And here's the pics from the garden. We kinda started it late and if it looks dry, that's because it's about mid day, and I tend to water in the evening. Let the plants drink up over night.

Our pineapple. I thought I killed it awhile back when some of the center leaves died and rotted loose, but then I noticed a nice crown of fresh green growing up in the middle.

That is a picture of the hibiscus leaf curling up, so if anyone knows that this is anything worse than the normal progress of the plant, please let me know and some possibilities as to how to fix it.

And this is the aloe plant. I'm curious about the mid-section of the leaf turning yellow like that. It becomes softer, and eventually can no longer support itself. Is it overwatering, underwatering, too much or too little sun, something worse? All knowledge is appreciated.

and that's a picture of what the rest of the garden looks like. The taller plant is a rose bush, all of it's blooms passed their prime not too long ago. Still waiting to see if another batch grow up on us. Any insight on the best way to prune the plant to encourage more blossoms? The shorter plants are dwarf penta's, they're supposed to attract butterflies. The pink ones handled the transplant very well, but the purples had a rough time of it and are only now really bouncing back from it.
You can see it, but behind the post, against the garage is a mango tree that we're going to plant this weekend. For the lunar planters out there, I know it's not anywhere near the waxing moon, but we don't want to let it set for a month before we get it planted.
I remember 56k, when you thought you were going fast if you could download a 1MB file in under a half hour.