Seed Packet Parade!

in ecoTrain4 years ago

IMG_4295.jpg

Way back on Black Friday I put in an order with one of my favorite seed suppliers,Pinetree Seeds . Now, usually they ship out like lightning, but one of the seed packet machines were down and they were waiting on a component so they could get back up and running. Being the awesome peeps that they are, Pinetree's amazing customer service asked if I wanted my ordered shipped in multiple shipments, as they had all of it ready but one packet, which was delayed by the down machine. I chuckled and said I was fine waiting because you know, I have a few feet of snow and typically don't start any seeds until end of February or so.

Well, they finally got the machine squared away because a few days ago I got a padded envelope full of seeds, SQUEE!

IMG_4306.jpg

Jager does not share my enthusiasm for garden seeds...

I order seeds from quite a few different places, but Pinetree has been one of my favorites for years. There's a couple of reasons why. Aside from being a small family run business with excellent customer service, the main reason I love them is they cater to home gardeners, so if I want to try out a new variety without buying six billion seeds, Pinetree is the place to go. They have a glorious selection of heirloom organic seeds too, which makes me happy. I love to try time-tested and true varieties developed by our ancestors!

Every year I pour through the Pinetree catalog when it arrives (usually in mid to late November) and make little stars next to varieties that I want to give a go. After I am done, I go back and have a little heart palpation over the sheer number of stars I put in the book, mainly because they carry herb and flower seeds too, and then I remember that they do a 15% off your entire order Black Friday sale. Phew...

Anyway, Hive being full of awesome homesteaders, gardeners, and people who are just interested in excellent things, I thought it would be cool to share with you all some of the new things I am going to attempt to grow this year!

IMG_4296.jpg

Yard long beans are something I have never grown, but when the entry said they tasted like a cross between asparagus and green beans, I starred that bean like the intriguing legume siren that it is! Plus, I like pole type beans. Double plus, they are PURPLE! My grandma used to grow bushels upon bushels of pole beans and I have that whole fond memory of picking, snapping, and canning green beans thing when it comes to any type of pole bean.

IMG_4297.jpg

Okay, this one isn't new to me, but it is totally worth mentioning. Pinetree's lettuce mix is a salad BOMB! I seed a chunk of row feet of this mix every couple of weeks from the moment the soil is workable until about mid June or so, and this lettuce mix just delivers. There's a excellent mix of leaf, butterhead, and Romaine types, and I cut some for baby lettuce and leave some to mature out. It's got a glorious flavor and color profile, so much yum and ease of growth makes it a winner!

IMG_4298.jpg

Ground cherries are something I have wanted to grow for years. The Hawaiians I live with can put away the fruit, and the idea that I could cultivate an annual out in the garden that yields a fruit which tastes somewhat like a pina colada intrigues me. I mean, just for jam purposes alone I'm intrigued. We'll see how they grow, yield, and taste this year for sure!

IMG_4299.jpg

Sometimes the history of a plant gets me, and this melon is no exception. It's a rare French heirloom that was preserved by the Carmelite monks. I typically don't bother growing melons up here, because our growing season is pretty short, we have cool, non-humid nights, and well, those two reasons really. That said, this melon's back story and it's 80 days until finished packet claim ensnared my interest.

IMG_4300.jpg

We eat a lot of hot food here, and when I say hot, I mean hot. The kids were eating ghost pepper salsa like it was ketchup the other day while playing Diplomacy for hours. One time I almost gave a local BBQ owner a coronary because I dumped several Tablespoons of his aged ghost pepper bbq sauce on my pulled pork sammie. He ran up and offered to go get me a glass of milk, and I replied, "For what?" as I joyfully kept eating. He stood wringing his hands off to the side for a few minutes until he realized that I, like the heathens I live with, truly enjoy hot things.

All that explanatory fluff was to lead up to my next plant try, Bhut Jolokia, AKA The Ghost Pepper. I am so, so excited to grow these little fireballs! Plus, I have a friend who smokes meat like a champion, and I can't wait to give him some of the ghost pepper chilis, this summer is going to be HOT!

IMG_4301.jpg

I'm pretty obsessed with growing pumpkins, so I always get a couple of new varieties to try each year. This time around the sun I will be coaxing these two vines to yield along with all my other tried and true pumpkin types. Early is always a good thing to focus on in our super unpredictable, extreme growing season, and I love me some roasted pumpkin seeds, so the hulless squash got me all kinds of excited.

IMG_4302.jpg

And then came the tomatoes. I usually grow around 50-100 tomato plants, mainly because I like them. And I probably have a problem saying no when it comes to starting seedlings too, but tomatoes are just so yum, and we eat a ton of pizza and spaghetti here, so it's not like they don't get used. That and I give about a truckload away every year too.

Anyway, Marianna's Peace just had a cool story, and I am a sucker for heirloom beefsteak type of tomatoes. When a tomato grows big enough that you can chuck it at an insolent teenager and hear a satisfying plop from forty feet away, you know that the plant was more than worth your time to grow.

The next tomato, the Large Barred Boar, reminded me of what would happen if a Cherokee Purple and a German Striped tomato had a love child. I love growing strange colored heirloom tomatoes, they are just so much fun to look at and eat! Plus, that the variety was developed by a small organic farmer in Northern California is a bonus. Love, love, love supporting small farmers!

Paste tomatoes are a must around here (RE: pizza and spaghetti are a thing in these parts), so I tend to grow a lot of Roma, San Marzano, and Amish Paste tomatoes each year, but the fact that this little heirloom paste tomato was brought to Vermont from Italy during WWII definitely caught my eye, and we will see if yields like I think it will.

IMG_4303.jpg

And finally, there is the Yellowstone carrot. I am a fan of carrots of all colors, and the mellow sweet flesh of yellow carrots is something I adore. When I read this, "it was the largest and longest carrot we have ever grown, with some reaching over 12” on the Pinetree website, you better believe I added Yellowstone to my order. I mean at the very least the horses will be ecstatic.

And there you have, a sampling of some of the many seed varieties that I ordered. I am so excited to get my hands back in the soil. Mainly because it looks like this outside:

IMG_4308.jpg

Remind me I said this in about four months 😉


And on another note, What are you all excited to try out in your gardens this year? I adore hearing about what you are all getting up too in garden-land!


And as most of the time, all of the images in this post were taken on the author's not looking forward to being dropped in compost fifty-two times a day iPhone.


Sort:  

I still haven't been able to get my act together to make garden plans and place orders...

But you got illness for a birthday present, so I kinda understand being a bit behind. Hope you are mending nicely:)

I am in the same boat as @goldenoakfarm: no garden plans and no seeds ordered. I got as far as thinking about it recently. I don't think we got any seed catalogs in the mail yet, which is odd. They would be inspirational if they would turn up. But, once again, I am struggling with how much gardening I should try to do. Realistically, it's all up to me to get it done; hubby can't help any more, son is too busy. And I'm not getting any younger, or any more flexible, or any less sensitive to heat. So I'm not sure whether there will be much of a garden this year. Time will tell.

Everything is a bit off for the second year in a row. Lots of delays and lack of supply, which has made things a bit more interesting for sure. And I totally understand that you have many considerations to consider, seeing how you do most of the gardening and work that goes with it yourself. With those new grandbabies around, I totally understand a shift in time prioritizing. I'm sure we will revisit this subject in the spring:)

Wait, hold up! Did I just learn something entirely new? "Ground cherries"! Never heard of them before! Is that really a thing? Well yes it is coz I just looked it up! You had me at pina colada! I got to get some of these! Thanks for sharing that, Kat!

Right?! They have been tempting me for years, I just have to know if they truly have that flavor profile. Hope you have good luck with them!

Ohhhh! Seeds! You really scored! I love them and especially take great pleasure in trying to save seeds from plants. This year, I am actually going to be planting pole beans, asparagus, tomatoes, peppers, and zucchini. A pumpkin is a must and I know there will be other squash. Lettuce is always there in different varieties, whatever we can use from our purchases at the market.

I'm ready to get my hands dirty!

Contact!

You want to know something funny?I don’t even need to buy seeds, I’ve got a huge stash, including seeds I’ve saved, but I just can’t help myself, there’s so many types to try!

I can’t wait to see all the glorious cultivars that you coax out of the Earth! Super excited for you to dive in😊

!PIZZA

I always have something growing! Even now, although it is only parsley and basil and already finished my lettuce.

I love seeds, especially fruit tree seeds! I will do my best to keep it posted!! A woman after my own heart!

!PIZZA back atcha!

I was going to say "seed porn" but they're all still tastefully dressed. I need to try and plan for our next season.

,😂😂

Well, you didn't beat around the bush, LOL! Hope to see your seed porn...er, I mean plans posted soon😂

Ermahgerd, SHEEDS!!!!

That first comment was just my typical initial reaction when I see seed packets.

The number of tomatoes on Earth really boggles my mind. Every year there's new ones with new colors that have never been seen before. I love it.

In our garden this year, we'll be growing a lot more beans and onions. I've fallen in love with them. Last year we went N-V-T-S nuts on the tomatoes, only to find out that they set off the wife's hashimotos disease, so I gave away tomatoes from 20 plants.

Most of the garden space this year though will be used for rabbit food. I'm tired of paying for pellet, and there's gonna be inordinate numbers of rabbits here very soon. We've found they love radishes and turnips, so those will probably be our staples. I get those seeds from our local feed store in bulk, like $3 a pound or so. As for ordering seeds, I don't know that we will this year. My friend grew a ton of bean seeds, and I have plenty of others stocked, so this might be a first for us.

I have a similar reaction. I mean, I don't even need to order seeds, but I have found that one can never really have too many seeds now, can they?

Oh your poor wife! As a fellow afflicted with the dreaded Hashimoto's Hypothyroidism, I totally feel for her. As long as I stay away from too many starches, the occasional nightshade doesn't set it off, but I am super glad you figured out some of her triggers. Mine was commercially grown beef. It would swell my thyroid something fierce. Blech!

I so, so, so love you are growing your own rabbit food! Have you ever heard of mangels AKA the fodder beet? Up until the turn of the century I guess they were pretty commonly grown for livestock fodder. Radishes and turnips I like though because they are super quick, kinda like those rabbits lol!

Have you made sausage out of your rabbits yet? I have a pile of gifted ducks that I think I am going to make smoked sausage out of...

reading this I’m sure will encourage me to put my garden to use. I haven’t tried cultivating any plant before, I think it’s about time to do so. 🤔

Oh! I hope you enjoy it! Gardening is a wonderful kind of work. Now, I do know people who don't like to garden, but there is something so grand about harvesting food you grew yourself:)

OH, MY!!!!

I finally got my seeds in too! On top of plenty of leftovers from last year. I am doing about twice I did last year. BTW, I hope you will join us, and show off your Growing for 22? Use the tag #GroVid22.

Last year, during the early pandemic, @dreemsteem was thinking of ways to combat the feeling from many of us, of being overwhelmed by CoVid, so she coined the phrase #GroVid19. This year, Over in @dreemport community and the DreemPort Discord Server we're running a February Challenge, for people to earn tokens, and to show off their Gardening and growing! one plant? one Seed? One row? One garden? One farm? Show us your fears and food, your fun and frustration! Participate in the #Grovid22 Challenge!

IMG_2555.JPG

Oooh, those are some nice wares you got there, a lovely selection!

And I will so check out #Grovid22! Thank you so much for sharing that with me, and I can't wait to see how those lovely little beauties yield for you!

I'll bve posting more details about the GroVid Challenge we'll be doing to promote the HiveGarden Community, in @dreemport

My father grew ground cherries this year for the first time..I had never even heard of them before, but I loved snacking on them, his one or 2 plants sure produce a lot!I enjoyed them whenever I would visit

Now I am super excited that I got a couple packs! I have been thinking about getting some to grow for years, but didn't, and now I've got a positive review which makes me look forward to getting those things in the ground!

Thanks for stopping by:)

Congratulations @generikat! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s):

You received more than 65000 upvotes.
Your next target is to reach 70000 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Check out the last post from @hivebuzz:

Hive Power Up Month - Feedback from day 15
Support the HiveBuzz project. Vote for our proposal!

PIZZA! PIZZA!

PIZZA Holders sent $PIZZA tips in this post's comments:
generikat tipped dswigle (x1)
@dswigle(1/5) tipped @generikat (x1)

You can now send $PIZZA tips in Discord via tip.cc!