<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter p6">
<ANTIMG src="images/i016.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="389" alt="Our Neighbor over the Way" /></div>
<h2>OUR NEIGHBOR OVER THE WAY.</h2>
<p class="left45">
<span class="smcap">Mandarin</span>, May 14, 1872.</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/dco.jpg" alt="O" width-obs="125" height-obs="125" class="floatl" /></p>
<p>UR neighbor over the way is not, to
be sure, quite so near or so observable
as if one lived on Fifth Avenue
or Broadway.</p>
<p>Between us and his cottage lie five good miles
of molten silver in the shape of the St. John's
River, outspread this morning in all its quivering
sheen, glancing, dimpling, and sparkling, dotted
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</SPAN></span>
with sail-boats, and occasionally ploughed
by steamboats gliding like white swans back
and forth across the distance.</p>
<p>Far over on the other side, where the wooded
shores melt into pearly blue outlines, gleams out
in the morning sun a white, glimmering spot
about as big as a ninepence, which shows us
where his cottage stands. Thither we are going
to make a morning visit. Our water-coach is
now approaching the little wharf front of our
house: and we sally forth equipped with our sun-umbrellas;
for the middle of May here is like
the middle of August at the North. The water-coach,
or rather omnibus, is a little thimble of a
steamer, built for pleasuring on the St. John's,
called "The Mary Draper." She is a tiny
shell of a thing, but with a nice, pretty cabin,
and capable of carrying comfortably thirty or
forty passengers. During the height of the travelling-season
"The Mary Draper" is let out to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</SPAN></span>
parties of tourists, who choose thus at their leisure
to explore the river, sailing, landing, rambling,
exploring, hunting, fishing, and perhaps inevitably
flirting among the flowery nooks and palmetto-hammocks
of the shore. We have seen
her many a time coming gayly back from an excursion,
with the voice of singing, and laugh of
youths and maidens, resounding from her deck,
flower-wreathed and flower-laden like some
fabled bark from the fairy isles. But now, in
the middle of May, the tourists are few; and so
"The Mary Draper" has been turned into a sort
of errand-boat, plying up and down the river to
serve the needs and convenience of the permanent
inhabitants. A flag shown upon our wharf
brings her in at our need; and we step gayly on
board, to be carried across to our neighbors.</p>
<p>We take our seats at the shaded end of the
boat, and watch the retreating shore, with its
gigantic live-oaks rising like a dome above the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</SPAN></span>
orange-orchards, its clouds of pink oleander-trees
that seem every week to blossom fuller
than the last; and for a little moment we can
catch the snow-white glimmer of the great Cape
jessamine-shrub that bends beneath the weight
of flowers at the end of our veranda. Our little
cottage looks like a rabbit's nest beside the
monster oaks that shade it; but it is cosey to see
them all out on the low veranda,—the Professor
with his newspapers, the ladies with their
worsteds and baskets, in fact the whole of our
large family,—all reading, writing, working, in
the shady covert of the orange-trees.</p>
<p>From time to time a handkerchief is waved
on their part, and the signal returned on ours;
and they follow our receding motions with a spyglass.
Our life is so still and lonely here, that
even so small an event as our crossing the river
for a visit is all-absorbing.</p>
<p>But, after a little, our craft melts off into the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</SPAN></span>
distance, "The Mary Draper" looks to our friends
no larger than a hazel-nut, and the trees of the
other side loom up strong and tall in our eyes,
and grow clearer and clearer; while our home,
with its great live-oaks and its orange-groves,
has all melted into a soft woolly haze of distance.
Our next neighbor's great whitewashed barn is
the only sign of habitation remaining; and that
flashes out a mere shining speck in the distance.</p>
<p>Now the boat comes up to Mr. ——'s wharf;
and he is there to meet and welcome us.</p>
<p>One essential to every country-house on the
St. John's is this accessory of a wharf and boathouse.
The river is, for a greater or less distance
from the shore, too shallow to admit the
approach of steamboats; and wharves of fifty
or a hundred feet in length are needed to enable
passengers to land.</p>
<p>The bottom of the river is of hard, sparkling
white sand, into which spiles are easily driven;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</SPAN></span>
and the building and keeping-up of such a wharf
is a trifling trouble and expense in a land where
lumber is so plentiful.</p>
<p>Our friend Mr. —— is, like many other old
Floridian residents, originally from the North.
In early youth he came to Florida a condemned
and doomed consumptive, recovered his health,
and has lived a long and happy life here, and
acquired a handsome property.</p>
<p>He owns extensive tracts of rich and beautiful
land on the west bank of the St. John's, between
it and Jacksonville, destined, as that city grows
and extends, to become of increasing value.
His wife, like himself originally of Northern
origin, has become perfectly acclimated and naturalized
by years' residence at the South; and is
to all intents and purposes, a Southern woman.
They live all the year upon their place; those
who formerly were their slaves settled peaceably
around them as free laborers, still looking up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</SPAN></span>
to them for advice, depending on them for aid,
and rendering to them the willing, well-paid services
of freemen.</p>
<p>Their house is a simple white cottage, situated
so as to command a noble view of the
river. A long avenue of young live-oak-trees
leads up from the river to the house. The
ground is covered with a smooth, even turf of
Bermuda grass,—the only kind that will endure
the burning glare of the tropical summer. The
walls of the house are covered with roses, now
in full bloom. La Marque, cloth-of-gold, and
many another kind, throw out their splendid
clusters, and fill the air with fragrance. We
find Mrs. —— and her family on the veranda,—the
usual reception-room in a Southern house.
The house is the seat of hospitality; every room
in it sure to be full, if not with the members of
the family proper, then with guests from Jacksonville,
who find, in this high, breezy situation,
a charming retreat from the heat of the city.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</SPAN></span></p>
<p>One feature is characteristic of Southern
houses, so far as we have seen. The ladies are
enthusiastic plant-lovers; and the veranda is
lined round with an array of boxes in which gardening
experiments are carried on. Rare plants,
slips, choice seedlings, are here nurtured and
cared for. In fact, the burning power of the
tropical sun, and the scalding, fine white sand, is
such, that to put a tender plant or slip into it
seems, in the words of Scripture, like casting it
into the oven; and so there is everywhere more
or less of this box-gardening.</p>
<p>The cottage was all in summer array; the
carpets taken up and packed away, leaving the
smooth, yellow pine floors clean and cool as
the French parquets.</p>
<p>The plan of the cottage is the very common
one of Southern houses. A wide, clear hall, furnished
as a sitting-room, opening on a veranda
on either end, goes through the house; and all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</SPAN></span>
the other rooms open upon it. We sat chatting,
first on the veranda; and, as the sun grew hotter,
retreated inward to the hall, and discussed
flowers, farm, and dairy.</p>
<p>On the east bank of the St. John's, where our
own residence is, immediately around Mandarin,
the pasturage is poor, and the cattle diminutive
and half starved. Knowing that our neighbor
was an old resident, and enthusiastic stock-raiser
and breeder, we came to him for knowledge on
these subjects. Stock-breeding has received a
great share of attention from the larger planters
of Florida. The small breed of wild native
Florida cattle has been crossed and improved by
foreign stock imported at great expense. The
Brahmin cattle of India, as coming from a tropical
region, were thought specially adapted to the
Floridian climate, and have thriven well here.
By crossing these with the Durham and Ayrshire
and the native cattle, fine varieties of animals
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</SPAN></span>
have been obtained. Mr. —— showed me
a list of fifty of his finest cows, each one of which
has its distinguishing name, and with whose
pedigree and peculiarities he seemed well acquainted.</p>
<p>In rearing, the Floridian system has always
been to make every thing subservient to the increase
of the herd. The calf is allowed to run
with the cow; and the supply of milk for the
human being is only what is over and above the
wants of the calf. The usual mode of milking is
to leave the calf sucking on one side, while the
milker sits on the other, and gets his portion.
It is an opinion fixed as fate in the mind of
every negro cow-tender, that to kill a calf would
be the death of the mother; and that, if you separate
the calf from the mother, her milk will dry
up. Fresh veal is a delicacy unheard of; and
once, when we suggested a veal-pie to a strapping
Ethiopian dairy-woman, she appeared as much
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</SPAN></span>
shocked as if we had proposed to fricassee a baby.
Mr. ——, however, expressed his conviction that
the Northern method of taking off the calf, and
securing the cow's milk, could be practised
with success, and had been in one or two cases.
The yield of milk of some of the best blood cows
was quite equal to that of Northern milkers, and
might be kept up by good feeding. As a rule,
however, stock-raisers depend for their supply
of milk more on the number of their herd than
the quantity given by each. The expenses of
raising are not heavy where there is a wide expanse
of good pasture-land for them to range in,
and no necessity for shelters of any kind through
the year.</p>
<p>Mr. —— spoke of the river-grass as being a
real and valuable species of pasturage. On the
west side of the river, the flats and shallows
along by the shore are covered with a broad-leaved
water-grass, very tender and nutritious, of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</SPAN></span>
which cattle are very fond. It is a curious sight
to see whole herds of cows browsing in the
water, as one may do every day along the course
of this river.</p>
<p>The subject of dairy-keeping came up;
and, at our request, Mrs. —— led the way to
hers. It is built out under a dense shade
of trees in an airy situation, with double walls
like an ice-house. The sight of the snowy
shelves set round with pans, on which a rich
golden cream was forming, was a sufficient testimony
that there could be beautiful, well-kept
dairies in Florida, notwithstanding its tropical
heats.</p>
<p>The butter is made every morning at an early
hour; and we had an opportunity of tasting it
at the dinner-table. Like the best butter of
France and England, it is sweet and pure, like
solidified cream, and as different as can be from
the hard, salty mass which most generally passes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</SPAN></span>
for butter among us. The buttermilk of a daily
churning is also sweet and rich, a delicious
nourishing drink, and an excellent adjuvant in
the making of various cakes and other household
delicacies.</p>
<p>Our friend's experience satisfied us that there
was no earthly reason in the climate or surroundings
of Florida why milk and butter should be
the scarce and expensive luxuries they are now.
What one private gentleman can do simply for
his own comfort and that of his family, we should
think might be repeated on a larger scale by
somebody in the neighborhood of Jacksonville as
a money speculation. Along the western bank
of this river are hundreds of tracts of good grazing
land, where cattle might be pastured at small
expense; where the products of a dairy on a large
scale would meet a ready and certain sale. At
present the hotels and boarding-houses are supplied
with condensed milk, and butter, imported
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</SPAN></span>
from the North: and yet land is cheap here;
labor is reasonable; the climate genial, requiring
no outlay for shelter, and comparatively little
necessity of storing food for winter. Fine breeds
of animals of improved stock exist already, and
can be indefinitely increased; and we wonder
that nobody is to be found to improve the opportunity
to run a stock and dairy farm which
shall supply the hotels and boarding-houses of
Jacksonville.</p>
<p>After visiting the dairy, we sauntered about,
looking at the poultry-yards, where different
breeds of hens, turkeys, pea-fowl, had each their
allotted station. Four or five big dogs, hounds
and pointers, trotted round with us, or rollicked
with a party of grandchildren, assisted by the
never-failing addition of a band of giggling little
negroes. As in the old times, the servants of the
family have their little houses back of the premises;
and the laundry-work, &c., is carried on
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</SPAN></span>
outside. The propensity at the South is to multiply
little buildings. At the North, where there
is a winter to be calculated on, the tactics of
living are different. The effort is to gather all
the needs and wants of life under one roof, to be
warmed and kept in order at small expense. In
the South, where building-material is cheap, and
building is a slight matter, there is a separate
little building for every thing; and the back
part of an estate looks like an eruption of little
houses. There is a milk-house, a corn-house, a
tool-house, a bake-house, besides a house for each
of the leading servants, making quite a village.</p>
<p>Our dinner was a bountiful display of the luxuries
of a Southern farm,—finely-flavored fowl
choicely cooked, fish from the river, soft-shell
turtle-soup, with such a tempting variety of early
vegetables as seemed to make it impossible to
do justice to all. Mrs. —— offered us a fine
sparkling wine made of the juice of the wild-orange.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</SPAN></span>
In color it resembled the finest sherry,
and was much like it in flavor.</p>
<p>We could not help thinking, as we refused
dainty after dainty, from mere inability to take
more, of the thoughtless way in which it is often
said that there can be nothing fit to eat got in
Florida.</p>
<p>Mr. ——'s family is supplied with food almost
entirely from the products of his own farm.
He has the nicest of fed beef, nice tender
pork, poultry of all sorts, besides the resources
of an ample, well-kept dairy. He raises and
makes his own sirup. He has sweet-potatoes,
corn, and all Northern vegetables, in perfection;
peaches, grapes of finest quality, besides the
strictly tropical fruits; and all that he has, any
other farmer might also have with the same
care.</p>
<p>After dinner we walked out to look at the
grapes, which hung in profuse clusters, just
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</SPAN></span>
beginning to ripen on the vines. On our way
we stopped to admire a great bitter-sweet
orange-tree, which seemed to make "Hesperian
fables true." It was about thirty feet in height,
and with branches that drooped to the ground,
weighed down at the same time with great
golden balls of fruit, and wreaths of pearly buds
and blossoms. Every stage of fruit, from the
tiny green ball of a month's growth to the perfected
orange, were here; all the processes of
life going on together in joyous unity. The tree
exemplified what an orange-tree could become
when fully fed, when its almost boundless capacity
for digesting nutriment meets a full supply;
and it certainly stood one of the most royal of
trees. Its leaves were large, broad, and of that
glossy, varnished green peculiar to the orange;
and its young shoots looked like burnished gold.
The bitter-sweet orange is much prized by some.
The pulp is sweet, with a certain spicy flavor; but
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</SPAN></span>
the rind, and all the inner membranes that contain
the fruit, are bitter as quinine itself. It is
held to be healthy to eat of both, as the acid
and the bitter are held to be alike correctives
of the bilious tendencies of the climate.</p>
<p>But the afternoon sun was casting the shadows
the other way, and the little buzzing "Mary
Draper" was seen puffing in the distance on her
way back from Jacksonville; and we walked
leisurely down the live-oak avenues to the wharf,
our hands full of roses and Oriental jessamine,
and many pleasant memories of our neighbors
over the way.</p>
<p>And now in relation to the general subject of
farming in Florida. Our own region east of the
St. John's River is properly a little sandy belt
of land, about eighteen miles wide, washed by
the Atlantic Ocean on one side, and the St.
John's River on the other. It is not by any
means so well adapted to stock-farming or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</SPAN></span>
general farming as the western side of the river.
Its principal value is in fruit-farming; and it will
appear, by a voyage up the river, that all the
finest old orange-groves and all the new orange-plantations
are on the eastern side of the river.</p>
<p>The presence, on either side, of two great
bodies of water, produces a more moist and
equable climate, and less liability to frosts. In
the great freeze of 1835, the orange-groves of
the west bank were killed beyond recovery;
while the fine groves of Mandarin sprang up
again from the root, and have been vigorous
bearers for years since.</p>
<p>But opposite Mandarin, along the western
shore, lie miles and miles of splendid land—which
in the olden time produced cotton of the
finest quality, sugar, rice, sweet-potatoes—now
growing back into forest with a tropical rapidity.
The land lies high, and affords fine sites for dwellings;
and the region is comparatively healthy.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</SPAN></span>
Then Hibernia, Magnolia, and Green Cove, on
the one side, and Jacksonville on the other, show
perfect assemblages of boarding-houses and
hotels, where ready market might be found for
what good farmers might raise. A colony of
farmers coming out and settling here together,
bringing with them church and schoolhouse,
with a minister skilled like St. Bernard both in
husbandry and divinity, might soon create a
thrifty farming-village. We will close this chapter
with an extract from a letter of a Northern
emigrant recently settled at Newport, on the
north part of Appalachicola Bay.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="left65">
<span class="smcap">Sept.</span> 22, 1872.</p>
<p>I have been haying this month: in fact I had
mowed my orange-grove, a square of two acres,
from time to time, all summer. But this month
a field of two acres had a heavy burden of
grass, with cow-pease intermixed. In some
parts of the field, there certainly would be at the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</SPAN></span>
rate of three tons to the acre. The whole field
would average one ton to the acre. So I went
at it with a good Northern scythe, and mowed
every morning an hour or two. The hay was
perfectly cured by five <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, same day, and put
in barn. The land, being in ridges, made mowing
difficult. Next year I mean to lay that land
down to grass, taking out stumps, and making
smooth, sowing rye and clover. I shall plough
it now as soon as the hay is all made, and sow
the rye and clover immediately. I have five
cows that give milk, and four that should come
in soon. These, with their calves, I shall feed
through the months when the grass is poor. I
have also a yoke of oxen and four young steers,
with Trim the mule. I have already in the barn
three to four tons of hay and corn-fodder, and two
acres of cow-pease cured, to be used as hay. I
hope to have five hundred bushels of sweet-potatoes,
which, for stock, are equal to corn. I made
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</SPAN></span>
a hundred and ten bushels of corn, twenty-five
to the acre. My cane is doing moderately well.
Hope to have all the seed I want to plant fourteen
acres next year. Bananas thrive beautifully;
shall have fifty offsets to set out this
winter; also three or four thousand oranges,
all large-sized and fair.</p>
</div>
<p>All these facts go to show, that, while Florida
cannot compete with the Northern and Western
States as a grass-raising State, yet there are
other advantages in her climate and productions
which make stock-farming feasible and profitable.
The disadvantages of her burning
climate may, to a degree, be evaded and overcome
by the application of the same patient
industry and ingenuity which rendered fruitful
the iron soil and freezing climate of the New-England
States.
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