It’s official: My plants are NYC tough

Amanda Green - Guest Blogger 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
 

This summer, the NYC weather patterns fluctuated as dramatically as Lady Gaga's wardrobe. One day it would be scorching hot, followed by jungle monsoon time, and now the city's enjoying that we-can-call-this-fall-maybe stage. On any given week, two of these patterns will present themselves. Sometimes it occurs in the same schizophrenic sort of day. New Yorkers will be walking around with fleece layered over short shorts and a tank top. This is how the worst fashion trends get started, I think.

I left the city awhile back and tried to be a responsible gardener. I got a friend to water the plants — she's small and could easily slip out of the living room window and onto the fire escape without looking like a burglar. My friend was lucky to get a series of rainy days, so she only watered the plants once. I came back to find them thirsty, but green and upright. The red pepper that had been growing gradually into something right out of a farmer's market had fully ripened. It's official: All of my Burpee plants made it out alive. (Well, except the herbs, but let's call those practice.)

The days are getting shorter now, and I haven't heard the drone of the air conditioner for a few weeks. NYC is collectively wearing more clothing — well, on weekdays anyway. With each morning crisper and chillier than the one before, I wonder when I should break out the sweaters and boots again. But now something else is on my mind: Where does a garden go when it's cold six months of the year?

Do I let the cold slowly kill the plants I've watered these last few months? Do I bring them inside, where the warm air of the radiator could be just as hazardous? I can't just pull the entire garden out of its pots and chuck it down a trash chute. (Knowing these hardy plants, they might sprout in the apartment's basement, anyway.)

I'll miss the little guys when the snow starts collecting and all my tomatoes are store-bought. But until then, I keep watching and watering. I tell autumn to take its time.

 
 
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