Stuff you talk about on a lazy Saturday afternoon
Saturday, Oct 1, 2005
While everyone is wrapping up their gardens for the year, my Floridian self is waiting for the day that I can set out my squash and tomatoes. It is still 90-something degrees, and tomatoes won’t set in anything higher than 85-degrees. Ask me how I know. Too, the bugs are having a gourmet time on my squash which are waiting in the shade for the day that I can set them out. Can’t the pests at least wait until I’ve toiled, nurtured, and hand-pollinated the male and female flowers before they mock me? No, they want to get an early start this year.
This is why it is unexplainable that my flowers along the front walkway are doing so well. Every visitor has commented on their beauty this month. This is probably because they are used to seeing my fruitless labor lining my front porch: impatiens that droop under the bug infestation that I spray without success every morning, petunias with a life cycle of two weeks, and verbena with uncontrollable white-stuff disease. The reward for my labor is discouraging to say the least. Blooming where you are planted is easier when you’re not in Florida.
I even went to an eight week class on growing roses in Florida (“in Florida”, being the key phrase) sponsored by the county extension office, the folks who should know. I won’t post a picture of my rose bush (yes, that’s right, there’s only one left) because it was clear by attending those classes that if I ever wanted to grow a measly rose, I’d have to quit my job as a wife and mother to devote it to full-time rose care. I’m not even exaggerating.
And so, I present my pentas, which will never happen like this again. Hurray for flukes. Boo for The Curse. [Edit: Creation was subjected to The Curse not without hope. And so, the Curse reminds us that He will make all things right one day, and that our hope isn't here, but there. But...you know what I meant.]
12 Comments
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Leave a comment

Amy, Your flowers are lovely! What a beautiful, welcoming front porch you have. I think you would be a great neighbor! What to move to Indiana? We have great gardening weather here and plenty of snow days to plan the Spring planting, too.
Comment by Julie (October 1, 2005 @ 12:55 pm )
So THAT is why my late season tomatoes won’t set! Texas has two growing seasons and I tried to get in on the late summer tomatoes, but the flowers just drop - it hasn’t been below 95 here for 40 days (except this last thurs. we had one day of blessed reprieve!) Thanks for the tip?
Curious - do you do organic or conventional gardening?
Comment by Annie (October 1, 2005 @ 6:04 pm )
What a wonderful front porch! It looks so down-home, makes me want to pull up with my glass of tea and do a few rows on a sweater.
I second Julie’s comment, but for MN. Talk about some fun gardening times here.
We have a friend from Mississippi who was here doing his Masters in Seeds, now he’s in Flordia doing his PhD. I’d say he’s getting a well-rounded gardening education.
Comment by gwen (October 1, 2005 @ 11:48 pm )
love your porch too!
Comment by Khyraen (October 2, 2005 @ 2:03 am )
Good question…Sounds like a post topic; I’ll try to write later this week.
Comment by Amy (October 2, 2005 @ 2:52 pm )
oh very pretty porch!!
no wonder my tomatoes are not happy, here in AZ it is still very hot, 101 today
Comment by peri (October 2, 2005 @ 8:27 pm )
Amy I too am in Florida and last year wanted to be all homey so I planted my veggies when the (read this book unless you live in Florida) growing vegtable book told me to. SO! I got NO veggies and could not figure out why..gotta love FL!
Your porch is amazing..I cant wait to get our debt paid off so we can start planning our new home it will definatly have a great porch!
Julie
Comment by Julie (October 2, 2005 @ 8:50 pm )
Living in the Pacific Northwest, I cannot even imagine PLANTING now! In fact, we’ve already had a couple of frosts, so if folks didn’t harvest their tomatoes, it’s just too late!
What a dream. Plant some for us.

Comment by Karen (October 3, 2005 @ 1:28 am )
Ya’ll have been gardening all summer long, while us Floridians have been cooped inside, praying over our AC bill. (tsk, tsk) Florida does not have summer gardens, just spring and fall. It’s a trade-off, but there are still numerous things that will never grow here: brocolli, raspberries, and 90% of pretty flowers, to name a few!
Oh, and any non-citrus fruit tree! But when
lifeFlorida hands you lemons, you make lemonade.Comment by Amy (October 3, 2005 @ 9:43 am )
Amy, The one thing that I was so eager to do when we moved away from FL (to the Atlanta area) was plant a big garden. It was so therapeutic. I tried growing things in FL. Had the best luck with Irises, hibiscus, azaleas, and eaten up nasty veggies!
Do I miss FL? YES! Do I love having fall arrive and going to a pumpkin patch where the pumpkins are still on the vines and we get to actually pick them off rather than pick them off the ground where they were placed when they were removed from the Virginia delivery truck? YES!!
Blessings dear MOMYS
Comment by Lisa (October 4, 2005 @ 7:00 am )
Amy, The one thing that I was so eager to do when we moved away from FL (to the Atlanta area) was plant a big garden. It was so therapeutic. I tried growing things in FL. Had the best luck with Irises, hibiscus, azaleas, and eaten up nasty veggies!
Do I miss FL? YES! Do I love having fall arrive and going to a pumpkin patch where the pumpkins are still on the vines and we get to actually pick them off rather than pick them off the ground where they were placed when they were removed from the Virginia delivery truck? YES!!
Blessings dear MOMYS
Comment by Lisa (October 4, 2005 @ 7:01 am )
Hang in there, Annie! We’re supposed to get some cool by the end of this week. Maybe it’ll stick this time.
Yep. Almost time to start the fall garden.
Comment by Carol (October 4, 2005 @ 7:59 am )