So, now that I'm living only 15 miles from Nichol's Garden Nursery, I have a chance to pop in. (It's actually much more inconvenient for me since we move - I used to drive past Nichols twice a month during daylight hours, and it was well positioned for a break from driving. Oh well). Anyway, I've been having less than warm feelings about Nichols since about 2007, when Monsanto bought Semenis and I took a strong position against Semenis seeds. I wrote to Nichols and they weren't very helpful, they were relucant to clarify sources on their various varieties. I had a little better luck with Territorial, perhaps since I stopped in their store in person when the product manager happened to be around and we looked up some varieties in his system.
Anyway, now I learn that Nichols is phasing out the Semenis varieties, that they are no going to be carrying them. The Semenis varieties are on a separate rack, away from the regular seeds. This is good; I feel much better about them and trusting them for something as important as the very source of our food!
And I think it's wonderful that we have seed companies so close! Oregon is blessed with many wonderful small seed companies as well as larger ones like Nichols and Territorial/Abundant Life. One I've found recently is Adaptive Seeds. These folks are pretty close to us (as the crow flies, there's some hills between). They are big advocates of seed saving and have a wonderful instruction book: Seed Saving 'zine.
I've also discovered that Tom Wagner, the seed breeder who came up with Green Zebra (as well as many other well-known tomato varieties), is around here, Washington state somewhere, breeding tomatoes and potatoes. Tom Wagner's blog He will sell an assortment of seed potatoes from his breeding lines. It's tempting, but we are so fussy about potatoes.
And finally short plugs for Peace Seedlings/Peace Seeds (I'm not sure why these are distinct) and for Wild Garden Seed.
I don't really need more seed this year, though, I already have more than I can possibly use
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Seed companies
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Lisa
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11:49 PM
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Thursday, January 6, 2011
Ducks, cold and rain and slugs
Some years ago in southern oregon we tried raising ducks (it was during the period where Jay had to limit me to one new species per month). We got 3 Khaki Campbells and raised them in the master shower in the mobile home. They were very stinky. They were nervous and high-strung. They got moved to the orchard, where they messed up the tree mulch. Their wading pool water was always filthy. One lost to a hawk, one disappeared, so we got 3 Indian Runners. They were even more nervous, and at least two of them were males resulting in some inapproproiate behavior :-). Finally we gave them away to someone with a pond. It was Not A Success.
So, moving ahead 8 years and 200 miles, to the Willamette valley. I'm reading Deppe's book, "the resiliant gardener". She's in Corvallis, less then 30 miles from me, so her observations are more relevant to me than they used to be. She points out that ducks eat slugs. Hey, we have lots of slugs here, all over the greens! She notes ducks like rainy weather. Well, we have that in spades now! It won't stop raining! She claims not all ducks are nervous and unfriendly - well, we'll wait and see, but perhaps I've been unfair to duckdom. Hey, you can eat ducks! Last go round, I was still pretty much vegetarian; but now we've learned how to smoke poultry, which makes even fatty meat like turkey legs delicious.
Our ducks used to hide their eggs in the grass and they were always filthy, so I'm not that enthusiastic about duck eggs, but they are a bonus.
Jay has always liked ducks, and I guess he's on duty to change their water. Ducks do have the ability to hang out and be happy in a way chickens never are. I think ducks are type B personalities, while chickens are type As and are only happy when they have projects to work on. Perhaps I identify too much with the chickens...
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9:33 PM
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