Success StoryWebinar Wednesday YouTube Channel Cultivates Gardeners Nationwide
Webinar Wednesday YouTube Channel Cultivates Gardeners Nationwide
Author: Kelly Jackson
Planning Unit: Christian County CES
Major Program: Horticulture, Consumer and Home
Plan of Work: Endorsing Environmental Stewardship and Promoting Green Living
Outcome: Initial Outcome
In April 2020, during the height of the pandemic, a group of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Horticulture agents saw an opportunity in crisis. With in-person learning on hold and gardening interest surging, they launched Horticulture Webinar Wednesday—a weekly live Zoom series covering a wide range of gardening topics. To reach an even wider audience, each session was recorded and shared on a newly created YouTube channel.
What began as a response to social distancing has since grown into a thriving, nationwide digital learning hub for home gardeners and Master Gardeners.
The goal of the project was to provide accessible, research-based horticulture education to home gardeners and Master Gardeners. The team hosts weekly live webinars during the growing season and upload recordings to a centralized YouTube channel. All topics focus on seasonal, trending, and high-interest gardening practices.
By the Numbers (Channel Lifetime):
- 2,076 subscribers
- 176 videos
- 168,600 total views
- 23,300 hours of total watch time
- 4,400 views in the past 28 days alone
Top-performing videos of 2025 demonstrate strong national relevance:
- “Growing Pawpaws” (2022) – 3,082 views
- “How to Start a Community Garden” (2020) – 1,697 views
- “Gooseberries and Currants” (2022) – 1,477 views
- “Growing Giant Pumpkins” (2024) – 1,228 views
- “Chaos Gardening” (2024) – 1,125 views
Participants are not only watching, they’re engaging and taking action:
“This helps me greatly! Thank you. I have searched for instruction that is NOT the duplicate of an audiobook. It is refreshing and needed to learn with an authentic presentation.”
— Viewer, Tree Risk Assessment
“Looking to start a green space project in Wichita, KS with a local group of like-minded individuals. This was very helpful. Thank you.”
— Viewer, How to Start a Community Garden
What started as a Kentucky-based outreach tool has become a national resource, supporting new and seasoned gardeners across the U.S. Webinar Wednesday continues to demonstrate the power of collaboration, consistency, and adaptability in Extension programming.
© 2024 University of Kentucky, Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment