Wondering what you should plant in your Florida Vegetable Garden in the month of January? Check out this Florida Gardening Video where I give lots of Florida Gardening Tips to help you have a successful Florida Garden. When you are gardening in Florida, you need to know what seeds to start each month, what vegetables to add to your garden, and how to care and maintain your vegetables.
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00:00 What to plant in January
00:21 Seed Starting Cold Weather Crop
07:21 Seed Starting Warm Weather Crop
13:57 Seed Starting Hot Weather Crop
16:03 Care & Maintenance
21:40 Harvest
25:02 Tips

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DISCLAIMER: This video and description contain affiliate links. As an affiliate associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

20 Comments

  1. Could you put those green mesh bags on the larger Tomatoes to keep some bugs off. I put them on my peaches and saved the only one left.

  2. I've grown micro dwarf tomatoes (like 8 varieties!) and i think Fat Frog and Balcony Elo are the winners! They did take like 3 months to produce harvest once transplanted… so end of March and loads in April!

  3. I got my new Wild Floridian Planner for a New Years gift to myself. I love the new planting guide and I especially enjoyed the section On native plants and wildlife.

  4. Happy New Year, my cucumbers froze last night here in Brooksville. It wasn't supposed to drop that low. This year the big projects are redoing the rabbit hutches and chicken coops. They are 15 years old and the wood is definitely rotting. 😁

  5. Wasn't expecting anything sowing volunteer mystery brassica seeds (sprouted in sand in late winter, so the plant was growing in the heat) and was surprised when they sprouted. Now they've been stuck on their first true leaves for at least a month and a half. They're still green and perky, but they look exactly the same day after day. So strange.

  6. Last year, I had a ridiculous amount of mealybugs. I went out of town and came back to find my plants overrun, and I fought them all summer and fall. What can I do to prevent that from happening again?

  7. It was such a pleasure running into you today! Honestly such a kind person! And of course I froze instead of asking you the questions I have 😅

  8. I kept watching the weather for our area, Ft. Myers, and when I saw those 35s I started clearing space in the house. My hibiscus and fruit trees said NOPE….not doing that. Everything is in containers, so I started pulling them in as soon as it got down to 45. After I thought about it for a few hours, I started hauling tomato plants inside. You can just imagine how excited my dogs were, lol. And it got cold. We had to turn our heat on, it got so cold inside. You haven't lived until you try watering all those plants inside the house. To make it even more fun??? (I'm convinced at this point that I am certifiable) we had a cane toad get in. It must have sneaked in with one of the peppers. Oh yeah, everything but the roses and aloes came in. Yes, I have a big house, but we don't usually entertain the garden inside. I had to chase that little devil all over the place while my dogs wanted to help. I THINK NOT!! Finally got him out and with a lot more generosity than sense, I turned him loose, down at the end of the driveway.
    It finally got up to where it was in the 50s at night, and I hauled everything back out. I think everything has survived, tho a couple of the Everglades look like they are about done.
    I went out this morning (Sunday) and picked 2 3/8 pounds of cherry and cocktail tomatoes, a big bowl of Everglades, and two more Cherokee Purples. OMG. You do have to grow these! I had never seen one before, and when I cut it last night, was amazed to see the beet red purple color inside, and that thing sliced like meat, not tomato. So yes, it was worth all the hauling in and out to save everything. Now I just need to win the lottery, build a heated greenhouse and raise more, lol. And it's all because I have learned so much from Jacqueline and Patrina.

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