digitS'
Garden Master
This was a couple of days ago. Some of these, and others, came home this morning.
These are Sugar Daddy. Usually, I have snow peas this time of year but, I'm more of an all-American snap pea guy. Did you know that it was a guy in Idaho who developed these?!
No, I mean this class of vegetables. I don't know about the Sugar Daddy variety, maybe someone at Oregon State U . I tried them a few years ago seeing if they would grow in the spring without support. Not very well ...
Sowing the last week of July, my snow peas are always short. The heat of summer must do that to them. Here's a naturally short variety. They went between the broccoli plants and claimed that space after those plants were pulled.
I have to admit that I'm not sure how things would have gone if the cold weather of about 10 days ago would have lingered. Oh, pea plants can survive a frost, you may be saying. Sure they can but, IME it slows them and frost can destroy the blossoms. Waiting for them to bloom and produce may not be an option.
A little earlier sowing, say, the 15th - with the last of the bush bean seed - should be about right for here for snap peas, 9 years out of 10.
Steve