First Fall Frost of 2023 : November 2nd
The first icing come through last nighttime , somewhere on the edge of All Saints Day and All Souls Day .
The compost pile pumpkin is signing off after a ridiculously productive summer and evenfall :

It was STILL cause new pumpkins !
I think it would have continued for many more months if we ’d been in a tropical climate .
And speaking of tropicals , the yam vine were make as well :

They ’ll experience until a harder frost , and I hope they ’ll put more growing into their solution before the very end , though I do n’t know how much they really do when it ’s cool and dry . I wish we could see the root ontogeny over time .
The brassicas are covered in rime , but should bounce back .
Though this will be the end of the Everglades Tomatoes .

Those tomatoes kept running flop through the brutal heat and drouth of summertime and have been extremely fat until last dark – and that ’s it . It ’s really heavy to pound Everglades Tomatoes . As a bonus , my daughtersells the seedsfrom our garden , and everyone enjoy them ! They are fundamentally a beloved mourning band in our Grocery Rows , and they ’ll reseed in the spring .
It ’s been a good class . We harvest the sugarcane from our yard over the last few 24-hour interval and in all likelihood got 150 - 200lbs . It was n’t a great yield due to the drouth , but the cane is for certain sweet .
The return board is almost at 2,000lbs and I have n’t counted the sugarcane yet , or harvested yams . Thank you for your blessings , Lord !

Today we hope to finish a picture on our nursery . Stay tune .
Related posts:
Protecting tomatoes from frost
Using sprinklers for frost protection
The Power of a Gardening Microclimate: Peaches in…
THE FROST DAMAGE KEEPS ROLLING IN
Fall garden in Florida – planting time!
Russian Ingenuity: Growing Citrus FAR Beyond its Natural…
August Natural Awakenings article: Growing tropical plants out…
After the Frost: 2022
Preparing a sugar cane bed for winter
Not a bad save…


