Pulsegleaner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2014
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- Lower Hudson Valley, New York
Like the vast majority of things I grow, I found them, so I don't know what their official variety name is, if they even have one.What kind of peas are those?
They MAY be what is referred to as "Kala Vanata" (Black Peas) in India, but I am not sure. To be clear I'm not sure, because I'm not totally sure what the definition of Kala Vanata is. Most sites seem to indicate it is a catch all for all soup peas with dark brown or mottled seedcoats. So, for example, a Carlin Pea, Maple Pea, Latvian Pea or any of the other would count as Kala Vanata, and I have often seen peas resembling these in bags of dried peas from India. But there was ONE picture I once saw that resembled these specific ones in being super small (either the peas were small, or the bowl they were in was equipped with a spoon like handle. With nothing else for scale in the picture, I could not tell.
I used to find a LOT of these peas in bags of lentils back when I was in college, along with lots of those tiny grass pea seeds. They stopped showing up when I left, and I thought that was the last I'd see of them. However, after the whole incident when one of the brands of lentils became full of vetch seeds, there was brief period where they again began to show those grass peas and peas (though at a much lower quantity). And those are the ones I planted this year (the company's lentils now have NOTHING of note in them, and haven't for some time, so I assume this is it.)
Besides the small size and mottled seedcoats, these peas also have an extreme version of the "chenille" or "caterpillar" trait, which is analogous to the "crowder" trait for cow peas. So, when ripe in a full pod, they come out as basically cylinders, not spheres.
Based on the last time I did them, they are also VERY fast maturing. Assuming the weather holds up, I could easily be seeing ripe, dried seeds in as little as 45 days. Certainly by 60.