Category Archives: Florida weather

Soil Building the Sweet Potato Patch – Fall 2017

The Summer 2017 garden was a total disaster. It was just way too hot to grow anything!   And we might have started the sweet potato cuttings too soon…oops.

Sweet Potatoe Slips

By the time we were ready to pot them up they had little potatoes on them already.   That stunted their growth.

Ugly Sweets

We had a drought all summer, so when we put the sweets into the ground, we didn’t realize the ants had already overrun the soil way down deep. The sweet potatoes ended up all disfigured and full of ant holes. Those all went to the Hogs, who love that type of thing. There were a few that were not too, too bad. Those went to the hogs as well!

 

Fortunately, you can find sweet potatoes
at the market about once a year for 38 cents a pound.   This year,  those will be the ones we “put up” for off-season.

 

 

 

 

As soon as the hot weather broke a couple of weeks ago (well, sort of), it was time to plant the Fall garden.   Now here is what the “sweet potatoe” patch looked like at that time…

Weeds and ants …what a mess.      Organic Spinosad did in the ants.  We fed the ground-cover weed with the tiny white flower to the goats…their favorite!

Since the potatoes were in last go round, we had to plant a cover crop this time.  And because this is year three for soil building, the soil is in pretty good condition already.  So, it’s a matter of raking  down the top of the row hills

 

…and scattering the pea seeds.

 

 

Austrian Winter Peas…lovely plants.  Wonderful feed for all the animals and terrific for nitrogen fixing the soil!

Austrian Winter Peas

 

Soil building… a lot of fun to figure out.  But, a real challenge. Remember, the weather is completely indifferent to our struggles…  you gotta learn to roll with the punches!

Happy Homesteading,

T.

The Long Needle Pine That Had to Go

When we positioned the house, we set it just to the west of the beautiful long-needle pine. Off center, of course, because everything in my world is slightly off center. So there sat house and tree in what would evolve into the Bent Pine Farm Tea Garden in our first three years.

We sailed through a couple of tropical storms, hardly worth mentioning.   No hard-nose hurricanes for this piece of the peninsula! But, statistically, how long can your luck hold out? So, in Aug we braced for Hermoine, which struck the area as a category 1 storm, taking out power for a couple of days.   And even more telling, cracking a couple of very large branches off my beautiful front yard pine.

See the Post from July 26

The pine branches that broke in Hermoine were an indication that long needle pines are much more brittle than the Sand Pines.   A long needle pine standing that close to the house would most certainly split, crack apart and go straight through the roof. Would we be sadder to lose our front yard pine or deal with a gaping hole in the roof, or worse?

 

So, ‘The Tree’ became the ‘Long Needle Pine That Had to Go’. The good news is that I made a deal. Traded the pine tree for a full length screened porch on the front of the house! (The long needle pine would have had to come down anyway!) I’ll let you know how it goes.

Happy Homesteading,

T.

P.S. Hurricane Irma hit us in the wee hours of Monday September 11, 2017 as a Category 2 hurricane, sustained winds of 110 mph. We sat out the storm in one of our Florida Engineered out-buildings (that means it has hurricane tie downs and rafters built with 2x6s). The building never moved an inch!

Hurricane Weekend 2017

It’s the waiting that drives you crazy.

So, here we sit. Saturday morning Sept 9, 2017. A category 5 hurricane, Irma, raking Cuba. The poor folks there, hunkered down. Kind of a futile effort. We can pray for those who have no recourse. That’s their best bet.

It’s the waiting that drives you crazy.

There have been humanitarian gestures, hotels lowering their rates. Of course, gas prices not included. Those hiked way up just as the last hurricane moved in and destroyed Houston. It’s up to $2.69 a gallon now. The major North-South routes look like giant parking lots. At least on the side headed North. No one is coming to Florida. Just leaving in a panic, outrunning the storm. At a snail’s pace.

It’s the waiting that drives you crazy.