Oh good. Then you'll get to experience a Texas 'winter', if you haven't already. My DH and I lived in the Hou area for 20 years. They're zone 9 (coastal). We're 2 hours north of Hou now, and seem to have a different 'climate' (if you will). We've been in zone 8 for 5 years now, and I'm still learning about things I can grow here that I couldn't by the coast and vice-versa.
NYS is gorgeous. We were there a few years ago in the fall. Up by Rhinebeck & West Point. The trees were beautiful! Are you in a mountainy area?
Our property is located in what is called a Post Oak Savannah. We have veins of rich soil, veins of sandy loam, and veins of mucky clay & petrified wood running through our property. It's pretty neat, but also poses it's own set of problems. We can't just pick a plot and plant on it, we have to pick a plot and then figure out what trees, etc. would work in that particular vein of soil. LOL!
I use a combination of raised beds, sheet mulching, and guilds, though I haven't tried the three sisters guild yet. Right now I'm setting up our fruit tree guilds.
We found out that in the winter, a nursery chain in Houston, TX marks all their trees down by 70%. The people in that area seem to do more landscape type of planting, so they try to get rid of the trees to get ready for 'spring color' I guess. So my DH & I drive 2 hrs south and load up on fruit trees & vines. 1 gallon pots (trees & fruiting vines) for $4 to $18 each. Most run about $6-8. We bought one untagged "Mystery" tree for $4 just for fun last year. We still haven't figured out what it is.
Things like Kiwi's are in the $18 range (regularly $60). We got 2 females and a male last year to see if they would work in our zone, but the sun killed 1 female and fire ants killed the 2nd female. So now we just have one lonely male
. All the 'cheap' plants lived though. Go figure. We'll get another female or two this year and plant them directly under the oak tree to see how that works. I'll also keep a better eye on them for fire ants. If that doesn't work, I don't know what I'll do with our poor little male. He seems pretty happy so far, so it's not the soil. I planted them on the north side of our chicken run which is under an oak tree, so they had something to climb, and they had shade. The male is a little more shaded than the females were though, so I'm hoping more shade is the key.
If anyone knows about kiwi's, I'm open for suggestions.