My first ever vegetable garden—in my entire life, that is—was hewn out of a grassy patch of sandy yard.
sandy soil, overgrown weeds...my first ever vegetable garden |
All those thousands of pesos down the drain with my vegetable garden in 2011, which I grew in the midst of summer, in Central Florida…where the temperatures are typically around 101ºF (38.33ºC). After a few weeks, Hubby said I was too...brown! (He was pining for my old skin tone apparently.)
I started late into the growing season, you see, because the gardening bug bit me just after spring has gone. And I hadn't known that smart Florida gardeners take a break from their gardens in the summer.
I imagine people driving their cars by and seeing me and they're shaking their heads at the crazy Asian lady hoeing and watering and tending her plots in the broiling heat. (I didn't know! I'm new to these woods, y'know.)
It was an experimental garden where the mantra was “Anything goes!”
And truly, anything went in and out—weeds, pests, alternating 3-day-rains and high temps, gadzukes zucchini that died after setting forth a seriously leafy front...
the gadzukes! zucchini would flower, then not follow through on the promise of fruit! bad plant. bad! |
a most welcome visitor in the garden |
we had a steady supply of vegetables for our table. our family just luv veggies! |
the okras were the most prolific, sending out new flowers every day so i could pick fruits every couple of days |
ditto with the bitter gourd (aka ampalaya), which didn't have any problems. probably because it didn't have any predators |
the string beans (aka pole beans, asparagus yardlong, and sitaw, Tagalog name) were just as prolific as the okra. |
bell peppers, seeded from store-bought veggie |
this was the size that's as far as the green beans would deign to grow |
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