<$BlogRSDURL$>
Google
Garden's GiftTips Plant Resources Garden Info Garden Accessories Florida Gardening Links www

Friday, August 24, 2007

Karl comes through again! 



Susan recently wrote and asked me where she might find a tree supplier in Central Florida to purchase Tibouchina trees. Although I found one or two, I've got to say it was not easy to find retailers in her area specifically listing this plant. So I did the next best thing. I asked Karl of Tropical Plants Library if he carried Tibouchina. Sure enough he responded immediately to let me know he stocks Tibouchina Urvilleana.

Commonly known as Princess Flower or Glory Bush, this species grows 10-15 feet tall with an equal spread. The tree prefers full sun and produces gorgeous purple blooms. Interestingly it is considered a pest in Hawaii and will spread in moist areas forming large thickets. It is a desired plant here in Florida flowering spring, summer and fall making a perfect specimen tree. We have one and absolutely love it. Check out Karl's Tibouchina and try one for your garden. Happy Florida Gardening, and thanks as always to Karl and Tropical Plants Library.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Boll weevils 


There was an article published in the local newspaper recently discussing the beauty and resilience of the cotton plant. It was suggested that folks could add it to their gardens and enjoy gorgeous flowers that ultimately become the actual cotton boll. I was intrigued by the idea, but somewhere in the back of my mind I was wondering if cotton could be planted residentially. Well, kudos to the newspaper for printing a retraction and letting us know that it is illegal in the state of Florida to plant cotton because of the boll weevil.

I've heard about boll weevils all my life, but it got me wondering what exactly a boll weevil is and what the little critter actually looks like. According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, it is an "insect...Anthonomus grandis, classified in the order Coleoptera, family Curculionidae, and all of its life stages". It is a beetle roughly a quarter inch in size that migrated from Mexico to the United States back in the 19th century. It all but totally destroyed the cotton crops. In the 1970s the Eradication Program was begun to regulate the growth of cotton. (Here in Florida the Southeastern Boll Weevil Eradication Foundation is responsible for cotton plant treatment.) So while the plant may be beautiful, we can only enjoy it from afar and it sounds like it's probably better that way.


On a goofier note, there is a Boll Weevil Monument located in Enterprise, Alabama. Why you ask? To honor the bug for forcing farmers to diversify their crops. Well, there's always another way to look at things, isn't there? Next thing you know someone may actually write a song about the critter. Oh wait - they did! Happy Florida Gardening.

Site
Meter Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

back to top

Thanks to Andrew Stenning who contributed the photograph for our masthead

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?