Preparation Ideas: Great shelling pea for enjoying fresh or freezing.
Plant Type: Vegetable
Plant Lifecycle: Annual
Approximate Seed Count: 15 - 40
Landscape Use: Edible Garden
Growth Type: Bush
Tolerance: Downey Mildew|Fusarium Wilt
Growing Season(s): Spring|Summer|Fall
Harvest/Bloom Season(s): Spring|Summer|Fall
Package Dimensions: 3.25 x 4.5"
Shipping
Free shipping is available on all orders over $50. Orders under $50 have a shipping rate of $7.99, and seed-only orders have a shipping rate of $2.99. Most orders are shipped within 2 business days of purchase. However, live plants and embroidered items may take 2-7 business days to ship, depending on the day of the week you place your order. For more information, please click here to review our shipping & returns policy.
Instructions
Sow Green Arrow Organic Pea seeds in full sun in the spring and late summer. Peas will tolerate some frost and are very sensitive to heat. Plant 1 seed every 2". Do not thin. Pea plants perform best when supported by a trellis. Support 2 rows at the same time by placing the trellis between 2 rows and letting plants grow together. Harvest when pods are filled out to encourage production.
Planting Depth: 1.5"
Seed Spacing: Plant your Green Arrow Organic Pea seeds roughly 2" apart in rows, keeping rows approximately 2.5' apart.
Nutrient Care Instructions: Apply SUPERthrive once per week. Soak in solution of 1/4 tsp per gal for 15 min. or longer depending on size and type.
Suggestions
When harvesting peas, do not jerk pods from vines since rough handling can cause plants to stop producing. It is best to snip clusters of pods from vines with scissors or pruners.
Pea, Green Arrow Organic Seeds
Register to receive a notification when this item comes back in stock.
At Ferry Morse, we are proud of our non-GMO & guaranteed fresh seeds.
Learn More
Garden growing Quiz
Find Your Best Match
Take our quiz to find the perfect plants and products for your location, skill level, and interests.
Spicy Asian Cucumber Spiral Salad Rosemary Citrus Gin Fizz What is a Plantling by Ferry-Morse?
View our helpful demos
View all videos
How a Plant is Grown from Seed Garden Get-Together Livestream - Highlight Reel Garden Get-Together Livestream - Fanny Liao Garden Get-Together Livestream - Megan Gilger Garden Marcus Get Together Livestream Garden Get-Together Livestream - Pamela Reed How To ID and Amend Your Soil (Soil Jar Test) How to Start a Backyard Garden from Seed Indoor Seed Starting Grow Light Seed Germination
Payment will be charged when a pre-order is placed. Pre-ordered item will ship between March 13-21, 2024. Please note other non-preordered items on your order will ship separately. When you place an order through the Site, we will maintain your Order Information for our records unless and until you ask us to delete this information.
Unlike Snow Peas or Snap Peas, their pod is too fibrous to be edible, and the peas themselves must be removed from the shells. These varieties grow in the familiar vining form and tend to be more productive than the bush types.
Use them in soups, salads, stir-fry, casseroles, and other dishes. Many pea varieties are delicious fresh off the vine for a sweet snack. -Stir sauce until it thickens (don't let it boil).
Its pods usually grow in pairs and reach maturity in 68 to 70 days. The pods are easy to harvest and shell, and the peas inside are bright green, tasty, and excellent for eating fresh, canning, and freezing.
Peas come in two heights: bush peas and climbing peas. All benefit from some kind of support. Though bush peas are only 2 to 3 feet tall, they will flop on the ground if you don't give them something to climb on. Climbing peas may reach 6 to 8 feet tall and they need a sturdy trellis.
If all goes well, you should start having pods ready to harvest about 50 to 60 days after sowing pea seeds. You can continue to harvest pods through about week 12 of these plants' growing cycle if the weather stays nice and cool and the plants stay well-picked. Let's look at how to harvest these pods.
It's essential to plant them early enough in spring so they mature while the weather is still cool! (This means planting in most parts of the United States and Canada in February, March, or April.) However, they can also be grown as a fall or winter crop in warmer regions.
Peas were a good model system, because he could easily control their fertilization by transferring pollen with a small paintbrush. This pollen could come from the same flower (self-fertilization), or it could come from another plant's flowers (cross-fertilization).
Beans don't cross with peas or other legumes, but different varieties of beans cross with each other, and different varieties of peas cross with each other. You can plant a row of beans next to a row of peas, but if you have two kinds of peas, separate them by the distance shown above.
Beans, peas and tomatoes are self-pollinating and do not need bees for fruit production. Their flowers have all the needed reproductive parts and can transfer and accept their own pollen for the development of their edible fruits.
Pea plants are climbers. Climbers are plants that require support because they have weak stems. However, their ability to climb up surfaces helps them to be able to carry their own weight. Climbers have special structures called tendrils that they use to climb upward.
Peas are an annual climbing herb that grow, depending on the variety, between 1 to 3 m tall on a cylindrical stem. The roots grow up to 1.2 m down into the soil. The leaves grow alternately along the stem, with each leaf having up to 4 pairs of leaflets (smaller leaf-like structures) and ending in a tendril.
The Sugar Snap Pea is a garden staple pea that has unmatchable taste! This variety has tall vines that with support can grow up to 6 feet plus! The Sugar Snap Pea plant produces 3" long pods that are a 1/2" across, and bear over a long picking period.
Black-eyed peas grow up to 2-6 ft. tall (60-180 cm), depending on the variety. They can be grown as a low bush (bush bean) or a vine climbing a trellis (pole bean).
Address: Suite 769 2454 Marsha Coves, Debbieton, MS 95002
Phone: +813077629322
Job: Real-Estate Executive
Hobby: Archery, Metal detecting, Kitesurfing, Genealogy, Kitesurfing, Calligraphy, Roller skating
Introduction: My name is Gov. Deandrea McKenzie, I am a spotless, clean, glamorous, sparkling, adventurous, nice, brainy person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
We notice you're using an ad blocker
Without advertising income, we can't keep making this site awesome for you.