Wednesday, April 3, 2013

What to Plant? Crop & Varietal Selection

We ended up talking a quite a bit this week about how we select the crops and plant varieties to grow each year for our CSA members. We also touched on issues of genetically modified, hybrid, and organic seed production. So I thought I'd share with you a blog post I wrote last year on the farm blog regarding these issues. In it, I give some basic information about the difference between hybridization and genetic modification in seed production: Wonderful Seeds.

A few of you were also wondering how our crop list has changed from year to year. You can view last year's crop list on the Wonderful Seeds blog post I referenced above. And I'll paste our 2013 crop list at the end of this email. But in short, in 2012 we planned 31 different crops and 70 different varieties of plants within those crop categories. In 2013 we've planned 37 different crops and 108 different varieties.

I also want to recommend this video of a TED talk by Winona LaDuke entitled Seeds of Our Ancestors, Seeds of Life. In it, she talks about the relationship that her Anishinaabekwe people have with certain food plants that have sustained them for generations and how they've fought the attempts to genetically engineer and patent these crops, as well as why climate change makes it more important than ever that we preserve and encourage genetic diversity among food crops. It's a really good talk and just under 17 minutes--it's worth your time.

What LaDuke says about the relationship between certain plants and her people may sound a bit esoteric, but it absolutely rings true to my experience. When you work with plants year after year, spending your life energy nurturing them and helping them flourish so that they can in turn feed you and sustain your life, you develop an intimacy with them, an affection, maybe even love. You get to know what they like, what they don't like, and certain varieties become your favorites, become plants that you can't imagine going through a summer without. They become your relatives.

I have long-standing relationships with many of the varieties listed below, but others are new ones that I hope to begin developing friendships with during the coming year.

2013 Crop & Plant Variety List
Arugula: Standard Arugula, Astro
Basil: Genovese Compact Improved
Beans, Green Snap: Provider, Fortex
Beans, Yellow Snap: Pencil Pod Wax
Beets, Red: Red Ace F1
Beets, Golden: Touchstone Gold
Braising Mix: Johnny's Braising Mix
Broccoli: DiCicco, Green Magic F1, Piracicaba
Brussels Sprouts: Roodnerf, Gustus F1
Cabbage, Green: Gonzales F1
Cabbage, Red: Ruby Perfection F1
Radish: Mokum F1, Nantes Fancy
Chard: Ford Hook Giant, Peppermint Chard, Red Rubarb Chard
Cilantro: Calypso
Cucumber: Marketmore 76, Green Finger
Dill: Dill
Edamame: Butterbeans
Eggplant: Orient Express F1, Rosa Bianca
Garlic: Music, Persian Star, Thai Purple, Silverskin, Inchelium Red
Kale: Beedy's Camden, Dwarf Blue Curled Scotch, Lacinato, Sutherland, Madeley
Kohlrabi: Early White Vienna
Leeks: King Richard
Lettuce, Head: Winter Density, Forellenschluss, Jericho
Lettuce, Salad Mix: High Mowing's Gourmet Mix
Melons: Delicious 51, Hannah's Choice F1
Mustard Greens: Red Mustard
Onions, Red: Red Burgundy
Onions, White: White Sweet Spanish Jumbo, Candy F1
Pac Choi: Mei Qing Choi F1, Shanghai Green Pac Choy
Peas, Snap: Sugar Ann
Peas, Snow: Oregon Giant
Peppers, Anaheim: Numex Joe E Parker
Peppers, Jalapeno: El Jefe Jalapeno
Peppers, Sweet Bell: King of the North, Jupiter, Golden California Wonder
Peppers, Sweet Italian: Stocky Red Roaster, Marconi Red
Potatoes: Kennebec, Russet Burbank, German Butterball, Dark Red Norland, Yukon Gold
Pumpkins: Charisma F1, Jack O' Lantern, Winter Luxury Pie Pumpkin
Radish: Cherry Belle, Pink Beauty, White Beauty
Scallions: Nabechan F1, Deep Purple
Spinach: Tyee F1
Squash, Spaghetti: Spaghetti
Summer Squash, Patty Pan: Y-Star, Sunburst
Summer Squash, Yellow: Saffron
Summer Squash, Zucchini: Black Beauty, Golden Zucchini
Sweet Corn: Bodacious RM F1
Tomatoes, Cherry/Plums: Cherry Roma, Mountain Magic F1, Chocolate Cherry, Esterina F1, Juliet F1, Hagan Little Yellow, Sungella, Gobstopper
Tomatoes, Slicing: German Johnson, Golden Sunray, Amish Paste, Prudence Purple, Cosmonaut Volkov, Defiant PHR F1, Ruby Gold, Big Rainbow, Boxcar Willie, Bobcat, New Girl
Tomatoes, Specialty: Green Zebra, Black Prince
Turnips: Hakurei F1, Purple Top White Globe
Winter Squash: Delicata JS, Sweet Dumpling, Waltham Butternut


2 comments:

  1. Just remembered we'd talked a little bit about plants going in the direction of light when we were talking about the seedlings getting leggy. I couldn't remember the term for it at first but with a little searching I found it's called phototropism. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phototropism

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  2. Phototropism! Check out this great 2 minute video capturing 3rd grader Cameron Wright's phototropism experiment with pea shoots: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLYOBi5gaVs. It's pretty fun & has a great soundtrack.

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