Pulsegleaner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2014
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- Lower Hudson Valley, New York
I'd be a lot easier if we knew the scientific name of them, then we could do some web research.The odd thing is these peas, presumably, come from a location with a much more difficult growing zone than you or I are in; Prairie Garden Seeds is in northern Saskatchewan. I guess it isn't impossible but I can't imagine that they buy these seeds elsewhere and sell them. So how are they getting such good quality seeds is the question. Maybe the plants are very frost tolerant, and the vines will continue to persist deep into September early October. I messaged the company. We'll see what they say about seed maturity with these.
God, I wish I was still back at Cornell and had access to the files at the Ag Station at Geneva; I remember them once photocopying me some publication that listed the vetches by seed shape. But it's twenty years now; any access I had will be long gone (I may have been eager but it was still just one college student among God knows how many. The undoubtedly saw hundreds just like me over the years. )
As I have mentioned, I tend to have the same growing problem with many soybeans (domestic ones, not the wild ones*). They'll reach what might be termed "edamame" stage quite quickly, and then sort of go into stasis, never moving on to drying down and being ready to be picked and stored. Or why I largely gave up on those; the last time I did a grow out of found ones (probably at least ten years ago, if not more) I think only one more or less matured correctly; and since that was the one with the super flat, super thin seeds, it wasn't one really worth pursuing for eating growth (though it was the first time I discovered soybeans could have seed that was red/pink when fresh.)
* With the wild ones, the problem was trying to keep up with the production, they LOVE it here (enough to be a potential weed threat if I lost control of them.)