Friday, December 26, 2025

For want of home-grown tomato ...

On April 4, 2009, I responded via email to a question from Dan Dewitt, a reporter for the “St. Petersburg Times. He had heard I was living in a small community called Spring Lake growing muscadine grapes and an organic vegetable garden. After an apparent failure at trying to start his own small garden, he wondered why doing it seemed to be getting popular generally and was wondering why the phenomenon, why was it becoming a ‘thing’? In 2009, remember, we were deeply into a world-wide recession, suffering economically, and involved in a perplexing and costly “War Against Terror.”

-----Original Message-----
From: Sonny Vergara
Sent: Monday, April 06, 2009 7:55 PM
To: Dan DeWitt
Subject: Why the backyard garden?

Dan,

No, I don’t live directly on the lake, but it was, in fact, surrounded by groves at one time.  In fact, most of the open pastures and hay fields in Spring Lake were groves before the winter freezes of the 1980’s.  One can still see the faint outlines of their rows in the terrain on my 20 acres, for example, which is now a pasture.  Not sure in what year the worst freezes occurred but when they did it devastated Florida’s citrus industry … again.   

The first time the industry was hit in Florida was toward the end of the 19th century when the citrus belt was much farther north of here.  The little town of Satsuma near Lake George and just south of Palatka was named after the Satsuma orange, for example, which was planted ubiquitously throughout that area.  In the early 1980’s, I lived in an old wooden house on the St. Johns River just north of East Palatka that was built to house grove workers. Interestingly, they had used sphagnum moss for insulation between the walls. I was told there was at one time a dock nearby where barges carrying the fruit to the Jacksonville market and elsewhere would tie up to receive their loads. That was where the citrus belt was then, running east and west, coast to coast.   

After the freeze of 1898 (?), the citrus belt moved south and by mid-century was running generally east and west through Orlando including Hernando County and as far south as Highlands County.  Even so, most of the land at that time was just woods, I believe, because the country’s focus was obviously on WWII and recovering from the Great Depression. 

After the war ended, the citrus industry’s markets expanded exponentially through the fifties and sixties and the central Florida citrus belt became more defined.  “Woods” were converted in large scale and the citrus industry as we know it today was established.  Ownerships were consolidated and “barons” like Emmitt Evans, Charlie Lykes and Ben Hill Griffin were created. 

It all changed again in the late 1980’s.  My memory isn’t clear, but I remember it happening somewhere around Christmas 1988, maybe.  After that freeze, the citrus acreage in Hernando County was massively reduced, as it was across all of central Florida.  But as fate would have it, farmers found houses could be “grown” just as profitably, perhaps more so, and land development became the new face of agriculture … and we all know where that has taken us today. 

But significant to Hernando County, citrus as an industry was reduced to a few acres and agriculture as an industry was moved to the brink of extinction.  Farmers who held on to their land and didn’t sell to developers were faced with losing their green belt tax status and thus their property to impossible ad valorem land taxes.  So, if they didn’t sell outright and they didn’t replant citrus, they planted pine trees.  Lots of them. 

Drive around Spring Lake today and you’ll see sour root orange trees growing among rows of planted slash pine.  Why?  Because most of the fruit trees then were sweet orange wood budded onto sour-root stock.  The sour-root stock was heartier and disease resistant.  The freeze killed the budded part of the tree but not the sour-root so it came back as a sour fruit tree. 

Thus, the central Florida citrus belt moved south again, and agriculture became essentially a hobby in our area to be pursued for tax purposes or because you don’t play golf.  The big guys like those mentioned concluded that it made no sense to tempt the whims of Florida weather a second time, so they again moved further south to Collier, Desoto, Hardee, and Okeechobee counties, anywhere the land was cheap, and the new belt was established there. 

I remember having to process a water use permit for one grove that was 40 square miles, so large it could be identified by satellite.  It was developed and managed by one entity with portions sold to others, many from outside the country.  I’ve long forgotten the name of the company but the regulatory folks at the water management district could probably identify it. 

So, what is happening to bring our national focus back to a vegetable garden in the back yard?  In my estimation? It’s the hard realization that we, as a country or a people, are not invincible.  Terrorism can and probably will reach us again.  It’s the fatigue of an unpopular, unwinnable, intractable, unending war that is creating an historic national indebtedness that can steal the future of our children and theirs. 

It’s the disastrous failure and subsequent loss of confidence in one of the greatest economic machines ever known to man.  It’s the realization that the system in which we entrusted our savings and therefore our fate as aging citizens is so cynical and infected with fraud that our final years as secure and comfortable elderly humans may well have been stolen from us. 

It’s realization that our political presence on the world stage is waning even after so many wars, battles, lives and trillions of dollars spent over the last century ostensibly to make the lives of others better.  

It’s the realization that we will have to pay more than any of us can afford for energy, and we can and will be held hostage until we pay the ransom. 

It’s the realization that it is foolish to debate further that our planet is at risk due to our own actions, because we all now know for a fact that the risk grows even more ominous every day. 

It’s because the new global economy which sends us most of the goods we use and the food we eat, commodities which touch our lives at every level and which we can no longer produce ourselves, can arrive poisoned and dangerous. 

It is because of the growing realization that the endlessly partisan and inflexible dogma of our two dominant political parties is, alas, not at all aimed at improving our lot as a nation of people, but only to perpetuate and protect the advancement of their own existence even if it risks the very soul of the nation. 

Only because I grow weary just thinking about all the other problems we can mention, I might offer, finally, that we are interested in growing our own gardens because we realize how dangerously complex bringing any one of these issues to resolution will be, much less all of them.  And if we can’t solve all of them what’s going to happen … to us? 

I hear a national sigh of resignation for want of something as simple as a home-grown tomato.

To you I suggest that growing a tomato would seem much more satisfying and predictable than all the misery of the present world, despite your unfortunate experience.  Try again.  It’s good for the soul.   

Drop by sometime.  I’ll show you my muscadine vines and organic garden and share a glass of homemade muscadine wine, if you’re so inclined.

 Regards,

Sonny

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