Radiant Rose Hollyhock (Alcea rosea 'Radiant Rose') is a vibrant and eye-catching perennial celebrated for its large, single, rose-pink blooms that brighten garden borders with a cheerful pop of color. Part of the refined "Spotlight Series," this variety features strong, upright stems that can reach 5 to 6 feet tall, making it ideal for adding vertical interest to cottage-style or traditional garden settings. Blooming from mid to late summer, Radiant Rose performs best in full sun and well-drained soil, with improved resistance to rust and other common hollyhock diseases. Its nectar-rich flowers attract butterflies and bees, enhancing both beauty and biodiversity in the landscape.
Sugar Lace peas are a unique variety of edible-podded peas known for their attractive, semi-leafless vines with tendrils that help them cling and climb, reducing the need for support. These peas produce sweet, crisp pods that are stringless and ideal for fresh eating, stir-frying, or steaming. Unlike traditional shelling peas, Sugar Lace peas are enjoyed whole, pod and all, making them a convenient and nutritious garden snack. They are a late-season type with high yields and excellent disease resistance, thriving best in cool weather and well-drained soil. Their compact growth habit also makes them suitable for small gardens or container planting.
Mad Hatter pepper seeds produce a unique, sweet Capsicum baccatum variety known for its distinctive three-lobed, flying-saucer shape and crisp texture. Bred in the early 21st century by plant breeder Michael Mazourek at Cornell University, Mad Hatter was developed to showcase the fruity flavor and adaptability typical of baccatum peppers while remaining completely heat-free. The medium-sized fruits ripen from green to bright red and have a refreshing, lightly citrusy sweetness with a crunchy bite, making them excellent for fresh eating, salads, stuffing, and pickling. Plants are vigorous and high-yielding, often reaching 3–4 feet tall, and are valued for their ornamental appeal, disease tolerance, and reliable performance in a wide range of growing conditions. All American Selection winner.
Jimmy Nardello pepper seeds produce a classic Italian heirloom sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum) brought to the United States in 1887 by Giuseppe and Angela Nardello from the coastal region of southern Italy and later popularized by their son, Jimmy, in Naugatuck, Connecticut. This open-pollinated variety is known for its long, slender, deeply ridged fruits that typically reach 6–10 inches in length and ripen from green to a vibrant glossy red. Jimmy Nardello peppers are prized for their exceptionally sweet, rich flavor with no heat, thin skins, and tender flesh, making them ideal for frying, roasting, or eating fresh. Plants are productive and adaptable, usually growing 24–30 inches tall, and are valued by gardeners and chefs alike for their reliable yields and outstanding taste that intensifies when cooked.
Pot-a-Peno pepper seeds produce a compact jalapeño-type hot pepper (Capsicum annuum) that was bred specifically for container and patio growing. Developed as a modern hybrid, Pot-a-Peno combines the classic jalapeño flavor and moderate heat with a dwarf, bushy growth habit that stays neatly contained while still producing heavy yields. The thick-walled, blunt-ended fruits are typically 3–4 inches long, ripening from deep green to red, and offer a balanced heat level that works well for fresh use, grilling, stuffing, and pickling. Plants are sturdy, highly ornamental, and very productive for their size, making Pot-a-Peno an excellent choice for small gardens, raised beds, and containers where space is limited.
Lavandula stoechas ssp. pedunculata, commonly known as Spanish Lavender, French Lavender, or topped Lavender, is a Mediterranean native long cultivated for its aromatic, ornamental, and pollinator-friendly qualities. It is easily recognized by its compact, gray-green foliage and distinctive flower spikes topped with colorful “rabbit ear” bracts, usually in shades of deep purple or violet, which bloom in spring through early summer. Valued for its strong fragrance and long-lasting blooms, it attracts bees, butterflies, and other pollinators, making it a favorite in gardens and landscapes. To grow Spanish Lavender successfully, plant it in full sun with well-drained, slightly alkaline soil, avoiding excess moisture; it is drought-tolerant once established, benefits from light pruning after flowering to maintain shape, and thrives as a hardy, low-maintenance perennial in mild climates or as a container plant in colder regions.
The Salmon Maverick Geranium is a more vigorous, hybrid plant that produces bigger 5-6" flower heads that are a stunning salmon color! This variety is the best Geranium to grow from seed in 4-6" containers. It's is excellent for high density growing and takes 13 weeks to be ready from seed. The Maverick's garden performance is superior to other varieties, with well-branched plants, 16 to 18" tall.
Asclepias incarnata ‘Ice Ballet’, often called White Swamp Milkweed, is a selected form of the native Swamp Milkweed long found along wetlands, marsh edges, and moist prairies across North America, where it has served for generations as an essential host plant for monarch caterpillars. This cultivar stands out for its showy clusters of pure white, vanilla-scented flowers that bloom in midsummer, contrasting beautifully with its upright stems and narrow, deep-green leaves. Like the species, it thrives in full sun and prefers consistently moist soils—though it will tolerate average garden moisture once established—and it attracts a wide range of pollinators. To grow ‘Ice Ballet’, sow seeds in full sun and moist, fertile, well-drained soil, giving them natural winter stratification or refrigerating them before planting; over time, it forms a robust, long-lived clump that returns each season with elegant, pollinator-rich blooms.
Quicksilver Mountain bean seeds grow into a vigorous pole bean variety prized for its elegant, silver-speckled dry beans and reliable performance in the garden. The tall, climbing vines produce long, slender green pods that can be harvested young as tender snap beans or left to mature into striking dry beans with a smooth, pale base marked by silvery patterns. Known for their creamy texture and rich, nutty flavor when cooked, Quicksilver Mountain beans are ideal for hearty dishes like soups, stews, and casseroles. This variety thrives in full sun with support from a trellis or pole structure and is favored by gardeners for both its visual appeal and culinary quality.
Commercial quality netting will keep birds off your garden and field crops. Protect your crops with this polypropylene netting that can easily be drapped over most crops and is visually unobtrusive. Does great over most fruits and vegetables. Some uses may require support. Dimensions: 14' x 100' with tight 0.75 x 0.75" mesh.
10"L metal garden labels for garden and market growers. 1" x 2-1/2" Zinc writing plate. Ideal long term solution to identifying plant varieties, garden rows and garden sections. Use a fade/water resistant marker or pen.
Carex comosa is a large tufted wetland sedge. The narrow leaves are lime green and shiny. In late spring triangular culms rise above the foliage to 5’ bearing large chartreuse bottlebrush shaped spikes. Attractive warm brown seed spikes follow. This bold sedge flourishes in sun or part sun in damp or wet sites. Plants prosper in difficult wet mucky soils or even in shallow water.
Illusion is an early white synergistic sweet corn that stands out for its exceptional flavor and dependable early-season performance. It offers excellent cool-soil vigor, strong tip fill, and easy snapping at harvest, all wrapped in deep green husks that protect the ears well. Tapered ears measure 7½–8 inches long and are packed to the tip with bright white, tender kernels arranged in 14–16 rows, delivering some of the best eating quality available in an early white synergistic corn. Ears are set about 25 inches high on sturdy, clean plants reaching roughly 6½ feet tall, accented by long, attractive flag leaves. With intermediate resistance to northern corn leaf blight, common rust, and Stewart’s bacterial wilt, Illusion is a true farm favorite known for its outstanding taste and reliable field performance.
A beautiful mix of popular flowers that are native to the Southwest region. Nevada wildflower mix is stunning to the eyes and will last for some years after the first planting.
This mix contains annuals and perennials that are native to mountainous regions of the western United States and Canada. Use it for elevations above 7,000 feet in the continental U.S. and southern Alberta and British Columbia. It is also suitable for all elevations in southern Alaska. Plant at a rate of 7-14 pounds per acre or 5 ounces per 1,000 sq.ft.
Secures landscape fabric, drip/soaker hoses and more! Garden staples help secure landscape fabric, black plastic, netting, lawn ornaments, floating garden covers, soaker hoses, and more tightly to the ground. Garden staples are made from 90% recycled steel to help preserve our vital natural resources. Staples are 4 inches in length.
A wildflower blend for Delaware area. This seed blend is a mix of native and naturalized flowers to the Northeast region. Plant at a rate of 5-10 lbs. per acre or 5 ounces per 1,000 sq.ft.