Part Deux
Seeds worth trading for... |
There were two people specifically who were generous above and beyond. One was a guy who grows tomatoes. I read a few blogs about certain kinds of tomatoes and starting a hunt to find some seeds. I sent and email to a guy who seemed to be a guru in the field and he was more than happy to help us out. He ended up sending us like 10 varieties, all with nothing from us in terms of a trade or postage and more importantly, he sent us two strains which he himself created and named just this year. One named for his wife which I cant wait to check out. Doubt I'll tell D about that one or I'll be knee deep in veggie genes trying to make a Danni Squash.
5 Colour Twilight Zone |
By the way, one of the bean seeds was suppose to be on the Mayflower back in the day and the strain has been kept 'pure' since then. If nothing else, we can grow one or two plants of the most rare or desirable plants and sell/trade the seeds in the future years. We do value the benefit of heritage seed saving and being anti GMO, so we will do our part.
Something of note to keep your eye out for when checking the seed swapping sites are either;
- 'Round Robin Exchange' where you mail in 10 packs each of 1 - 5 kinds of seeds to a 'Host', the Host takes your seeds and 10 or 20 other people's who have done the same, then splits them up for all those who participated. You wait patiently and they send you back a package with an interesting mix of seeds. We've joined two so far and just got one back which was exclusively peppers. The number of seeds you get back is usually a direct correlation to how many you send in.
- 'Seed Trains' this is where one person takes a box and starts with a few varieties of seeds. People sign up to be a stop on the train and you mail the package to the next person on the list. When it stops at you, you sort through what you want, add a little to replenish your bounty and mail it on to the next person. We are just waiting for now coming from out west. We found this one on The Hot Pepper , again in the forums section. Wish I liked hot peppers more...
Small portion of the bible... |
I won't bother to get specific with what seeds we have moving into this year, but I will share some overall numbers. Most likely a majority, if not all, will have at least 1 seed planted to test and preserve, but as usual the reality may be different. Some of course will have multiple planted.
Final Seed Tally
- Tomatoes: 55 varieties - small to beefsteak, yellow to black
- Beets: 7 varieties - Striped, yellow and a few variations on the standard red
- Peas: 12 varieties - Not much to say about peas frankly
- Broccoli: 5 varieties - Purple heads, some Italian that branches out and an early sprouter
- Cauliflower: 3 varieties - Super white, a purple and one which is suppose to taste like heaven
- Cucumbers: 10 varieties - Pickling, slicing and a few which may question my manhood
- Lettuce: 15 varieties - These include spinach, romaines, various heads and loose leafs
- Peppers: 45 varieties - Uber spicy, super sweet with every colour and size known
- Carrots: 9 varieties - Rainbow of colours but mainly on the larger size. No minis here
- Beans: 115 varieties - Snaps, dry, rare and some worth 2$/seed. We'll focus on the larger ones
- Melons: 35 varieties - Pumpkins, squash, melons & watermelons. Anything you could ask for
- Potatoes: 10 varieties - Early, mid and late season, mostly large with focus on long storage
- Sweet potatoes: 6 varieties - Testing the waters, most are early season varieties for our climate
- Asparagus: 4 varieties - Green and purple with half being a male only high producing strains
- Garlic: 7 varieties - From all over the world, mild to pungent. Looking forward to this one.
- Misc: 29 varieties: Corn, celery, onions, kohlrabi, brussel sprouts, radish etc etc
Finally, what we did with the seeds was to preserve them not only for safety from natural disasters but also for ease of identification. When the seeds first started coming in I knew the small envelopes they usually come in would be hard to maintain, difficult to sort through and ultimately a recipe for mix-ups and seed errors. To eliminate these pesky issues I went to a friend who has a company shipping Chia Seeds coast to coast. If you don't know Chia seeds, I'll give him a free plug: Chia Seeds
The Larry, Moe and Curly of seed safety |
Seed Bank vault rare opening... |
I'll see you sooner then you think...
Life Lesson # 559b - People, like seeds, need good companionship. Be near those who will help you flourish and bloom. Otherwise you might as well plant yourself under a black walnut tree, alone...
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