seeds of Italy
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- alan refail
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Hi Nemo
The short answer is yes. You know what grows in your climate, so "Italian" varieties will do just as well (or badly) as other varieties. They should love your mild weather.
The short answer is yes. You know what grows in your climate, so "Italian" varieties will do just as well (or badly) as other varieties. They should love your mild weather.
- Chantal
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Hi Nemo
I've been growing Seeds of Italy for years, beans, courgettes, carrots, cabbaged, onions, tomatoes, radishes, beetroot etc etc and they've done better than "UK" varieties, despite the wet and the cold. Go for it!
I've been growing Seeds of Italy for years, beans, courgettes, carrots, cabbaged, onions, tomatoes, radishes, beetroot etc etc and they've done better than "UK" varieties, despite the wet and the cold. Go for it!
Chantal
I know this corner of the earth, it smiles for me...
I know this corner of the earth, it smiles for me...
- Colin_M
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I'd echo Chantal's comments. The only thing to be aware of is that (fairly obviously) the varieties will be different. For example some SOI Swedes I grew last year were very vigorous but looked (and tasted) slightly different. For things like Beans & Tomatoes, the alternative choice may be more welcome.
Hi Nemo,
I grew SOI cutting lettuce, Carrot Calde, Parsnip Bugi Bijeli, Melon and Onion Texas Grande in West Cork this year and all were successful. Though I obviously don't know how the onions will keep.
Go for it.
Regards, Gerry.
I grew SOI cutting lettuce, Carrot Calde, Parsnip Bugi Bijeli, Melon and Onion Texas Grande in West Cork this year and all were successful. Though I obviously don't know how the onions will keep.
Go for it.
Regards, Gerry.
Unlike most of you I have never grown SOI that is probably because on three successive years they have failed to send me their catalogue when it had been requested.
However good people find SOI they obviously do not get to make proper comparisons. If you grow SOI and nothing else that's fine with me but there are many seed companies that sell wonderful seeds and all seed merchants deal on a global basis and SOI are no
exception.
Good they may be but so are a lot of other seed companies.
Yesterday I pulled my first Swede, at damn near 3lbs, and that came from common old Kings and if anything they are going to be too big.
JB.
However good people find SOI they obviously do not get to make proper comparisons. If you grow SOI and nothing else that's fine with me but there are many seed companies that sell wonderful seeds and all seed merchants deal on a global basis and SOI are no
exception.
Good they may be but so are a lot of other seed companies.
Yesterday I pulled my first Swede, at damn near 3lbs, and that came from common old Kings and if anything they are going to be too big.
JB.
- Tony Hague
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For those with a computer (
) The seeds of Italy catalogue is available as a very pretty pdf on their web site. I have had good luck with their tomatoes - Rio Grande and Red Pear were great, and you certainly get a LOT of seed in a pack. Not such great luck with peppers though; their Romanian yellow pepper came out red ! But it was still nice, and they sent me a free replacement packet.
