Seedy Penpals January 2014 – My Parcel

Seedy Penpal Parcel January 2014

Our Seedy Penpals exchange has got off to a grand start this year. I received this very thoughtful & generous parcel above from Lorraine last week.

Squash seeds

Lorraine sent us four different squash varieties from US seed supplier Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Co.

  • Pattison Golden Mabre Scallop (summer squash)
  • Gelber Englischer Custard (summer squash)
  • Marina Di Chioggia (winter squash)
  • Blue Hubbard (winter squash)

We’ve been perennial squash growers here with mixed success. We’ll make a concerted effort with these to keep them very well fed and watered and hope the summer weather is kind to us.

Aubergine & Chillies

We love growing different chilli varieties and Lorraine sent us two we haven’t tried before:

Plus aubergine Black Beauty that Lorraine had over-ordered. We’ve had limited success with aubergine here with bad summers. When we lived down south, we had good crops – so fingers crossed.

We’ve just acquired a load of sash windows from a local friend (via Twitter) who is having them replaced. We’ll use these to build a super cold frame to house these gems. Hopefully the aubergines will be especially happy with them. More of this in later posts.

Brassicas

Lorraine sent us:

  • Cabbage: heritage variety Wheelers Imperial
  • Mustard – giant red
  • Mustard – komatsuna
  • Nasturtium – organic mixed, for companion planting.

It’ll be interesting to try the cabbage which we can grow for spring greens and hearts.

MustardsPT-1
We’re big fans of mustards. We grow them over winter in our big polytunnel where they produce leaves for salads and cooked veg over the winter and great shoots in the spring. The different colours and leaf shapes add welcome variety in the dark days. The mustard seeds she sent are some passed on from her earlier seedy penpal Jenny – so the connection continues.

The nasturtiums are always welcome. Apart from being great companion and bee plants they’re a great edible too. The leaves, flowers and flower buds and seed pods are all edible and delightfully peppery. So we’ll be munching on those for sure and I’ll post some recipes for them during the year.

Onion & dahlias

Tussy Mussy made 2 Jan 2014Lorraine sent us some Senshyu Yellow seeds. These are an overwintering Japanese type for autumn sowing. This is brilliant, as we’ve decided to do all our onions this way and to concentrate on varieties that we can’t buy or are more expensive to get.

And to help with our plans to have more perennial flowers for cutting and using in Debs’ tussie mussies, Lorraine sent us some great dahlia tubers. We’ll have to be patient until we can see what colours we have. I’m instructed that I’m not allowed to eat them ๐Ÿ™

Ingredients

Lastly, as Lorraine is well aware of my culinary proclivities, we’re the lucky recipients of two lots of dried chillies from Lorraine’s own garden. They smell great and I’m keen to use them soon.

All round a really great Seedy Penpal package. To see Lorraine’s side of the story, see her Slow January blog post.


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9 responses to “Seedy Penpals January 2014 – My Parcel”

  1. […] & bulbs 50g stale bread in chunks 1 dried chilli, or quantity to taste (in this case from my Seedy Penpal Lorraine) 375g beef mince (pork, lamb or chicken would all work well as would thick lentil/spilt pea puree) […]

  2. narf77 Avatar

    “SEW Jealous!” (get it…sew…seeds…sigh…) I wish we could take part in seedy penpals but as Australians we are ostracised :(. I completely understand why but that doesn’t make it any better :(.

    1. Carl Avatar
      Carl

      Ahhh – a comic genius ๐Ÿ˜‰

      I’d be very happy for you to set up an Antipodean Seedy Penpals, you can even borrow the logo…

      Can’t say fairer ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. narf77 Avatar

        The problem is that we have varying degrees of seedy/plant materially acceptance within our own borders. I live in Tasmania and we have pretty strict importation limits on what we can and can’t import but nowhere NEAR as strict as Western Australia. I can only look on with lust at Ebay sales from Queensland for all kinds of amazing seeds and plant material. We can send pretty much anywhere from Tasmania but getting anything back is a bit of a problem. I guess I am just going to have to live vicariously through your seedy penpal hauls? ๐Ÿ˜‰ (and cultivate a really good underground network in Tasmania ๐Ÿ™‚ )

  3. lindaswildlifegarden Avatar

    What a great seedy parcel you got Carl looking forward to the updates as you start to sow some of your seeds have a great weekend

    1. countrygate Avatar

      What a fab parcel. High five Lorraine. Bet you can’t wait to start sowing. I shall be in touch with Debs re tussie mussies obvs. ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. Carl Avatar
        Carl

        Thanks Cally ๐Ÿ™‚

        Debs is looking forward to you getting in touch ๐Ÿ˜€

    2. Carl Avatar
      Carl

      It is ace Linda – I’ll keep you posted ๐Ÿ™‚