🎆 250 Years of America, Still Growing
Sunshine: America is turning 250 years old.
Smokey: Correct. And not all of that history happened on
battlefields.
Sunshine: Some of it happened here. In yards. In small
plots of ground.
Smokey: The way most lasting things happen.
Tomorrow, the United States turns 250. Most of what gets written about it
will focus on documents, presidents, battlefields, and monuments. Those
stories matter. But they are not the only place American history happened.
Some of it happened in the ground. In backyards, in fields, in pots on
windowsills, and in rows behind farmhouses. Quietly, without headlines,
gardening has been part of American life from the very beginning.
Long before 1776, this land already had gardens. Indigenous farmers grew
corn, beans, and squash together, a planting method later known as the Three
Sisters. The corn gave the beans something to climb, the beans helped
enrich the soil through nitrogen-fixing roots, and the squash spread low
across the ground, shading out weeds and holding in moisture. This was
farming built on cooperation between plants, refined over generations.
When colonists arrived, gardens were not decoration. They were survival.
A kitchen garden supplied vegetables, herbs for cooking, and plants used as
medicine when the nearest doctor was days away. Knowing how to grow food,
and keep it through the winter, was a skill that could decide whether a
family made it to spring.
Several of the country's early leaders were also genuine plant people.
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson both gardened seriously, testing
crops and keeping notes on what worked and what didn't. It was the same
practical habit gardeners rely on today: pay attention, and adjust next
season when something fails.
Few stories make that point better than John Chapman, the man history
remembers as Johnny Appleseed. He was not simply scattering seeds at random.
Through the early 1800s, he ran seedling nurseries ahead of settlers, so
young apple trees would already be growing by the time families arrived.
Setting a tree in the ground you may never sit under is its own kind of
faith. He planted for people he would never meet.
As the country grew, so did the way people found new plants. Long before
anyone could order online, seed catalogs arrived by mail, filled with
descriptions of vegetables, flowers, and fruit trees a family might never
have seen growing nearby. A catalog could bring a new tomato variety to a
farm in Ohio or a rose to a porch in Georgia. That habit of discovering
plants through the mail did not end. It just found new forms, and it is part
of what a nursery like ours still does today.
Amaryllis
Minerva puts on a spectacular show with multiple brilliant red-and-white
blooms opening at once. Its bold crimson petals, crisp white star pattern,
and elegant green throat make it one of the most eye-catching amaryllis
varieties, while additional buds promise even more dazzling flowers to
come.
Gardening carried the country through harder years too. During World War
II, Victory Gardens turned lawns, schoolyards, and empty lots into food
gardens. It was steady, unglamorous work that fed people, supported the home
front, and gave families something useful to do when so much else felt out
of their hands.
Florida adds its own chapter to that story. Here, gardening looked less
like neat rows of familiar crops and more like an ongoing experiment.
Spanish settlers brought citrus to Florida centuries ago. Growers replanted
after hard freezes and kept moving south, chasing warmer ground. Plant
explorers and nursery owners introduced mangos, palms, caladiums, bamboos,
tropical fruit trees, and ornamentals from other tropical regions, testing
what could take root in Florida's heat and humidity.
South Florida became something like an open-air laboratory, and in many
ways, it still is. At Top Tropicals, we work in that same living laboratory
every day, growing, testing, collecting, and sharing plants that still feel
new to many American gardeners. Different decade, same instinct. Find a
plant worth growing, learn how to grow it, and share it with anyone patient
enough to try.
None of this happened quickly. A garden does not come together in one
afternoon. It grows one seed, one season, one plant, one generation at a
time. A country grows the same way.
As the country marks 250 years, it might be worth planting something of
your own. Not because it will make headlines. Because years from now,
someone may be glad you did.
🎉 Celebrate America's 250th Anniversary with Us!
Enjoy 10% OFF your order over $100 with this coupon code:
HAPPY250
Valid through July 5, 2026
Excluding S&H. Offer applies to new orders only. Not valid on previous
purchases, pending orders, gift certificates, shipping charges, or combined
with other discounts or promotional offers.
👉 Plant Something for
the Next Chapter