The other day our
once beautiful gardenia succumbed to disease. We have such a hard time growing things in Central Florida. It is kind of weird. Some things we planted last spring are growing in leaps and bounds. But many other plants have died for one reason or another.
Most of our new plants were lost in the moist heat of the summer; during the 3 summer months it rains nearly every afternoon. I blame the rainy season for many of our plant deaths, but wet soil is not what killed the gardenia. It was fine during the rainy season.
One thing I am learning is you cannot "baby" plants down here. It is standing-water-wet and steaming hot in the summer, dry as a bone the rest of the year, and can generate the occasional frost overnight in the winter. Plants must be a certain kind of hardy to live in this climate and survive the extremes in moisture. I am on board with that concept in theory, I have always been a survival of the fittest kind of gardener. I have lost plenty of plants to cold winters up north. But in practice it is always hard when they die.
I loved the idea of having a gardenia. That is my problem, really - liking the "idea" of a plant rather than settling for a plant that will actually grow in our back yard. Still, I thought the gardenia was going to make it. There are lots of them thriving in Leu Gardens about 25 minutes from us in Orlando.
When it was still healthy our gardenia grew steadily, bloomed at the appropriate time, and was both beautiful and fragrant. Then it was attacked by scales and developed sooty mold. It seems both are common pests with gardenias, camellias, and azaleas. Had we noticed the scales earlier we probably could have caught it. By the time we noticed, it was seriously infested. We had been treating the gardenia for weeks but it did not get better, it got worse. The scales spread to the Desert Rose Plant. We started worrying about our camellia and azaleas. T chopped it into pieces on Halloween and stuffed it into a garbage bag. Big gardening sigh.
Florida can be so harsh and cruel!
Is Central Florida someplace I would have chosen to move given free will and full choice? Absolutely not. I only moved here to be near my grandkids and help our daughter and son-in-law out with the occasional babysitting gig.
On the other hand, yesterday (November 3rd) we took a dip in the pool. We are having a hot spell that is prolonging the pool season this year, much to our delight. The water was 81 degrees (cold by our standards), but the temperature was 89 degrees outside.
Nearly every day throughout the year we are able to ride our bikes and see wildlife and wildflowers, or bike downtown to mail a package or drink a latte. I never have to do any white-knuckle driving on snowy roads. People are friendly and drivers are courteous. I see my daughter and her family on a regular basis. The grandkids will know me and have stories to tell of their old grandma.
I am finding it hard to stay mad at Florida for too long.
Most of our new plants were lost in the moist heat of the summer; during the 3 summer months it rains nearly every afternoon. I blame the rainy season for many of our plant deaths, but wet soil is not what killed the gardenia. It was fine during the rainy season.
One thing I am learning is you cannot "baby" plants down here. It is standing-water-wet and steaming hot in the summer, dry as a bone the rest of the year, and can generate the occasional frost overnight in the winter. Plants must be a certain kind of hardy to live in this climate and survive the extremes in moisture. I am on board with that concept in theory, I have always been a survival of the fittest kind of gardener. I have lost plenty of plants to cold winters up north. But in practice it is always hard when they die.
I loved the idea of having a gardenia. That is my problem, really - liking the "idea" of a plant rather than settling for a plant that will actually grow in our back yard. Still, I thought the gardenia was going to make it. There are lots of them thriving in Leu Gardens about 25 minutes from us in Orlando.
When it was still healthy our gardenia grew steadily, bloomed at the appropriate time, and was both beautiful and fragrant. Then it was attacked by scales and developed sooty mold. It seems both are common pests with gardenias, camellias, and azaleas. Had we noticed the scales earlier we probably could have caught it. By the time we noticed, it was seriously infested. We had been treating the gardenia for weeks but it did not get better, it got worse. The scales spread to the Desert Rose Plant. We started worrying about our camellia and azaleas. T chopped it into pieces on Halloween and stuffed it into a garbage bag. Big gardening sigh.
Florida can be so harsh and cruel!
Is Central Florida someplace I would have chosen to move given free will and full choice? Absolutely not. I only moved here to be near my grandkids and help our daughter and son-in-law out with the occasional babysitting gig.
On the other hand, yesterday (November 3rd) we took a dip in the pool. We are having a hot spell that is prolonging the pool season this year, much to our delight. The water was 81 degrees (cold by our standards), but the temperature was 89 degrees outside.
Nearly every day throughout the year we are able to ride our bikes and see wildlife and wildflowers, or bike downtown to mail a package or drink a latte. I never have to do any white-knuckle driving on snowy roads. People are friendly and drivers are courteous. I see my daughter and her family on a regular basis. The grandkids will know me and have stories to tell of their old grandma.
I am finding it hard to stay mad at Florida for too long.