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UK seed swap or pass it on

 
steward and tree herder
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Location: Isle of Skye, Scotland. Nearly 70 inches rain a year
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Getting to the end of the season, and I have most of my seeds ready to pass on for swaps or pass-it-forwards favours. Since the seeds are only available in limited quantities, purple moosage me with your request (and snail mail address to send to) first, so I can check whether I have seed left for you. These were all gathered fresh by me this year either from wild plants or my plants grown here on Skye.
Please be aware if you are outside of the UK there may be problems with restrictions on your country allowing imports of seeds, so any loss in transit is at your risk.

I'm looking for seeds to add to my landrace project, so if you have any saved seeds of Carrots, Parsnip, Broad (fava) beans, Runner beans, Swede (Rutabaga), Peas, leeks, Avena strigosa (blackoats, bristle oats japanese oats), Bere barley, rye, particularly any cool season, quick ripening varieties, we can maybe do a swap.

I have the following seeds available in limited quantities (first come first served):

Good king Henry (Chenopodium bonus-henricus)
”Good

Pignut (Conopodium majus)  my blog on pignut
”Pignut

Caucasian spinach (Hablitzia Tamnoides) my blog on Hablitzia
”Caucasian

Sweet Cicely (Myrrhis odorata)
”Sweet

British bluebells (Hyacinthoides non-scripta)
”Bluebells

Sea Cabbage (Brassica oleracea)
”Sea

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) X large flowered forms)
”Dandelion

Yellow rattle (Rhinanthus minor) my blog on yellow rattle
Yellow rattle Rhinanthus minor seed uk

Angelica (Angelica archangelica)
”Angelica

Wild Angelica (Angelica sylvestris)
wild angelica

Selfheal (Prunella vulgaris)
”Selfheal

Marsh woundwort (Stachys palustris)  (seeds not tubers)
marsh woundwort
woundwort tubers (on right)

my blog on marsh woundwort

Ribwort plantain (selected from longer seed heads)


Meadowsweet (filpendula ulmaria)


Udo (Aralia cordata) set berries for the first time this year! So seed gathered fresh this year from my plants  
Udo spring shoots


Turkish rocket (Bunias orientalis)  
turkish rocket spring leaves


True potato seed x pink fir apple the parent is an early maincrop with elongated waxy tubers.
True potato seed X "Skye blue" the parent is an early maincrop with floury tubers with dark purple skin, white flesh with a purple ring.
Skye blue tubers


Fava beans - wide mix of broad beans grown in close proximity to field beans.
Fava beans - mix of field beans grown in close proximity to broad beans.
some with colourful flowers


Flax X fibre type seed

Black oats (Avena strigosa) - mixture of varieties (no smut this year!)

Rye (Secale Cereale) fulltofta landrace - first year growing this and it did really well for me.

Bere barley (Hordeum vulgare)
rye barley and flax harvest


Ladies mantle (Alchemilla mollis) from Skye native plants

Any questions please ask.
 
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Good evening guys! Blake here to request some stuff from Britain and here's what he's targeting for his gardens next year in America.
1. Medieval German black carrot ( tried to acquire some from a seed company in Texas before a death in their family)
2. Gortark or Glendale cabbage ( need some for my Irish garden next year to commemorate my great grandpa)
3. Londonderry fava beans ( same as for the cabbage)
4. Tippary turnip ( same as above, it's an Irish turnip)
5. Viceroy parsnip (same as above)
6. Red stem leaf celery (same thing)
7. Irish black oats (same as above)
8. Kerry blue potatoes (same as above)
9. Moby Dick yellow cucumber ( trying to use that in my European settler garden next year)
10.  More Bere barley ( wanna invest in more to honor the fur traders that passed through my community and settled elsewhere in my region)
11. Dutch Red cabbage ( tried to find those in America, but don't have any)
12. Serbian melon
13. Serbian white sweet pepper
14. Serbian Osmask white corn
15. Serbian giant red sweet pepper
16. Ancient Serbian pole beans
17. Slovenian red onion
18. Serbian onion
19. Early Polish watermelon
20. Gros artichoke
21. Common Flat Dutch cabbage
22. Irish green pea
Those are my targeted crops to grow next year in Chicago to honor my community's past and have done my very best to acquire them although the requirements are too difficult to bring these historic crops into America due to custom issues and things of that nature, and don't know or have anybody to aid me in my efforts to accomplish some of my goals to help my community and region remember their past and culture of their motherlands. Please reach me at my Purple Mooseage to discuss more ways to acquire these historic varieties and overcome the legal hurdles. Good night!
 
pioneer
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Glendale cabbage?!

"In the parish of Glendale, on Scotland’s Isle of Skye, folk talk of a giant cabbage once grown by their ancestors."

I think I've eaten this .. and we called it "Shetland cabbage"?

https://gaiafoundation.org/where-giants-grow/
 
Nancy Reading
steward and tree herder
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Location: Isle of Skye, Scotland. Nearly 70 inches rain a year
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Ac Baker wrote:I think I've eaten this .. and we called it "Shetland cabbage"?

https://gaiafoundation.org/where-giants-grow/


Maybe, but the story is that the seed came from the a survivors from the Spanish armada in the 16th century. Cabbages and kale do grow remarkably well here, considering the acidic soil - witness my sea cabbage; some of which has survived several winters with me.... Whether anyone still grows the original strain here, I believe not.
 
Nancy Reading
steward and tree herder
Posts: 11107
Location: Isle of Skye, Scotland. Nearly 70 inches rain a year
5386
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Blake - some of my starting seed for my bere barley and black oats did come from Ireland if you would like some? I know US customs are difficult at the moment, but we may get them through if you would like me to try.
 
Blake Lenoir
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Hey Nancy. I'd like some more Bere barley and black oats to advance my restoration of my grandfather's Irish past even though I never knew the full truth to his story. Also like some common Flat Dutch or one of the two giant cabbages, as well as the red stem celery, viceroy parsnip, Tippary parsnip, Londonderry or Celtic fava beans, Irish green peas and a few others if you have those besides the first two you mention. These two historic cabbages are extremely hard to find and obtain as well as a few others. I'm looking to make my Irish garden as historic and authentic as it can so it can resemble the classic motherland. Please share me more details on how I obtain these crops in a secure manner so I can handily have them for the coming growing season. Have a good day.
 
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