List of products by brand Seeds Gallery

Seeds produced by Seeds Gallery

Seeds produced by Seeds Gallery

There are 408 products.

Showing 376-390 of 408 item(s)

Giant plant (with giant fruits)

Variety from Serbia
"Vezanka" Chili Seeds Old Serbian variety

Vezanka Chili Seeds Old...

Price €4.40 (SKU: C 57)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>"Vezanka" Chili Seeds Old Serbian variety</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 or 50 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <div><span><strong><em>Vezanka, Vezena</em>&nbsp;</strong>peppers are medium to large in size and are long, slender, and taper to a point at the non-stem end, averaging one centimeter in diameter near the stem cap and 15-30 centimeters in length. The pods have prominent, horizontal tan lines, also known as corking, and these lines create a leathery texture. The skin matures from green to red and is very thin, moist, and slightly chewy. Inside the pod, there is a hollow seed cavity housing many round, pale white to cream-colored seeds that are slippery, firm, and crunchy. Vezena peppers have a mild to medium heat, are very aromatic, and are initially sweet with a nutty finish. </span> <h2>Current Facts</h2> <span>Vezena peppers, botanically classified as Capsicum annuum, are a rare heirloom variety native to Eastern Europe that grows on small plants reaching just under one meter in height. Also known as the Rezha Macedonian pepper, Vezeni Piperki, Vezenka, Vezanka, and Vezhenka, the name Vezena Piperka often translates to “engraved” or “embroidered,” a descriptor used to identify the pepper’s unique corked skin. Vezena peppers vary considerably in heat and average between 1,200-5,000 units on the Scoville Heat Scale, with some peppers carrying less capsaicin having a milder taste and some peppers carrying stronger heat similar to jalapeno. Vezena peppers are commonly used as decoration and are also dried and ground for use in spices such as paprika.&nbsp;</span><br> <h2>Nutritional Value</h2> <span>Vezena peppers contain vitamins C, A, K, and B6, potassium, manganese, iron, magnesium, copper, and fiber.&nbsp;</span><br> <h2>Applications</h2> <span>Vezena peppers are best suited for both raw and cooked applications such as grilling and roasting. They can be chopped, diced, and incorporated into salsas or they can be roasted or boiled and used in marmalades and spreads. Vezena peppers are also commonly dried and hung for extended use or ground into paprika and chile salt. They can also be pickled or smoked for an added flavor. Vezena peppers pair well with savory foods, omelets, onion, garlic, sour cream, yogurt, meats such as poultry, pork, beef, and fish, creamy sauces, rice, potatoes, goulash, and boiled or steamed vegetables. They will keep up to one week when stored in a paper bag in the crisper drawer of the refrigerator. Vezena peppers have extremely thin skin and will dry out quickly if left in a dry, warm environment.&nbsp;</span><br> <h2>Ethnic/Cultural Info</h2> <span>In Serbia, Vezena peppers are often hung in large clusters around homes and are dried naturally in the autumn sun. The peppers are then left as decoration or are used for grinding into spices and powders. Vezena peppers have been grown in Serbia for hundreds of years, and the Serbian farmers search for the fruits with the most corking striations and collect the seeds as these peppers are considered the most valuable to grow.&nbsp;</span><br> <h2>Geography/History</h2> <span>Vezena peppers are native to Eastern Europe, specifically to Serbia. The exact origins are unknown, but these peppers are believed to have been cultivated for hundreds of years and are also found in Albania, Yugoslavia, and other select areas in the Balkan region.</span></div> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
C 57 (0.4g)
"Vezanka" Chili Seeds Old Serbian variety
Violet Sparkle Sweet Pepper Seeds 1.95 - 1

Violet Sparkle Sweet Pepper...

Price €1.95 (SKU: P 40)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>Violet Sparkle Sweet Pepper Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 5 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>Pointed, wedge-shaped fruit is purple streaked with pale yellow. We originally received a few seeds of this variety from a Russian seed trader. Ripens red. Very lovely and delicious, sweet, crisp and thick-walled. One of the finest and prettiest peppers we have tried!</p> <p>The flavor is excellent: sweet and aromatic, but you must wait until the peppers fully mature; they are very bland in immature stages. Wait until they are red and orange. I loved watching these peppers grow and their color change as they matured. They aren't just gorgeous in the purple stage they also turn yellow, orange, red with beautiful streaking and different color patterns when in-between colors.</p>
P 40 (5 S)
Violet Sparkle Sweet Pepper Seeds 1.95 - 1
VIOLETTA Violet pepper Seeds

VIOLETTA Violet pepper Seeds

Price €2.00 (SKU: PP 41)
,
5/ 5
<div id="idTab1" class="rte"> <h2><strong><em><span style="text-decoration:underline;">VIOLETTA Violet pepper Seeds</span></em></strong></h2> <h3><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 8 seeds.</strong></span></h3> <p>Violetta is a thick-fleshed block pepper coming in 3 different colors. These peppers weigh 250 g (0,6 lbs) each and start from violet, then turn green and then finally red. They appear riper, the sweeter. Violetta can be grown outdoors in warm areas or in greenhouses.</p> <p>Capsicum annuum         </p> <p>Harvest: from August</p> <p>Plant height:</p> <p>outdoors: 70 cm (28 in)</p> <p>indoors: more than 70 cm (28 in)</p> </div>
PP 41 (8 S)
VIOLETTA Violet pepper Seeds

Variety from Russia
Volgograd Tomato Seeds Russian Heirloom

Volgograd Tomato Seeds...

Price €2.05 (SKU: VT 140)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>Volgograd Tomato Seeds Russian Heirloom</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color:#f60101;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p><span>Other Names for Tomato 'Volgograd' Volgograd Winter, Volvograd. 'Volgograd' is a Tomato variety in the Solanum genus with a scientific name of Solanum lycopersicum. 'Volgograd' is considered a heirloom OP (open polliated) cultivar.</span></p> <p><span>65 days, bush habit, regular leaf, 2-5 oz oblate or round red fruit which may have green shoulders. no cracking, the plants are loaded with fruit, very good ‘old-fashioned’ tomato taste, early tomato. good for cool season, or cool areas.</span></p> <p><span>Dislikes heat.</span></p> <p><span>This variety is an Fruit that typically grows as an Annual/Perennial, which is defined as a plant that can matures and completes its lifecycle over the course of one year or more.</span></p> <p><span>Volgograd Tomato is normally fairly low maintenance and is normally quite easy to grow, as long as a level of basic care is provided throughout the year. Being aware of the basic soil, sun and water preferences will result in a happier and healthier plant.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Growing Volgograd from seed</span></strong></p> <p><span>Start seeds indoors six weeks before last frost date.</span></p> <p><span>By our calculations, you should look at sowing Volgograd about 42 days before your last frost date.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Transplanting Volgograd</span></strong></p> <p><span>Plant to the first set of true leaves to promote strong root growth.</span></p> <p><span>Ensure that temperatures are mild and all chance of frost has passed before planting out, as Volgograd is a tender plant.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Tomato Volgograd Etymology</span></strong></p> <p><span>Volgograd Winter, aka Volgograd is from the Volgograd region of Russia.</span></p> <p><span>“Winter” sometimes tacked on to the name Volgograd, because it does best in cool weather.</span></p>
VT 140 (10 S)
Volgograd Tomato Seeds Russian Heirloom

Variety from United States of America
VOYAGE Tomato Seeds - Heirloom Variety

VOYAGE Tomato Seeds -...

Price €1.95 (SKU: VT 86)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>VOYAGE Tomato Seeds - Heirloom Variety</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>Voyage Tomato is about as strange-looking tomato as you will find. The voyage tomato is an old Indian heirloom variety from Central America. It owes its name to the fact that, due to its unusual fruit form, it is ideally suited as food for travel. The name voyage comes from the idea that you can take it on a voyage and not have to eat the whole fruit. Pulling sections off and eating them as you need it.</p> <p>Indeterminate, regular leaf, sprawling plants produce very unusually, 120 grams, red, lumpy and beautiful tomatoes.</p> <p>Don't miss this fantastic strange variety for your garden this year...</p><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VT 86
VOYAGE Tomato Seeds - Heirloom Variety

Variety from United States of America
Wagner Blue Yellow Tomato Seeds 2.25 - 1

Wagner Blue Yellow Tomato...

Price €1.65 (SKU: VT 13)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Wagner Blue Yellow Tomato Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10, 20, 50 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>This rare and beautiful tomato comes from the breeder Tom Wagner. Wagner Blue Yellow is a rare eye-catching tomato that is bright yellow, with dark blue marbled shoulders. They develop the blue-purple color as they grow, and the more sun that each tomato receives, the deeper that color becomes. Wagner Blue Yellow is a small salad-type tomato, though still larger than a cherry tomato at about <strong>5-6 cm in size and 50-90 grams of weight</strong>, and it has a mild, almost citrusy flavor with an appealing juicy texture. The fruits ripen after 60 to 70 days. Wagner Blue Yellow tomato plants can grow to an <strong>average of 180 cm</strong>, and they produce abundant yields of the round fruit throughout the season right up until frost.</p> <p>Wagner Blue Yellow is not to be confused with the <a href="https://www.seeds-gallery.shop/en/home/blue-tomato-seeds-bosque-blue.html" title="Blue Tomato Seeds &quot;Bosque Blue&quot;" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><strong>bosque blue tomato</strong></a>, which is a totally different variety that was released by the same farm in 2011. Wagner Blue Yellow has also been offered under the name Purple Yellow Light Bulb.</p> <p>Wagner Blue Yellow tomatoes are great for fresh snacking, and their unique look makes them a great addition to salads. They can be used in fresh salsas...</p> <p>Blue tomatoes like Wagner Blue Yellow are purposefully bred in the United States for the health benefits of their anthocyanin content. Until the 21st century, tomatoes grown in home gardens have had the beneficial pigment only in their leaves and stems, which are inedible, while only a few wild tomato species had anthocyanins in their fruit.</p><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VT 13 (10 S)
Wagner Blue Yellow Tomato Seeds 2.25 - 1
Wasp Hot Chili Seeds 2.45 - 3

Wasp Hot Chili Seeds

Price €2.45 (SKU: C 13 (0,3g))
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Wasp Hot Chili Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 100+- seeds (0,3g).</strong></span></h2> <p>Beautiful Chili, belongs to the group chili peppers with the high ingredient of capsaicin, whereby the fruits are extraordinary hot. It forms a short stalk, numerous branches, giving the plant a bushy appearance. The fruits are 3-4 cm long, green in the technological and red in the biological maturity. By regular harvest you can get 350-400 fruits. Due to the decorative appearance and large number of fruits, this plant is suitable for growing in pots on the terraces and balconies as a decorative plant.</p><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
C 13 (0,3g)
Wasp Hot Chili Seeds 2.45 - 3
Watermelon Yellow Flesh Seeds - Super Sweet 2.55 - 1

Watermelon Yellow Flesh...

Price €1.85 (SKU: V 44)
,
5/ 5
<h2>Watermelon Yellow Flesh Seeds - Super Sweet</h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of <strong></strong></strong></span><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>5 or 10 </strong></span><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong><strong></strong>seeds.</strong></span></h2> <div>Watermelon Yellow Flesh is an unusual and very attractive watermelon.</div> <div>This highly prized variety which has pure yellow flesh inside not only tastes great, it looks fabulous as well, the perfect complement to the standard red fleshed types such as Sugar Baby.</div> <div>The flesh which is very sweet sometimes gives the impression of being bland but this is only because of the colour.</div> <div>Watermelon Yellow Flesh produces firm, good quality and evenly shaped fruit on a bushy plant.</div> <div>Heavy for their size the melons which can weigh anything from 3.5 - 5.5 kilos have a superb watermelon flavour and are highly rated in their native Poland.</div> <div>Can be cultivated outdoors but gives best results in the British Isles when grown under protection.</div> <div> <table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="1"> <tbody> <tr> <td colspan="2" width="100%" valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Sowing Instructions</strong></span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Propagation:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">Seeds</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Pretreat:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">Damage the membranes of the seed. But not the sprouts! See Picture 3</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Stratification:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">0</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Sowing Time:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">all year round</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Sowing Depth:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">0,5-1 cm</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Sowing Mix:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">Coir or sowing mix + sand or perlite</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Germination temperature:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">Opt. 38 ° C</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Location:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">bright + keep constantly moist not wet</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Germination Time:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">1-6 weeks</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong>Watering:</strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><span style="color: #008000;">Water regularly during the growing season</span></p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap"> <p><span style="color: #008000;"><strong> </strong></span></p> </td> <td valign="top"> <p><br /><span style="color: #008000;"><em>Copyright © 2012 Seeds Gallery - Saatgut Galerie - Galerija semena. </em><em>All Rights Reserved.</em></span></p> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> </div>
V 44 (5 S)
Watermelon Yellow Flesh Seeds - Super Sweet 2.55 - 1
Welsh Onion Seeds (Allium fistulosum)

Welsh Onion Seeds (Allium...

Price €1.55 (SKU: MHS 142)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>Welsh Onion Seeds (Allium fistulosum)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #f80101;"><strong>Price for Package of 50 (0,13 g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p><span>Long-term Welsh onion – one of ancient useful plants who can provide with valuable vitamin greens in the early spring. Its bright shoots are shown when even not all snow melted on a country site. In the people to it thought up many names: dudchaty, Chinese, sand, Tatar. Gentle, not really sharp "plumelets" are suitable for salads, garnishes, okroshka.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Description and characteristic of Welsh onion</span></strong></p> <p><span>Externally these onions are similar on everything the known napiform. But here the bulb underground at it is not formed. The basis of escape has only a small expansion called by botanists a false bulb. It is formed because the bases of sheet vaginas are thickened. The underground part of Welsh onion lives in the earth some years, and here the land part presented by leaves and tsvetonosa annually dies off during the autumn period. For Welsh onion strong branching, existence of a set of modified dudchaty leaves, hollow is characteristic inside. They accrue gradually, gaining the power. Depending on a grade, height of Welsh onion can be from 40 to 60 cm. For the second year of life Welsh onion throws out flower shooters, which length about 45 cm. Growing on one place, these onions well give greens for seven years. But it is best of all it does in the first four years. Then productivity considerably falls, it is connected with strong growth of underground part. Therefore in four years it should be seated in other places of a site. Surprisingly, but shoots of Welsh onion are capable to transfer spring frosts when stem of thermometer falls lower than zero by eight degrees. And here adult plants normally winter even if temperature will be-45 degrees. Therefore it is sowed often by Siberian summer residents. For normal development these onions need long light day. Optimum temperature for fast development from 18 to 22 degrees. Vitamin C in Welsh onion is approximately twice more, than in a turnip. There are in it phytoncides, essential oils, vitamins: carotene, B1, V2, PP, mineral salts of calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, potassium.</span></p> <p><span>The Chinese and Tibetan Aesculapians actively use Welsh onion as the antiseptic, all-strengthening means at treatment of gastrointestinal diseases, feverish states, skin illnesses. It is recommended to eat to hypertensive persons, it improves elastic properties of walls of capillaries.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Site for Welsh onion</span></strong></p> <p><span>This perennial cannot be placed on low, flooded places. A bed it is better for it to do the high. The excellent crop can be received on the structural, generously flavored with organic chemistry light loams or sandy loams. Boggy or heavy clay soil does not suit Welsh onion at all. It is also necessary to consider that on sandy and peaty soil which tend to drying, the strelkovaniye occurs much quicker. Sour soils before landing by all means should be izvestkovat or changed, adding a dolomitic flour when redigging. Well sites where grew cabbage, pumpkin, vegetable marrows, potatoes earlier are suitable for Welsh onion. If soils at you poor, on square meter it is necessary to bring about 5 kg of humus, 25 grams of ammonium nitrate, 15 grams of chloride potassium, 25 grams of superphosphate. It is better to prepare a site for Welsh onion even in the fall.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Landing</span></strong></p> <p><span>It is possible to sow Welsh onion from the last days of April to the last decade of July – here such long period. But that the earth was not empty if you decided to sow Welsh onion in the summer, in the spring on this place can put salad, fennel, the Beijing cabbage or a radish so far, and then after their cleaning to place Welsh onion there. At first it is desirable to wet seeds in water or solution of microfertilizers (one tablet on water liter undertakes). Only watch that seeds did not give long boring, such seeds will complicate landing process. We at first for 20 minutes presoak seeds in potassium permanganate solution (warm), and then in usual warm water which constantly we change. In advance before landing humidify the bed, and then already do grooves. On square meter about two grams of seeds leave. Depth of seal fluctuates from 1 to 2 cm (everything depends on your soil). Between plants there has to be a distance not less than 6 cm, and between ryadochka – on 18 cm. If carry out landing in the early spring (April), it is better to cover a gryadochka with a film or other ukryvny material. It will be necessary to remove it when boring seems.</span></p> <p><strong><span>Recommendations about further leaving</span></strong></p> <p><span>And everything is farther it will be simpler – acquaintances to us loosening, timely watering, weedings, top dressing if necessary. InfoAdvisor.net will notice that loosening it is desirable to carry out after each rain (or watering). Then the soil crust will not be formed, air will be better to get into the earth, it will more long keep moisture. When Welsh onion does not have moisture, it "becomes angry" - tastes bitter and grows coarse. If seeds from these onions are not required for you, tear off flower arrows. Now about podkormka. Do the first of them in 30 days after shoots get out, using an azofoska or a nitrofoska (on square meter take them 10 grams). Also the divorced dung water is good. That onions wintered better, in October carry out top dressing with potash fertilizers (their number of 10 grams on square meter). The next year in the spring as soon as from a gryadochka snow leaves, clean the remains of plants, cover it with ukryvny material. If build a parnichok, for example, by means of arches, receive green material for about fifteen days earlier. If to carry out having watered with warm water, it too will accelerate receiving greens.</span></p> <p><span>If you wish to grow up Welsh onion as an odnoletnik then it is better to resort to a rassadny way of cultivation. At first sow seeds in the spring in glasses on some pieces, keep them in the greenhouse. And then already send to an open ground when at plants is on four leaves. Usually such occurs in the middle of May. Then in the middle of July you receive a good harvest of sound Welsh onion.</span></p> <p><span>If contain Welsh onion as part of affiliated plants dig out perennial, each three or four years with the earth and replace in other place. Such way of reproduction, simple division of a big bush, is very convenient. Still such expanded bushes can be dug out with an earth lump over time and then to use for a vygonka to receive vitamin greens. It works well even on a window sill in the container.</span></p> <p><span>Sometimes Welsh onion gets sick peronosporozy, the pale green specks blurring on a stalk and a gray-violet raid testify to it. Here it is necessary to do processing by specifics. If in plumelets you noticed a white worm, this is the wrecker called by the onions miner. Can lead its defeat to rotting of a false bulb onions flies (their larvae). Transparent, whitish stripes on a stalk of Welsh onion is a sign of that in a stalk the onions weevil was brought.</span></p> <p><span>It is a little about harvesting. During the season it is possible to carry out some cuts (at ground level) of the accruing green material – gentle "plumelets". Manage to make the last cut to the middle of August that onions could be prepared for wintering.</span></p>
MHS 142 (50 S)
Welsh Onion Seeds (Allium fistulosum)

Variety from United States of America
West Virginia Pea Hot Pepper Seeds 1.55 - 1

West Virginia Pea Hot...

Price €1.95 (SKU: C 88)
,
5/ 5
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> </head> <body> <h2><strong>West Virginia Pea Hot Pepper Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>90 days. Capsicum annuum. Open Pollinated. The plant produces good yields of 2cm long by ½" wide hot peppers. Peppers grow upright, are hot, and turn from green, to green with purple markings, to red when mature. The plant has green leaves, green stems with purple markings, and white flowers. A variety from the USA.</p> </body> </html>
C 88
West Virginia Pea Hot Pepper Seeds 1.55 - 1
White Bitter Melon Seeds...

White Bitter Melon Seeds...

Price €6.50 (SKU: V 7 B)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>White Bitter Melon Seeds, Bitter Gourd, Balsam Pear (Momordica Charantia)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price per pack of 5, 10, 50, 100 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>If the Balsam Pear did not exist a pharmaceutical company would invent it. &nbsp;In fact, there have been some ten studies published this past year about it, the latest as of this writing in February 2008 in the Journal of Food Biochemistry about its potential in diabetes treatment.</p> <p>A very common, bitter vegetable in Asian cuisine, &nbsp;the Balsam Pear, Momordica charantia, &nbsp;is a natural drug store for diabetics and others. It’s not a pear at all but a fruiting gourd and vine that smells like an old, well-used gym shoe. Don’t say you weren’t warned.</p> <p>The warty gourd is edible when green (and cooked) but turns toxic when orange ripe. It then splits characteristically into three parts, revealing red arils (fleshy seed covers). &nbsp;The ripe seeds inside the arils and orange flesh of the gourd are toxic and can make one violently lose fluids from both ends, and induce abortions. The red arils around the seeds, however, are edible. And notice this: The arils are 96% lycopene, which gives them their color. Just remember to spit out the seed from each aril.</p> <p>M. charantia is found Connecticut south to Florida, west to Texas, also Puerto Rico and the Hawaiian Islands. Incidentally, the bitter melon has twice the potassium of bananas and is also rich in vitamins A and C.</p> <p>The Latin genus name, Momordica, (mo-MOR-dee-ka) &nbsp;means “to bite,” and refers to the jagged edges of the leaves, which appear as if they have been bitten. Charantia (char-AN-tee-ah) the species’ name, comes from Greek meaning beautiful flower. &nbsp;It’s native to tropical regions of the world though no one knows where it came from originally. Gray’s four-inch-thick Manual of Botany, started in 1850 and revised in 1950, makes no mention of M. charantia in the United States but it is currently a serious crop weed in Florida and to 21 other crops around the world, bananas to soybeans. It’s a latecomer to Florida or Gray was in the dark about it. In the Amazon, and as far away as India, it is used very much by local populations for food and medicine. &nbsp;Apparently a &nbsp;dynamic chemical factory, the M. charantia is being tested for treatment against cancer — leukemia in particular — &nbsp;AIDS, as an analgesic, and to moderate insulin resistance. It is often called vegetable insulin. It does not increase insulin secretion but “speeds up carbohydrate use of the cells by affecting membrane lipids.” Seems like the smelly gym shoe hanging on the fence has a great future. But, it is not for everyone: Don’t eat the vegetable if you’re hypoglycemic or pregnant. In diabetics, it can lower blood sugar too effectively. It also reduces fertility in men and women. &nbsp;And, it contains vicine. That can cause favism in people who have a variant glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. (I presume if you don’t know what that is you don’t have it. Favism is a severe reaction to fava beans and or their pollen. Occurs most often in Mediterranean men.)</p> <p>Cultivated versions of the M. charantia, also called Bitter Gourd or Wild Balsam Apple, are found in most Asian markets, and they, too, smell like an old gym shoe. The odor, thankfully, almost all goes away when cooked, and the bitterness moderates, but does not go away. If you are not yet brave enough to pick your own, you can buy some or grow it yourself. There are many varieties and numerous recipes are on the Internet. The M. charantia is indeed bitter. Some cut up the vegetable and soak it in water, or salted water and or blanch it to reduce the bitterness.</p> <p>While I have never seen an Oriental family picking M. charantia off local fences here in Florida, I have seen many Hispanic families doing so. &nbsp;Dr. Julia Morton, a plant professor in south Florida, &nbsp;says besides the green fruit, the young leaves when cooked and drained are also edible and nutritious, with iron, phosphorous, calcium, and vitamin C. I have never managed to get past the locker room bouquet to toss ‘em in a pot, and the fruit is just too bitter for me to enjoy. The ripe fruit pulp has been used as a soap substitute, which should give you some idea of the flavor. In India and Africa, the cooked leaves are canned like spinach. The fragrant flowers can be used as a seasoning when cooking.</p> <p>Incidentally, if you have a glut of green Bitter Gourds, you can slice them, partially boil them with salted water, then dry them, sun, or otherwise. They will last for several months. You can then fry them and use as you like. Also, drinking the fresh bitter juice is recommended by some naturopaths. That ain’t going to be easy, it’s really bitter…. much easier to tell someone to do it than do it yourself.</p> <p>REMEMBER: No part of the Momordica charantia is ever to be eaten raw, except for the red arils (and remember to spit the seeds out.) &nbsp;No part, other than the arils, is ever to be eaten when ripe, which is when it is turning from green to yellow to orange. Do not eat the yellow or orange fruit raw or cooked. It is toxic. Also, the green fruit is suspected in the poisoning of dogs and pigs.</p> <p>Relatives: Momordica balsamina, which has longer spines on the fruit and can ripen to red, grows only in St. Lucie County in Florida and only a smattering of places in the southern U.S. &nbsp;M. balsamina fruit can be pickled or after soaking used as a cooked vegetable. Young shoots and tendrils are boiled as a green. The seeds are eaten. &nbsp;Momordica cochinchinensis produces a huge round fruit that is red when ripe. Young fruit boiled, not as bitter as M. charantia. Momordica dioica, small and roundish, &nbsp;is more esteemed than the rest. It is not bitter but sweet. Fruits, shoots, leaves, and roots are boiled for food. There are also at least seven commercial cultivars of the Momordica gourds</p> <p>IDENTIFICATION: Momordica charantia: A slender, climbing annual vine to 18 feet with long-stalked leaves and yellow flowers where the leaf meets the stem. Young fruit emerald green turning to orange when ripe. At maturity, the fruit splits into three irregular parts that curl backward showing many reddish-brown or white seeds encased in scarlet arils.</p> <p>TIME OF YEAR: Fruit, summer, and fall in warm climates, fall in northern climes.</p> <p>ENVIRONMENT: Love to climb, found in hammocks, disturbed sites, turf, and ornamental landscapes, and citrus groves. It seems to be the most common vine on chain link fences in Florida.</p> <p>METHOD OF PREPARATION: None of it ripe except the arils. Boiled green fruit (including seeds) leaves and shoots, boiled twice. Or, cut open and remove seeds and fiber and parboil. &nbsp;Ripe parts toxic are too bitter to eat. &nbsp;(An adult can swallow hole two ripe seed and not have much distress.) Young leaves and shoots are boiled and eaten as a potherb. Flowers used as a seasoning.</p> <p>HERB BLURB</p> <p>Herbalists say the charantia has long been used to treat diabetes and a host of other ailments from arthritis to jaundice.</p> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
V 7 B
White Bitter Melon Seeds (Momordica Charantia)
White Chili Seeds SPEAR  - 3

White Chili Seeds SPEAR

Price €1.75 (SKU: C 80)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>White Chili Seeds SPEAR</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>Very hot Chili pepper, which also looks really good... The fruits are conical in shape and remain white for a long time and then ripen for a very short time and turn red. The fruits weigh on average up to 10 grams.</p> <p>Because the plant does not grow tall (up to 40 centimeters), it is ideal for smaller pots to hold in an apartment, balcony. Of course, if you take it to a flat or basement in winter where the temperature does not drop below 0 the plant is perennial.</p>
C 80
White Chili Seeds SPEAR  - 3

Variety from United States of America

Coming Soon
White Skin - White Flesh KENNEBEC Potato Seeds  - 4

White Skin - White Flesh...

Price €1.95 (SKU: P 247 WK)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>White Skin - White Flesh KENNEBEC Potato Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>These white-skinned and white flesh tubers make excellent table potatoes. The fairly firm texture when boiled. They are highly recommended for fries and chips. Plants are compact and erect with pointed smooth leaves and; numerous big white flowers with slight reddish-purple tinge on backs.</p> <p>Potatoes can be grown from true seeds just as easily and reliably as tomatoes, peppers or eggplants. True potato seed is a new development offering the advantages of, lower cost than mini-tubers, completely disease-free, and always available at the right planting time for gardeners in any region. This is the new wave in potato culture.</p> <p>Start indoors in seedling trays. Fill each cell to 1cm (1/2") from the top with sterilized seed starting mix. Moisten with water and place one seed on the top of the soil per cell. Cover with vermiculite and water in. Note: Potato seeds require light to germinate, so do not bury.  Optimal soil temperature for germination: 15-27°C (65-80°F). Seeds should germinate in 6-10 days.</p> <p><strong>Starting</strong><br />Keep the soil evenly moist during germination, but allow free drainage so that excess water does not collect. Water before mid-day to allow foliage to dry completely by nightfall. Potato seedlings <span>tend to stay prostrate immediately after emergence if they have 13 or more hours of daylight. As a somewhat longer stem is desired to ease transplanting, keep seedlings in about 12-hour light per day. During the last week expose seedlings to full sunlight to strengthen the stem. At optimal temperature, transplants will be ready 4 to 6 weeks after seeding.</span></p> <p><span>If field conditions are very different from indoor conditions, allow one week of hardening off. Water the plugs heavily the day before and day of the transplant, and transplant into moist soil.</span></p> <p><strong>Growing</strong><br />Ideal pH: 5.0-6.0. Plant seedlings so that only the crown of its top, 2-5cm (1-2“) is above soil level, burying the whole plug and a good part of the stem of the seedling. Seedlings cannot be completely buried, the growing point needs to stay above ground. Space seedlings 10-25cm (4-10") apart in rows 75cm (30") apart. Wider spacing produces fewer, but larger tubers. Keep the area well-watered for several weeks after transplant.</p> <p><strong>Hilling<br /></strong><span>When seedlings reach 10-15cm  (4-6") in height, they should be hilled, probably three weeks after transplanting. This operation takes soil from the centre of the row, and covers the seedlings up to half of their height, creating a small hill. It is best to work from the centre of the furrow towards the plants. Do not cut too deep into the soil near the plant to avoid root damage. Just before hilling, fertilizer can be applied near the base of the seedlings, and this will be covered when hilling.</span></p> <p>A second hilling and side dressing of balanced organic fertilizer should follow 3-4 weeks after the first, again depositing soil up to half the height of the plants. Again, increase the depth of the furrow in its centre and bring this soil on top of the small hill created in the first hilling operation.</p> <p><strong>Harvest</strong></p> <p><span>In the garden, potatoes can be harvested without destroying the plant if only a few potatoes are needed. Carefully scrape soil near the base of the stem until the skin of a potato is found, and pull it from the stolon. Consume it that day for a tasty and nutritious meal. </span>If potatoes need to be stored for some time, remove the foliage 3 weeks before harvest. This "sets" (hardens) the skin, and it will store better as the thicker skin will reduce water loss from the tubers. Keep them dark up to 2 to 3 months at high humidity before eating.</p> <p><strong>Seed Info</strong><br />In optimal conditions, at least 75% of the seeds will germinate. Usual seed life: 3 years. Per 100′ row: 200 seeds, per acre: 8.8M seeds.</p> <p><strong>Diseases &amp; Pests</strong><br />Protect from cabbage moths and other insect pests with floating row cover. Prevent disease with a strict 4-year crop rotation, avoiding planting Brassicas in the same spot more than once every four years.</p> <p><strong>Companion Planting</strong><br />A worthy companion for beets, Brassicas, cucumbers, and onions. Avoid planting near peppers, pole beans, strawberries, and tomatoes.</p>
P 247 WK
White Skin - White Flesh KENNEBEC Potato Seeds  - 4

Variety from United States of America
Tomato Seeds White Wonder 1.65 - 2

White Wonder Tomato Seeds

Price €2.30 (SKU: VT 29)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>White Wonder Tomato Seeds Great Taste Heirloom</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong> Price for Package of 5 or 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>White Wonder tomatoes are creamy-white oblate shaped beefsteak tomatoes that weigh about 1 kg (2 pounds). The meaty flesh has few seeds and is also yellowish-white in color with high sugar content and low acidity, creating an exceptionally sweet melon-like flavor. The bushy indeterminate plants grow to an average of 1,5 meters (5 feet) tall, and they have good foliage cover to protect the fruit. As an indeterminate variety, the White Wonder tomato plant will continue to grow and produce good yields of the large tomatoes throughout the season right up until frost.</p> <p>White Wonder is a beefsteak-type tomato, characterized by large, heavy fruit and thick, meaty texture. Tomatoes are members of the Solanaceae or nightshade family and they are botanically known as either Lycopersicon esculentum or Solanum Lycopersicum, as new DNA evidence has led some horticulturists to re-adopt the original classification. Like all heirlooms, White Wonder is an open-pollinated cultivar, meaning that saved seed being passed down through family generations grows true to the original parent type.</p> <p>White Wonder tomatoes have a high sugar level and are deliciously sweet, making them great for fresh eating. They add a beautiful contrast to veggie trays alongside other colored tomato varieties. As a beefsteak-type tomato, they are great for slicing onto sandwiches, burgers, and salads, and they are also a good variety for canning. Try using them to make white tomato soup or white tomato sauce. Tomatoes pair well with savory herbs and soft cheeses, and they can also be combined with sweet herbs, like mint. Store White Wonder tomatoes at room temperature until fully ripe, after which refrigeration can slow the process of decay.</p> <p>White Wonder tomatoes were brought into the spotlight when they became one of the varieties chosen for Alice Waters’ famous Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California. Chez Panisse opened its doors in 1971 and is known for sourcing ingredients that are organically and locally grown and ecologically harvested to protect the land for future generations.</p> <p>Geography/History<br />The White Wonder tomato is an old American heirloom believed to date back as far as pre-1860. Some even suspect that Thomas Jefferson planted this variety at his home in Monticello. Like all tomatoes, White Wonder tomatoes cannot stand any frost, and they are sensitive to low night temperatures. They are said to do best in USDA hardiness zones 3-9.</p> <p>HEIRLOOM TOMATO: Heirloom Tomatoes are just what their name implies. They have been handed down, through generations of farmers and gardeners, from family member to family member. Many of these tomato varieties are known to have thrived since the 1800’s.</p> <p>Unlike hybrids, they are not selectively bred for taste or appearance. They are open-pollinated, growing ‘true to type’ plants, like their predecessors, from seed. Heirloom Tomato Plants will add untraditional color and pleasing variety to your garden harvest.</p>
VT 29 (10 S)
Tomato Seeds White Wonder 1.65 - 2

Variety from Bosnia and Herzegovina

Plant resistant to cold and frost
Wild Fig Seeds (from...

Wild Fig Seeds (from...

Price €1.85 (SKU: V 19 WF)
,
5/ 5
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> </head> <body> <h2><strong>Wild Fig Seeds (from Herzegovina)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 20 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>We brought this fig from Herzegovina and we found it in the mountains in complete wilderness. Its habitat was rocky and dry, which means that it is resistant to poor soil conditions. There are also constant droughts in that part and despite the fact that the plant did not get much water, it did not bother it to grow at all. The fruits are smaller than other varieties of figs and dark purple when ripe. Although the fruits are small they are very tasty and sweet. From reliable sources, we learned that where we took it, the temperature dropped to -15C in winter.</p> <p>Fig flowers are difficult to spot because they grow inside figs and such flowers are pollinated by the so-called. fig wasps, which develop in the fruits of the wild fig. The difference between a tame and a wild fig is that the tame fig blooms only with female flowers while the wild fig has female and male flowers.</p> <p>Wild figs grow at an abnormal rate compared to tame ones.</p> </body> </html>
V 19 WF (20 S)
Wild Fig Seeds (from Herzegovina)