May 6, 2016 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Canada
Posts: 1,553
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Wemer's.. check this beauty out!!!!
Sorry the title should say Welmers.
I got a very nice thank you card in the mail today with a packet of seeds enclosed. It was a company I have never heard of. The seeds I got are very rare so I was thrilled . Curiosity made me look them up and wow did I have a strange experience reading some of the offerings. eg Cut Melon..shows a picture with a hanging squash that has a lump cut off it..I kid you not. it was under edible fruits by the way if anyone wants to look How about Powder Beauty tomato, or Red Peach tomato,Yellow Peach tomato, Mauve Zebra and Purple Goodness tomato. The corn was interesting to..White Waxy,Yellow Waxy,Red Waxy and Black waxy corn I further noticed they have two website one in the UK and one in the US http://walmerseeds.co.uk/index.html http://walmers-usa.com/index.html Take a look, it makes interesting reading but you have to look through the various categories as some things are in funny places. Oh and there is a multi pack section at the end with red tomatoes, yellow..etc etc Have fun XX Jeannine Last edited by Jeannine Anne; May 6, 2016 at 03:51 AM. |
May 6, 2016 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Plantation, Florida zone 10
Posts: 9,283
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Golden string pumpkin seems to be a spaghetti squash.
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May 6, 2016 | #3 | |
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A cauliflower is shown, Ided as just cauliflower A picture of spinach is shown,Ided as just spinach. And I don't have the patience to go through , well Idid, how almost all any of the tomatoesare Ided. Not a place I'd buy seeds from, that's for sure, and of course, just my opinion after spending quite a bit of time,but only in the vegetable section. Carolyn
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May 6, 2016 | #4 |
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Join Date: Nov 2011
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No phone number. No physical address. No "about us" page.
Three strikes⚾️⚾️⚾️ |
May 6, 2016 | #5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Norway
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I'd be wary of them. In very small print on the home page it says Walmers is a "trading name of China Seeds Ltd. registered in England".
Steve |
May 6, 2016 | #6 | |
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Sorry. Carolyn
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May 6, 2016 | #7 |
Tomatovillian™
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I found this listing of Canadian suppliers last week and bookmarked.
From a treeHugger article, "Seed Sources for Canadian Gardeners 6 & 7. Terra Edibles and Salt Spring Seeds A couple of readers asked for recommendations for seed companies that Canadian gardeners, interested in heirloom seeds, can turn to in search of seeds. Some commenters chimed in and recommended Terra Edibles and Salt Spring Seeds. Since I don't know much about Canadian seed companies I turned to my friend Kelly, who runs the Populuxe Seed Bank in Canada, for her recommendations. 8, 9 & 10. The Cottage Gardener, Seeds of Victoria, and Solana Seeds She wrote back, “The Cottage Gardener is my absolute favorite. Seeds of Victoria is probably my second fave. Solana Seeds has really neat rare stuff.”.." |
May 6, 2016 | #8 | |
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One is Tania and the other is Jeff Casey and both ship to the US but many of the Canadian companies don't ship to the US,only within Canada. Without checking last I knew it was Solana seeds,for one,that would not ship to the US. And I bring up the US vs Canada issue seeing that you are from the US. Carolyn,who also has not heard of the Populuxe seed bank,The Canadian Seed Bank yes, and their equivalent of SSE as well, but not a Populuxe one.
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May 6, 2016 | #9 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Steve |
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May 6, 2016 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2015
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Jeannine is Canadian and i have been lightly putting together a list of Canadian suppliers as i have a home in Newfoundland where i am at the moment.
Within the next year or two i will be up here a full growing season, hopefully, so i'm planning a greenhouse and searching sites and its been raining quite a bit....lots of reading time. |
May 6, 2016 | #11 | |
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May 6, 2016 | #12 | |
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https://www.heritageharvestseed.com/ And here's the list of all Canadian seed companies,I didn't check it to see which ones are still in business. https://www.google.com/search?q=cana..._AUIBigA&dpr=1 Carolyn
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May 6, 2016 | #13 |
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I'll add those two to my list Carolyn. Thanks for that!
I did bring along a tray of healthy culls, last minute, using the headroom of our book crate. A couple dozen survived the trip and are under a new stoplight set-up. To be grown out by friends and neighbors here. I also realize i do not need to purchase from only Canadians but i was curious what is available in other crops as well. Garlics, onions, fruit trees, etc. Putting in horseradish from a nursery stop in NewBrunswick. Also searching other nurseries along my driving route once over the border. |
May 6, 2016 | #14 | |
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I didn't realize you also had a home in Newfoundland,that gets me thinking of the Viking presence there https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%27Anse_aux_Meadows And of course I'm always interested in the Vikings since on my maternal side my grandfather's ancestors were from Germany and my grandmother's family were from Uppsala, Sweden, Viking area, so I probably have some Viking genes lurking within me. Carolyn
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May 6, 2016 | #15 |
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And i should have said, Jeannine, being Canadian,... (bad wording)
It also helps to look at what does well here, but the Catskill Mnts is pretty tough as it is so i've got experience. I'm rather remote here with a local food market/hammer and nails/fireworks/booze store that just has a dozen seed packets, simple roots crops Same roots grown here and cheap to just purchase already bagged. I do have a healthy seed box collection here by bringing along from NY over the years. I do have a fine rhubarb patch I have divided a few times. Just now showing itself. yes, the Vikings, and another discovery that is being excavated now found via satellite much further south. |
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