Snow Pea, 'Schweizer Riesen'
(P. sativum) We trialed this almost 20 years ago on recommendation from our good friend Heather Tiszai, one of her favorites from the old Abundant Life Farm in Port Townsend, and have continued to be delighted by its vigor, sweet taste, and productivity year after year since. Beautiful bi-color purple/pink blooms are borne on sturdy 6’+ vines. The seemingly endless harvest of snow peas stays tender and sweet even as the pods mature and swell. An old variety from Switzerland, the name translates as “Swiss Giant”. One of our tastiest snow pea discoveries. Trellis as these vines love to grow and grow and grow...to 7'(super fun for a child's hiding place)!!
65-70 days. FF, UO
Packet: 1oz (~100-120 seeds)
*Note, some of our current lot contains a percentage of yellow podded off types
Product Code: PEA-SR-pkt
Availability:In stock
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Growing Info
SOWING:
Seeds can be sown as soon as the soil can be worked in the early Spring. Some people try to push the season even earlier by sowing in flats indoors and transplanting, but we are not those kinds of people (peas don't love to be transplanted). Direct seeding is strongly recommended.
Note: Fully saturated cold soil can cause big fleshy seeds like peas to rot, so waiting for a dryish spell in regions that see a lot of precipitation in the early spring, (like here in the PNW) is recommended for good emergence.
PLANTING DEPTH:
1/2-1"
SPACING:
6-8 seeds per linear foot (thinning further is not generally needed)
EMERGENCE:
5-14 days @ soil temp 50-75F
LIGHT:
Full sun to part shade
FERTILITY:
Low to medium. Peas (and other legumes) are able to produce their own usable nitrogen from atmospheric nitrogen through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria that colonize specialized nodules in their roots. Too much soil fertility can cause excessive vegetative growth at the expense of pod set. High nitrogen can also produce more disease-susceptible plants.
ADDITIONAL NOTES:
It can be quite beneficial to mix pea seeds with commercially available bacterial "inoculants" to encourage the beneficial symbiotic relationship in the growing plant's root nodules, especially if growing on ground that hasn't been planted with peas before. This can increase yields and improve plant health. In gardens or fields where peas have been grown regularly, there are often adequate populations of the beneficial bacteria already present and inoculant isn't necessary.
Provide a trellis for support.
Peas love cool weather! Avoid sowings that will mature in the heat of mid-late summer, as peas will quickly become starchy and tough.
Seed stats
Packet sows approx 6-8 ft