Tree fruit
Pawpaws have dropped!
After they've dropped, they can be eaten... I prefer to peel first, but it isn't really necessary....
Or is it? I've read that the peel & seed contains toxins... I've also read that toxicity may be mostly myth.
Pawpaws have dropped!
After they've dropped, they can be eaten... I prefer to peel first, but it isn't really necessary....
Or is it? I've read that the peel & seed contains toxins... I've also read that toxicity may be mostly myth.
This is actually an easier fix than all the fencing I've been doing over the last 2 months, where I'm just adding more wire above existing, and when they jump in, are apparently clearing existing 6 foot wire with no trouble...
Not being able to tell where they come in is a difficult fix... so much wire to add more to...
No problem...
Labels: fence
Mature dwarf paw paw 'tree'... Height waist high to chest high.
Loaded with fruit this year... But tiny!
Fruit on regular tree is still hard...
Labels: gopher tortoise, pawpaw
The rains stopped... the weather turned hot...
Not a surprise, the rains this spring were the unusual weather...
With the end of the rain, and the near constant heat, came the fun of portaging water from the rain barrels and attempting to keep a few plants going...
And... the deer fence started getting tested as the desperate critters wanted something to eat that wasn't crunchy...
Here's some pics from before everything turned crunchy...
Labels: 4 o'clock, butterflies, deer, echinacea, mulberry trees, pear tree, posts, rudbeckia, Summer heat
Monarch on a kale leaf... That's not where the milkweeds are!
(Like these matelea... milk weed vine)
Knockout roses, grown from cuttings...
Labels: butterflies
Labels: Cherokee rose, Chionanthus, Florida anise, poppies, robinia, spiderwort
Back when I first came to Gardens in the Sand... I purchased some paw paw seed...
The seed came up readily when I planted them in nursery pots.... Eventually I spread them around... Everybody that wanted paw paw trees got one.
Unfortunately... it takes more than a single seedling to bear fruit. Since then, the root suckers of the different plantings have been getting moved around.
So... I finally have fruit this year!
Labels: Asimina triloba, paw paw, pawpaw, zebra swallowtail