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Prairie Plants Seed Savers Exchange Spring 2013 Plant List The following heirloom plants, prairie plants and potatoes will be available at the LILLIAN GOLDMAN VISITORS CENTER AT SEED SAVERS HERITAGE FARM 3074 North Winn Road, near Decorah, Iowa The Visitors Center will open for the season on March 1, 2013 Hours: Monday-Friday 9-5; Saturday & Sunday 10-5 Note the dates of availability listed below in the different plant sections Please call for any questions (563) 382-6104 or (563) 382-5990 Visit us at www.seedsavers.org • Satisfaction Guaranteed Seed Savers Exchange is Heritage Farm, SSE’s a non-profit, member-supported headquarters near Decorah, organization that saves and shares the Iowa, is currently maintaining heirloom seeds of our garden heritage, thousands of varieties of forming a living legacy that can be heirloom vegetables and fruits. passed down through generations. Revenue raised from the sale of When people grow and save seeds, they these plants is used to support join an ancient tradition as stewards, the maintenance of the vast seed nurturing our diverse, fragile, genetic collections at Heritage Farm. and cultural heritage. 1 plant BRASSICA TOMATO 32 Available beginning April 15 (3" Pots–Available April 29 – June 9) varieties $175 • Asian Greens-Mizuna, Prize Choy, Tatsoi • Calabrese Broccoli • Amish Paste • Gold Medal • Rosso Sicilian • De Cicco Broccoli • Beam’s Yellow Pear • Green Zebra • Silvery Fir Tree • Early Snowball Cauliflower • Black Cherry • Hillbilly Potato Leaf • Speckled Roman • Long Island Improved 4-Pack Brussels Sprouts $250 • Black Krim • Hungarian Heart • Stupice • Copenhagen Market Cabbage • Brandywine • Italian Heirloom • Tommy Toe • Mammoth Red Rock Cabbage (aka Red Brandywine) • Lemon Drop • Trophy • Lacinato Kale • Red Russian Kale • Brandywine • Mexico Midget • Ukranian Purple (Sudduth’s) • Mortgage Lifter, • Velvet Red MISC. Available April 29 – June 9 • Cherokee Purple Halladay’s • Wapsipinicon Peach • Seed Savers Lettuce Mixture • Cherry Roma • Paul Robeson • White Tomesol • Purple Vienna Kohlrabi 4-Pack • Dester • Peach Blow Sutton • Wisconsin 55 • White Vienna Kohlrabi $ 50 • German Pink • Red Zebra • Giant Pascal Celery 2 • Five Color Silverbeet Swiss Chard 1 plant PEPPER 23 POTATO (3" Pots–Available April 29 – June 9) varieties $ 75 USDA Certifed Seed Potatoes 1 Available beginning March 18 • Alma Paprika (Very Sweet) • Garden Sunshine (Sweet) • Miniature Yellow Bell (Sweet) Pricing for Standard Varieties: • Ancho Gigantea (Med. Hot) • Jalapeño, Traveler 2.5# Bag 5# Bag 25# Bag • Napoleon Sweet (Sweet) $ $ 25 $ 50 • Black Hungarian (Med. Hot) Strain (Hot) 10 16 62 • Orange Bell (Sweet) • All Blue • Purple Viking • Bull Nose Bell (Sweet) • Jimmy Nardello’s (Sweet) • Purple Beauty (Sweet) • Desiree • Sangre • Buran (Sweet) • Joe’s Long Cayenne (Hot) • German Butterball • Yellow Finn • Ruby King(Sweet) • Nicola • Yukon Gold • Chervena Chushka (Sweet) • King of the North (Sweet) Pricing for Fingerling Varieties: • Chocolate Beauty (Sweet) • Miniature Chocolate • Tolli’s Sweet Italian (Sweet) 2.5# Bag 5# Bag 25# Bag Bell (Sweet) • Wisconsin Lakes (Sweet) $ 75 $ 75 $ • Fatalii (Sizzling Hot) 13 23 100 • Miniature Red Bell (Sweet) • French Fingerling • La Ratte • Fish (Med. Hot) • Rose Finn Apple EGGPLANT ONION & LEEK APPLES-BERRIES (3" Pots–Available April 29 – June 9) Available beginning April 15 RHUBARB Available beginning April 15 • Diamond • Borettana, Yellow • Listada de Gandia 1 plant 1 pot • Apple-Esopus Spitzenburg $ 75 • Yellow of Parma Onion 50 plants per pot • Apple-Lady • Pingtung Long 1 $ 75 $ 1 • Apple-Liberty 35 • Rosa Bianca • Blue Solaise Leek each • Apple-Pomme Gris • Apple-Roxbury Russet MISCELLANEOUS (3" Pots - Available April 29 – June 9 • Black Raspberry-Jewel $ 50 8each • Aunt Molly’s Ground Cherry • Red Raspberry-Heritage 1 plant $ 95 • Tomatillo, Green $ 75 • Rhubarb-Crimson Red 1 9each Seed Savers Exchange Spring 2013 Plant List The following heirloom plants, prairie plants and potatoes will be available at the Lillian Goldman Visitors Center At Seed Savers Heritage Farm Thank you for your continued support! OUR GROWERS –Seed Savers Exchange is pleased to offer transplants for your gardens grown by: • Almost There Farms, a beautiful collection of • River Root Farm, a diversified organic vegetable farm greenhouses secluded within an oak forest near Spring nestled into a hillside along the Upper Iowa River, in Green, Wisconsin, run by Phil Roehrborn. Decorah, Iowa, run by Mike Bollinger and Katie Prochaska. CLIMBING SPECIALITY PLANTS PRAIRIE PLANTS Available beginning April 29 3" Pots - Available beginning April 15 Get a jump-start with these 4 to 6-week-old • Big Bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) climbers with bamboo supports included • Black-Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta) • Black-Eyed Susan Vine • Blue False Indigo (Baptisia australis) • Cardinal Climber 1 Gallon • Butterflyweed(Asclepias tuberosa) Pot • Grandpa Ott’s Morning Glory $1650 • Cupplant (Silphium perfoliatum) • Sunrise Serenade Morning Glory • Great Blue Lobelia (Lobelia siphilitica) • Snail Flower • Indian Grass (Sorghastrum nutans) $350 • Joe Pye Weed (Eupatorium fistulosum) Each • Lavender Hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) • Little Bluestem(S. scoparium) • New England Aster (A. novae-angliae) • Ox Eye Sunflower(H. helianthoides) • Prairie Blazingstar (L. pycnostachya) • Prairie Smoke (Geum triflorum) • Purple Coneflower(E. purpurea) HERB PLANTS • Purple Prairie Clover (Dalea purpurea) 3" Pots - Available April 29 - June 9 • Red Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) Note: Frost hardy plants (Bold) will be available beginning April 15; all others available April 29 FLOWER • Basil-Lemon, Purple, Genovese and Thai Available April 29 - June 9 Note: Frost hardy plants (Bold) will be available • Chives-Regular and Garlic beginning April 15; all others available April 29 • Cilantro • Bishop’s Children Dahlia 2-Pack • Dill-Fern Leaf and Grandma Einck’s $ 50 • Fennel-Florence 2 • Hyssop • Empress of India Nasturtium • Lamb’s Ear • Giant Exhibition Coleus • Lavender-Munstead • Giant Spotted Foxglove • Oregano-Greek $325 • Kiss-Me-Over-The-Garden-Gate • Parsley-Giant from Italy Each • Ladybird Nasturtium • Parsley-Triple Curled • Night Scented Tobacco • Rosemary-Upright and Prostrate • Old-Fashioned Vining Petunia • Outhouse Hollyhock 4-Pack • Sage-Green Culinary, Golden, $ 50 Tri-Color • Red Marietta Marigold 2 • Sage- Pineapple • Single Moss Rose • St. John’s Wort • Sky and Ice • Stevia • Snapdragon (Rocket Mix) • Sweet Marjoram • Spider Flower Mixture • Tarragon-French • Sweet Pea (Annual) - Grandiflora Mix • Thyme-Garden, Lemon, Red Creeping, • Sweet Pea (Perennial) Everlasting Wooly • Tall Russell Lupine MISCELLANEOUS (3" Pots - Available April 29 – June 9 • Viola - Historic Pansies Mixture 25 $3 • Wee Willie Dianthus • Sensitive Plant (Mimosa pudica) Each.
Recommended publications
  • Variation in the Grass Pea (Lathyrus Sa Tivus L.' and Wild Species
    Euphytica 33 (1984) 549-559 VARIATION IN THE GRASS PEA (LATHYRUS SA TIVUS L.' AND WILD SPECIES M. T. JACKSON and A. G. YUNUS1 Department of Plant Biology, University of Birmingham, Bl5 2Tr, England Received 21 September 1983 .DEX WORDS Lathyrus sativus,grass pea, wild species,variation, multivariate analyses. SUMMARY Forty-nine accessionsof Lathyrus sativuswere studied for morphological variation. Data were analysed using Principal Components Analysis and Cluster Analysis. The variation in 14 speciesof SectionLathyrus was also evaluated in order to ascertainaffinities betweenL. sativusand other species. L. sativus is a highly variable species,and there is a clear distinction betweenthe blue-flowered fonns from south-west Asia, Ethiopia and the Indian subcontinent, and the white and white and blue flowered fonns with white seedswhich have a more westerly distribution. Differences in vegetative parts may be due to selectionfor forage types. L. sativus appears to be closely related to L. cicera and L. gorgoni, and this relationship needs further investigation. INTRODUCTION The genus Lathyrus is large with 187 speciesand subspeciesrecognised (ALLKIN et al., 1983).Species are found in the Old World and the New World, but clearly there are centres of diversity for Old World speciesin Asia Minor and the Mediterranean region (ZEVEN& DE WET,1982). A number of speciesare usedas animal fodder plants including L. hirsutusand L. palustris, and some are valued as ornamentals, especially L. odoratus,the sweetpea. Only one species,L. sativus,the grasspea, khesari or chick- ling pea is widely cultivated as a food crop, and this pulse is a dependable cropper in drought conditions (SMARTT,1976).
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    October 2019 Horticulture/Small Acreage/2019-01pr Sweet Pea Cut Flower Production in Utah Maegen Lewis, Melanie Stock, Tiffany Maughan, Dan Drost, Brent Black Introduction heavy rain and snowfall. If the plastic is installed Sweet peas are a cool-season annual in Utah, and after heavy precipitation, moisture will be trapped cut flower production is improved with the use of in the tunnel and soil can remain too wet. This high tunnels. Sweet peas should be transplanted makes very early spring planting challenging and early in the spring and harvested until hot summer increases the risk of disease. temperatures decrease stem length and quality. Sweet peas require a strong trellis, high soil fertility, and frequent harvesting. Tunnel-grown sweet peas began producing 4 weeks earlier and had 15% more marketable stems than a field-grown comparison crop in North Logan, Utah. However, our hot, semi- arid climate, combined with insect pressure limited success in our trials. How to Grow Soil Preparation: For optimal growth, sweet peas require rich, well-drained soil. Incorporating an inch of compost into the soil prior to planting can increase fertility, drainage, and organic matter, without creating pH or salinity problems. Conduct a routine soil test to determine any soil nutrient needs prior to planting sweet peas. Soil testing is particularly important when planting in new locations, and should be repeated every 2 years. USU’s Analytical Laboratories performs soil tests. Pricing and information for collecting and submitting a sample is available on their website. For sweet peas grown in a high tunnel, begin planning and maintaining the high tunnel during the ©2019 Utah State Univ.
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  • Diseases of Geranium
    New York State Flower Growers INCORPORATED BULLETIN 201 Secretary, Charles Wilton, Prattsburg, Steuben Co., N. Y. AUG., 1962 Diseases of Geranium Paul E. Nelson Department of Plant Pathology Cornell Ornamentals Research Laboratory Farmingdale, Long Island The geranium (Pelargonium hortorum, Bailey) is one water conducting tissues in stems and branches become of the major pot-plant crops grown in the United States. brown to black 2 to 4 weeks after the plant is infected. At The production of high quality geraniums is often difficult this time one or more leaves on a branch usually wilt or impossible because o£ the widespread occurrence of (Fig. 2). Later the bacteria spread from the water con several geranium diseases. Since diseases can be and often ducting tissue located just under the cortex inward to the are the limiting factor in geranium production, it is im pith and outward to the cortex, causing a brown to black portant that growers be able to recognize and correctly discoloration in the stem. At this stage the exterior por identify the symptoms of these diseases. This article is in tions of the stem are gray and dull in appearance and de tended to be an aid in identifying the important geranium foliation of the plant (Fig. 3, A) continues until only the diseases by providing both written descriptions and photo tips of the branches have leaves. The stem rapidly graphic illustrations of their symptoms. blackens (Fig. 3, B) and shrivels into a dry rot leaving Published papers of several investigators have been the stem fibers and epidermis intact but destroying the used in preparing this article.
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  • How to Grow Sweet Pea
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  • Raisers and Introducers of Sweet Pea Epithets – Updated 2 August 2021
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  • Inheritance in Sweet Peas William Melville Fleming
    Inheritance in Sweet Peas William Melville Fleming IHHERITANCE I N SWEET PEAS *y William Melvin Fleming A Thesis submitted for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURE in the Department of HORTI CULTURE THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA APRIL 1925. ACKNOwTJEDGKLDSNTS. The writer desires to express his grateful appreciation of the opportunities afforded for carrying on this investigation to the seed growers of Cowiohan and more particularly to Messrs A. & S. Matthews, of Weetholme, who gave valuable assistance in collecting notes in the field and to Messrs Crosland Bros, and Capt• Dobbie of Duncan, who extended many privileges in pursuit of these studie e» He Is also deeply grateful to Mr. George Robinson of Royal Oak, who made possible a greatly increased field of study by assistance in reoords on over 80 varieties, many of whioh were not grown in Cowiohan. He would further express sincere appreciation to Associate Prof* A.7. Bares, A.B.; B.8.; M.S. and to Assistant Prof. P. X. Buck, B.B.A. of the University of British Columbia, for assistance in planning and develop­ ing these studies, and also to Prof. A.H. Hutchinson, M.A. Ph. D. of the same University, whose suggestions for study In genetios proved a rich field of material and made possible the induction of valuable material that might otherwise have been overlooked. To Prof. R. C. Punnett, P. R. 8. of Cambridge University, who has probably done the most original research along the line of genetics In sweet peas, the writer is indebted for furnishing copies of available publications.
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