Please contact us for availability and pricing. Also check out our Cover Crop Fresh Sheet and our About Nash's Organic Certification — Certified Producer #470 |
VEGETABLE SEED - Legumes - Grains Click images to view larger photographs. |
Red Express Cabbage
Vigorously selected from Red Express for uniformity and early, round heads. First red cabbage of the season, reaching maturity 10-20 days before competitive varieties.
Limited quantity.
Green Columbia Cabbage
Early, uniform summer cabbage, well-suited to summer-long production. Resilient mainstay into early fall. Great flavor with a round, firm head ideal for wholesale and direct market.
Limited quantity.
Green Mariner Cabbage
Selected from Bingenheimer seed of Germany for winter hardiness and flavor. Tolerates cold weather, shows some resistance to black spot in winter, and stores well. Transplant into the field in July for late fall harvest. Simply the sweetest flavor fresh from the field we’ve experienced. Limited quantity, but we like this one so much we want to share it.
Limited quantity.
Red Granite Cabbage
Late summer/fall/winter cabbage with beautiful deep purple color. Selected from Bingenheimer seed for our NW growing conditions. Performs well mid/late season and holds well in the field in early winter and in storage. Mild sweet flavor. Transplant into field in July for fall harvest.
Limited quantity.
Red Winter Cabbage
Grown at Nash’s farm for over 20 years. Great deep red/purple color, spicy cabbage flavor with hard, firm, round head. Tolerates NW maritime winters and stores well under refrigeration.
Winter Bloomsdale Spinach
Our favorite for early spring overwintered spinach production. Heavy, Savoy-type, thick leaves, with great flavor. Winter-hardy in well-drained soils yielding the first field spinach of the year.
Red Russian Kale
Favored for its winter hardiness, tender leaves and flavor. 50% taller, consistently more vigorous and robust than current commercial varieties. The salad candy of kales.
Red Winter Kale
Developed on our farm, it is our main production winter kale for its cold-hardiness, red/purple color, frilly leaves and 4-foot stature. Has powdery mildew resistance and reliable survivability down to temperatures in the teens (°F). Provides consistent leaf production through the winter. Plant in June for good plant structure going into winter.
Green Winter Kale
A strong, vigorous, winterbor-type open-pollinated green kale. Developed on our farm over the last 20 years; Dungeness Green has the hardiness and stature of its Brussels sprout heritage, with the leaf curl of the most refined green kales. Grows to 3 feet in height; an outstanding producer later in the season than any other green kale we’ve seen. Plant in June to develop a tall well-structured plant by autumn. This variety has shown resistance to powdery mildew in our milder NW damp winters, and no leaf-edge yellowing in temperatures down to the low 20s F. Limited quantity.
Vegetable Seed - LEGUMES - Grains Click images to view larger photographs. |
Windsor Fava Beans (Broad Beans)
Prolific English heirloom variety produces 3-5 large beans in 6-8” green pods on 4-6’ stalks. Sow in mid-autumn for fall germinating and overwintering. Winter-hardy plant reliably tolerates down to 15° F in the maritime NW. Produces early summer green pods for shelling beans, dries down for harvest of dried beans in the fall. Dried beans make great soups, stews or hummus.
Diana Fava Beans (Bell Beans)
A master of biomass that out-competes most weeds when grown to maturity. Plants can reach 6-8’ tall. Plant in autumn or in early spring. Winter-hardy plant reliably tolerates down to 12° F, but is intolerant of drought. Turn in at flower set for early nitrogen-fixing cover crop. Grows well when planted with annual rye grain in a mixed cover crop. Produces small, globule, high-protein beans (25%) in a 3-5” pod, suitable for feed mixes or excellent protein in soups or casseroles.
Yellow Field Peas
Classic dried field pea for cover crop, animal feed, and split pea soup with a ham hock! Fast-growing to 2’, maxing out near 4’. Early pea shoots with purple/white flowers are perfect for salads. Yields heavy crops of high-protein (22%) dried peas. Plant from early spring into summer for a fast, nitrogen-rich cover crop, about 150 lb. per acre, depending on soil.
Common Vetch
Robust cover crop for building organic matter in soil and providing nitrogen, as well as breaking down straw thatch from grain crops. Plant 100-120 lb. per acre in autumn or spring.
Vegetable Seed - Legumes - GRAINS Click images to view larger photographs. |
Rye/Vetch Mix
Excellent cover crop. Grows well together in many different soils. Winter-hardy for fall planting, or use year-round. Vetch trellises on rye for dense stands. On wet, poorly drained soils, over-wintered rye may lodge when 4-to-5 feet tall, but vetch will mesh to a 3-foot-thick mat, producing a textured, nitrogen-rich cover crop. Plant about 150 lb. per acre, depending on soil.