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New law - vegetable home gardens OK
Corn, cabbage and soybeans..Oh My! (till here)
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A new topic to knock 'dog poop' off...as the leading complaint? :popcorn: |
I'll be keeping a few goats, too - I hope they're allowed?
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Great Now the White Cross Trolls will become Carrot Cops :police:
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But, you can only water 2 days a week, right.
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& pets can water at will. |
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Now I can plant my herbs!
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I would like to have a few chickens
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Thanks for the link. Some very beautiful gardens! The key is maintenance. |
Wasn't the prehistoric section built in what had been a watermelon field?
Heck, herbs such as rosemary and dill, tomatoes, carrots and lettuce would be nice. Watermelon, zucchini and cucumbers. Yum. |
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I have had rosemary as shrubs for years. They grow to be about 3 feet high and 3 feet around and make a really nice very fragrant addition to your landscape. When I trim them I fill a lawn yard waste bag with the clippings. I have tried to give it away with no success. For those that like to use rosemary, it is very easy to grow and maintain, needs very little water and no fertilizer. And will provide you with more rosemary than you will ever be able to use.
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I give it a season before the grass is back down.
Good veg is hard work! |
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If an enclosure to protect your plants such as a fence and chicken wire is prohibited one problem may be critters getting to the veggies before you can.
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Well. Sharlene and I are just happy as all get out. Ready to plant taters, corn, and beans but some say ya have to change some soil first.Dang.
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I was planning on having a perennial herb garden on the side of the house from the get-go. The deed restrictions never forbade that anyway. Meanwhile, there's no reason why you should have to expect people growing corn and watermelons on their front lawn. Why? Here's why:
1. Soil is lousy for that in the Villages. 2. Irrigation is equally lousy for that in the Villages. 3. The deed restrictions can be altered to say "yes you can grow veggies but they still can't be more than 3 feet high, they still have to be maintained, you still can't put up fencing around them, you still can't plant decorative ornaments or signs on your lawn or in the front flowerbed (meaning, no plastic tags that identify what plants are growing in which rows of the garden). You still have to go through ARC to get a permit for a raised bed, which they can still deny. So sure put up those corn stalks. Just make sure to cut them down before they grow more than 3 feet tall. You won't ever yield any actual corn, but hey - you want to see how close to the limit you can get without getting fined, have at it. Honestly, not worried at all. There are plenty of veggies that are decorative AND useful (various cabbages and lettuces, peas, and root vegetables that have flowering tops). There was never anything stopping anyone from growing tomato plants in pots. And herb gardens were never verboten so you can keep planting those. |
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This was the best part of the article linked in the OP: "After the Florida Supreme Court ruled in favor of Miami Shores' right to control design and landscaping standards, the couple replaced their vegetables with pink flamingos." That wouldn't fly here either. :D (pun intended).
The only thing I can grow successfully are weeds. |
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The new green houses are moving right along. Hopefully produce will be available by the fall to residents. Maybe the tomato’s will be better than what we grow here. North they are fabulous, here same plant seed, samedirt, and no flavor here. But everything else I grow here is great
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Bermuda is used for a lot of golf greens, where I doubt anyone can find a course of any decency using St. Augustine...for anything. :shrug: |
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We had our garage & driveway "stretched" 4 feet and they planted that St Augustine from H3LL grass on the side of our house because that was pretty much all the contractor could find in January (read that as find c-h-e-a-p). It looks like an over 55 condominium community for fire-ants. |
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From my personal observations all over Florida, it seems St. Augustine is the 'go-to' type of grass...for most homes/neighborhoods down here. Which makes some sense, given that it is a very hardy...weed. :D |
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Yuch ... they should send it back to St Augustine. |
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I’m pretty sure the large rabbit population in our neighborhood lobbied heavily for this law.
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Dog poop out...chicken s** t in. We're evolving. [emoji6]
Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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