I've still got plants on my porch.
I added Miracle Grow to everything a few weeks ago. The maple has got a whole new batch of big leaves and a few side trunks growing around the base. The tomato plants are about two feet tall in a four-gallon pot, but haven't blossomed yet. The red and green bell-pepper plants (those that survived) are about five inches tall in gallon buckets. No production from those yet, either. I've recently planted 60 seeds in peat-pots and Dixie cups (orange and yellow bell peppers, tomatillos, grape tomatoes, habernero peppers, pear seeds, and grapefruit seeds). Since it's so hot and dry now, I have to keep the peat pots in a thin layer of water in a shallow tray.
This is actually quite fun, and doesn't cost much.
This started last year with the maple, which (as an uprooted sapling) was about to get thrown out with the landscaping waste at place where I volunteer on Sundays. On a whim, I took it home, buying a pot and a bag of dirt on the way home. Symbolic, I guess... something to plant in the yard when I finally own my home (or when hell freezes over, whichever comes first). The pear and grapefruit seeds are just because I've always wanted to try growing a tree from the seed. The peppers and tomatoes are in hopes of having my own source of fresh produce later this year.
BTW, habernero peppers are something you don't fuck with unless you know what you're doing. Think jalapeños are hot, they ain't got shit on haberneros. I use them by boiling a slice or two of habernero with ramen noodles or other soup, to give it some "kick", then I take the habernero slices out and discard them before eating the soup. You only bite into haberneros if you're bat-shit crazy and enjoy extreme pain.