February 29, 2008

GARDEN BLOGGERS' MUSE DAY


I'm on the road again, heading back to the wintry clime of Chicago. I'm putting up my Muse Post early and invite all of you to join the March poetry circle .



What Good is March?
Well, for one thing, it keeps February and April apart.
-Walt Kelly


MARCH

Slayer of the Winter
Art thou here again ?
Welcome, thou that bring'st the summer nigh!

The bitter wind makes not thy victory vain,
Nor will we mock thee for thy faint blue sky.

Welcome, O March! Whose kindly days and dry
Make April ready for the throstle's song,
Thy first redresser of the winter's wrong.

-William Blake

February 28, 2008

FAREWELL FEBRUARY AND FLORIDA!


Goodbye beautiful white beaches......



Pelicans and other water birds........



Grapefruit and orange trees.....


Beautiful Palm trees everywhere .....


Hibiscus in bloom .....








and dear friends.....

Goodbye February and Florida !

February 27, 2008

A FLORIDA LEGEND

A Woman for the ages : Gifted writer, conservationist, gardener and superb cook


As a young girl growing up in the South THE YEARLING was a must read in school. Its author, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, won the Pulitizer prize in 1938 for the true story of her neighbors in backwoods Florida. The novel was later made into a movie starring Gregory Peck and Jane Wyman. It too is a classic.

I knew nothing about the writer until recently when I saw a 1984 film of her life, Cross Creek. Travelling through Gainesville, Florida I discovered that her home still existed and is an attraction that draws 30,000 visitors a year.

The sign at the entrance of Cross Creek reads : " It is necessary to leave the impersonal highway, to step inside the rusty gate and close it behind. One is now inside the orange grove, out of the world and in the mysterious heart of another. After long years of spiritual homelessness, of nostalgia, here is the mystic loveliness of childhood again. Here is home. "

A transplanted northerner with sophisticated taste and a city girl's education, Marjorie endeared herself to her "cracker " neighbors in the wild swampland of Cross Creek by learning and respecting their ways. She could " cuss and drink along with the best of them. " She was also at home and friends with such literary giants as Margaret Mitchell, Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Truly an " enigma wrapped in a mystery ! "

Marjorie loved her garden which produced the food for her superb cooking. She wrote Cross Creek Cookery, a treasury of Southern recipes that uses local game, fruit and produce. This is not a cookbook in the traditional sense but an evocative and charmingly conversational discussion of cooking. Her garden has been restored and still produces vegetables, herbs and flowers. Of it she wrote " I do not know how anyone can live without some small place of enchantment to come to. "

Of her beloved Cross Creek home she wrote : " But what of the land? It seems to me that the earth may be borrowed but not bought. It may be used but not owned. It gives itself in response to love and tending , offers its seasonal flowering and fruiting. But we are tenants and not possessors, lovers and not masters. Cross Creek belongs to the wind and the rain, to the sun and the season, to the cosmic secrecy of seeds , and beyond, to all time."

As I looked at the silent typewriter sitting on her desk, the novel THE YEARLING and the Pulitzer Prize nearby I was moved by the character of this woman who could've been the darling of the literary world and high society but instead chose the simple life . She'd rather hear the song of cardinals and mockingbirds .

Her friend says it best : " Ponce De Leon discovered Florida in 1513 but found only the physical and material aspects of it. Then, more than 400 years later, you came to discover the heart and spirit of Florida and reveal them to the world in writings of rare beauty and sensitivity. "













February 26, 2008

ONE OF THE MOST USEFUL TREES IN THE WORLD

FLORIDA'S STATE TREE


Can any other tree match the palm in usefulness ? From it comes food, seeds, medicine and construction materials. It's also hard to match it for durability and beauty and is a favorite of the Florida landscaper.

With it's fibrous trunk it is about as hurricane-proof as trees get. It can withstand drought, urban conditions of compacted soil, pollution, space, and poor drainage .

A true native of Florida's swampy coastal regions the early pioneers harvested the heart bud of the Sabal Palmetto and ate it like cabbage, thus it's name.

The Seminoles used the trunks to build their homes and the fronds as a roof. It's green fruits are favorites of squirrel and racoons. And to top off all its wonderful attributes, it produces a beautiful 4-5 ' creamy white showy flower. What more can you ask of a tree?




February 25, 2008

WHEN IS A PINE NOT A PINE ?


Araucaria heterophylla


On my drives around the Tampa Bay area I saw a most beautifully shaped conifer with widely spread branches and triangular outline. Good thing my friend knew a little about the flora in Florida and identified it as a Norfolk Island Pine.

Yes, the same pine you've probably purchased in a pot for a small indoor Christmas tree. Reading up on it I found that it grows well in pure sand but is very frost sensitive and can be damaged at temperature below 40 degrees.

When is a pine not a pine ? The name is misleading as the Norfolk is not a pine but a very ancient confer that covered the earth during the Jurassic period. Norfolk Island, off the Australian Coast where this conifer originates, displays it on its flag, as shown above.
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