If any one else is in N central Florida- I will past some "stuff" i wrote about gardening there -on this thread so we can have some discussion -if needed..
We grew dinosaur kale, new kuroda carrot, elephant garlic, yams [dioscores sp. ] sweet potatoes, butter crunch , and winter density, red Cherokee, lettuce, Taro, xanthosoma brasilense, xanthosoma violaceum, several kinds of bananas [some years they froze] sugarsnap peas, and mammoth snow peas, onions, turmeric [both yellow and white] sweet corn, and dent corn, black summer was the best producing pac choi
we trellised our tomatoes to keep them off the ground, and planted corn on the sunny side for shade in mid summer-- same with peppers- sometimes we planted tomatoes between corn rows-- and as you know-- the bugs are terrible.....we had to spray [soap] almost every week- or after a big rain on some things-- Seminole pumpkin ,was our favorite "winter keeper" squash-- once it gets going it is invasive-- but the squash will keep almost a year at room temperatures... has a taste and texture like butternut- but a less favorable seed to fruit ratio - This tropical squash survives by out running the bugs, it roots every place the vine touches the ground- The squash borers kill it,- but by then it has grown another 50 feet and set more fruit... the last few years we just grew that instead of any summer squash, we harvested the green fruit to use as summer squash-- it was wonderful...
-the picture that shows with my ID here is Seminole pumpkin ..
Rabbits like sweet potato especially the foliage, Kale , Seminole Pumpkin [fruit] and they recycle the corn stalks. They readily eat yam [dioscorea sp.] foliage -and some varieties of Yam root, [dioscorea oppositifolia] the Chinese yam.[rabbits don't eat dioscorea bulbifera root, -AKA air potato the very unpopular banned invasive variety..- it is just too toxic, but- they do love the vines and leaves] and of course any part of the carrot . I also grew Jerusalem artichoke for rabbits- they love both tops [a good source of long stem fiber] and the root [about the same calories as Irish potato without the need for cooking]
and use raised beds for drainage . If you have sugar-sand soil- you need lots of organic material and bunny poo