Garden update

I wanted to share a little photo gallery of my garden and give you a quick garden update.

The tomatoes are doing well, got really large before having flowers, probably my fault because thier fertilizer was 10-10-10. Last week I added some Miracle Grow Tomato and flower specific fertilizer and they are so big, they can handle any extra fruit.

Squash is looking nice, there are 3 squash on multiple plants and look good. Almost ready to pick.

I’m growing a trellis of ornamental squash, along with birdhouse gourd and loofah. The last two listed just started coming up over the weekend, so glad they decided to make an appearance in this year’s garden!

Sunflowers popped up over the weekend as well. A smaller variety and I’ll be sure to plant more every 4-6 weeks to get them all summer.

Hope you enjoyed this garden update.

Zone 8 hardiness

Bananas – how to ripen

banana trees
Bananas are coming along nicely… I’ve asked an extension agent, master gardener and he said that once the first bananas turn ripe, I can pick all of them from the tree, and put them in a cool place, eat them off the bunch as I wish.
“When the top hand starts to turn yellow cut the whole stalk and hang it somewhere in the shade to use as they ripen. You can cut off the bloom stem end portion when the flowers stop setting bananas. ”  – Tom Maccubbin, Extension Agent Emeritus
Special Note:  Also check out their web site at http://www.betterlawns.com and tune in their 30 Year Better Lawns & Gardens Radio program Saturdays between 7 & 9 AM on Orlando’s FM 93.1 & AM540 Radio Stations.  Or anytime at https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-better-lawns-garden-29843164/

banana trees

Pink Hibiscus Seeds

seed pods

If there is one thing my family knows about me, it is that I love seeds.  Seeds are a symbol of hidden potential.  If China sent me seeds, it would be so difficult for me to keep from planting them!  They didn’t, so you are safe North Florida.

Here’s the next pod I’m waiting on to plant… my pink hibiscus.

Inspirational story… at 87 years old, my dad was still planting palm tree seeds.  If that doesn’t describe optimism for the longevity of life, I don’t know what does.

Bananas

After living in my current home in North Florida for about 27 years, I’ve only seen one banana flower on my banana trees.

We cleared a large portion of our property over the past year and found we had several other banana trees, and while excited to find them and clear around them, the real excitement came this summer.  We noticed a banana flower by the trees next to our back porch, which has yet to produce a banana.  Then noticed 4 bunches in the trees ‘down the hill’ on our property. More bananas than we will likely be able to eat, and certainly more than I’ve seen in my life.

Our family loves bananas, and growing up we did have a bunch in my parents’ yard, but we didn’t seem to love them, likely picked too early with my mom’s enthusiasm biasing her decision about when to pick them.

I’ve read up a little and spoke to my neighbor to determine when the best time might be.  It was decided that we would cut off the flower after the bananas stopped being produced, and then when the bananas get to be a bit more rounded, we would ‘pick’ them.

Funny story, as my dad told it, he was visiting my mom’s family in Venezuela, where she lived for a part of her life, and as they were ‘picking’ bananas, one of my uncles cut the tree down, instead of just cutting the bananas off the tree.  My dad was alarmed and asked why they didn’t just cut the bananas.  He was told that once a banana tree produces a flower, it will die after the bananas are ripened.  So rather than just cut the bananas (which in most cases they couldn’t easily reach), they cut the tree.  The trunk of the tree is actually good for the living bananas as well so when possible, I’m told it is good to leave the trunk to decompose by the living trees.

As I was walking around my yard, I noticed one more banana flower right by my porch. So, 6 banana flowers, 5 banana bunches… Yum.

I hope the rest of N. Florida is enjoying bananas as I hope my family will be soon.

Hummingbird

Saw a hummingbird on my native red hibiscus in the evening (8/3)… is it early for them to be in North Florida?

So sad not to have a photo.. but maybe one will be back soon.  That said, I searched to see when they would be around, and found that they come to winter here, and they come in March… so while confusing, I can only guess they are two different species, but have no real idea… just saw one in August.

Native Red Hibiscus

Passion Fruit

passion fruit seedsOver July 4th weekend visiting my parents’ home, I picked up a few passion fruit.  They were on the ground and rotting as they have taken over a small area of their property.

They have since been drying out and so I thought I’d start the month with harvesting the seeds, planting a few to see if they sprout and sharing with family and friends.  I have only harvested seeds from one fruit, I have two more to go, but thinking I’ll do those another day.

Fingers crossed.

They can be invasive if not careful.

A master gardener video I watched on Sunday had a great idea for how I would grow these quick growing vines.
Video: https://twitter.com/uf_leon/status/1289260025207111681  <– highly recommended for North Florida Gardeners!

Fellow Garden Enthusiasts!

I love gardening and have since I was very young. My parents had 4 acres in central Florida and at 10 years old I had my own hot house… yes, a hot house in central Florida. It wasn’t covered in clear plastic much of the year, but we did have a few cold nights.

My parents instilled a love of gardening in me and I hope to pass that along to my children. To have food and herbs in your yard, to pick them fresh and cook them for dinner, a few left over to share with neighbors and family, even having some fresh mint for that mojito, can be very gratifying.

I plan to post about my garden, partly to share what I’ve learned, but mostly so that next year, I can plan a little better and learn from what went wrong and what went right.

Thanks for stopping by!