Re: Stroll in the evening
What I couldn't do with key limes!
Cathy
On Tuesday, February 17, 2004, at 05:18 PM, james singer wrote:
I just returned from a stroll through the plantation looking for ripe
loquats. I have five loquat trees--one named variety and four
seedlings [three of these are seedlings of the fourth]. All are loaded
with unripe fruit. Last weekend, on St. Valentine's Day, the named
variety and one of the seedlings had a few ripe fruit, which the short
one and I ate within minutes of finding them.
Alas, none of the other green fruit has become orange since then. But
I did notice three things worth reporting. First, the one remaining
tangelo [Mineola honeybell] was tree-ripe. So I picked it, peeled it,
and ate it. Second as I ate the honeybell, my favorite cat, The Beans,
raced to the top of our jacaranda tree, presumably so her barbaric
yalp could be heard across the countryside. She remained there,
yalping, until I told her to get her silly little butt down. Three, I
noticed that the valencia orange tree has, maybe 100 ripe fruits that
need to be picked, juiced, and frozen next weekend. And four, the key
lime must have 1,000 blooms; I can't deal with half that many limes
next year.
Island Jim
Southwest Florida
Zone 10
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