Ordering Our Seeds
Today I finally got around to ordering the seeds for our garden this summer. Jeremy and I had been narrowing it down for a while, but today I got on the internet and made our purchases. We order from two different catalogs, Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds and Seed Savers. Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds is our favorite catalog, it was started in 1998 in the Ozarks of Missouri, by Jere Gettle who was 17 at the time. His first catalog offered 70 seeds and was sent to 550 people and today they offer 1400 varieties and mail their catalog to 250,000 people. There is a video of him talking about his seed catalog and how he got started on YouTube:
Anyhow, Jeremy and I probably did things backwards of what we should have. I probably should have drawn up a garden plan first and then ordered seeds, but we went through the seed catalogs first and picked out what we were going to plant this year. Here is the list:
Long Island Improved Brussel Sprouts – we grew these last year, but planted them to late and only got a few sprouts. This year we know to plant earlier!
Tendercrisp Celery – We’ve never tried celery before.
Celeriac Caesar – We’ve also never tried to grow celeriac, which is related to celery but a root vegetable.
Red Russian Kale – We grew kale last year but planted it too late and it never really took off. It is in our garden now and is still hanging on, I’m not sure if in the spring we will get any new growth or have to plant more.
Yellow of Parma Onions and Tropeana Lunga Onions – We grew Tropeana Lunga onions last year, they are a long red onion, and they grew easily. Last year we also grew Gold Princess Onions but only a couple actually came up, this year we are trying a different yellow onion and hoping to have more success with it.
Green Grape Tomatoes, Monomakh’s Hat Tomato, Fox Cherry Tomato, Siberian Tomato, and Silvery Fir Tree Tomato – Last year we did not plant any grape or cherry tomatoes and regretted it, so those are on our list this year. The green grape is supposed to be like a mini green zebra, so we are excited about that. I am also reading a Rocky Mountain Vegetable Gardening book right now and it said to look for Siberian tomatoes that ripen early, so I found one of those to try as well. We also have seeds from last year that we will also try to finish off, so there may be a few other varieties we grow again as well.
Slo-Bolt Cilantro – Last year I tried to grow cilantro but it bolted so fast we didn’t get much. This year, I found a Slo-Bolt Cilantro and am hoping we will have more luck!
Thyme – We’ve never grown before.
Giant of Italy Parsley – We’ve never grown parsley before, this is a large leaf variety.
Arugula – We’ve never grown before.
Cherokee Trail of Tears Pole Bean and Scarlett Runner Pole Beans – We grew Scarlett Runner’s last year and they were beautiful and we had a lot of luck with them. We also tried Molly Frazier White Cut Short beans last year and had trouble getting them to grow, so are trying Cherokee Trail of Tears Pole Beans this year, which is a type of green bean that also dries as black beans.
Aquadulce Fava Beans – Fava beans are new for us to try growing this year.
Bloomsdale Spinach – Spinach is new for us this year, we decided we needed more cool season crops in our garden this spring.
Lady Godiva winter squash – We have never grown winter squash before. This year we got a lot of winter squash from our CSA, but we found this variety that you can grow specifically for the shelless seeds. Jake loves roasted squash seeds, so we thought we’d try this variety.
Stevia – This is an herb that is very sweet and can supposedly be used in place of sugar. We’ve never tried it, but it sounded interesting.
Southern Giant Curled Mustard Greens – The farm where we get our CSA from grows mustard, arugula, and some type of lettuce, and gave us a mix this summer to use for salad greens and they were delicious. So we thought we’d try to grow some ourselves this year.
Cauliflower – I can’t remember the variety we have, we tried some last year, but couldn’t get them to work, but we still have seeds left so will try again this year.
Leeks – Another one we tried last year and were unsuccessful with, but will try again this year.
Lunar White Carrot and St. Valery Carrot - Last year we tried a yellow carrot, which was really sweet and delicious. This year we thought we’d try something different and picked the Lunar White carrot which is also supposed to be really sweet and also not supposed to have much of a woody core to it. We grew the St. Valery Carrot last year, it is a normal looking orange carrot, which was really tasty and easy to grow.
Turnips – We had so many turnips this year that we are a little burnt out, but we still have seeds, and want to grow things early in the season, so we’ll do it again this year.
Alma Paprika Peppers, Joe’s Long Cayenne, Joe’s Round Pepper, Chinese 5-Color – Last year we didn’t have much luck growing peppers in our garden, it is too cool and windy, so this year we are going to grow them up against our house on the south side where it is warm. We did that a few years ago and had a lot better luck with them.
Caribe Potatoes – We’re going to try potatoes for the first time this year, and thought we’d try something we can’t get in the store, so are trying these purple potatoes.
I think that covers it! We are really hoping to be more efficient in our garden this year, we have already used most of our stored food from last year, and now that we are hardly eating out because of our food issues it would be really nice to have a lot of food to freeze or preserve this summer. Now I need to work on how we are going to fit all of this in our 20×20 plot!
This entry was posted on Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 at 3:39 pm and is filed under Colorado Gardening. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

February 10th, 2010 at 2:56 pm
Wow! That's a ton of veggies! I definitely need to visit you guys this summer to partake of the delish array. Have you tried the stevia sugar subsitutes? I haven't yet, but I've talked to several people who have and I've heard mixed reviews. But I'm curious at how the actual herb is used in cooking, as opposed to the processed subsitute that they somehow make.
February 10th, 2010 at 4:21 pm
You do! I can't remember did you get to see our garden last summer? You should come a couple of times but definitely around August or so when everything is going strong! I want to say a lady at the Boulder Farmer's Market sells gluten free baked goods and uses stevia as the sweetener, and they were good, it could have been a different sweetener though I don't remember. Anyway it sounded interesting so we thought we'd give it a try!
February 16th, 2010 at 2:43 am
Your choices sound good Steph. Someone in our community garden is growing Stevia. I picked off a leaf and it was really sweet. Pretty crazy. Hope it all goes well!
February 16th, 2010 at 6:15 pm
Oh cool, i just realized a couple of cookbooks i have call for powdered stevia. Not sure if we'll be able to make that but I guess I'd just dry it and grind it up maybe? We are really excited, I just got about 2/3 of our seeds in the mail yesterday! How is your garden going?