Denny - Are you back home? I thought you were in Fla for the winter??
Anyhow - you read correctly about the snow. Although in my experience that usually means snow flurries that melt before they hit the ground. Sleet? Oh yeah...I've seen sleet showers quite a few times in sunny Florida.
The unusual thing about this current cold snap is how long it's lasting and how severe it is for Florida. You might get one or two nights of freeze warnings the entire winter and then we're back into the 70's. This has been going on for almost two weeks now and the farmers & citrus growers are beginning to really feel the pain. I don't know if there will be many of the famous Plant City strawberries this year.Not that it matters to me because I think Florida grown strawberries are tasteless, as are the tomatoes.
Yep, because many of them are ripened in that box. I grew up on a tomato farm outside Buffalo, and my Dad used to work winters on a large tomato operation in Palm Beach County. They pick em green, pack them, and then stick them in a climate controlled room where they are adminstered ethylene gas to ripen them. Yummy!They are not tasteless. They taste just like the box they were packed into.
This is why they refer to it as "climate change" now.
When I was a kid we just called it "weather".
Al Gore can kiss my frostbit butt!!! It's COLD outside.
Yep, because many of them are ripened in that box. I grew up on a tomato farm outside Buffalo, and my Dad used to work winters on a large tomato operation in Palm Beach County. They pick em green, pack them, and then stick them in a climate controlled room where they are adminstered ethylene gas to ripen them. Yummy!![]()
Where the heck is/was there a tomato farm outside of Buffalo? For most of my youth I lived in NE Amherst (farm country) and all that was ever grown in that area was wheat, corn, and cabbage. I hated cabbage fields most of all because whatever was not picked was left to rot in the field. Kimchee without the burying part. Not a pleasant odor at all!!
I've had field ripened tomatoes grown here in Florida and, while they are better than what you can get in the stores, they are no where near as good as a northern grown beefsteak!!! Mmmmmmmm!!
I grew up near Silver Creek, in Chautauqua County. From there up through Brant and Evans in southern Erie County there were several large tomato operations. The Vacco family was a big grower that also owned (not sure if they still do) some huge farms in Palm Beach County.Where the heck is/was there a tomato farm outside of Buffalo?