Sunday, March 4, 2012

March 5, 2012 - Ordered the Seeds


It's now March and I am just now starting to take a look at the garden this year.  It's later than years past but I think that because it's been such a mild winter I never got too stir crazy from the snow. But now we're starting to see the first signs of spring: buds on the hydrangeas and green leaves on the strawberries - it's past time to get started!

 
After taking stock of my leftover seeds I made the tough decision to get rid of them all and start fresh. Many are a few seasons old and I don't have confidence that they were stored properly.  I can't bring myself to just throw them away so I'm going to seed bomb them around town and see what happens!

 I ended up ordering  all my seeds from the Seed Savers Exchange s again this year. I've had nothing but good luck with everything I've purchased from them and they seem to be a great organization with interesting varieties.   Here's my order:
  • Amish Snap Peas - Superb snap pea reportedly grown in the Amish community long before present snap pea types. Vines grow 5-6' tall and are covered in 2" translucent green pods. Yields over a 6-week period if kept picked.
  • Snowball Cauliflower - Introduced to American gardeners in 1888 by Peter Henderson & Company. Smooth 6-7" heads of tightly formed white curds are solid, crisp, and tender, excellent quality.
  • Calabrese Broccoli - Popular market variety that was brought to America by Italian immigrants in the 1880s. Tight heads can grow up to 8" in diameter. After the central head is harvested, side shoots will form.
  • True Lemon Cucumber - Heirloom listed in the 1894 catalog of Samuel Wilson of Mechanicsville, Pennsylvania. Once a popular market variety in Australia. Short and plump, resembles a lemon in size, shape, and color; mature fruits even have a faint lemony flavor. Used for pickling, slicing, and in salads.
  • Russian Pickling Cucumber - Originally from Perm, Russia. First offered in the 1991 SSE Yearbook by Daniel L. Flyger from South Dakota who said the seed was “brought to this area by German-Russian immigrants in the 1870s.” Early maturing smooth green pickling cucumber with a delicious sweet flavor and good crunch.
  • Dragon Carrot - The most refined purple carrot available; bred by John Navazio. Sure to be the best selling carrot at specialty and farmers’ markets. Beautiful red-purple exterior provides an amazing contrast with the yellow-orange interior when sliced. Sweet, almost spicy flavor.
  • Scarlet Nantes Carrot - Dates to the 1850s; original seed developed by Vilmorin in France. Cylindrical roots are 7" long with blunt tips. Fine-grained bright red-orange flesh is nearly coreless. Great flavor, sweet and brittle. Good when used as baby carrots.
  • Ideal Market Bean - Introduced to the seed trade in 1914 as Black Creaseback by Van Antwerp’s Seed Store of Mobile, Alabama. Reintroduced in 1924 by Chris Reuter Seed Co. of New Orleans, Louisiana as Reuter’s Ideal Market. Very early and productive 5" snap bean. Excellent quality, stringless, fine texture.
  • America Spinach - Long-standing compact Bloomsdale type. All America Selections winner in 1952. Grows 8" tall with thick, deep green, savoyed leaves. Slow-growing, slow to bolt, heat and drought resistant. Fine quality, suited for spring sowing in long-day areas.
  • Rainbow Char - Australian heirloom from Digger’s Garden Club. Ornamental technicolor mixture of Swiss chards with shades of red, orange, purple, yellow, and white.
  • Oh So Sweet Watermelon - Delicious watermelon that definitely lives up to its name. Originally from Virdie Smith of Gladewater, Texas. Productive plants bear many medium round striped fruits with high sugar content.

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