Brassica Seed Cheat Sheet

Here’s a Brassica cheat sheet for #seedsavingformarketgrowers There are 6 common brassicas species. If you grow two crops of the same species. They will cross pollinate together. For better or worse.  Mostly worse if you want something true to type. But if you grow two brassicas of different species side by side, they will not … More Brassica Seed Cheat Sheet

The Misery (And Joy) Of Radish Seed

There are 2 kinds of Radishes Spring Radishes – small, round and ready in 3 to 4 weeks from sowing. You can plant them all summer if you treat them right Winter Radishes – larger radishes and daikon that are sown midsummer for fall harvest. These store well through the winter. Both are in the … More The Misery (And Joy) Of Radish Seed

Rutabaga And Turnips – Brassica Napus In Your Garden

This is a Public Turnip Announcement. There are Rutabagas and there are Turnips. And  maybe you think they are the same thing and maybe you insist that they are different. I’m not here to tell you how you should use these words. I just want to make sure you’re equipped to save their seed. Because … More Rutabaga And Turnips – Brassica Napus In Your Garden

Brassica juncea – another crosser for your seed plan

Mustard greens are an easy choice for #seedsavingformarketgrowers Mustard greens are in the Brassica juncea species. I’ve heard that there is a whole world of Brassica juncea diversity out there including heading mustards and turnip root mustards and swollen stem mustards. I can’t vouch for those. But what I do know is that there is … More Brassica juncea – another crosser for your seed plan

Brassica Oleracea – That Wonderful Magical Animal

Ahhh, Brassica oleracea – That wonderful magical animal that brings us Broccoli, Brussels Sprouts, Collards, Kale, Gai Lan, Cabbage, Kohlrabi, and Cauliflower. All of these crops stem from the same leafy common ancestor. Farmers have been selecting away at them for the last couple millenia to bring us this current selection of Brassica oleracea. Needless … More Brassica Oleracea – That Wonderful Magical Animal

So Much Brassica Rapa Seed To Save!

Did you know that leafy greens like Mizuna, Tatsoi, Tokyo Bekana, Komatsuma, Bok Choy are all Brassica rapa?  And so are budding and flowering Brassicas such as Choy Sum, Hon Tsai Tai, and Rapini?  Not to mention Napa cabbage?  And turnips? (And by turnip I mean those tender white fleshed roots that are so delicious … More So Much Brassica Rapa Seed To Save!