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28th March 2012 04:00
Link to Post #1
Gardeners: Here's the Monsanto seed list
Here is a detailed list of Monsanto brands. If you are putting in your garden, you may want to avoid these:
Beans: Aliconte, Brio, Bronco, Cadillac, Ebro, Etna, Eureka, Festina, Gina, Goldmine, Goldenchild, Labrador, Lynx, Magnum, Matador, Spartacus, Storm, Strike, Stringless Blue Lake 7, Tapia, Tema
Broccoli: Coronado Crown, Major, Packman
Cabbage: Atlantis, Golden Acre, Headstart, Platinum Dynasty, Red Dynasty
Carrot: Bilbo, Envy, Forto, Juliana, Karina, Koroda PS, Royal Chantenay, Sweetness III
Cauliflower: Cheddar, Minuteman
Cucumber: Babylon, Cool Breeze Imp., Dasher II, Emporator,
Eureka, Fanfare HG, Marketmore 76, Mathilde, Moctezuma,
Orient Express II, Peal, Poinsett 76, Salad Bush, Sweet Slice, Sweet Success PS, Talladega
Eggplant: Black Beauty, Fairytale, Gretel, Hansel, Lavender Touch, Twinkle, White Lightening
Hot Pepper: Anaheim TMR 23, Ancho Saint Martin, Big Bomb, Big Chile brand of Sahuaro, Caribbean Red, Cayenne Large Red Thick, Chichen Itza, Chichimeca, Corcel, Garden Salsa SG, Habanero, Holy Mole brand of Salvatierro, Hungarian Yellow Wax Hot, Ixtapa X3R, Lapid, Mariachi brand of Rio de Oro, Mesilla, Milta, Mucho Nacho brand of Grande, Nainari, Serrano del Sol brand of Tuxtlas, Super Chile, Tam Vera Cruz
Lettuce: Braveheart, Conquistador
Melon: Early Dew, Sante Fe, Saturno
Onion: Candy, Cannonball, Century, Red Zeppelin, Savannah Sweet, Sierra Blanca, Sterling, Vision
Pumpkin: Applachian, Harvest Moon, Jamboree HG, Orange Smoothie, Phantom, Prize Winner, Rumbo, Snackface, Spirit, Spooktacular, Trickster
Spinach: Hellcat
Squash: Ambassador, Canesi, Clarita, Commander, Dixie, Early Butternut, Gold Rush, Grey Zucchini, Greyzini, Lolita, Papaya Pear, Peter Pan, Portofino, President, Richgreen Hybrid Zucchini, Storr’s Green, Sungreen, Sunny Delight, Taybelle PM
Sweet Corn: Devotion, Fantasia, Merit, Obession, Passion, Temptation
Sweet Pepper: Baron, Bell Boy, Big Bertha PS, Biscayne,
Blushing Beauty, Bounty, California Wonder 300, Camelot, Capistrano, Cherry Pick, Chocolate Beauty, Corno Verde, Cubanelle W, Dumpling brand of Pritavit, Early Sunsation, Flexum, Fooled You brand of Dulce, Giant Marconi, Gypsy, Jumper, Key West, King Arthur, North Star, Orange Blaze, Pimiento Elite, Red Knight, Satsuma, Socrates, Super Heavyweight, Sweet Spot
Tomato: Amsterdam, Beefmaster, Betterboy, Big Beef,
Burpee’s Big Boy, Caramba, Celebrity, Cupid, Early Girl, Granny Smith, Health Kick, Husky Cherry Red, Jetsetter brand of Jack, Lemon Boy, Margharita, Margo, Marmande VF PS, Marmara, Patio, Phoenix, Poseidon 43, Roma VF, Royesta, Sun Sugar, Super Marzano, Sweet Baby Girl, Tiffany, Tye-Dye, Viva Italia, Yaqui
Watermelon: Apollo, Charleston Grey, Crimson Glory, Crimson Sweet, Eureka, Jade Star, Mickylee, Olympia
From the Heart,
Wormhole
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28th March 2012 08:49
Link to Post #2
Avalon Member
Re: Gardeners: Here's the Monsanto seed list
Thank you for this list, Kristin. I've been saving seeds and wasn't sure which ones were GMO....
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WhiteFeather (30th March 2012)
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28th March 2012 11:07
Link to Post #3
Re: Gardeners: Here's the Monsanto seed list
Hi Kristin,
Perhaps a bit more research would be in order here. All the vegetable varieties you have listed are most definitely NOT GMO seed. They are hybrids. There is a huge difference. There are basically three types of seed available.
Heirloom or open-pollinated seed: These are the “old” varieties that have been around forever. You can save the seed from these plants and plant the next season and it will produce the same vegetable.
Hybrid seed: Hybrids are a cross between two different varieties or parent plants. Today we even have crossed hybrids with three and four parent plants; these are most often referred to as “super-hybrids”. Hybrids have a special quality that a gardener likes and tries to enhance through careful breeding. Hybrids can also be patented therefore enabling a company to charge more for the seed. Nature also creates hybrids when the wind carries pollen from one plant to another. The negative aspect on hybrids is you can’t save the seed and replant and expect to get the same vegetable. If you plant saved hybrid seed the following year it will revert back to one of the “parent plants” . . . .which ever has the stronger genetic traits. Remember basic biology on high school?
Genetically Modified Organism Seed (GMO) or like what I like to say genetically “mutated” organism: These seeds or plants have been genetically altered on a molecular level. Nature cannot create these Frankenstein foods. If you save seed from gmo-plants it will grow nothing or a plant that will not bear fruit. Also when gmo pollen is blown in the wind to heirloom or hybrids plants and cross pollinates it pollutes that plants ability to produce seed that will bear true or any fruit the following year.
I plant a mix of hybrids and heirloom varieties . . . . but I am careful to make sure the two garden plots are far from each other or have a hedge row or trees in between so the hybrids don’t cross-pollinate with my old heirlooms I have saved for years.
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28th March 2012 11:15
Link to Post #4