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Sam 23-10-2003 05:12 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam


paghat 23-10-2003 06:02 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
In article , Sam wrote:

While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!


Nasturtium is the common name, Tropaeolum the genus name, but everyone
who has gardened for even a week knows them as nasturtiums, being commonly
planted by eight year olds as one of the easiest & cheapest
instant-gratification flowers one can grow carefree from seeds. What you
have learned from your trip to Home Depot is their workers lack even the
expertise of an eight year old.

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)


http://www.paghat.com/nasturtium.html

-paghat the ratgirl

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/

animaux 23-10-2003 08:12 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
I have rarely, if ever seen nasturtium being sold at the box stores.
Occasionally I see the 'Alaska' variety being sold in hanging baskets. It is an
edible flower and seed pod, when green. It is a hot, peppery flavor.

That's why they didn't know. You also probably didn't ask the nursery person,
but a person who is there to water.

Victoria


On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 16:05:41 GMT, Sam opined:

While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam



gregpresley 23-10-2003 08:12 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
Sam, if you were asking for nasturtiums now, (late October), they might have
been looking at you strangely because no store in North America would be
selling nasturtium plants at this time of year. They are summer annuals -
best planted by seed, but occasionally sold as seedlings in flats, available
in late April - May.
I would recommend looking for seeds anyway - the plants are easy to
grow from the big seeds, and of course it's MUCH cheaper than buying flats.
"Sam" wrote in message
...
While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam




Salty Thumb 23-10-2003 10:12 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
"gregpresley" wrote in
:

Sam, if you were asking for nasturtiums now, (late October), they
might have been looking at you strangely because no store in North
America would be selling nasturtium plants at this time of year. They
are summer annuals - best planted by seed, but occasionally sold as
seedlings in flats, available in late April - May.
I would recommend looking for seeds anyway - the plants are easy
to
grow from the big seeds, and of course it's MUCH cheaper than buying
flats. "Sam" wrote in message
...
While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from
Mars! One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I
was wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people
would recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is
what I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam


They do sell the seeds at Home Depot and Lowes in early winter/spring in
my area. It wouldn't surprise me if nasturtiums weren't available in
your area now, but then my HD doesn't even have a vegetable section this
time of year. Did you actually look in the veggy section? Sometimes
they put things wherever there's space. If you pronounced it NAS-TI-
TURDI-YUM! I would have also looked at you funny but would have pointed
you to the manure section.

At the minimum you should be able to find them the Ferry Morse white seed
packets (when in season).

animaux 23-10-2003 11:12 PM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
Not true. I just planted my seeds for nasturtium 'Alaska' which will flower
profusely all winter. They are cool weather annuals. Sometimes in the summer
they go dormant and come back out about now...several of the plants I had last
winter are now starting to push up shoots from the ground.

Up north, they can grow very well in late fall into winter and can tolerate a
light frost.

Victoria


On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 12:28:26 -0700, "gregpresley" opined:

Sam, if you were asking for nasturtiums now, (late October), they might have
been looking at you strangely because no store in North America would be
selling nasturtium plants at this time of year. They are summer annuals -
best planted by seed, but occasionally sold as seedlings in flats, available
in late April - May.
I would recommend looking for seeds anyway - the plants are easy to
grow from the big seeds, and of course it's MUCH cheaper than buying flats.
"Sam" wrote in message
...
While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam




Tina Gibson 24-10-2003 12:32 AM

Nasturtium??? Common name?
 
Google nasturtium seeds and you should find a supplier even this time of yr!
"Sam" wrote in message
...
While I was down at HomeDepot, I asked several pelple from the garden
department for "nasturtium." They looked at me as if I was from Mars!
One of them actually pointed me to the vegetable section!!! I was
wondering if it goes by some "common" name that the HD people would
recognize!

PS if anyone has a pic (or link with pic) handy, it would go a long
way! Because then, I can just show them the pick and say: this is what
I'm looking for! ;-)

Thanks!
Sam





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