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Vermont

GREEN
MOUNTAIN TRANSPLANTS, INC.
RR 1,
P.O. Box 6C, East Montpelier, VT 05651
802-454-1533; fax 802-454-1204
Dexter R. Merritt
Vegetable
and flower seedlings.
Business hours April though June, Monday to Friday
8:3O-5.
Saturday 9-noon. Fax open 24 hours. Greenhouses open in June to
clear stock.
Free
catalog. Mail order. E-mail: GMThnspl@aol.com. Web site:
www.gmtransplants.com.
Green
Mountain Transplants Is a seasonal nursery specializing in
vegetable and flower seedlings grown in its northern Vermont
greenhouses. Its seedlings (called transplants) come in 38- and 72-cell
flats, shipped to customers from late April through June. Each
seedling has a developed root ball and (in the 38-cell flats) soil
volume about equal to a 21/2-inch pot. In effect, Green Mountain
allows gardeners to oversee the last stage of seedling growth themselves,
rather than paying a retailer to finish plants for them. These
seedlings transplant easily, and quickly catch up to garden center
plants. The only hard part of Green Mountain’s system is
completing the order blank, which requires figuring out which
plants come in 38-cell packs, which come in 72-cell
packs, and which have a small per-plant surcharge.
While
different varieties can be mixed within a single flat, glitches
may occur with orders that are too complicated. To ensure timely
delivery, we strongly recommend that simple, straightforward
orders be placed early; remain free of alteration; and specify
“no substitutions.” Be warned that the greenhouse staff is
nearly impossible to communicate with during shipping season.
Within these limitations, Green Mountain offers an excellent way
to acquire spring vegetable and flower gardens at a surprisingly
modest cost, without the trouble and mess of sprouting seeds under
grow-lights in the basement.
Green
Mountain’s catalog lists more than 650 varieties of vegetable
and flower seedlings. Many are the kind of plants offered in
six-packs by good garden centers. Vegetables include squashes,
peppers, onions, tomatoes, melons, strawberries, asparagus, and
more than 40 culinary herbs. Less common vegetables are also
offered, such as celerlac, kohlrabi, okra, tomatillo, rhubarb, and
sweet potato. The tomato list includes gold and purple tomatoes,
heirlooms such as ~Brandywine’ and ‘Arnish Paste’, and a
compact European variety called ‘Window Box’. The chili pepper
selection ranges from warm ‘Hungarian Wax’ to ultra-hot ‘Red
Habanero’. We especially liked all the lovely lettuces: red
butterheads, green crispheads, frilly red Italians, and a green
romaine with red freckles, called ‘Freckles’.
Green
Mountain seedlings also include flower varieties, old and new.
Among the annuals are good choices of impatiens, fuchsia, salvia,
and verbena, and some interesting trailers and vines. A number of
these have won AAS awards. We particularly liked the broad
selection of petunias (grandifiora, multiflora, millifiora, and
trailing) and geraniums (zonal, ivy, and cranesbill), grown by the
nursery from cuttings and seed. Perennial seedlings include
yarrow, columbine, campanula, coreopsis, delphinium, dianthus,
daylily, hosta, phlox, poppy, sedum, and veronica. An uncommon
flower occasionally appears, such as the azalea-flowered
snapdragon. The list includes some good ground-cover plants.
Green
Mountain will custom-grow any vegetable or flower variety in a
38-cell flat (one variety per flat) if the customer provides or
pays for the seed. We once tried this with a flat of Cerinthe
major purpurascens, a dazzling container plant with blue
foliage and purplish bracts. It would have worked beautifully if
we had not been out of town when the plants arrived; as it was,
half of the plants survived, which still made them a bargain. We
recommend custom orders only to gardeners with stable schedules.
Green
Mountain’s catalog consists of 50 pages of newsprint, listing
flowers and vegetables by common name. Besides seedling flats, the
catalog offers supplies such as plastic mulch, drip-irrigation
tools, and harvest baskets. Certified seed potatoes are sold in 5-
and 50-pound bags, and onions and leeks in 288-cell flats or
25-plant bunches. Lily bulbs will accompany any transplant order
at bargain rates. Orders are due by April 1 to guarantee spring
delivery; anything later risks disappointment.
Although
Green Mountain operates almost exclusively by mail-order, the
greenhouses in East Montpelier are open to customers in June to
clear out the remaining stock, They are located off the main
highway, and getting there involves a windswept trip through
dairy-farm country laced with mountain views.
Directions:
Call for hours in June. From 1-91, take exit 21 onto Route 2 west,
in East Montpelier, turn right onto Route 114 north, in about a
mile, look for greenhouses on the right, behind some apple trees.
Alternatively, from Route 89, take exit 8 onto Route 2 east. Turn
left onto Route 114 north and follow directions above.
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WINDHAM WILDFLOWERS
P.O. Box 207,
Westminster Station, VT 05159 (802) 387-4096
Ruth Vroman Gorius
Natural
wildflower seeds. Free
catalog. Mail order. No visiting hours. CD-ROM pictorial plant
encyclopedia. E-mail: cj@flowerseeds.com. Web site:
www.flowerseeds.com.
Windham
Wildflowers sells all-natural wildflower seed grown in the Vermont
garden of Ruth Vroman Gorius, an experienced old-timer, formerly
of Putney Nursery. Gorius says she began selling wildflower seed
as “my answer to the many exotic wild plants Vermont would not
allow us to mail.” The nursery’s brief “old tyme catalog”
lists seed for 144 native wildflowers (for sun and shade), hybrid
perennials, and alpines. Native seeds include Jack-In-the-pulpit,
wild leek, wild bergamot, shooting star, Bowman’s-root, blue
cohosh, and wild sarsaparilla. as well as many common meadow
plants beloved of wildlife. Alpines include edelweiss, alpine
poppy, sea pink, and a saxifrage mix.
Windham
Wildflowers’ seed is sold by mail or through the Web site; many
varieties are unobtainable from commercial seed sources. Seed is
sold in individual packets or by the ounce (enough to cover 60
square feet). The nursery concocts unique seed mixtures for
perennial wildflowers, cut flowers, butterfly and hummingbird
attractants, and woodland perennials native to New England. A
CD-ROM pictorial encyclopedia of 100 wildflowers is produced by
the nursery. Seed orders are accompanied by homey wisdom from Ruth
Gorius, including her endorsement of “scarecrows and cats” as
effective plant guardians.
Nearby
attractions: Alternative sources for mail-order seed in Vermont
are High Mowing Organic Seed Farm, RR 1, Box 95, Derby Line, VT
05830 (802-89.5-4 696) (heirloom and open-pollinated vegetable
seed), and Le Jardin do Gourmet, P0. Box 75, St. Johnsbury Center,
VT 05863 (802-748-1446) (flower, vegetable, and herb seed; shallot
bulbs). The Vermont Wildflower Farm, P0. Box 6, Charlotte, VT
05445 (800-424-1165) keeps a signposted wildflower meadow on Route
7 in Charlotte (visitors welcome); despite its name, this seed
house is affiliated with a large horticultural enterprise in
Missouri and its seed orders processed by a call center in Peoria,
Illinois.
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