Today was Operation Plant Protection Day. Most tropical plants can handle a temperature of 32° F (which would be 0° C), especially if it doesn't stay at that temperature for very long. Anything below that and there's a good chance the plant will take on severe damage or even die although a seemingly dead plant will often surprise me with new growth. It might take months but I am patient.
We used to bring every potted plant we had into the house when the forecast was for freezing weather but we are older now and some of those plants are huge and must weigh at least a hundred pounds. Glen can and does manage to move them with his dolly and my help (which is not much) but I hate to ask him to do that. Also- finding a place in the house to fit all the plants is not easy. And then of course when the danger of frost is over, the entire operation must be done in reverse and the plants are moved back outside.
I have begun wrapping plants in old sheets and blankets when I feel they are too big to move or I am simply not that attached to them. Sometimes this works. Sometimes it does not. And if it's done right, it's not easy. Check out Steve Reed's blog post on unwrapping his beloved avocado tree when they were about to get snow. Yes, it is the UNWRAPPING but as he goes through the steps, you can easily see what the wrapping entailed.
Now look- I'm just not going to go to that amount of effort. But I will make an effort, pitiful as it may be.
I knew Glen would be home by late afternoon and help me bring in the two plants I was just not willing to risk which are my Roseland mango and my sea grape I started from a seed I picked up near the Sebastian inlet. Although I wrapped the sea grape during the last freeze, it ain't looking good folks, but I do believe that after some cutting back it will begin to show signs of growth again. The mango, which I had also wrapped, only had a few leaves that were nipped so it's good. I grew this plant from the seed of a mango which grew on a tree that when I ran with the feral group of kids who roamed the woods and dirt roads of Roseland, we could always count on to have fruit during the season. And the tree was on property where no one lived so we felt safe in picking up that fruit off the ground, perfectly ripe, to eat, the juice of which would run down our chins. On one of my first stays at the Lion Pool House I was thrilled to see that same tree and I stole one of its fruits and that's where the seed came from that my plant was born out of. The tree is no longer there and so that plant is all the more precious to me.
So out came the dolly and first we moved in the sea grape and then the mango and I will rest easier, knowing they are safe from the cold.
I moved a few more plants into the house before Glen got home and found places to nestle them. They may not be ideal locations, lacking in light as they are, but the plants can take a break and be rested up and ready to rumble when it's time to move them back out. The rest I wrapped using garbage bags and old bedding. I also wrapped the new limequat tree planted in the back yard as well as the little olive.
One more thing I did was to take cuttings of some of the plants I love which are not being brought in.
"Good luck, little ones!" Glen said as we left the porch where he'd helped me tuck in the plants.
I offer the same words, along with the old southern expression, root hog, or die, which basically means you're on your own, Baby.
I am feeling rather flat lately and this morning was no exception. I laid in bed for quite awhile, Maurice holding down the covers over me. I pondered the strange dreams I'd had, what the day ahead possibly had for me, the meaning of life and the question of why am I still here?
Don't worry. I ask myself that question almost every morning of my life and as I did today, I always get up, I get dressed, I drink coffee, I work through the morning angst. Some days I think about Mr. Natural
And these days, R. Crumb's portrayal of the words of a hippie guru philosopher ring more true than ever.
I've posted these exact same images and ruminations many, many times. Just as I've posted the story of my Roseland mango. And the story of the annual plant protection day.
Sweet potato and black bean chili.
I've also made a loaf of oatmeal bread, still in the oven, which promises to be as heavy as a door stop, as dense as a MAGAt's brain.
Stay warm, y'all.




your meal looks delicious! I am a vegetarian so will see if I can find that recipe online
ReplyDeleteOh, you have every reason to do the ritual to save your plants. I get it. Wrapping them is perfectly acceptable but those you grew from seed, especially the mango that grew in Roseland needs to be inside. Those are sweet memories about mangos growing up.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy your personality and perspective. Thank you for being you. And even in the mornings when it hits you that this world is as insane/fucked up as your philosopher illustrates, you get up and wrap your plants and make soup. AND make cool fish pottery. Life is fucking hard sometimes. Getting up when a cat holds the covers down is even more difficult so you’ve accomplished a lot when you can escape Maurice’s cover grip.
You are a really good writer and human being. Thank you for being real. -Nicol
I read Sabine's post this morning and burst into tears, sobs really. I'm going to miss her but I don't know where the sobbing came from. Then I yelled at the radio and I think I might just be overwhelmed with the fuckery of the world today. I'm sad because the world is such a fucking mess right now and it weighs on me, even when I'm quilting. It was too windy to go for a walk today. I could have gone for a walk but I would have been even bitchier and would probably have yelled at the dogs too because wind makes me grumpy.
ReplyDeleteI hope your plants make it and thank you for letting me rant.
Your plants sound well protected from the cold. I find, growing and nurturing plants is a labor of love. I am glad you've decided to take no risks as a cold night can be devastating for tropical plants. Your Roseland plants are special and carry great memories for you making protection efforts even more important.
ReplyDeleteTimes are tough. No doubt about that. Staying the course and being vigilant while still enjoying what gives us joy is more important than ever before.
I'm partly very calm and liking my life and partly frantically writing to officials, signing endless petitions. It's like two people are operating here.
ReplyDeleteMay your plants do well with your major TLC..sigh. I'm sad because I lost a 30 foot tall Cottonwood tree yesterday in our relentless 6 day *Santa Ana* wind event of 43mph winds 24/7 ...a tree Mom and Dad gave us when we moved to this property 29 years ago. she's gone now, darned. My husband Buzz would be sad as well...but I carry the sadness for both of us. We love and care for them..and sometimes they go. sigh.....may yours do well
ReplyDeleteSusan M
Knowing now that the original mango tree is gone, I am glad you saved that seed and it grew. Does Roseland get snow and cold the same as you do in your area? If yes, then the mango will be able to survive just as its parent did once it grows large enough.
ReplyDelete