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Old 01-04-2009, 11:57 PM posted to rec.gardens
Buderschnookie[_2_] Buderschnookie[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2007
Posts: 78
Default What can one grow in sand??


"Nelly Wensdow" wrote in message
...
My mother overwinters in Bonita Spgs & her soil looks & feels like plain
sand. Being of such modest means, my idea of soil amendments is just
adding whatever compost I'd normally produce anyway, which isn't a lot.
Native plants I don't expect much trouble with, it's the other things I
might want to add. A (non-native)grass lawn would not be part of my plans,
nor anything else that'd require what I'd consider an ongoing waste of
water. Especially with the water restrictions they so often seem to have.



Soils in that area can be vary tremendously from one half mile area to the
next.
I gardened in South Florida for 30 years and grew everything my heart
desired.
Even using the most xeriscape friendly plants available there are thousands
of wonderful choices you just can't get anywhere else.

Most of Lee County is rated either "loamy and siliceous" or "sandy over
clay" according to the soil survey page at
http://www.soilsurvey.org/soilseries...t=Series&st=FL

I'm not saying that different soils and climates don't present unique
challenges, I just think that simply calling it "sand" is a little lazy.
I found the gardening there fascinating and wonderfully rewarding- I'd live
and garden there again in a heartbeat if the housing crisis and homeowners
insurance increases and storms hadn't worn me out.



--
Toni
Hills of Kentucky
USDA Zone 6b
http://www.cearbhaill.com