
Every gardener loves the fall/winter seasons. The garden is tucked away for winter and our canning of vegetables and homemade jams decorate the pantry shelves in a beautiful array of color—as gorgeous as the bright, fall leaves outdoors.
As much as we enjoy viewing the bounty of our harvest though, we absolutely love the day the postman brings the first of our seed catalogs. A gardener can spend days on end thumbing through each section of vegetables and the bright, colored photos gracing the pages. There’s nothing better than a quiet afternoon, snuggled up in a comfortable reading chair with a mug in one hand, pencil tucked behind the ear and a seed catalog in the other hand. We will spend hours each winter reading, circling and jotting notes in our catalogs—it’s better than a Christmas Wish Book.
Then, come early spring it’s finally time to dwindle the list of favorites down and get the seed orders completed. So, to help new gardeners discover seed companies offering open-pollinated and heirloom varieties—the only seed that seed saving gardeners order and grow—I’ve compiled a list of some excellent companies to consider.
Visit their websites and get your free catalogs delivered just in time for winter. Support companies that share an interest in preserving open-pollinated and heirloom seeds by purchasing your garden seed from them—our future depends on small companies like these.
Company: Click on Link to Visit Website
As much as we enjoy viewing the bounty of our harvest though, we absolutely love the day the postman brings the first of our seed catalogs. A gardener can spend days on end thumbing through each section of vegetables and the bright, colored photos gracing the pages. There’s nothing better than a quiet afternoon, snuggled up in a comfortable reading chair with a mug in one hand, pencil tucked behind the ear and a seed catalog in the other hand. We will spend hours each winter reading, circling and jotting notes in our catalogs—it’s better than a Christmas Wish Book.
Then, come early spring it’s finally time to dwindle the list of favorites down and get the seed orders completed. So, to help new gardeners discover seed companies offering open-pollinated and heirloom varieties—the only seed that seed saving gardeners order and grow—I’ve compiled a list of some excellent companies to consider.
Visit their websites and get your free catalogs delivered just in time for winter. Support companies that share an interest in preserving open-pollinated and heirloom seeds by purchasing your garden seed from them—our future depends on small companies like these.
Company: Click on Link to Visit Website