Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#31
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Any of you ex hippies out there growing anything else?
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#32
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I had heard that they are building a large hydroponic garden nearby to provide produce to our local grocery stores. I saw what I think is the structure going up near Brownwood. I hope the veggies taste home grown. Having grown up on a farm I miss the taste of home grown veggies.
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#33
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#34
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I stated that ours does not allow vegetable gardens, I did not say yours does not, no need to beg to differ. While on the subject, are you allowed to grow vegetable in your herb garden?
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#35
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Also, for clarity and my edification, could you please reference the Deed Restriction which prohibits such an item. I'd be interested to read it, especially since ARC approved the plans for my customer. Last edited by photo1902; 08-10-2018 at 04:25 PM. |
#36
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"a herb is something that flavours food where a vegetable is a plant that can be eaten as a main ingredient."
Copied from here: What Is The Difference Between A Herb And A Vegetable > This Week In The Garden This too: An herb is an annual, biennial, or perennial plant which does not produce permanent woody stems, and has aromatic, medicinal, or savory qualities. A fruit is the ovary or seed-bearing part of a plant. A vegetable is any other part of a plant--stems, leaves, roots, bulbs, tubers, etc. that is eaten. Dictionary by Merriam-Webster: America's most-trusted online dictionary Herbs, fruits, and vegetables are all plants. Not all plants are herbs, fruits, or vegetables. Maybe they wouldn't have approved tomatoes, peppers & eggplant growing but OK'd herbs ??? Last edited by EdFNJ; 08-10-2018 at 10:37 PM. |
#37
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The Villages Grown
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Born and raised in Dubuque, Iowa. Chicago 1979 to 1986. Northwest Suburbs of Chicago - Schaumburg since 1988. |
#38
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Recomendation
Regarding concern in buying "roasted chicken". We buy ours at "Whole Foods" and have never been wrong. They are slightly smaller and a trifle over priced but definitely worth it. Found Sam's to be big, cheaper but very tough.
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#39
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#40
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Definitely, and hopefully tours of the operation will be offered.
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#41
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Well which is it?
Just kidding. I got a little chuckle when I read this. |
#42
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Many senior/retirement communities and even some municipalities have community gardens. You pay a modest yearly fee for a square within the garden. You are responsible for its upkeep, and you are limited as to what you may/may not grow, and which pesticides/fertilizers you may/may not use. Some are strictly organic herb and vegetable gardens, some allow non-food flowers, some are flowering plants only, some allow decorative grasses. Some allow "garden gnome" type decorative touches, some don't.
The community takes turns watering the whole thing, or has a built-in watering system. You might have an option of selecting a square within a section of the garden that doesn't get the automatic watering (in case you're planting desert-friendly plants or vegetables that don't thrive with daily watering, such as tomatoes). I haven't heard anything here mentioned about TV having such a thing, and it sort of has me wondering why not. I could imagine each village having a small raised-bed plot for things like tomatoes, squash, beans, herbs, peas, sweet potatoes, sunflowers, etc. And if you decide you don't want to participate anymore (or are unable for whatever reason) you let the garden manager know, and they rake the whole thing over and allow it to become fallow til your "right to use" period expires. Then they let someone else use it. |
#43
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Awhile ago is remember communities built around farms instead of golf courses. A room with a view sounds pretty good to me. |
#44
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Any and all grocery stores have a problem staying on top of aging produce, particularly that which is pre-bagged. A word to the wise: shop for your items individually and place them in a provided bag yourself. Might cost you a little more initially, but you will save yourself the frustration of taking it back once you get it home. Believe me, I learned this the hard way!
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#45
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My husband is the administrator of a community garden in the area of Buffalo ridge just off 466. It has been in existence for years. It is all laid out like square foot gardening and has I'm guessing 50 or 60 plots that are rented each year by whoever wants one. The produce harvested is for your own family's use. It's not the garden on Rolling acres where the produce is donated to charity. There are rules that are followed and each gardener has to sign a form to follow the garden rules. He has most of the plots rented with gardening starting in a few weeks but may have two or three left.
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