General information and discussion about cultivating all other edible garden plants.
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February 22, 2017 | #1 |
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Buying Seeds
Today we started buying garden seeds for the 2017 garden. I want to look up information on them. Just wondering what seed varieties you all already have or are buying to grow this year? So far, we bought:
Mustard - Florida Broad Leaf Okra - Emerald Spinach - Bloomsdale |
February 22, 2017 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2015
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Kale-Dwarf Siberian Kale
Watermelon-Orangelo Watermelon Squash-Red Kuri Squash Squash-Chirimen Squash-kikuza Eggplant-Thai purple ribbed eggplant Eggplant-Rosita Eggplant-Halap Kirisi Mustard-mizuna Mustard-Osaka Purple Mustard Melon-bitter melon (Chinese type) Eggplant-ao daimaru Fava Bean-Aquadulce |
February 22, 2017 | #3 |
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Location: Virginia Bch, VA (7b)
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Excluding tomato and peppers.
Baker Creek Seeds: Radish Pink Beauty Lettuce Rocky Top Mix Melon Green Skin Swiss Chard Rainbow Purple Teepee Bean Dragon Tongue Bean Holy Basil Hale's Best 45 melon Sugar Baby From Johnny's: Machiaw Eggplant Diva Cucumber Cilantro Older Kale seed Going to get bulk mustard greens from a feed and seed this spring, but will not plant it until fall. |
February 22, 2017 | #4 |
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Sounds really good. If I were to add tomato and pepper seeds, I would still be typing for the next hour
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February 22, 2017 | #5 |
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February 22, 2017 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: MA/NH Border
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I recently bought Early Jersey Cabbage, Rainbow Lacinato Kale, and Boltardy and Crosby Egyptian Beets from Hudson Valley.
The cabbage and beets are new crops for me and I'm mainly growing them for my husband. They will be fall crops which will go in after my garlic is harvested. |
February 22, 2017 | #7 |
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Newfoundland, Canada
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I'm going to buy some Magda kousa F1 squash this year, because they're so good and I want to share them with a friend.
Except for some impulse purchases last summer when I had cash on hand in the store, I haven't bought a seed for years. Between the MMM bonuses and Nicky's swap I had many things to grow, and I grew and saved seed to swap from many more things which kept me going. Saving and swapping seed has been a huge experience for me. Every kind of seed has it's own requirement and shucking techniques... very time intensive but totally worth it for the learning and also of course, any time you have more time than money. I can't believe how expensive seed has become! Holy cow. Seed saving is a must know for hard times. |
February 22, 2017 | #8 | |
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Location: Vancouver Island
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Quote:
I remember very well tables and tables of drying seeds in my grandmother's basement every winter. She saved most of her own seed from year to year from OP vegetables and she didn't do it Fancy. Just cleaned and spread out to dry on newspaper or seed heads placed into paper bags until they were dry like dill or lettuce and then shaken to release the seeds but catch them in the bag at the same time. My grandma never fermented tomato seeds. She just squeezed seeds into newsprint, spread them out and let them dry stuck irrevocably to that paper. Then she would just cut that up with scissors and plant those seeds paper and all. What I wouldn't give for a piece of my grandmas newspaper stuck with dried tomato seeds.... Long gone I'm afraid but I like to think I have some of her green thumb. She was an amazing gardener all 4 foot 10 of her. KarenO Last edited by KarenO; February 22, 2017 at 11:10 PM. |
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February 22, 2017 | #9 |
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I started saving seeds back in 2011. The first were black eyed peas and top crop bush beans. I joined Tomatoville in 2014 and have saved all kinds of seeds since. Until late 2015, I had never heard of a runner bean. Now I have several different varieties saved from last year's plants. Of course, countless tomato and pepper seeds too.
My wife saves flower seeds. She has enough morning glory seeds to plant out a square mile. AND THEN ... I saved some emerald velvet okra seeds that were accidentally crossed with Clemson spineless that grew out some okra not fit for the compost pile It was that bad. Buying seeds for me is like window shopping is for others. I try to stick with buying Ferry~Morse ($1.44 per pack), American Seed (5 packs for a dollar), and from the local feed and seed stores. I have gone-in with our two adult children/men and purchased from Baker Creek and Kitazawa. |
February 23, 2017 | #10 |
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Red Russian kale
White Russian kale Hot Portugal pepper Parsley Basil Pink wave petunia Irish poet tassel flower Rugosa Friulana Squash Dixie queen watermelon Peanut pumpkin Meraviglia Di Venezia Bean Landreth Stringless Bush Bean Waiting for southern states to get their pea seeds in stock. I am forgetting something...hmmm. |
February 24, 2017 | #11 |
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Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Virginia
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Another tidbit regarding runner beans - arguably, they are one of the most promiscuous. They cross easily and readily, so you should only grow one variety if you're going to save seed. That is unless you own acres and acres and can spread them out.
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February 24, 2017 | #12 | |
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Quote:
If I need to just plant one variety, it would be the IWK. |
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February 24, 2017 | #13 |
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We added some more seeds to the pile yesterday:
Cilantro Radish - Early Scarlet Globe Radish - Sparkler White Tip Squash - Yellow Summer Crookneck Squash - Black Beauty (Zucchini) It was too late to go to the feed store. That's where we will buy pole beans in bulk. I want to find some with the round stringless pods. |
February 28, 2017 | #14 | |
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I also think it has to do with what else the bees have available to "wipe" their feet on. If you've got beans planted, then 25 feet of yummy flowers, then more beans, I think the chances of crossing between the two go way down. Just my 2c. Hope you have a great season! |
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March 2, 2017 | #15 |
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Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
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I placed some 100 Granadero F1 seeds, a package of Sunshine F1 winter squash for a total of $25.80 at Johnny's, but the shipping cost is $9 for that, which is so high for my small order, it will go up more if my order exceeds $30, so it is sitting in my cart, I have to think about that. Those will be grown and donated, so I'll have to find the seeds one way or another somewhere. Then I got a reminder in my email about not forgetting to checkout... I'm thinking about it
Park seeds ship for $2.99. and these are for fun for myself mostly except for the beans. They are actually offering free shipping if you don't use your 10% discount. But Park seeds arrive slow for me in the past, 3 weeks plus. 05218-PK-P1 Toy Choy Hybrid Pak Choi Seeds 1 05456-PK-P1 Space Hybrid Spinach Seeds 1 02236-PK-P1 Park's Picks Purple Zinnia Seeds 1 51095-PK-P1 Marvelette Blue Calamint Seeds 1 51904-PK-P1 Tuscany® Lavender Picotee Verbena Seeds 51460-PK-P1 Bergamo Bee Balm Seeds 1 01805-PK-P Evolution Salvia Seeds 1 Arizona Sun Blanket Flower Seeds 1 Diva Cucumber Seeds 1 beans (P) Pkt of 200 seeds 1 05609-PK-P1 Carmen Hybrid Pepper Seeds Copy and Paste, sorry for the format. Last edited by NewWestGardener; March 2, 2017 at 05:12 PM. |
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