• Pastures and House Lawn,  Pastures and House Lawn

    Bluebird Chicks

    “Somebody gimme a treatstick! I’m hungry! Oh goodie…..it’s Bird Lady! Maybe she’s got one in her pocket for me!” I don’t think this bluebird chick would have cared which hand or beak fed it, had I reached over onto the roses and pulled off one of the grasshoppers to give it. The parents work in tandem but hold at a distance on the pear trees with bugs in beak until we leave the porch, in this case a trip to the store. I can almost hear “will you guys get outa here!? This thing’s getting stale.” For anyone close to us who knows the symbolism of these brightly colored birds…

  • Cactus Nursery

    A Forest of Native Florida Cactus

    I took the greenhouse tent canopy off early this Spring, expecting to get some growth with the stronger light, but this blew my mind. To all I met at recent Florida plant shows, here is the video of the tall “bamboo” forest of aboriginal prickly apple cactus I promised – and thank you for your purchases! These things are pupping, budding and fruiting like crazy and it’s early in the season. I’m saving seeds from flowers I hand-pollinated on nights when Harrisia fragrans weren’t in bloom, and I’m armed with professional pollination bags just in case of a megabloom. H. fragrans self-pollinates with even a light breeze and I suspect…

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  • Cactus Nursery

    Cactus Flowers Open at Night

    This past week four have opened so far, and many more are budding on the aboriginal prickly apples. The mahogany and rose colors on the hypanthium and sepals distinguish this species’ flowers. I’ll be mesh bagging others now that both species are in bloom at the same time, to avoid possible hybridizations. Here are the largest of both species of prickly apple and the mama Royen’s in their new “cactus cairn” raised stone beds. I’ll add onto the sides of this large round one a couple of smaller satellite beds with Consolea moniliformis, to make it a habitat garden.

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  • Cactus Nursery

    Some Cereus Spring Flowering

    One year later, the other Florida Harrisia species I’m growing has finally come into bloom! The aboriginal prickly apple cactus, Harrisia aboriginum, is sporting flower morphology true to description and with luck will produce bright yellow fruit. Because of habitat destruction, this endemic cactus is critically endangered and almost went extinct in it’s Southwest Florida coastal hammock range. The dedicated species tent, now called the Aboriginarium, will have to be built up higher as these are reaching 7-9ft tall and potentially twenty feet. It is quickly gaining popularity with Florida gardeners who can grow it in their yard sanctuaries. Last year’s Harrisia fragrans yielded a lot of the bright red…

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  • Cactus Nursery

    New Greenhouses, Last Blooms and Fruit Before Winter

    The downside of mega propagation of cactus is where to put them all come Winter. The last couple months of Fall bring worry over preparedness, then ideas and effort prevail. I am getting closer after setting up and securing cactus greenhouses #5-8. Now comes the heavy work of building doorjambs and insulated doors on all of them. Heating the greenhouses to keep temps at or above 43f over the nights until March will not be fun or cheap. I’m already moving our army of spiky green things into the shelters as the weather changes. The Outsunny plastic and metal greenhouse kits, when modified with improvements, have worked great. The warm…

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  • Pastures and House Lawn

    James V. Freeman, “Curious Observations”, Museum of Art – DeLand

    In a couple of weeks my solo exhibition at the Museum of Art – DeLand in Florida opens. There is a lot of newer work that hasn’t yet seen the light of day, and I am excited to finally showcase these paintings in public view. Given the re-pandemic and health risks in holding a densely packed event, there will be no opening or closing reception. But the museum will be open to the public for the duration of this show. If civilization behaves and this thing subsides, I may be scheduled to give an artist lecture or walk&talk this Fall. It’s about time I posted something about the “art” in…

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  • Cactus Nursery

    Evening Magic in Photos and a Video

    This mantis has been eating well, because everything in there looks healthy enough to put on such a show in the absence of destructive bugs, though tonight the place was abuzz with pollinators. That horsefly in the video at 0.38 was following me as I walked through making it. I’m looking at a dozen flowers that will likely all fruit, with more opening this week. These are open one night only and close up at sunrise.

  • Pastures, Gardens and House Lawn

    Sand Pear Harvest and Canning

    The lion’s share ripened on two sand pear trees so overladen that the branches wept like an ornamental cherry, so I put aside cactus this week for the kitchen. With over 500 pear to peel and core staring up at me from the bushel basket, I started several very long multiple shifts along with my mom, who water bath canned at the stove. These Asian hybrid “sand pears” are ideal for North Florida and the few chill hours it provides in Winter, but they are tricky in that they’re tart and tasty when still rock hard yet beginning to fall off the tree at the end of July. When they…

  • Cactus Nursery

    From Bud to Fruit in 46 Days

    No, this is not some unusual variety of dwarf watermelon we’re growing at Cactus Island. That little black cactus bud I shared on June 8th? It flowered, fruited and grew into by far the largest fruit I’ve ever seen on any species of Pilosocereus. This eight foot plus Brazilian P. azureus took about 12 years to flower from germination and I’ve had it since 2012 when I bought it as an 8-10 inch potted pair. This biggie has to be an anomaly, because the seed count after cleaning was 5374 – way more than the normal, roughly 1800 I’ve been seeing in this genus. Maybe, just maybe, the two winters…

  • Pastures and House Lawn,  Pastures, Gardens and House Lawn

    Taste of July

    This has been the summer of cucurbits, especially Seminole pumpkin and watermelon which have taken over the organic beds for the season. We are not disappointed, and neither are our birds or the way-too-tame deer that abuses Cactus Island as its personal salad bar. Despite the relentless young buck that thinks I’m playing tag with it when I try to chase it off the property at dusk, Mom is still filling the cornucopia and freezer with an excess of its favorite beans for our enjoyment. She has put in several long shifts baking, freezing or canning our harvest while I tend cactus, but I’ll be helping when the lion’s share…