Monday, January 31, 2011

Gardening

It is for Cousin Lyn I assembled these photographs as a reminder that things are alive and growing somewhere on the planet outside Chicago. It has been raining a fair bit lately and a flower pot base was sitting around with some rainwater from the night before. Cheyenne does not allow anything to go to waste.I think it must be exceedingly tiresome hanging around all the time watching me and waiting on my every mood but she seems entirely happy. Indeed Cheyenne is settling in so well that she takes it upon herself to bark and guard her home. I wonder if she remembers much of what went on before she was dumped at the pound.But enough about the dog, Cousin Lyn wants to know what's growing. An avocado tree, that's what. The flowers in the pots were selected and planted by Therese who came for a visit recently from her home in Paris. She works in Holland and has no garden so she made up for it here ("Anything grows down here!" was her mantra) and planted flowers that will attract butterflies.We keep the avocado, mango, custard apple, fig and pomegranate downstairs under the mature coconuts. The vegetables and herbs we grow on the deck alongside the house. The deck is actually our rainwater cistern. The mangroves in the background mask the canal alongside our house.
I have found these egg plant (aubergine) bushes do amazingly well in the Earthboxes, and this year's crop looks like it will be as good as last years. The egg plants themselves are rather smaller than the regular sized ones but I just slice them into quarters and fry them in a little olive oil and garlic and they make a sweet side dish with no effort at all.
The egg plants are more like fat fingers than small footballs.Plus they make lovely purple flowers.
I reported previously that I made up my own anti-iguana spray as explained to me by Lisa and it has worked beautifully this year. I'd like to think Cheyenne's enjoyment of sunbathing on the deck might also help. But as one can see from this next picture a iguana tasted this tomato and gave up:The tomato crop is looking good overall. We buy our plants from the lady at the Big Pine Flea Market as she has heat resistant plants suited to the Florida climate. We find them more reliable than Home Depot's plants.After we cut off the broccoli floret last week and ate it, these started to appear:
Therese bought these pots and plants and I do know the one in the corner is jasmine and it's starting to climb up the netting on the porch. Next to the jasmine you can see the down pipe from the roof gutter which guides the rainwater into the cistern. The plant on the right is a Mamey though it does not produce fruit by that name.
The jasmine is doing it's climbing thing.Therese said these plants will attract butterflies and indeed I saw one the other day hovering in the area.The frangipani Tim gave us is starting to sprout leaves once again in the winter sunlight.Downstairs we have the tangerine tree... ...the mango......an avocado...
...and another frangipani. Therese sited this one here after I let it languish in excessive sun. Kathy gave us this cutting off her impressive Big Pine tree. Therese filled the pot with annual flowers.
Overhead the coconut trees are starting to produce. I get hundreds of nuts over the summer and I try to drink as many as I can but we have a dozen mature trees surrounding our little house.
The West Indian Almond is almost bare. In summer it will be covered in thick shiny green leaves and provide shade and privacy. The nuts are supposedly edible but I have yet to try one- they are an unappetizing shade of black.I anxiously await fresh pineapples. None so far.
Coconuts produce huge quantities of fronds which are a chore to clean up:The essential colors of the Florida Keys: green white and blue.
My property line is a couple of feet south of the coconut line. The lots on either side of my house are empty for the moment.
This is the view to the west of my house looking across the salt ponds. The Niles Channel Bridge which rises forty fee tin the air is visible in the distance. At night when I sit out here I can see the red and white lights of vehicles rising up into the sky over the bridge.Sitting in the living room of our 770 square foot (70sq meter) house we can see Therese's butterfly plants outside the porch.Behind my armchair, where I like to read when indoors, the side deck is where we are growing our upstairs plants.And we end like we started...
...with Cheyenne watching my every move.

13 comments:

Jack Riepe said...

Dear Conchscooter:

Today's blog episode was like a portal to paradise. You have no idea how soothing it is to look the greenery of your pot garden (meaning flower pots), and see how the mangos, the coconuts, and the eggplant are doing.

I am entralled by the purples, the lavenders, and fucias that explode like nature's fireworks, and hang about your verandah. In your next blog, please show me the lime tree and the sugar cane fields from whence my rum will and coke will originate.

I thought of doing a little planting here today. It appears to be the season for winter wheat, as the snow in the yard is halfway to Atticus's shoulder. But we may be in luck. While northern New Jersey is slated to get another 15 inches of snow next Tuesday, we have been assured we're getting a bare minimum of 4 or 5 inches of ice.

Fondest regards,
Jack • reep • Toad
Twisted Roads

Conchscooter said...

Now I have to figure out how to grow stuff in summer when it is fearsomely hot. If our just-in-time delivery system is going to collapse I would ahte to have top depend on what I grow to live on. Lean times indeed they would be.
Enjoy the seasons Up North- it's good for your soul to suffer. It's not good for mine which is why I live in the land of peprpetual summer.

AS said...

I am deeply envious of your situation. My husband and I hope to move to the Keys some day and your home, lot, gardens, and extensive deck are exactly the sort of place we would like to have. Congratulations on your good fortune in finding such an excellent abode.

Conchscooter said...

Dear As: here's the bad part. My neighbors on my street suck. The old control freaks near the highway yell at everyone that rides/drives by, including me. I save my speeding for the highway but the cranks don't care they flap their arms at me as I cruise by sedately at 26 mph with my factory issued exhausts. The rednecks furthest from the highway slam by at 50 miles per hour with loud exhausts on their trucks to piss off the cranks. The snowbirds march up and down the road in step getting their exercise like they're missing military life, all of which makes me wonder just how grumpy do these shit heads get when they are living somewhere shitty? Not everyone knows how to express gratitude, even here. Me? I live in my own world because it is a lot more fun. That's what Cheyenne says anyway.

Anonymous said...

I thought you lived there to avoid the snowbirds, rednecks and cranks of Old Town...

Chuck on Fleming.

Conchscooter said...

I goofed. I put out an Obama sign when I thought he was FDR, not Hoover, and my enighbors are Tea Partiers. Smooth move.
I wave and grin like an idiot and keep moving. I would never avoid a crank like you Chuck.

Anonymous said...

So I need to uncork the BSA and run down your street in 1st gear, generating racket sufficient to set of car alarms whilst waving both arms madly?

Not that I've ever done that...

Chuck on Fleming.

Singing to Jeffrey's Tune said...

Great post today.

Your avocado makes mine look sick. What is your secret? I think mine has reached the capacity of its pot and needs to be put into the ground. I have 2 other volunteers in the compost pile I think shall join it.

Rob said...

Lovely. My parents have a similar garden growing wildly out of control at their home on Cudjoe.

They just made a trip to the nursery on Homestead on Saturday as they've complained that the cost of plants in the Keys are excessively high.

Conchscooter said...

I like the plant people at tghe Big Pine flea market. Their plants are well adapted to growing in Florida.

Dr. Lisa said...

Wow--I want to live there now. Fruits, flowers, coconuts, green everywhere--I live in northern Florida and I'm still jealous.

When I lived in the Keys, I rented a bedroom in a small concrete duplex. If I come back, I hope to do better.

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