After planting 80 onion sets, only 5 have sprouted. I'm afraid I was too late planting them.
Oh well.
One can hope the frosts are gone and they probably are. I'm going to bet on it and get maters, corn, and broom corn in the next 7 days, then start building mounds for melons and squashes.Half of our garden is planted and will finishing in the next few weeks. Looks like risk of freezing is over.
I grew up disliking the beach quite bit I am very glad to be living here now. Tropical food is my favorite, besides southern and cajun. I absolutely love it, it's all I eat.
Alongside my raised beds and what I cram around them I have a blackberry bush going crazy, 4 dwarf plantain trees, sugarcane, corn, a Mexican black sapote (chocolate pudding) tree that's now taller than me, fig tree, a guava tree, two dreadlock looking dragon fruit trees, a tamarind seedling that's about 1 inch high, self seeded "wild" amaranth, and already cherry tomatoes, beans the size of my arm.... This is on very small property too, I am doing my best to integrate it all into the landscape and push the yields to their boundaries.
I am utterly jealous of people with even a half acre. This is all on probably... 300 sqft.
Just two years ago I couldn't grow a thing. Diseased soil and no knowledge. Knock on wood for avoiding hurricanes.
The last thing I need space for is all my tobacco seedlings...
The downside of FL is I basically can't grow a single root vegetable or leafy green... I really love mustard greens, not to mention every other leaf green that exists, and of course garlic
I've never heard a report of a successful fruiting of an Avocado tree started from a pit from another avocado, at least as a home grown effort.I got a lesson in patience.
Last year a good friend gave us a bag of avocados, no idea of the variety though---smaller, thin skinned and small pits, but certainly delicious.
I saved the last two pits and did the toothpicks and glass of water thing. Both rooted and cracked, one even sprouted so I transplanted both into pots and put them on the patio about a month ago, after the cold weather passed. The sprout has been growing, the other---nothing. I was about ready to toss the unsprouted pit when I just now noticed---a sprout coming out of the crack!
I gave them both a generous drink of B-1 and celebrated the new arrival with a bowl of GLP Lagonda.
Pollinating avocados is tricky. There are "A" and "B" species that must be cross pollinated. To get fruit I need to find out which species of avocado I have growing, and find an avocado tree that is of a species that can pollinate them.I've never heard a report of a successful fruiting of an Avocado tree started from a pit from another avocado, at least as a home grown effort.
I hope others have, and can tell us of such.