did get attacked also by some wool the aphids and that's the thing this little area here has had a bit of a drama with some aphids problems but there's a lot of ants nests down the ground around here and that could be the reason why the pests are thriving in these two areas whereas they're not in all of the other garden but anyway I'm onto it and we'll get there behind the blood orange is a loquat and that's just starting to come into fruit now we go there small loquat fruits and flowers hopefully we'll get a decent crop out of them and hopefully they'll come on before the spring hits it should should get them they should be developing in another three to six weeks and on the other side of the loquat is a star apple this has grown from seed and it's been growing now for good ten years it should start fruiting this very soon nice big handsome looking tree good growth but no fruit is yet but we're getting close I love the foliage on this look at the beautiful brown foliage underneath the leaves and the green on top going past this is a angel peach produces a flat peach again this is hard to net and little fruit in springtime and I've got to cut it back and do a lot of pruning this winter so that we can net it properly so that the fruit fly don't decimate the fruit as are starting to grow our new row of fruit trees a Malabar chestnut there this is a jar body Carver or a yellow one so it has yellow grape like fruit this is a Sapodilla a soursop this here is a black pudding tree or a SAP toad and that's looking lovely isn't it it's growing nicely we should get some fruit on that soon a star fruit this is a more mature tree we've got some excellent staff fruit out of that this season and I thought the fruit was a little bland and so did the rest of the fam but it's refreshing with a little bland but I'll tell what it does do it makes a fantastic Jam a chili and ginger jam with the star fruit and that must have a lot of pectin in the fruit because it sets you beautifully and it makes it's been a huge hit with the family I'll put that recipe on my website soon in the recipe section I just haven't got around to it yet but I will do that yeah it surprised me at how good it was even if I do say so myself and here we've got another kumquat this is an oval type of kumquat oval fruit I just had to have it because I collect citrus and they grow so well here and speaking of collecting citrus here's our pomelo and this is the largest citrus that you can get and here's one fruit ripening now look at the size of that wow isn't that fantastic and it'll get bigger I tasted the pomelo in Thailand and I wasn't that impressed and I've also bought one here in Australia just off the supermarket shelf and I thought that a little bit dry but I'm hoping that this pomelo here homegrown variety will be a cracker you know I'm always optimistic and backyard produce they probably will be better and it probably will be perfect if it eaten straight off the plant rather than sitting in a supermarket or in deep deep freeze for several weeks before it gets to the consumer so I'm looking forward to this tree developing probably two years old now maybe if that it's growing quite fast and it looks like it loves that spot on the other side of the pomelo here we've got this Panama berry or the fairy floss tree or cotton candy tree these berries are always growing my wife absolutely adores them I mean I mean Nina really does go crazy for these berries she's out here all the time whenever she goes put some washing on the line or come out to the garden she makes a beeline straight for this tree and grabs a couple of berries and eats them every time she comes out in the backyard now and this is always in fruit it does suffer a little through our hot summers surprisingly because I thought it was a tropical subtropical tree but does tend to suffer a little bit through the hotter times of the year but at this time of year it flourishes and it produces these berries about the size of a blueberry I suppose maybe often a little larger and they do hmm and who tastes like fairy floss or cotton candy just through here on the other side of this Panama berry is a custard apple and I might have a fruit here that's ready to pick only small I think it might be a bit hard it's hard to tell the custard apple whether they're ripe or not I'll tell you anyone in the comment section that this is the first time I've ground custard apple how do you tell if it's ready to pick do they get a bit softer well they stay hard or would they smell or something if you can let me know in the comment section below I'll be grateful but the tree is growing quite well you can see it's nice and healthy one fruit there might be another one somewhere it hasn't really got to the productive stage yet but I'm sure in the future it'll go well once it establishes itself here's a mini pomegranate there all right I mean they're hardly worth picking but there you go there there's the fruit opening up I mean you don't get a lot out of these mini ones so we sort of grew it for a bit of fun lovely ornamental type plant I could probably pick that one you might get a little bit out of it but not much on the other side here is a Hawaiian guava being a bit overshadowed by this Hellena olive but it's still growing very well squeezed in here and this is what I'm talking about earlier I want to squeeze in as much fruit plants as we can or fruit trees as possible and here is a nashi pear leaves are falling off because it's deciduous again this is something I've got a prune because the fruit fly love the fruit but it does fruit well and if I give it a good haircut put some net over at this season we should get more fruit out of it and before we go back out and then down around the bottom of the veggie garden we've got this fig tree it's not doing the best but it's producing a few fruit I think it's probably getting shaded out a little bit at the moment but hopefully it'll come good it got a little fungus and I had to cut it back but we'll see how it grows and if it grows back it seems to be growing back strong enough and this isn't really the time of year for it we have to wait until the weather warms up and into spring before we can see whether or not this plane is going to be a success and now we'll go past the main orchard I guess you could call it fruit trees but there's some blueberries growing in here this raised garden bed I suppose they get fairly large not too big though but that's an experiment that I'm doing at the moment they're starting to flower we've got our poor pores growing here these two are ones that I bought commercially they're supposed to be soft pollinating and a red variety of pawpaw they're only just starting to fruit now some of the fruit are working some of them are dying off but the trees look healthy enough and these other two I grew from seed from a seed my uncle gave me from the fruit of that my uncle gave me and again they do suffer a bit through winter but they should pick up in spring there's our main mulberry tree that's been there the longest that's a black English here's a white mulberry right next to these banana trees and you've seen my banana videos got a few bunches still on the guy he's a big trees though really big these ones here are the dwarf variety and I can easily bag them whereas the ones next to them even though they grow some really good bananas stop there they're growing some really nice bunches one two that's probably about six bunches in this cluster the problem is that they're so high and I have to get a big long ladder and then if we come back on the other side we've got another mulberry it is winter and that's why the male berries are shedding the leaves and on the other side of the mulberry I've got an avocado in a raised bed and that's the last one there I'll just show you two olives basically one olive here and a bay leaf tree that's quite a large one and another olive and these olives you can see as I'm looking back out at the vegetable garden from the top of our back deck though this just gives a nice Mediterranean feel to have those olives and it's just handy also to have a bay leaf tree that you can just pick when you need to and now it's high enough that we can actually get we can actually pick it from when we come out from the kitchen yeah so that's it that's our big full fruit tree or food plant tree walk around done a hundred and forty plus of them I know we didn't get to see every one of them like individually cuz otherwise we'd be here for a month and I'm sure you don't want to look at my ugly doll going around the garden for a whole month there to get pretty boring but I think we've done a pretty good job had a good crack at showing you just about everything and putting it into perspective on a small acreage which we're not using all of it remember the last a car down the back there is primarily mainly for the poultry and it's it's sort of like a native vegetation area that backs onto parkland we can't really grow anything down there except for some of those pigeon pea plants that's about it uh there is a couple but they really they're veggie plants there's a couple of of weed what people would call them noxious weeds I don't their food plants AP eggplants they're growing naturally down the back and I'm leaving a few of them grow so that we can eat them but apart from that really isn't much down that last acre so when you think that the veggie patch takes up quite a bit of area in the middle a house driveway and other ornamental plants have to take up some space well then there's not that much room to grow the fruit trees but regardless you can still grow a lot if you pack them in pack the fruit trees in and put them in wherever you can I don't necessarily just have to be in the one location we did initially start our orchard over there because it was the high ground it had the most Sun but yeah you can still try growing fruit trees anywhere around your property as long as it's appropriate for that fruit tree and if they're a native fruit tree that doesn't need as much Sun you can grow it in a a spot that doesn't get as much so there are plenty of things that you can grow and plenty of places around a standard property that if you think outside the box you can utilize and maybe exchange some of those ornamentals for productive fruiting trees or food trees well I hope you enjoyed this video if you did make sure you give it a big thumbs up the last video in this series will be on how we tie the property together irrigation fruit trees vegetable garden the chickens and how it all sort of ties in a bit together it might be as long as this one but that'll be the third part remember if you want to see the first part with just just the veggie garden tour check the links below thanks a lot for watching bye for now
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Channel: Self Sufficient Me
Views: 581,154
Rating: 4.9433808 out of 5
Keywords: food garden tour, food garden, fruit tree garden, fruit tree forest, food forest, food forest tour, fruit trees, growing fruit trees, garden tour, growing food, growing fruit, gardening, homesteading, self sufficient me, backyard fruit trees, backyard fruit orchard, backyard fruit forest, garden
Id: i84ISXzAfrg
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Length: 43min 25sec (2605 seconds)
Published: Thu Jun 20 2019
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