Friday, May 22, 2026
Hometown Connections and Rootbound Ferns
Just in case someone needs a reminder of where they are. I have no idea what that little thing is -- a key chain? A letter opener? A hood ornament? I found it shoved into the top of that post, and left it there.
I worked my way through more slides yesterday morning. I went back through the second-look pile and decided which of those need scanning and which don't, and I put the "don't" slides into a plastic storage box so they're out of my way. I'm now ready to launch into scanning this new batch, probably tomorrow.
I came across this slide, from 1981, marked "1st Christmas, Pan-Am plane from Tampa to Miami." And sure enough, that is Tampa International Airport in the photo. You could have knocked me over with a feather. What are the odds that I'd buy a pile of random slides in London that contain an image of my hometown airport, taken when I was 15 years old and living about 20 miles from that very spot?
When I was in high school, my friends and I used to go to the airport for fun. Back then you could wander right up to the departure gates without any identification or boarding pass, and we'd explore every public corner of the terminal and page each other on the PA system and generally be silly teenagers. It seemed so exotic and exciting to see people boarding planes for Europe and Mexico and New York. It fueled my dreams of traveling the world.
Incidentally, I discovered that if you enter the tail number of a plane online, you can get information about its use and ownership. The plane above entered service with National Airlines in 1978 and became part of Pan-Am with a 1980 merger, according to this page. (For all you aircraft junkies out there.) In the background are planes from United and the now-defunct Ozark Air Lines.
Here's a detail from a 1984 slide with another hometown connection. That random little kid, sitting in his back garden, is drinking from a cup marked MacDill Air Force Base -- which is in Tampa. I don't know whether he's in England or the USA. The same family is probably responsible for both slides.
Anyway, after lunch I set all that aside and went to work in the garden. We had some ferns in pots that have been struggling, so I planted them in the ground. They were indeed quite rootbound, so I hope they prosper with space to spread out.
Digging in our garden is always an adventure. For one thing, our clayey soil can be hard and heavy, and it's also chock-full of rubbish -- bits of brick and rock, old square nails, you name it. I think when our houses were being built more than 100 years ago, any construction debris just got dumped in the garden, and it's all still there.
Here's some of what I unearthed planting my ferns -- a piece of bright blue tile and some kind of gigantic iron bolt. I tossed the bolt but I kept the tile and added it to my collection of pottery bits. Was our bathroom or kitchen ever that color? Not that I know of.
I also repotted this fern, known as a "golden polypody," according to my Picture This plant identifier app. The app helpfully informs me that "this plant looks sick!" and I'm sure it does, because it was rootbound as all get-out. Repotting it was not easy because I had to remove a fibrous mat of roots growing out the bottom of the old plastic pot, and then I had to cut that pot off because I couldn't get the plant out of it. Then, while repotting, I had to try to preserve those heavy, spreading rabbit's-foot-like roots that have grown over the sides. I wound up breaking a few of those off but I just stuck them in the dirt of the new pot and who knows, maybe they'll grow.
One thing I've learned over the past few weeks, having repotted our tree fern and now replanted these three, is that ferns have a root system from hell. I always thought they were these ephemeral little forest plants, but no, they are freaking prehistoric monsters. I guess that's why they've survived for millions of years.
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A lovely coincidence re the Tampa slides.
ReplyDeleteYou've made me more aware of all my ferns now! Many years ago I had a wasps nest in the centre of a large one.
ReplyDeleteWendy (Wales)
That’s a bit of magic with the Tampa connection.
ReplyDeleteI've got to say, I am missing tales of weeding in the library and the brutal punishments that Big Boss Woman meted out out to all male members of the library team. Ah. those were the days.
ReplyDeleteGreat to see the Tampa slides - confused about the caption on the Pan Am plane, because when I was a stewardess on Pan Am they didn’t have any domestic flights (between 2 US cities) but only international. That was in 63. Tampa to Miami wouldn’t have happened then.
ReplyDeleteGreat old Pan Am photo. My father owned a plane in the early 1960's, a couple of years ago I searched the tail number, and found the current owner, an aircraft restorer near Jacksonville Florida. The plane was built in the 1930's, he sent me photos of the restoration in progress.
ReplyDeleteThat is such a cool photo of the Pan Am plane. A sure blast from the past. And I also remember the days when one could walk up to the gate to greet people.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know the tail number was a permanent id. Interesting to track down an aircraft. Barbara has me wondering about PanAm now.
ReplyDeleteI have one of those ferns, so thank you for providing me with the name. Mine has turned bluish and I thought there was something wrong with it, but nope. I think I'll try repotting it.
ReplyDeleteThe slides continue to surprise. I'm sorry the link to youtube wasn't helpful.
We have found some interesting things in our garden, too. The best was a large nail, and by large I mean it's about three feet long! We have it laying on the fireplace hearth!
ReplyDeleteWhat a coincidence that you bought slides in the UK that included photos taken in Tampa.
ReplyDeleteFerns growing in a swarth are lovely. Once they get established, they spread and make a great display.
In Massachusetts, the ferns on my property grow freely and I mow around them. Think islands of ferns. In the Fall they turn brown and die back so I mow over them. In the Spring they pop up again as green islands of ferns.
Tampa slides in your pile! Amazing. Last day of school in my city. Is your old workplace out for the summer now? Do you have an end of school year party to attend?
ReplyDeleteWe've found so many things in this yard as we've dug around. Some quite old, some not but still interesting.
ReplyDeleteYes! I remember when you could go to the airport just for fun. Watching people get off the plane from far away places was always interesting. The greetings as loved ones re-met.
Times have certainly changed.
Pretty interesting to find slides of Tampa airport and a cute little guy drinking from a MacDill Air Force Base cup. Sometimes I think we do indeed create our own reality.
I used to find stuff in the dirt of the city house but not so much out here. Whenever I repot a rootbound plant I usually trim off some of the roots and loosen them up as much as possible before putting them back in dirt. It's been my experience that just sticking a root bound plant in the ground or in a bigger pot does not necessarily allow it to do better, to spread out.
ReplyDeleteI remember those days when you could wander anywhere you wanted at the airport. I loved hearing those calls for departing flights to all those exotic places.
ReplyDeleteI also remember seeing some kind of nature show many years ago that talked about the underground connections that plants make. I don't remember details but I do remember thinking there were worlds of alien creatures living right here around us.
Pan Am In Tampa , Crazy A$$ Cool - My Perspective About Slides Has Definitely Changed - You Rock
ReplyDeleteHappy Friday ,
Cheers
The slides keep on giving surprises.
ReplyDelete