Why I like the garden, part 1
Sunday, Nov 13, 2005
I spent most of Saturday exploring the plants at Lukas Nursery with a friend. It was the largest nursery I’d ever been to, so we spent many hours there. I enjoyed the visit on many levels. The employees were gardeners themselves and had a lot of information and advice to convey, unlike the workers at most chain stores. Another thing I appreciated about the nursery is that they were selling varieties suitable for Florida growing. While I wasn’t in the market for them, I noticed that the roses were grown on fortuniana rootstock, a special rootstock developed to thrive in Florida. After experimenting with both regular and fortuniana rootstock roses, the difference can’t be emphasized enough. This is just one example, as there are many peculiarities to growing food and foliage in Florida. Additionally, Lukas Nursery was selling plants appropriate to plant now, unlike the watermelon and summer squash starters I saw at the chain garden centers.
Score one for the local horticulturists.
Among a few other odds and ends, at the end of the day I’d purchased 50 strawberry plants, three blueberry bushes, a muscadine grape vine, and a raspberry bush. I recall reading that the Heritage raspberry bush is somewhat of an imperfect solution for Florida gardeners, but that this is the best they’ve produced as raspberries really need more chilling hours. We’ll see how that goes, but I’ve put my receipt in a safe place.
Whether or not I’ll ever see raspberries in my garden is one question, but the real question that begs to be answered is, “Why am I zealous about gardening in the first place?”
As soon as I began earning babysitting money as a teenager, I began buying watermelon seeds, bareroot strawberries, and flowers. While my learning curve was steep at the time, the weak and feeble rewards of my efforts were enough to keep my interest. I wish that I knew enough to ask why something failed, what went wrong, and what to do to prevent its reoccurrence. I am only now asking those questions and wish that I had this insight earlier.
More often than not, we go through life blaming our lot on “well, nothing much grows in Florida anyway” instead of taking responsibility for choosing the right plants at the right time and providing the right conditions for growing them. Now that I am bringing my fourth child through the much maligned “terrible twos” stage, I know that taking responsibility and providing good growing conditions is a gardening lesson that applies to many things.
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Hi Amy, I’m considering paying that place a visit and getting the same items. Can you give me an idea of how much this stuff costs? (Hope that’s not too tacky of me to ask.)
I bought a $2 rosebush at Kmart 5 years ago and it still performs beautifully despite my ignorance regarding roses. It has 5 or 6 buds that will open this week. Sometimes God blesses the efforts of the ignorant.
I seem to have been bitten by the gardening bug. It’s been quite gratifying watching seeds sprout and grow. My husband jokes about me massaging the seed packets. I just enjoy looking at them and planning better ways to organize my garden.
How did Adam do it?
Comment by Jo in Orlando (November 14, 2005 @ 12:16 am )
The Lukas Nursery in Oviedo?? It was 2 miles from where I used to live….now I am jealous! They have quite a bit of our money, and worth every penny!!! Can’t wait to see pix.
Comment by Lisa (November 14, 2005 @ 1:51 am )
I’m soooo glad that you found your strawberries! =)
Comment by Tiffany (November 14, 2005 @ 11:57 am )
The strawberry plants were cheaper at Halls on Edgewater,–$1.50 per 4″ pot. I “swung by” and got them there because of the volume that I was buying. It’s getting a little late to begin planting, so you’d need to do it this week.
Last time I planted, I put in 100 plants and only paid like $10 for all of them. They are CHEAP through the mail. The problem is, however, every seed catalog place won’t ship them until spring. If you can find a source that will, be sure to let me know about it.
If I had got these in earlier, you could’ve had my runners, as I cut the early ones off to get the plant’s energy to concentrate on leaves and flowers, not creating new plants. We’ll have to coordinate this better next year.
Lisa, Yes, the one in Oviedo. Pics (of not much) coming soon.
Tiffany, You faithful reader!
Comment by Amy (November 14, 2005 @ 1:51 pm )
Amy, as one who lives in the Great White North (Canada)–and one for whom, admittedly, “gardening” means, uh, “weeding”–I’m curious: How cold does it get where you are? Are you tropical all the time, or do you have something approaching winter?
In this part of Canada–as opposed to, say, the south of this province (Ontario), which always seems to me like the Garden of Eden, as everything grows there–we have similar challenges to you in terms of what we can grow when, and what we can grow, period. My little postage-stamp of a front lawn has some hardy wild roses that were originally my great-grandmother’s, some lavendar, and a blackberry bush that grew up as a weed from under my parents’ tool shed several years ago! But we definitely have a short growing season. Can you really grow things all year ’round?
Comment by Mrs. P. (November 14, 2005 @ 5:41 pm )
Right now, it’s about 78-80 degrees, and in the “winter” freezes are very rare. Since we live between two rivers, the water factor makes it even more rare. There are probably about three days each year where it gets in the 30’s at night.
Now before you pack your bags, remember we can’t grow food items in the summer! (There are a couple wierd things that I read about, but nothing we eat.) It’s too hot, and basically everyone hides indoors and prays about their AC bill. Kind of the same thing northerners do in the winter.
Comment by Amy (November 16, 2005 @ 11:54 am )
Oh, don’t worry–Irish people don’t do very well in tropical climates!
(Oh, wait–maybe it’s just this Irish person!)
No, I love Canada, and in particular the city in which I live, which has four distinct seasons. Well, okay–three (spring is just a couple of weeks of rain). But for some reason I never really thought of Florida as _that_ hot for an entire season. Don’t know why. Thanks for the illumination!
Comment by Mrs. P. (November 16, 2005 @ 5:07 pm )