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100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...

100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa-...
  • Stock: In Stock
  • Model: 682648170
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$20.88

100 Pcs Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds- Heirloom Variety/Brassica Rapa- Organic (Non GMO)-Earliest of All/ (V079)


  • From Canada.
  • 100 Pcs Earliest of All (V079) Heirloom Golden Acre Cabbage Seeds-Brassica Rapa- Organic (Non GMO). Golden Acre is an excellent early summer variety ball head cabbage. With small to medium-sized green, round solid heads on compact plants with few outer leaves. Ideal for confined areas, it can be grown at 30cm spacings and give excellent small heads of first rate quality and flavour.
  • The heads are tightly folded, solid, 12 to 18cm (5 to 7 in) in diameter, round, grey-green in colour and weigh three to five pounds. Matures in 64 days. It is not a long standing variety but is Yellows resistant. Golden Acre is an old heirloom variety, earliest references are in 1927 seed catalogues where they say…. “A first early type This Danish variety is highly praised by all who have grown it.”. By 1950 it was called.
  • “The most popular variety for home and garden planting.”. Prepare the site: All brassica crops grow best in partial-shade, in firm, fertile, free-draining soil. Start digging over your soil as soon as you can brave the elements. Remove any stones you find and work in plenty of well-rotted manure or compost. Tread on the soil to remove air pockets and to make the surface firm.
  • Brassicas will fail if the soil is too acidic; add lime to the soil if necessary, aiming for a pH of 6.5 to 7.5. Sowing: Sow successionally from February to July. Nearly all brassicas should be planted in a seedbed or in modules under glass and then transferred. Seeds should be sown thinly, as this reduces the amount of future thinning necessary and potential risk from pests.

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