30 Funny Harvests That Prove Mother Nature Has Some Funny Tricks Up Her Sleeve
Interview With ExpertGardening is a hobby that gives you something really tangible: if done right, it can sustain you. In the U.S., growing your own food is quite popular. According to Raleigh Realty, 55% of American households have a garden.
Although lots of people do it, not all are so successful at it. A lot of things have to go right if you want to enjoy a good harvest: weather conditions, soil, and enough love and care. This time, we're celebrating the hilarious times people's gardening efforts yielded less than desirable results, courtesy of the Might Harvest subreddit.
Bored Panda reached out to Linda Ly, the founder of Garden Betty, a top gardening and home blog. She shared her own experiences with garden fails and told us why making mistakes is a vital part of having your own garden. Read her expert insights below!
More info: Reddit
This post may include affiliate links.
I Did It, I Grew A Watermelon!
Modern homesteader and gardening enthusiast Lindy Ly of Garden Betty tells Bored Panda that her most memorable garden fail involved tomatoes. "I didn't realize the effect that extreme heat can have on tomato plants," she remembers.
"We had a severe heat wave one summer that lasted a few weeks, and most of my tomatoes started dropping flowers. After that year, I learned to cover my plants with shade cloth in peak summer to protect the pollen," she adds.
Linda believes that failing and making mistakes is the best way to learn in the garden. Even if your harvest was less than impressive, she encourages you not to lose faith and keep at it. After all, with every mistake, you learn something new. "It's always worth trying again with the new insights you've gained!" Linda believes.
I Was So Excited When I Saw A Quarter-Sized Carrot Top Poking Through The Soil 😑
So Excited For My First Ever Eggplant Harvest! I'll Feed My Family For Nanoseconds With This Haul. Recipe Suggestions?
The Mighty Harvest subreddit is for gardeners to boast their hilariously small yet wholesome gardening results. But, in general, the average garden enthusiast in the U.S. grows $600 dollars worth of food. The most popular veggie in American gardens is, interestingly, the tomato (though, I hear, it's technically a fruit?)
There are some interesting statistics on gardeners as well. Apparently, the majority of green thumbs in the U.S. are gentlemen: 56.4% of gardeners say they're men, and only 43.6% are women. The average gardener's age is also somewhat surprising: it's not just grandmas working in their gardens. Most enthusiasts are between 35 and 44 years old.
Well, At Least It's Pretty
I Found Even Smaller Tomatoes
I know these ones, so when there’s tomato’s farms (I lived in Childers QLD for but they had lots of fruit pickers), the birds nibble those and then pass the seeds out but because of how we manipulate produce growth, those seeds grow back as their natural wild tomato form, they are 10000 X sweeter than anything. Peep was obsessed with these ones even over pear yellow cherry tomatoes (her fave snack was tomatoes 😂).
Load More Replies...There is an actual tomato that grows to this size. They are called spoon tomatoes and the flavor is outstanding. Tomato caviar is how I refer to them
People eat the tomatoes unborn babies? Monsters
Load More Replies...Awww, these are so adorable! I bet I could've gotten my kids to eat them (provided I served them with a very generous amount of Ranch dressing).
Those look like currant tomatoes - Solanum pimpinellifolium. I've raised them several times and they're a wonderful crop to have in the garden. They're mild, sweet, not very acidic. Like many tomato varieties they tend to sprawl out (indeterminate growth pattern), so I recommend growing them in a big tomato cage such as a cylinder made from 6" concrete reinforcing mesh. One vine will deliver quarts of tasty little tomatoes during a single growing season.
Bountiful Harvest
Being a good gardener is like an art. You have to know which plants like the shade and which prefer the sun, which veggies grow better when they're next to each other and which ones can't ever get along, and that you can never plant mint seeds directly into the ground if you don't want that monster overgrowing onto everything else in your herb garden.
Mistakes happen, but beginners, naturally, make more mistakes than seasoned gardeners. So, let's explore some of the most common mistakes veggie growers can make in their first years as green thumbs.
My Brother's Bountiful Corn Harvest!
Should I Soak The Olive Or Turn It Into Oil?
Eggplant (Egg For Scale)
A good place to start is to pay attention to the food you're giving your plants. Many experts say that good soil is the key to a healthy and productive garden. A great soil is nutrient-rich and has air pockets, and some enthusiasts prefer to make their own. Nicole Burke of Gardenary uses topsoil, sand for drainage, and the magic ingredient – compost (mushroom is, in her opinion, the best).
My Only Cucumber This Year
If I Store It Correctly, This Carrot Should Last My Family All Winter!
Update From My Lemon Tree
Some other things beginner gardeners should pay attention to are the plant's season and in what climate it grows best. Novices often fail to understand that not every veggie that is in the supermarket grows year-round naturally. So, read the seed packet and check when it's best to plant it in your climate.
Apple Pie Anyone?
I Was Told You Guys Would Appreciate This. Behold: My Ghost Pepper
I Planted Bananas On My Backyard
Just like humans, plants need food, but they also need water. Finding a balance between too much and too little can be hard, though. Signs of overwatering include yellowing leaves, wilting, edema, mold and algae, and rot. Underwatered plants will have dry, brown edges, they'll droop, their leaves will be dropping, and the soil will be hard and compacted.
My Neighbors Sunflower Has A Comically Small Bloom For It's Massive Size
I Think I Can Open A Soup Kitchen Now
My $100 Water Bill Watermelon
Seasoned gardeners also advise to use mulch. In short, you should keep your soil covered if you want to avoid erosion, runoff, and compaction. Exposed soil surfaces dry out and make it harder for water and nutrients to penetrate it. It can also help prevent the growing of weeds, as the mulch prevents weed seeds from getting sunlight, which they need to germinate.
Pineapple Pizza Toppings For Everyone!
My First Ripe Habanero, And A Zucchini That Hid Under Weeds And Avoided Detection. The Zucchini Was Kind Enough To Say Hi To Me When I Found It! The Habanero Has Been Eaten And Was Nowhere Near As Spicy As I'd Expected
Decided To Harvest All Of My Chives To Make Chive Powder. Behold My Mighty Chive Powder Stash
When you're starting your gardener's journey, you might get overexcited and try biting off more than you can chew. Expert gardeners recommend starting small: list five of your favorite herbs and veggies, research them, and work on getting the best harvest out of them. Next year, add a couple more and go from there.
Just Thinking About All The Stew We Will Have
Behold This Giant Lime - My First Lime Harvest
Recipe Says To Use Two Lemons
If you want your garden to be as natural and eco-friendly as possible, work on a wildlife-friendly and pesticide-free garden. Australia-based gardener and author Casey Lister urges other gardeners to ditch insecticides, pesticides, and fungicides and invite predatory insects, birds, lizards, and frogs. "Ladybirds devour aphids, birds munch on caterpillars, frogs eat snails and slugs," she explains.
10 Generations Of My People Will Never Know What It Feels Like To Be Hungry!
Yesterday’s Mighty Harvest Is Today’s Breakfast!
Well at least your nails are fantastic! And that beautiful plant in the background, we have one of those but it's very small
Eggplant Smaller Than An Egg
In the end, failing is a big part of gardening. You observe and learn new things, that's how you become a better gardener. As Abra Lee, director of horticulture at Atlanta’s Oakwood Cemetery and Gardens, told WaPo's Cynthia R. Greenlee, "The garden will always defeat you." In other words, nature will always nature.
My Sister Just Handed Me This
Time To Learn How To Preserve Asparagus, We'll Swim In It Soon!
On a side note pickled asparagus is one of my few remaining joys in life
Alas, I Fear The Gallons Of Tomato Soup I Will Make With This Bountiful Harvest Will Mold Before It Can All Be Eaten. No One Could Ever Consume Such Quantity :(
Let this list of harvesting fails not discourage you from your gardening endeavors, green thumb Pandas. Instead, may it inspire you to start planning your first mini garden. Whether you start with a few herbs or feel confident enough to tackle tomatoes or peas, don't forget to share your plans with us in the comments! And if you want to see more pics of hilariously bad harvests, head over here, here, here, and here!
I Am Officially A Strawberry 🍓 Farmer
Cucumbers Turned Out Great
Very Large Banana
Just Need A Tiny Bottle Of Champagne And A Tiny Hot Tub
I Was Told You Would Appreciate This
Behold! Out Of My Ten Blueberry Bushes!
Watered Every Day For Months
Strawberry Shortcake, Anyone?
I'm sorry I'm sure you tried your best but that strawberry looks like the diagrams of cigarette-damaged lungs in my school textbooks
Onion Soup, Anyone?
I Don't Have Enough Space In My Refrigerator, Anyone Want To Share?
Biggest 'Cumber I Got
A Bountiful Harvest! Cornbread For All…!
We Feast! Obligatory Bananas For Scale
Chili Bean Is Embarrassed By The Bountiful Harvest
This Tomato Is Way Too Big For My Basket
Today’s Large Harvest!
I Think I Might Make Some Onion Rings
We're Making It Through The Winter With This One
Many, Many Teeny Tiny Tomato Sandwiches In My Future
Hello! I Was Told To Post My Tomatoes Here. 🍅
My S*xy, Voluptuous Carrot
Harvested My First Corncob
It actually looks very nice, just a lil smaller than we're used to seeing 😄
Lemonade, Anyone? (Normal Lemon For Scale)
Jalapeno Anyone? 😏
The Sun Shined Down, The Rain Poured Forth, And We Were Blessed With A Mighty Tomato Harvest
I'll Be Baked All Winter
The Whole Block Will Feast Tonight 💪
Carrots take a long time to grow to maturity. This guy wasn't there yet.
I've Been Blessed With Cucumbers This Year
Pickling cucumbers? I bet the plant will produce more. The engorged shape seems to imply irregular watering - you might get more if you water morning and night with a little tomato feed chucked in every now and then.
Behold My Mighty Sunflower!we’ll Be Eating Seeds All Winter
B A N A N A
Potatoes For Days!
Ever tried growing potatoes in a big, big garbage bin? Like the kind your trash gets picked up in? Only way I've been able to grow them. Make drainage holes in bottom of bin. Start w/ a layer of good soil (2-4 inches) & place your potatoe pieces with the eyes on top. Pieces only need to be an inch or so apart. Cover with another layer of soil (1-2 inches). Every time you see green starting to poke through the soil, add another layer. Make sure to water regularly. It should be fairly damp, not wet, between watering. You can also add more pieces every time add more soil, just not to many at a time. Just keep doing that until the bin is mostly full. It's been a while but I think I let them stay a bit. Look it, just in case! When its time to harvest, just dump the bin and gather potatoes! I used to get between 10 & 15 pounds per bin using 30 gallon cans. And the kids loved helping dig them out
My Mom’s Quote “Cherry Tomato.”
Maybe her packet of seeds was mixed up with the "beefsteak" seeds from a previous post ... But this does not look good or edible.....
16 Weeks Of Growing Turnips
Don’t Know How I’m Gonna Can It All!
Free Lemonade For All!
A Bountiful Harvest Bestowed Upon The Land
My Huge "Beefsteak" Tomato Harvest. Nothing Beefy About Them
What Should I Do With All My Leftover Watermelon After I Cut This Up?
I’m So Proud ☺️
I Will Also Have Bulk Sunflower Seeds
Prayers Have Been Answered — An Entire Kernel!
3 Months Later 😅
Salsa For Everyone!
A Bountiful Harvest Of Potato Indeed
Imagine How Many Smoothies I Can Make
Two Watermelons Should Last Me Through The Rest Of The Summer For Sure
My Awesome Tomato Harvest
I loving looked after my beetroots one year. I planted them, watered them, and fed them. I got 6, 1 inch beetroots. They were thrown into a stew with the real vegetables I bought from the supermarket.
I want to put all of the teeny tinies on a miniature market stall on a miniature high street. That would make me so happy 😊
I loving looked after my beetroots one year. I planted them, watered them, and fed them. I got 6, 1 inch beetroots. They were thrown into a stew with the real vegetables I bought from the supermarket.
I want to put all of the teeny tinies on a miniature market stall on a miniature high street. That would make me so happy 😊
