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DeBaggio's Herb Farm & Nursery


Your search for Vegetables begining with the letter S returned 48 items.


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Displaying items 1 thru 15


Shungiku (Edible Chrysanthemum).

. Makes a flavorful addition to salads, vegetables, pickles, and sushi. Harvest when plants are 4 to 8 inches tall. Unharvested plants will have small orange yellow chrysanthemum flowers.
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Spinach.

Spinacia oleracea 'Tyee'. Description not available at this time
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Squash, Zucchini.

'Black Beauty'. 55 days. Dwarf, bushy vines produce cylindrical, long, smooth, dark-green fruit with greenish white flesh. Space plants 3 to 4 feet apart. Feed/fertilize regularly. Water regularly once flowers appear until fruits ripen.
Last Seed Source: www.seedsavers.org


Squash, Zucchini.

'Cocozelle'. 42-56 days. Bush type. Long, cylindrical fruit is dark green with light green stripes. Plant 3 to 4 feet apart. Fertilize/feed regularly throughout the season. Water regularly once flowers appear until fruits ripen. Do not disturb roots when transplanting.
Last Seed Source: www.germaniaseed.com


Squash, Zucchini.

'Costata Romanesco'. 52 days to harvest. A traditional Italian heirloom. This distinctive zucchini is medium gray-green, with pale green flecks and prominent ribs. Big, large-leafed, trailing vines produce only half the yield of hybrids, but much have a flavor, nutty, and delicious, raw or cooked. Also a good producer of heavy male blossom buds for cooking.
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Squash, Zucchini.

'Gold Rush'.
Last Seed Source: www.harrisseeds.com


Squash, Summer.

Cucurbita pepo 'Prolific Straightneck'. 50 days. 1938 AAS Winner. Uniform lemon-yellow, club-shaped fruit. Firm flesh is of excellent quality. Harvest when 3 to 7 inches long. Plants are vigorous, hardy, and productive. Space 2 to 3 feet apart. Do not disturb roots when transplanting.
Last Seed Source: www.germaniaseed.com


Squash, Yellow Patty Pan.

Cucurbita pepo 'Sunburst F1'. 52 days. 1985 All-America Selections winner. Prolific producer of tender, rounded squash with a scalloped profile. Vigorous plant. Plant 2 to 3 feet apart. Do not disturb roots when transplanting
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Strawberry, Alpine.

. These small, conical, deep red berries have delicate, soft flesh that is perfume-sweet when fully ripe. It is no wonder that Charles V of France was captivated by them in 1360 and brought them from the woods to his garden. These modern offspring of his fraises des bois bear the royal breeding of the originals; they are refined, well-mannered, everbearing plants that are compact and runnerless. Commercial growers gave up the cultivation of these strawberries decades ago, an event attributed to the need for large, eye-popping berries that traveled well, no matter their taste. Space plants 12 inches apart in full sun or part shade. Soil should be rich in humus, deeply dug, and drain well. Keep plants watered well during dry, hot summer months. Alpine strawberries are produced from June until frost. They are best enjoyed right off the vine, since they do not store well. Crowns may be divided every three years to produce additional plants. When transplanting, be sure the crown of the plant is above soil level.
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Strawberry, Everbearing.

Fragaria 'Ozark Beauty'. Hardy to -30°F. Vigorous plants produce excellent quality berries. Fruit is a deep red color externally and red throughout when mature, very sweet with excellent strawberry flavor. For new plantings, pinch off early blooms to promote larger, later harvest. Remove all but 2 or three runners the first year. Remaining runners can be lifted and replanted once rooted, but typically will not set fruit in their first year. Ideal pH range: 5.3 to 6.5.


Strawberry, Pine.

'White Carolina'. Description not available at this time


Peppers /Chiles
As popular as the tomato in home gardens, peppers should not be transplanted to the garden as early. Pepper transplants may be placed in the garden after night temperatures are reliably 50°F or above; plants subjected to cold nights often become stunted, reducing pepper production. A temperature range of 60°F to 80°F provides the best growth and fruiting. Site plants in full sun (minimum 4 hours) and in soil with a pH range of 5.5 to 6.8. Space 2 to 3 feet apart. Support is usually needed to prevent fruit laden plants from toppling under their own weight or in a strong wind. Notations in our listing about the number of days, indicate approximate time from transplanting to first harvest. Green peppers are immature fruits that ripen in an array of colors, but most commonly red or yellow. Plants are available beginning in late April.

Sweet Pepper.

'Alma Paprika'. 70-80 days. Ripens from cream-white to orange to red. Thick walled, cherry-type fruit. Excellent for drying and grinding.
Last Seed Source: www.hpsseed.com


Sweet Pepper.

'Antohi Romanian'. 53 days. Romanians typically fry this heirloom pepper in a hot skillet in order to fully experience the sweet, full flavor. Plants produce lots of yellow 4 inch tapered fruits that eventually ripen red.
Last Seed Source: www.johnnyseeds.com


Sweet Pepper.

'Big Bertha'. 70 days. A giant in the sweet pepper pantheon, this hybrid has fruits as large as 7 inches long and 4 inches in diameter. Young green peppers mature red on plants that are easily 3 feet high. Fruit is mostly 4-lobed, making it good for stuffing.
Last Seed Source: www.hpsseed.com


Sweet Pepper.

'Blushing Beauty Hybrid'. 72 days. Hybrid. Sweet, blocky 4 inch fruit ripen ivory to gold to orange to red. All color stages on the plant at the same time. All-America Selections winner for 2000! Fruit is almost never green.
Last Seed Source: www.ivygarth.com



  • Thomas DeBaggio
    (1942-2011)

We are no longer growing any plants. Listings are for information only. Last seed source listed after some of the plants is the company from which I last purchased the seeds. I make no guarantee that a variety is still available from that company or that there aren't other sources. Plants with no source either were not grown from seed (most likely) or the seed is not commercially available.