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expiredTinkleondabeach posted Jun 22, 2024 06:01 AM
expiredTinkleondabeach posted Jun 22, 2024 06:01 AM

30-Pack Deluxe Valley Greene Heirloom Non-GMO Vegetable Garden Seeds

$10

$18

44% off
Amazon
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Deal Details
Black Duck Deals via Amazon has 30-Pack Deluxe Valley Greene Heirloom Non-GMO Vegetable Garden Seeds on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member Tinkleondabeach2 for finding this deal.

Includes:
  • Burpee Stringless Green Pod Garden Bean
  • Topnotch Golden Wax Garden Bean
  • Detroit Dark Red Beet
  • Calabrese Green Sprouting Broccoli
  • Nantes Coreless Carrots
  • Cubanelle Pepper
  • Stowell's Evergreen Sweetcorn
  • Country Gentleman Sweetcorn
  • Table Queen Squash
  • Chicago Pickling Cucumber
  • Marketmore 76 Cucumber
  • White Spine Cucumber
  • Black Seeded Simpson Lettuce
  • Beefsteak Tomato
  • Garlic Chives
  • Green Arrow Peas
  • Keystone Resistant Giant Pepper
  • Rutgers Tomato
  • Jack O' Lantern Pumpkin
  • Champion Radish
  • Golden Bantam Sweetcorn
  • Parris Island Cos Lettuce
  • Cherry Tomato
  • Purple Top White Globe Turnip
  • Seven Top Turnip
  • Black Beauty Zucchini Squash
  • Early Scarlet Globe Radish
  • Bloomsdale Longstanding Spinach
  • Early Prolific Straightneck Squash
  • Buttercrunch Lettuce

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This matches the previous Frontpage Deal from earlier this month.
    • All seeds are dated Sell By December 2024 but if kept in a cool dry place seeds typically stay viable for years.
    • Rated 4.5 stars overall based on over 4,800 reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and give the WIKI and forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by Tinkleondabeach
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Black Duck Deals via Amazon has 30-Pack Deluxe Valley Greene Heirloom Non-GMO Vegetable Garden Seeds on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member Tinkleondabeach2 for finding this deal.

Includes:
  • Burpee Stringless Green Pod Garden Bean
  • Topnotch Golden Wax Garden Bean
  • Detroit Dark Red Beet
  • Calabrese Green Sprouting Broccoli
  • Nantes Coreless Carrots
  • Cubanelle Pepper
  • Stowell's Evergreen Sweetcorn
  • Country Gentleman Sweetcorn
  • Table Queen Squash
  • Chicago Pickling Cucumber
  • Marketmore 76 Cucumber
  • White Spine Cucumber
  • Black Seeded Simpson Lettuce
  • Beefsteak Tomato
  • Garlic Chives
  • Green Arrow Peas
  • Keystone Resistant Giant Pepper
  • Rutgers Tomato
  • Jack O' Lantern Pumpkin
  • Champion Radish
  • Golden Bantam Sweetcorn
  • Parris Island Cos Lettuce
  • Cherry Tomato
  • Purple Top White Globe Turnip
  • Seven Top Turnip
  • Black Beauty Zucchini Squash
  • Early Scarlet Globe Radish
  • Bloomsdale Longstanding Spinach
  • Early Prolific Straightneck Squash
  • Buttercrunch Lettuce

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This matches the previous Frontpage Deal from earlier this month.
    • All seeds are dated Sell By December 2024 but if kept in a cool dry place seeds typically stay viable for years.
    • Rated 4.5 stars overall based on over 4,800 reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and give the WIKI and forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by Tinkleondabeach

Community Voting

Deal Score
+33
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Top Comments

jeecay
589 Posts
149 Reputation
Heirloom basically means that the plant you grow can produce seeds that can grow more of the same kind of plant.
bmv_a2
205 Posts
114 Reputation


​LOL well let's see . . . I currently have their beefsteek tomato, Detroit dark red beet (almost ready to harvest) keystone resistant giant bell pepper, cubanelle pepper, mammoth dill (not included in the 30 packet offer) and a 2nd round of purple top turnips growing, but it will be a month or so before I can share harvest pictures of most of those. I'm attaching photos of the black seeded simpson lettuce, parris island cos Lettuce, buttercrunch lettuce, 1st round of purple top turnips, and bloomsdale longstanding spinach I harvested last month.
EyeVandy
340 Posts
94 Reputation
The other type of plant is a "hybrid." They've crossed two types of tomato, pepper, etc. because that plant will produce veggies that have desirable characteristics. The child plant might produce more, or have a longer growing season, or sweeter fruit, something like that.

But when THAT plant produces seeds, those seeds aren't going to produce the same plant. The "grandchild" plant is going to be different. You can't buy Jalafuego seeds and grow them this year, and then save the seeds and grow more Jalafuegos next year.

Heirloom seeds are not better or worse than hybrids, just a different mindset. I haven't really heard of the term "heirloom" being applied to anything besides tomatoes before (sometimes it's just called "open-pollinated"). With tomatoes you have people that like the idea of really unique tomatoes that they can cultivate over the course of years, and you have people that just want a plant that produces hundreds of super sweet cherry tomatoes and is resistant to disease, and don't mind buying seeds or plants every year.

I've said this in other posts on these same seeds, but I think calling these "heirloom" is a little misleading. The concept of heirloom chives is ridiculous. Chives are a perennial that spread by multiplying bulbs underground, there's no reason to care whether their seeds will grow the same plant. I also can't imagine trying to collect seeds from broccoli or lettuce but maybe people do this? As many people have said, these are not particularly expensive seeds, how could that be worth your time? At any rate there are no health or quality implications with hybrids vs. heirlooms despite what this seller is saying. And of course they throw the GMO scare in there even though you can't even buy GMO seeds at the consumer level.

If it were me, I'd take the $10 and buy 4 or 5 individual packets of vegetables that you really like, and get experience with those. And apart from tomatoes, don't worry about whether they are heirloom.

38 Comments

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Jun 25, 2024 03:43 PM
340 Posts
Joined Sep 2019
EyeVandyJun 25, 2024 03:43 PM
340 Posts
Quote from evar :
actually, most seeds produced and sold in the United States are of GMO nature. there's a huge article about this almost 10 years ago in nature, magazine, and various other publications
Link? Or name of the article? Or don't, because this is 100% false. You cannot buy GMO seeds in the US at retail. Maybe the article you're talking about is referring to production crops?
Last edited by EyeVandy June 25, 2024 at 08:52 AM.
Jun 25, 2024 04:19 PM
598 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
SteelRingJun 25, 2024 04:19 PM
598 Posts
GMO or not, who cares.... as long as it grows it works for me..... BTW has anyone ever picked a fruit or veg, tasted it and tell if it's GMO or not? I don't think so. non-GMO crap is a scam.
Jun 25, 2024 04:52 PM
2,382 Posts
Joined Feb 2005
nolifeJun 25, 2024 04:52 PM
2,382 Posts
Quote from EyeVandy :
Link? Or name of the article? Or don't, because this is 100% false. You cannot buy GMO seeds in the US at retail. Maybe the article you're talking about is referring to production crops?
Exactly. https://www.finegardening.com/art...-gmo-seeds

From the article. To set the record straight, there are currently no genetically modified garden seeds available for sale to the general public. Not from Lake Valley or other seed companies selling to home gardeners.
1
Jun 25, 2024 07:51 PM
201 Posts
Joined Apr 2018
savenow2020Jun 25, 2024 07:51 PM
201 Posts
Quote from Frankie251 :
I've used seeds that were five years old. The germination rate will go down but it never goes to zero unless they've gotten wet. They don't expire, but you need to keep them cool and away from humidity. I use photo boxes to organize my seeds. I'll never use all my seeds until we have the zombie apocalypse, but I'm ready when we do.
is it good to seal them dry and keep them in freezer ?
Jun 25, 2024 08:12 PM
45 Posts
Joined Jan 2023
Raiderman786Jun 25, 2024 08:12 PM
45 Posts
Quote from evar :
actually, most seeds produced and sold in the United States are of GMO nature. there's a huge article about this almost 10 years ago in nature, magazine, and various other publications
Actually you can buy GMO seeds. The Norfolk Produce Company recernly released seeds that have snapdragon purple gene engineered into them. I bought a pack and have a bunch of purple tomatoes. Beautiful to look at.

1
Jun 25, 2024 09:30 PM
15,350 Posts
Joined Aug 2006
Tourist1292Jun 25, 2024 09:30 PM
15,350 Posts
GMO is not necessary a bad thing. It may make it drought or disease resistant. The seed packs before season are usually $1-$2 each at Menards. Of the 30 packs on the list, I may only want 6-8 of them anyway which is around $10 value for me.
Pro
Jun 25, 2024 10:54 PM
1,347 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
Frankie251
Pro
Jun 25, 2024 10:54 PM
1,347 Posts
Quote from savenow2020 :
is it good to seal them dry and keep them in freezer ?
I don't know. I would be afraid to put most vegetable seeds in the freezer, although some seeds, like blueberries, won't germinate unless they've been frozen. It's called stratification. But personally, I haven't found it necessary for vegetables, but you may be onto something.
https://www.prairienursery.com/re...%20process.

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Jun 26, 2024 07:37 AM
229 Posts
Joined Feb 2022
Texasluv99Jun 26, 2024 07:37 AM
229 Posts
That's not the price I see. Is the deal over?

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