Bloomsdale - Organic Spinach Seeds

SKU: VSH101
Open-Pollinated
Certified Organic
Heirloom
Price:$4.95
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Bloomsdale Long Standing has been the traditional choice spinach since the 1920s—savoyed, dark leaves that stay sweet longer as days warm. A source of iron, folate, and vitamin K, spinach is the spring tonic green.

Sow as soon as soil can be worked and again in late summer for fall crops. Keep beds moist for germination and harvest whole plants or leaf by leaf.

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Unopened items may be returned within 30 days of delivery. If an order arrives damaged, incomplete, or incorrect, please contact us so we can make it right.

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We stand behind every packet we sell. Our seeds are carefully selected, tested for germination, untreated, and guaranteed to be true to variety.

Your seeds are covered for one year from the date of purchase. If they fail to germinate under reasonable growing conditions, arrive damaged, or do not grow true to type, contact us and we’ll make it right with a replacement, store credit, or refund.

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Plant seeds directly in the garden in early spring, 4–6 weeks before your average last frost date or as soon as the soil can be worked. Optimum soil temperature for germination is 55–65°F. Spinach seed germinates poorly in warm soil and may become dormant above 75–80°F. Sow thickly, then thin to 3–4” apart. Make successive sowings every 1–2 weeks during cool weather. Sow again in late summer for a fall crop. Spinach is very cold hardy and tolerates light to moderate frosts. For overwintering, sow in late fall and mulch heavily for early spring harvest.

Scientific name: spinacia oleracea
Days to maturity: 44
Seed depth: 1/2"
Days to sprout: 7-14
Plant spacing: 4-6"
Row spacing: 12-18"
Light requirements: sunny / partial shade
Plant height: 10-12"
Life cycle: annual
Frost hardy: yes

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NON-GMO

Open-pollinated varieties for home gardens & seed saving

UNTREATED SEED

Safe seed, free from chemical treatments

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Growing Guide

Spinach has been grown for centuries from ancient Persia across Europe and into gardens around the world. Few crops capture the freshness of the cool-season garden quite like its tender green leaves, gathered when the air is still crisp and the soil holds spring moisture.

Varieties may have smooth, semi-savoyed, or deeply crinkled leaves. Spinach grows quickly in cool weather, but lengthening days and heat soon encourage it to flower, making careful timing the key to a sweet and generous harvest.

Direct sow spinach about 4–6 weeks before the expected last spring frost, once the soil can be worked. Seeds germinate in soil as cool as about 40°F, though emergence is faster near 50°F.

Make small sowings every 1–2 weeks while conditions remain cool. For fall harvest, sow as summer heat begins to ease. Established plants tolerate frost well, and late plantings may overwinter beneath mulch or protection for an early spring harvest.

Sow seeds about ½ inch deep and 1–2 inches apart. Keep the soil evenly moist until seedlings emerge, which commonly takes 7–14 days depending on temperature.

Thin plants to about 3–4 inches apart for mature leaves, or leave them closer for baby-leaf harvest. Spinach is usually best direct sown because seedlings have delicate roots and may be slow to recover from transplanting.

Choose a site with full sun during cool weather. Light afternoon shade can help extend the harvest as temperatures rise.

Grow spinach in loose, well-drained soil enriched with finished compost. Its shallow roots need steady moisture, so water whenever the surface begins to dry. A light organic mulch can help keep the soil cool, but leave the soil exposed if slugs become troublesome.

Begin harvesting baby leaves once they are large enough to use. Pick the outer leaves first and allow the center to continue growing, or cut the entire plant near soil level.

Spinach is commonly ready about 40–50 days after sowing. Harvest promptly when a central flower stalk begins to rise, since the leaves quickly become tougher and more bitter as the plant bolts.

Spinach provides fiber, folate, vitamins A, C, and K, along with iron, magnesium, potassium, and carotenoids such as lutein and beta-carotene.

Use young leaves fresh in salads and sandwiches. Mature leaves may be sautéed, steamed, added to soups, folded into eggs and pasta dishes, or blanched and frozen. Cooking greatly reduces the volume, making a large harvest surprisingly easy to use.

Leafminers may leave pale, winding tunnels through the leaves. Inspect leaf undersides for eggs, remove badly affected foliage, and use insect netting where leafminers are a recurring problem.

Aphids, slugs, and flea beetles may also appear. Crop rotation, clean beds, good airflow, soil-level watering, and nearby flowering plants that support beneficial insects help keep problems in balance. Remove plants showing severe yellowing, distortion, or stunting.

Spinach is wind-pollinated, and male and female flowers are commonly carried on separate plants. Different spinach varieties cross readily, so grow only one variety for seed nearby or provide generous isolation.

Allow a broad group of healthy, true-to-type plants to flower rather than harvesting them all. Keep both early-flowering male plants and later female plants until pollination is complete.

Seed is ready when the female plants turn yellow-brown and the seed clusters become dry and firm. Cut the stalks, finish drying them under cover, then rub or thresh away the seed. Store fully dry seed in a labeled container in a cool, dark place.

  • Keep the seedbed consistently moist until seedlings are established.
  • Sow in loose soil that drains well but does not dry out quickly.
  • Harvest promptly when warm weather arrives.
  • Grow beneath taller crops for light shade in late spring.
  • Try a protected fall planting for early spring leaves.