Showing posts with label Southwest Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southwest Florida. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2014

Sea Hibiscus Blvd.



Time-lapse blogs are a wonderful thing. Just as time-lapse photography fast-forwards into the future, this post will now reveal the completed sea hibiscus boulevard.  




The sea hibiscuses are at this point taller than the house and must be hacked back brutally to stay in line.

My birthday present—an arched trellis that I'd been planning as the entryway—went into place about a year ago.  The Dutchman’s pipe, a bizarre plant whose flowers look like bruised scrota, has by now grown like crazy, crawled all over it, and threatens to strangle the sea grape to its right. 

One approaches this vision around the corner of the house, past the Mexican petunia bed on the left and, on the right, the heliconia, ti plant, and Plant from Mars, which got its name because I had no clue what it was.  I couldn’t find it anywhere online, and our landscaper's brother, who claims to know everything, didn't know what it was. It just grew there one day, I chop it back periodically, and it shoots up again. It has big, cabbagelike leaves with frilly white edges. It's on the right in this picture, behind the ruby-leaved ti plant.



I'm persistent to a fault. After hours of hunting for Plant from Mars online, I stumbled upon a nursery in South Carolina called Woodlanders, which specializes in unusual plants, and wrote to them via Contact Us. I apparently asked the right guy, because Bob McCartney wrote back to tell me that a contact in Gainesville told him it is Acalypha wilkesiana forma circinata, more modestly known as Jacob's coat. Like my sea hibiscus, it hails from Southeast Asia and has many medicinal uses. One website said its stalk is poisonous; others suggested boiling its leaves and drinking the tea to cure everything from pleurisy to diarrhea. I don't think this is a good idea.

Here's Bob McCartney's backstory:

In seeking out people who had been involved with the cultivation of native southern plants, the trail led to Bob McCartney at Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in Williamsburg, Virginia. Colonial Williamsburg's gardens relied heavily on native plants and for more than a decade Bob had been collecting, propagating and introducing into the extensive gardens and grounds a wide range of seldom cultivated species.


What's so odd about all this is that I appear to have found a hobby in the last field I ever would have guessed. I've never liked gardening or considered myself a gardener--even though my mother was one. But it's just so darn easy in Florida, among all these weirdo plants that become like pets.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Growing sea hibiscus



I eventually planted over two dozen sea hibiscus saplings and seedlings, which I’d been nurturing for six months, all the way from a sackful of seed pods, to a tray of seeds on the kitchen counter, to pots on the lanai. I'd moved them around the lanai when they were threatened by downpours, repotted them twice as they grew, sprayed them when something unpleasant and invisible was eating their leaves, until finally they pleaded to be put out.



Here's a stalwart Tonga native who knows how to grow these things from a trunk like the one he has in his hands. These are clearly as easy to grow as sticking a bare trunk in the ground and watering it. 


I failed at this simple approach. Apparently seed propagation is my thing, instead. 



Who knew?  I do not consider myself a gardener, but maybe I need to rethink this. 

The initial vision I had was of a living fence lining the path leading to our back patio. Someday we would even put an arched trellis in place at the entrance to this path.

Here's what such a boulevard might look like.



If they get truly out of hand, I understand sea hibiscus can be invasive. 



I guess I should fear for the foundations of our home, but I figure by then we'll be long gone and it won't be our problem. I could, of course, be wrong and come to regret this.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Florida woman goes to library



After you move from the scholarly western suburbs of Boston to the coast of Southwest Florida, a few things may unsettle you at first.  

There are, of course, the gap-toothed guys driving around in pickup trucks flying Confederate flags.  

You realize that news reports about Florida Man or Florida Woman—a recent form of Homo sapiens—now come out of your own fair state.  You know Florida Man, of course you do.  “Florida man assaults wife with machete for buying toilet paper at Walmart.”  Only in Florida, you think.

Groceries are surprisingly pricey here. The ice cream truck plays Christmas carols, year round. The sun sets into the ocean.  Given the FCAT scores, you wonder if kids here ever go to college. 

You suspect they might not even have libraries in this neck of the woods.

Up north, you’ve spent hours in the cool solitude of brick-bound establishments that have either presided over their community since the nineteenth century or been built to look as if they have.  

Your first library was in the heart of the tree-lined colonial streets of Concord, Mass.  The Concord Free Public Library’s Victorian Gothic spire first rose at the base of a triangle of land bisecting Main Street and Sudbury Road in 1873--to be rivaled in grandeur only by the Massachusetts State Reformatory up the road. Over the years it grew into a Greek revival temple with columns bracketing the front entrance and wings on both sides.  



You remember the way it smelled and felt, its Children’s Room with a fully furnished and lighted Victorian dollhouse, three hours curled up devouring its entire Bobbsey Twins collection.  There, you came to love the rich, musty smell of library books; the satisfying crinkle of the plastic covers taped over dust jackets with ribbed transparent tape; the list of purple stamps on each book’s unique card, which told you who had read the book before you and how long it had taken them to read it.

Your last library in the Northeast was the Beverly Farms branch library, renovated to emulate the brick-bound dignity of a place like the Concord Free Public.  By that time, you could search for and reserve books online, looking forward to their arrival like Amazon packages.  Except … they were free!

It seemed too much to expect such amenities on the Southwest Florida frontier. 

But the Mid-Country Regional Library up the Tamiami Trail has all that and more, suddenly making you feel at home.  Instead of manila cards, books now have printout due-date slips tucked into the envelope in their inside back cover.  The building is clearly modern, not Greek revival.  But as long as you can electronically seek, reserve, look forward to, hold, smell, and crinkle a library book here, for free, all’s well.  

They’re a bit more stern about late fines here, but I guess they have to be, with Florida Man and all.