Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Grow your own Pineapple

 I really enjoy growing things. I've been fascinated with plants and flowers for as long as I can remember.  Because we live in Florida, it's very easy to grow pineapples, and I currently have between 22-25 pineapple plants in my garden.  Nine of them have fruit this year, and that really gets me kind of giddy!

Here is a quick run  down on how to plant them, and lot's of pictures of how I made a place for them in my garden.

Step one.  Eat a pineapple... yum!  Save the top! ;)  Save the green "crown" and just a bit of the fruit itself...shown below.
Let it sit in a dish of water for about a week ....

...(or 3 weeks if you keep forgetting to plant it like me!)



Step 2.  Find a space in your garden, and tuck it in.  I took advantage of this little space in the middle of some of my older pineapple plants.
You just want to cover the "fruit" part with soil, and water it well to get it settled in.


Step 3:  Sit back and watch it grow.  It may be 2 years before you get a fruit, keep planting more plants all the time and you will have a rotating crop of pineapple.

This is an area by my back fence, you can't see if from the yard, it's hidden behind a large patch of Mexican Petunia.  I have 3 pineapple plants snuggled rather closely together.  I keep the spines trimmed so I can walk down my little path.  Two of these are fruiting this year...


There's one peeking his little head around the corner...


Top view...2 fruit on the left, the plant on the right isn't ready to fruit yet.


Here's a closer view of that middle guy...


In my "large" patch, I have a few that are starting to get their crown.  


 Here are two side by side in the large patch, one will ripen a few weeks ahead of the other....that's the way you want it! ;)


This one's just a little pineapple "nub" barely peeking out...


 This is the view of my "large" stand.  It may not seem possible, but there are about 24 plants in there!!!



Yum!


 I have a pretty bouganvilla and some confederate jasmine climbing the fence to "mask" the spiney pinapple plants.  I also like to sprinkle Cosmos seeds in the patch because they make a pretty "hide" to these "not so pretty" plants. :)


With the right placement and addition of other plants, you can grow a LOT of pineapples and keep them relatively "hidden".  Yes, there really are about 20 plants back there!  







Why do I bother growing my own?

No pesticides - I use only organic composted manures and kitchen scraps to feed my garden beds, so I know what is going into my plants, and what will eventually be going into my body. My original 4 pineapple plants were from the tops of store bought fruit, however since they were planted 14 years ago, I am hoping all chemicals used to grow them have worked their way out of the system by now.

Taste - When you grow your own, the fruit is allowed to ripen on the plant, allowing the sugars to fully develop. Store bought pineapples (among other things) are picked before they are ripe, allowing time to ship them to the stores and get them stocked on the shelves. There is nothing as delicious as a pineapple fully ripened on the plant and eaten the same day it's cut - the flavor is out of this world!

Joy! - I love to spend time in my garden, learning what makes things grow, what causes diseases, how to improve my soil, trying to figure out what I'm doing wrong and getting excited when something works out right. It is a joy to be outside and hear the wind rustling through the leaves of our pecan tree, smell the sweet scent of blooming honeysuckle and get dirt under my nails. I am amazed at this detailed world that God has made and how he has blessed us with such beauty to see, touch and smell.

It's easy - Cut the top off a pineapple (organic if you can find one), keep about 1/2 inch of fruit attached. Set that in a shallow dish of water for a few days. Outside on a covered porch is best, it will begin to smell kind of rottenish. Take that and plant it in enriched, well draining soil, covering the fruit part and a little bit of the "plant" - don't put dirt in the middle of the plant though, it needs to grow from here, so keep it clear!


Water well and ignore. It will grow, and in about 2 years you will get your first pineapple. As you can see in the photo, the plant will put off new shoots. Pineapple plants only produce one fruit and then they die off, but you never actually see this happening, as they send off a new plant that soon takes over, it is very unnoticeable.


In addition, I cut u
p an apple per plant once a year in the spring and put the chopped up pieces on and around the plant. The gas produced by the rotting apple feeds the pineapple plants and helps them to produce.  I wouldn't say this is necessary, but it was something I learned form a friend of a friend of a friend who use to grow pineapples... you get the picture. :)

Happy planting!




Here is an example of what happens to the plant after it produces fruit. "A" is where I cut off a ripe pineapple, the "original" plant will die off. "B" and "C" are where two new plants are shooting off of the original parent plant. Because of this, you hardly ever notice that the original plant is disappearing, the shoots become big quite quickly and take over where that one left off.

These are from the "archives"... :)


Monday, May 2, 2011

My May Mish-Mash Monday

Say that fast a few times! :) hee hee hee

Well, following suit with my bestest and another dear friend, I shall simply give you an "update" for this weeks happenings....Bullet style:

*  We will be attending the birthday party for our very favorite 6 year old (to be)...oh yeah.  It should be great fun, considering last year it resulted in this post...Good for a Giggle...I can't wait to see what happens this year. :)

Pretty small for a 6 yr old, huh?  :)


* I made a new Bible Cover...yup. 


 Old faithful was lookin' a bit "granny. Um, why did I use this fabric 10 years ago to cover my bible? Sigh. Oh well, I'm happy with the new one...she's purty. :)




* I got these....


do you know what they are?  They have made my life easier and I love them!  Any guesses???

*  My veggie garden is producing nicely.  Beans are almost ready to be turned under.  Cabbage are forming nicely, I've picked 4 so far and have several more coming along.  I have enough tomatoes to make sauce for dinner, with enough to slice and toss on salad.  Getting ready to put in some summer crops.


* This is my new chicken coop.  I can't wait for them to arrive!  I hope they like their new home...


YES.  I'm kidding. :) 

My precious princess, Stormie, has decided to make this area of the yard her sandbox and has taken the last few months to perfect the area by killing all the grass.  We have "quaranteened" it, so as to let the grass grow back.  She is not a happy camper.

* I shall begin a tough workout program VERY soon.  I'll be blogging my progress (maybe), LOL.  This will include a short period of time where I won't be having any sugar...ok, 3 months...that could feel like a lifetime!  Um, for me that means no coffee!!!  Yikes...or choclate...oh!  OR Cake balls...whatever will I do?  :) 

I'll survive.... I hope. :{

* Um, that's about it... I think.  Oh, I need to kill a plant.  A VERY invasive plant.  I am thinking about pouring vinegar on it.  Will that work?  What do you think?

Thursday, April 29, 2010

A Garden Stroll...

Welcome to my "Florida Cottage Garden", at least that's the way I feel about it.  I'd love for you to grab a cup of coffee or tea and take a stroll with me.  Come and see all the glorious colorful flowers that God has so graciously blessed us with!

Just after waving to my husband the other morning, as he left for work, this is what I saw from my front door...

Cosmos, Lavendar, Blue Salvia and Pink Angelonia...

Potted on, and around, the front porch are purple Penta...

This Purple Heart vine weaves it's way up the tall railing on the front porch.  I love the way the little purple "hearts" open and out pops a bright red flower!

This plant is new to me, so I don't know the name off the top of my head, but it's full of bright purple blooms...

This is one of my newer roses, Belinda's Dream.  The scent is sweet and beautiful and the bush is absolutely covered in buds right now...

If you are able to click and ENLARGE this photo, do it!  I took several shots of this butterfly on this sherbert Lantana, and realized after looking at them closely that I could see the nectar on his "feeding tube"...very cool!

These Don Juan roses were a Valentines gift almost 10 years ago!  Talk about the gift that keeps on giving!!!!  They trail up the rail on the opposite side of the front porch...

Just yesterday, I had two visitors to my garden.  A pair of Sandhill Cranes wandered through and nibbled at bugs as they made their way down the street.  I took this shot through my front window...

Let's go out to the backyard...
Outside my back porch is my potting bench and kitchen herb garden.  The boxes contain lettuces as well as several herbs I use for cooking.  The frame of the overhang is completely draped in the heavenly fragrance of Confederate Jasmine.  It only blooms for a month, but SO worth it!

At the back of the yard is my little "Veggie Patch".  This is a small stand of Snow Peas...


Newly planted "wide row" of green beans...

Spaghetti Sauce in the making...Roma Tomatoes...

Purple Cabbage...I am getting 5 new little cabbages from the one I cut off a couple of weeks ago!

Looking past the climbing tomato trellises and through the bell pepper patch, there are sugar peas on the vine...

Looking from the back of the Veggie Patch to the other side of the yard, you can see the Gazebo and swing under the Pecan Tree...

That looks inviting on the hot spring day....let's go rest for a bit in the Hammock...

From here I can hear the birds chirping and the squirrells chasing eachother up the tree.  Bees are buzzing around doing their thing and butterflies are fluttering by...

From the hammock, this is what I see when I look back toward the garden and shed...

Above my feet I hear the sweet tinkling of my "Happy" windchimes...

...and the air is once again filled with the intoxicating scent of Confederate Jasmine...

Surrounding the back of the Gazebo are MANY ferns, pineapple plants and plumeria...how many pineapples do you see "blooming" in this photo?

Plumeria, or as northerners call them, Frangipani, are some of the most beautiful tropical flowers.  The ugly stems are nothing to look at in the winter, but come mid summer the leaves are up to 2 1/2 feet long and rich deep green.  The blooms just keep coming in well over 50 different shades...I only have 3-4 different colors in my collection though...

I love to hear the sound of this fountain trickling while I work in my garden, it's so relaxing and drowns out any nearby street noise.  In the background is a Bouganvilla (bow-gan-vee-yuh) that is about 15 feet high...

Beside the fountain is another smaller potted Bouganvilla in purple where my garden fairy is playing hide n seek... :)

At the edge of the shed, are a bundle of flowers designed to attract both butterflies and people...pink Plumeria, yellow Butterfly weed, Pink Vinca, Cosmos, Gladiola, Blue Plumbago and a pretty orange ground orchid...


Blue Plumbago...

Pink Vinca...these LOVE heat and sunshine!

What a wonderful place to take a nap...

I've had this croton for almost 16 years and it had grown to over 7 feet tall.  I thought after our 3 nights of deep freeze that it was completely gone, but I was soooo happy to see new growth!  A new life for my colorful croton!

Lantana grows like a weed here in Florida, I have actually never purchased one for my backyard gardens, yet  I have 4!

Why would this be included in my garden tour?  Someday this ugly thing will make a breathtaking Orchid flower...

VACANCY ~ VACANCY ~ VACANCY
Hmmm....not sure how Stormie got her toy in the gutter...?

I thought it would be fun to take a photo of the overhang that I have my potting bench under...
DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE???

Yup...that's what I thought.  I saw the underbelly of this black snake...what a nice warm place for her to sun herself...

I love the way our large Pecan Tree casts cool shade across the lawn at just the right time of day...

There she stands in all her glory, wearing the latest in spring fashion,  soft green...

These little "fronds" will become pecans in the Fall...

Underneath that tree is a swing that is calling your name...are you sure you can't stop by today?

Oh well, that's fine...I'll head to the back porch where I'm busy collecting seeds to plant in the Fall...for another burst of color!

Cosmos stems and seeds...

Snapdragon seeds...it's amazing to me how many tiny seeds come from one plant.
WOW! Our God is amaznig!!!


Have a beautiful, colorful, flower-filled day!