View Full Version : Favorite things to grow in TV
Uptown Girl
02-10-2011, 01:08 PM
As I'm temporarily surrounded by snow and icky midwest cold, my mind turns to thoughts of all the 'right plant/right place' plant selections that thrive in TV, in anticipation of my own garden there! (someday soon.)
Any body want to share their thoughts or experiences?
Which plants are you proudest of?
Anything performed better than you expected it to?
Anything take more effort than you think it's worth?
Any plantings you were glad to get rid of?
Any landscape feature that you have now, that you would change if you could?
Anything you dream of obtaining eventually?
Thanks, this is an elixir for me!
Vinny
02-10-2011, 08:53 PM
It all depends what they legalize :icon_wink:
skyc6
02-10-2011, 09:26 PM
Uptown Girl,
I'm in the same boat. Surrounded by snow, Rockford, Il., and wishing I was in TV. Soon, I hope! Growing fun things would be so much fun!
alemorkam
02-10-2011, 10:14 PM
The grass is growing
Barefoot
02-10-2011, 10:49 PM
As I'm temporarily surrounded by snow and icky midwest cold, my mind turns to thoughts of all the 'right plant/right place' plant selections that thrive in TV, in anticipation of my own garden there! (someday soon.)
Any body want to share their thoughts or experiences?
Which plants are you proudest of?
Anything performed better than you expected it to?
Anything take more effort than you think it's worth?
Any plantings you were glad to get rid of?
Any landscape feature that you have now, that you would change if you could?
Anything you dream of obtaining eventually?
Thanks, this is an elixir for me!
Anything take more effort than you think it's worth? Yes! Those darn cute little Robellini palm trees. They're adorable but shrivel at the first sign of frost. Of course they survive and six months later they look OK. However right now our neighborhood is full of brown Robellinis.
I'm so happy that Mr and Mrs K9 took our two Robellinis and gave them a good home!
l2ridehd
02-11-2011, 06:19 AM
I grow rosemary which makes a great shrub and provides a wonderful fragrance and available spice. I grow basil which does really well, also oregano. Do not try mint except in a pot. It will take over. One small plant and you can't make enough mojitos or mint tea to use even a small % of it. I tried with the mojitos and failed badly. :thumbup:
There are lots of plants and shrubs that used to do great but have not survived well the past couple years. Those that die are getting replaced with things that thrive.
There are several good books on Florida plant and shrubs available that will help.
2newyorkers
02-11-2011, 06:42 AM
The petunias, pansies, snapdragons and decorative cabbages have all survived the winter.
Barefoot
02-11-2011, 10:10 AM
The petunias, pansies, snapdragons and decorative cabbages have all survived the winter.
And knock-out roses.
Uptown Girl
02-11-2011, 01:52 PM
Thanks, your posts are fueling warmth on a chilly afternoon!
Rosemary just may be a shrub I'd especially like.... always missed not being able to grow it here. I'm leaning toward growing ornamentals and perennials over fruits and veggies. I'm even thinking about succulents in place of annuals.
How do Geraniums fare there? Can you just keep them forever, like they do in Italy?
I saw the pictures of Loropetalum shrubs that Pooh posted on another thread and loved those.... wonder if they can be limbed up and used a small tree?
Anybody have a Fragrant Tea Olive?
if we end up with a CYV, I will be limited in space and must make limited choices carefully. When you moved in, did you like what was planted for you to start with?
Mikeod
02-11-2011, 02:29 PM
When you moved in, did you like what was planted for you to start with?
Unfortunately, I did not like everything that was planted for me. So I ripped out a lot of stuff and planted what I thought would make the house look nice. And most of it died the first winter!!! The landscaper who did the work warned me that some of my selections were cold sensitive, but I did not take it seriously. Bad mistake. Year by year I have watched my neighbors (and me) replace plants that didn't do well with some of those that were already here and got ripped out. So, be careful what you plant. Check the hardiness levels.
LI SNOWBIRD
02-12-2011, 10:14 AM
Unfortunately, I did not like everything that was planted for me. So I ripped out a lot of stuff and planted what I thought would make the house look nice. And most of it died the first winter!!! The landscaper who did the work warned me that some of my selections were cold sensitive, but I did not take it seriously. Bad mistake. Year by year I have watched my neighbors (and me) replace plants that didn't do well with some of those that were already here and got ripped out. So, be careful what you plant. Check the hardiness levels.
Our landscaper said the watch what TV plants and if you like therm plant 'em. They know what to plant for the weather.
It works.
:clap2:
K9-Lovers
02-12-2011, 04:26 PM
I want to hear more about the tomatoes! When do you plant, do they need full sun here?
duffysmom
02-12-2011, 05:09 PM
I think my banana tree died.:( My neighbor's banana trees had dozens of tasty bananas this past fall.
jebartle
02-13-2011, 06:23 AM
and every winter we whack it down and every year it grows back....Maybe yours will sprout a baby also.....Wish ours produced bananas....My folks had those yummy finger bananas, they were great!
I think my banana tree died.:( My neighbor's banana trees had dozens of tasty bananas this past fall.
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