PDA

View Full Version : Backyard Vegetable Garden.


Kenswing
07-18-2020, 05:44 PM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

Topspinmo
07-18-2020, 05:53 PM
IMO you’re best luck would be in Large pots 15 gallon or bigger where you can control the soil and watering using meter. Most designer property’s have very little garden space in back. CYV’s have space for pots behind walls or on you’re screened in porch. Most pots with vegetables can’t take afternoon sun do to the heat especially black pots.

Tomatoes IMO are hardest due to heat, blight, and whiteflies. Peppers seems to do good I have 4 to 6 varieties, but summer heat and white flies can destroy them if you can’t control them.

Coming from Washington you will find it lot harder down here for back yard garden IMO.

Timothyimitchell
07-18-2020, 06:52 PM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

We are in Kennewick and moving in the spring. Where are you currently in WA? And when are you heading south?

Kenswing
07-18-2020, 07:11 PM
We are in Kennewick and moving in the spring. Where are you currently in WA? And when are you heading south?
We're about 50 miles north of Seattle a couple miles west of I-5 about a mile from the Sound.

We're hoping to move around the end of next year. We plan on having a house there before we list our house here though. We'll do a "modified" snowbird -lol. With just 3 days of PTO my wife can take ten days off so that will give us time to get things ready for the big move.

davem4616
07-18-2020, 07:59 PM
okay, so here's what I've found out...I plant tomatoes in September and again in January...skins are tougher than what I had up north, but the flavor is great....I plant them in pots

haven't had much success with peppers, but that was never one of my main crops...we grow a lot of herbs and the critters don't go after them

DeanFL
07-18-2020, 08:12 PM
.
.
.
We've had veg gardens beside our home in The Villages for over 4 years. Tomatoes and peppers seem to do best for us - but the conditions in summer here are NOT ideal. These links should help>

Starting a Garden (https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_starting_a_garden)

ENH1189/EP450: Central Florida Gardening Calendar (http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep450)

Vegetable Gardening by Season - Gardening Solutions - University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (https://gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu/care/planting/vegetable-gardens-by-season.html)
.
.

Stu from NYC
07-18-2020, 08:49 PM
Wanted to try growing tomatoes but everyone I spoke to said soil and conditions not conducive so have not tried it yet

OpusX1
07-18-2020, 08:55 PM
Two seasons, plant in September harvest December, plant in February/March harvest May/June. I highly recommend Earth Boxes.

EarthBox(R) | Successful Container Gardening Systems (https://earthbox.com/) Using this system as directed works.

I had two jalapeño pepper plants that were 3 years old and would produce pretty much year around.

There is/was a garden mill store in Leesburg Called Simon seed.
Simon Seed Leesburg - Home | Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/Simon-Seed-Leesburg-111318985620458/)

vintageogauge
07-18-2020, 09:10 PM
I plant tomatoes from seed. August 1 will produce fruit in Late October through December, Plant seeds again in February and produce fruit May through July. The October fruit is better as there are fewer pests to put up with.

Topspinmo
07-18-2020, 09:18 PM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

I had couple acres in Oklahoma where I spent 20 years. I ordered Rainer cherries trees from nursery in Washington state. Best tasting cherries I’ve ever tasted. Had yellow, yellow red, and red ones. Mmmmmmmm. I get them in store down here is season, good but not like fresh off the trees. Jalapeño peppers do good down here. That type of stock plant can take the heat better. I also have milder jalapeño called La Bomba that’s been going for three years. Had to bring pot in garage couple nights due to frost/freeze. It does get down close to freezing down here in winter, but only lasts day or two.

Topspinmo
07-18-2020, 09:20 PM
Wanted to try growing tomatoes but everyone I spoke to said soil and conditions not conducive so have not tried it yet

You can plant them in pots where you can control ph in the soil. I don’t have much luck with tomatoes, but some do.

Kenswing
07-18-2020, 10:11 PM
.
.
.
We've had veg gardens beside our home in The Villages for over 4 years. Tomatoes and peppers seem to do best for us - but the conditions in summer here are NOT ideal. These links should help>

Starting a Garden (https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_starting_a_garden)

ENH1189/EP450: Central Florida Gardening Calendar (http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep450)

Vegetable Gardening by Season - Gardening Solutions - University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (https://gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu/care/planting/vegetable-gardens-by-season.html)
.
.Thank you. Good resources.

Kenswing
07-18-2020, 10:14 PM
Two seasons, plant in September harvest December, plant in February/March harvest May/June. I highly recommend Earth Boxes.

EarthBox(R) | Successful Container Gardening Systems (https://earthbox.com/) Using this system as directed works.

I had two jalapeño pepper plants that were 3 years old and would produce pretty much year around.

There is/was a garden mill store in Leesburg Called Simon seed.
Simon Seed Leesburg - Home | Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/Simon-Seed-Leesburg-111318985620458/)Thank you. Nice to have a local place to go for seeds and starts..

Kenswing
07-18-2020, 10:16 PM
I had couple acres in Oklahoma where I spent 20 years. I ordered Rainer cherries from nursery in Washington state. Best tasting cherries I’ve ever tasted. Had yellow, yellow red, and red ones. Mmmmmmmm. I get them in store down here is season, good but not like fresh off the trees. Jalapeño peppers do good down here. That type of stock plant can take the heat better. I also have milder jalapeño called La Bomba that’s been going for three years. Had to bring pot in garage couple nights due to frost/freeze. It does get down close to freezing down here in winter, but only lasts day or two.
Rainier cherries and Walla Walla onions.. Two things we have to get when in season. Then of course there's the crab and salmon..

srockey
07-19-2020, 05:19 AM
Simon seed is closed

thevillagernie
07-19-2020, 05:23 AM
most of it will do alright..need water and try to grow in pots.....use the shade to your advantage

Quixote
07-19-2020, 05:32 AM
We grow veggies in hydroponic systems (highly recommend Vertigro in Summerfield) and in raised beds. (Our son is an organic farmer, once found rusting cans from DDT buried on our property, and strongly urged us not to grow anything edible directly in the ground. Hydroponically whatever we try is worth a try. we’ve grown an onion that was 1lb 1oz and cauliflower the size of a person’s head.

Two green bean plants gave us an adequate daily supply. Our tomato plants are just finishing, but this summer we will try tomatoes specifically bred for our climate. We found that garlic and shallots did not ‘head’ as well as we would have hoped. Sweet potatoes grow phenomenally; white potatoes do not. Swiss chard and salad greens continue to supply us in a daily basis. We grow some herbs as well.

We had a huge garden up north, and I did a ton of canning. Nothing like that here. Even so, It’s a good feeling to go out and clip salad greens for today’s lunch. You’ll have to experiment, and if you’re like us, you’ll enjoy it!

Fran from MI
07-19-2020, 05:43 AM
We grow veggies in hydroponic systems (highly recommend Vertigro in Summerfield) and in raised beds. (Our son is an organic farmer, once found rusting cans from DDT buried on our property, and strongly urged us not to grow anything edible directly in the ground. Hydroponically whatever we try is worth a try. we’ve grown an onion that was 1lb 1oz and cauliflower the size of a person’s head.

Two green bean plants gave us an adequate daily supply. Our tomato plants are just finishing, but this summer we will try tomatoes specifically bred for our climate. We found that garlic and shallots did not ‘head’ as well as we would have hoped. Sweet potatoes grow phenomenally; white potatoes do not. Swiss chard and salad greens continue to supply us in a daily basis. We grow some herbs as well.

We had a huge garden up north, and I did a ton of canning. Nothing like that here. Even so, It’s a good feeling to go out and clip salad greens for today’s lunch. You’ll have to experiment, and if you’re like us, you’ll enjoy it!

Are you doing your Hydroponic Gardening within The Villages? If so, would like more info on what system you are using and how much space it takes up. My wife has a raised bed garden in our back yard and raises Broccoli, Okra, multiple types of Greens, Kale, Spinach, herbs, radishes, etc.

algi45
07-19-2020, 05:46 AM
Simon Seed is no more, alas. Earthboxes are good. Peppers do best.

Jensor17
07-19-2020, 05:54 AM
The soil here is poor, sandy. in Maryland, i could plant seeds Or seedlings and have months of vegetables on huge plants. Here, I took an enrichment academy gardening class and filled a Large pot With basil, One pepper plant and one tomato plant. I had 12 small tomatoes, only ONE pepper, and gangly basil. I suggest you cordon off a small area with rich soil, top soil, bags and bags— and keep it shaded and watered. Large pots on shaded patio or a small raised Garden bed may work, but don’t expect much produce. I Gave Up.

Fran from MI
07-19-2020, 05:55 AM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

Depending on where you move to in The Villages, there is an option of joining the Community Garden where my wife raises many of the things you have mentioned above. You can rent a raised bed there for $35-$40 per year. They are 4x12 plots and you have access to a variety of herbs that are there as well as figs from a fig tree and blackberries (all in common area). It is located outside the United Church of Christ on CR101 just north of Hwy 466. For anyone interested, you can contact Forrest Nieman (atcdayoh@aol.com) There are currently some plots available, but they usually fill up fast.

deebrock
07-19-2020, 05:55 AM
All could info. I did not think you were allowed to have vegetable gardens in the villages.

Croakn12
07-19-2020, 06:10 AM
Belview has a feed and seed. White flies are horrible here. They lay eggs on tender leaves and they suck leaves dry. I have a courtyard ville and have a 9×3 garden box. Onions and lettuce do well peppers ok. String beans do ok for one picking then white flies win . I used bag garden soil and its half like mulch. Still experimenting.

matandch
07-19-2020, 06:12 AM
The key to successful vegetable gardening in Florida is realizing that the growing seasons are TOTALLY different from what you’ve used to. If you plant tomatoes , peppers and eggplants in late May like you’re used to you will fail! These vegetables are best planted in late February or early March to do well. A second crop can planted in September. Look us vegetable gardening in Florida on the University of Florida web site to find what plants are planted when and follow it.

Villagesgal
07-19-2020, 06:30 AM
I'm from Seattle, been here 19 years now. I put in several raised beds, plant in late September when I get back from Seattle and have a nice garden. I grow tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, jalapeno peppers, snow peas, peas, garlic, leeks, scallions, herbs every year. Hydroponic lettuce works too.
There are rabbits here who will eat your garden if you don't do raised beds. Summers here are too hot and besides that's when I'm back home so planting in late Sept works great. The few freezing days we get just cover the raised beds and you'll be fine. My herbs have been producing for years. When we moved here we were only the second couple from Washington State, so many more of us now. Welcome, you'll love it here. Happy growing.
One more thing, join one of the gardening clubs here, they'll help you and you'll learn a lot.

La lamy
07-19-2020, 06:46 AM
Thank you for all the info shared, I'm inspired to try a few planters next winter!

Rsenholzi
07-19-2020, 07:12 AM
I tried to grow in the ground but they kept being overcome by weeds , bugs , etc. Changed to pots and tomatoes have done well, string beans too. Tried a few more this year but too much rain knocked them out. She will have to adjust her growing season since summer is way too hot . Look online for The best growing season for the vegetables she wants to plant. I know I now get tomatoes twice a year instead of the 1 time I used to. Good luck!

aldeana
07-19-2020, 07:21 AM
Yes, you can! Consult with the experts as to when and where in the garden: Institute for Agricultural Science (IFAS) @ University of FL and the master gardeners who are in the complex of buildings next to the Sheriff and Health Dept on Hwy 466. The Villages are in zone 9A. Here's a link. SP 103/VH021: Florida Vegetable Gardening Guide (https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/vh021)

Pmarlow
07-19-2020, 07:24 AM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

We planted a cherry tomato plant in a pot in February and it was removed a couple of weeks ago. Seemed to grow great . The only pest problem we had was one batch of voracious green caterpillars that I simply picked off the plant and killed. My wife didn’t want me to plant a second crop because she is tired of then now but we have new tomatoes coming in the pot now from dropped fruit. I am going to see if they will get big enough to produce. I think they will. One thing we did notice was that we had to give the one plant 2 gallons of water 3 times a day during the dry season

Foxmd
07-19-2020, 07:27 AM
I have had little luck with tomatoes. I do grow Meyer lemons in a pot in my lanai.

wiltma
07-19-2020, 08:26 AM
We use grow boxes. Cheaper but same idea as earth boxes

seetshaw
07-19-2020, 08:29 AM
I had a beautiful garden in Maryland. Here it was big time trouble with bugs, disease, heat, animals even when I tried things adapted to “Florida “. I was planting in well composted ground. I did have great success with Swiss chard and cherry tomatoes. They were very happy. Greens, herbs do ok. Tomatoes, buy them! Did a few pineapples from tops ( delicious)! Did finger bananas.

wiltma
07-19-2020, 08:32 AM
Just looked at Simon Seed Facebook page and it seems like they have joined up with a farm and are no longer on Magnolia. The farm is on Lewis. Seems really good. Thanks for the info. We are still eating tomatoes from our February planting but this is the end till Fall

seetshaw
07-19-2020, 08:36 AM
Figs did wonderfully well. Keep away from your foundation as roots go under. I had them espalier on the garage.

Nucky
07-19-2020, 08:36 AM
It's not much Kenswing but we just got NOTHING but Lemons, Limes, and some that looked like a mix. Not bad for a first try from people from The Concrete Jungle. You will be fine with your garden just sell the tractor and backhoe. Hopefully, things will be back to normal around the entire country and you will be so busy with other things the Garden could be less in size than the one on The Ponderosa. I'm sure your Garden will grow Happiness and Common Sense. We need more of that around here. I'd bet The Love Shack on it!

Michael A. David
07-19-2020, 08:37 AM
We used a Hydroponic garden and it worked well. I don't care what you do with Tomatoes down here they will never taste the same as up North. I'm looking into a tube hydrophonic garden. Check it out on line.

OpusX1
07-19-2020, 08:42 AM
Simon Seed is no more, alas. Earthboxes are good. Peppers do best.

That’s too bad. It was a great old place.

Almost forgot to mention that birds, especially mockingbirds are a problem for tomatoes. When/if they find the tomatoes they will take a few pecks right before you’re ready to pick.

Astron
07-19-2020, 08:52 AM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.…
Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

After years of helping my Wife garden in Florida, my suggestion is to use pots to avoid nematodes, avoid tender plants like lettuce, and stick with silk plants!:icon_wink:

kcrazorbackfan
07-19-2020, 08:55 AM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

Isn’t FAVA beans the same one that Hannibal Lecter refers to in Silence of the Lambs? 😳😳

VICAR OF DIBLEY
07-19-2020, 08:56 AM
I think Simon closed and Dirty Dog took over their business. Dirty Dog organic sis a CSA and also sells organic products. I have bought starter plants and vegetables from them.

MandoMan
07-19-2020, 08:58 AM
.
.
.
We've had veg gardens beside our home in The Villages for over 4 years. Tomatoes and peppers seem to do best for us - but the conditions in summer here are NOT ideal. These links should help>

Starting a Garden (https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_starting_a_garden)

ENH1189/EP450: Central Florida Gardening Calendar (http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep450)

Vegetable Gardening by Season - Gardening Solutions - University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (https://gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu/care/planting/vegetable-gardens-by-season.html)
.
.

I once traveled through the West Bank region of Israel. This is along the Jordan River that runs into the Dead Sea, and it is far below sea level and supper hot. Yet, it provides endless fruit and vegetables not only in Israel but to Europe. How can they grow in the summer? Shade cloth roofs over the gardens. This cuts the temperature enough so the vegetables will grow. This might work in a courtyard villa. A roll of shade fabric could be rolled up in the fall and spread out in late spring.

matandch
07-19-2020, 09:13 AM
Vegetables that do well here in the summer heat: okra, sweet potatoes, purple hull peas.

I’ve had beautiful cabbage late November through mid January.

lmack
07-19-2020, 09:20 AM
How would your wife feel about fruits in addition to some vegis? My friends seem to do very well with banana, papaya, lemon, lime, and just started a pineapple. These all seem to love the climate in TV.

VICAR OF DIBLEY
07-19-2020, 09:24 AM
I found all the posts interesting to read. For some gardeners certain plants do not grow well and for others they do.
Lettuce, kale, corn lettuce, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, white potatoes when the weather gets cooler, string beans, etc. are some of the veggies I grow.
Wish everyone a good growing season.

VICAR OF DIBLEY
07-19-2020, 09:26 AM
Mache lettuce, (corn lettuce) tatsoi also donquite well.

Kenswing
07-19-2020, 09:29 AM
How would your wife feel about fruits in addition to some vegis? My friends seem to do very well with banana, papaya, lemon, lime, and just started a pineapple. These all seem to love the climate in TV.
Considering how many things she grows now I'd say it's safe to assume that if you can eat it she'd be willing to grow it.. lol

junieben
07-19-2020, 09:29 AM
Lots of free seed sites on the web. Check it out.

oldtimes
07-19-2020, 09:51 AM
We used a Hydroponic garden and it worked well. I don't care what you do with Tomatoes down here they will never taste the same as up North. I'm looking into a tube hydrophonic garden. Check it out on line.

I agree that tomatoes and apples are not the same in the south. I think they need the cold temps to develop the flavor that we are used to.

sswitenki
07-19-2020, 10:01 AM
I had to use netting to protect my tomatoes from birds and little critters in Minnesota. Sounds like the same here. I have been reading some suggestions for shade cloth. Is that something that covers the plants all the time or just when particularly hot and sunny? Should I plant Tomatoes where there is more shade??

Janlindsey4@gmail.com
07-19-2020, 03:19 PM
This year my wonderful husband who has, I believe, ten green thumbs, has grown peppers: Italian, bell, and jalapeño. We have had lovely tomatoes, basil, sage, rosemary, and thyme. Lots of rain helped!

doctorknow
07-19-2020, 05:16 PM
Do you have one? What can you grow successfully in the Florida Climate?

My wife loves her garden and wants to continue growing her own vegetables when we move.

Right now she grows:

Kale (2 varieties)
Swiss Chard
Squash (4 varieties)
Tomatoes (4 varieties)
Peas
Fava beans
String beans
Cucumbers
Beets
Carrots
Radishes
Onions
Lettuce (2 varieties)
Arugula
Spinach
Bell Peppers
Jalapeno peppers
A bunch of different herbs
Pumpkins
Watermelon
Strawberries
Blueberries
Figs

Will any of those make it in FL? We currently live in Western Washington. The climate is a tad different.. lol

Thanks.

I find Florida has two seasons for gardening Early spring and summer/fall. The big problem is the insects and critters that love your garden. The upkeep becomes a real chore. Are you going to use pesticides or go organic? Then there are mold and fungus issues with the humid and wet season. For tomatoes you will need to get some good soil.. not Florida Loam. They need magnesium and manganese for good taste. They grow big and juicy in Florida but are often tasteless unless you get good soil.

askcarl
07-19-2020, 06:21 PM
I grow potatoes, tomatoes, peppers green and super hot, , corn, cucumbers, cantaloupe, watermelon, papaya, orange, lemon, lime, edamame, bush beans, blueberries, plumeria.

3 keys. Real soil (sand sux) and water. Drip line with fertilizer tank. Don't fight July to August heat.

Spike380
07-19-2020, 07:07 PM
Buy a pineapple and twist off the top and tell your wife to plant it-my husband has about 15 pineapple plants all around the house! They are very sweet too but takes 2-3 yrs. We have a fig tree-I think my husband got over 355 figs!!!!So far! As far as gardening-keep it backyard. We have the herbs in pots in front-to the side of the driveway

Kenswing
07-19-2020, 07:07 PM
I grow potatoes, tomatoes, peppers green and super hot, , corn, cucumbers, cantaloupe, watermelon, papaya, orange, lemon, lime, edamame, bush beans, blueberries, plumeria.

3 keys. Real soil (sand sux) and water. Drip line with fertilizer tank. Don't fight July to August heat.Thanks.
Do you grow in pots, raised beds or in the ground?

Nucky
07-19-2020, 07:25 PM
Thanks.
Do you grow in pots, raised beds or in the ground?

I don't think you are allowed to grow pot. But there is a store up the road that will sell you any kind you like as long as you have a Mask on and know the secret handshake to get in. Raccoon salute - YouTube (https://youtu.be/pPDu4q4rfeI) Tell 'Em Lucky Nucky sent ya! :1rotfl::1rotfl::1rotfl: God Forbid.

CFrance
07-19-2020, 10:40 PM
Wanted to try growing tomatoes but everyone I spoke to said soil and conditions not conducive so have not tried it yet
I have had good luck with tomatoes. There is a nursery off the main street in Leesburg that sells a rectangular plastic container, a stand for it to sit in that raises it up to non-backbreaking level, and knows how much soil, etc. I had lovely tomatoes one winter and just took it up again this year with seeds my friend started in January, harvested a month or so ago, and have started a second crop with plants bought at Lowe's. They are called Sun Boy or something like that, and are supposed to tolerate the extreme heat. But I do have them positioned so that they are in shade during the afternoon.


I also have herbs--basil, parsley, rosemary, thyme, oregano, lemongrass & mint. If we can't get back to the EU next summer, I may turn much of that side of the CYV into a container truck garden. I'd like to try eggplant and baby squash.

Rwirish
07-20-2020, 04:52 AM
You can grow vegetables.

Frogfolly
07-20-2020, 07:17 AM
Check YouTube for Florida gardening. Lots of Florida gardeners giving really good info. The season here is roughly Sept/Apr but there are some hot weather crops as well. I do large pots and vertical gardening in a protected area. Very little bending over! Look at Gardening with Leon for his take on easy watering tubs, a great space saver.

Jtcoggin@bellsouth.net
07-20-2020, 08:28 AM
Good luck with a garden in Florida. Gardens are a rarity in Florida due to the sandy soil and extreme heat.

Bmillard11
07-20-2020, 09:46 AM
Check with the Master Gardener program. They have great advice specific to the area. Link below.

Sumter County Master Gardeners - TheVillages (http://thevillages.fnpschapters.org/index.php?id=sumter-county-master-gardeners)

Curtisbwp
07-20-2020, 10:07 AM
I use three systems all with no dirt. 1. A drip hydroponic system. I use a 35 gallon rubbermaid barrel fillrd with water and nutriants. A pump in the water, a timer. A hose is attached to the pump, the hose is streached across two towers on plants. Perlite and coconut shells (shreaded)
2. Areoponics. A 20 galon reservoir a pump, a timer. Both of these setups need to be refilled every 2 weeks.

Shamp
07-20-2020, 02:47 PM
Be sure to plant where you can water with fresh water. You don't want to eat food grown with non-potable water!