Kitchen Garden

KEEP YOUR OPTIONS OPEN

It’s that time of year again when the seed catalogues start to arrive. With a profusion of choices available, picking your seeds can be a daunting task.

You will need to consider your plot size and local conditions, and the foods you and your family like will influence your decisions. Another choice you’ll have to make is whether to grow open-pollinated or F1 hybrid seeds.

F1 hybrids are the first generation result of planned crosses between specially selected parents. This planned parentage results in a single generation seed with very specific characteristics, such as: bolt resistant, fast maturity, disease resistant, productivity, fruit size or colour. Only the breeder of the F1 hybrid variety knows exactly which two parent plants are needed to produce the seed and thus becomes the exclusive source of that variety. The seed companies protect their interests by patenting their F1 hybrids and breeding varieties which, in effect, puts them firmly in possession of the most crucial element of our food supply, the seed, by privately owning those “sow once” genetically homogeneous seeds and controlling their availability. If you want to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden7 min read
A Space Apart
How long have you been growing your own and how long have you had your allotment? I've been an avid gardener now for well over 10 years, learning as I go while also trying to teach my two children, Imogen (10) and Oscar (5). Before we got the keys to
Kitchen Garden3 min read
Garden Store Plus * subscriber Savers
Incredibly strong, extremely sharp, surprisingly light – and golden. What more could one ask of a spade? Niwaki's Golden Spade, now available in Long in addition to the Standard and Small sizes, is ideal for general-purpose digging, tree planting and
Kitchen Garden3 min read
Under Cover
As heat- and sun-loving plants, aubergines need to be grown under cover for most of the UK. It is too late to sow aubergine seeds now, but May is an ideal time to buy in a few grafted plants (and it saves you months of growing on heat from seed!). Gr

Related Books & Audiobooks