Joe Haynes
Chillin' In The Garden
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2014
- Messages
- 12
- Reaction score
- 3
- Points
- 30
This year, my daughter and I will be planting a Patawomeck Indian garden. I am a member of the Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia and want to grow some plants that my ancestors grew hundreds of years ago.
After some research, I learned that the Patawomecks planted three varieties of corn: popcorn, flint, and dent. One of the varieties only grew to about 3' tall and matured in about 50 days. They planted two crops of this corn so they had four total corn harvests per season.
After searching for a fast maturing heirloom corn, I ran across Gaspe Flint Corn which is a corn that was corn my Native people in Canada. The cooler climate meant they needed a fast maturing corn. So far, I have been unsuccessful in locating a seller that can ship the corn to the U.S.
Does anyone know of a source for some Gaspe Flint Corn seed in the U.S.?
We will be growing corn, pole beans using the corn stalks as poles, and squash using techniques that were used by Virginia Indians in the 17th century. It's an exciting project and we can't wait to see some growing plants!
After some research, I learned that the Patawomecks planted three varieties of corn: popcorn, flint, and dent. One of the varieties only grew to about 3' tall and matured in about 50 days. They planted two crops of this corn so they had four total corn harvests per season.
After searching for a fast maturing heirloom corn, I ran across Gaspe Flint Corn which is a corn that was corn my Native people in Canada. The cooler climate meant they needed a fast maturing corn. So far, I have been unsuccessful in locating a seller that can ship the corn to the U.S.
Does anyone know of a source for some Gaspe Flint Corn seed in the U.S.?
We will be growing corn, pole beans using the corn stalks as poles, and squash using techniques that were used by Virginia Indians in the 17th century. It's an exciting project and we can't wait to see some growing plants!