Meet Stan

Stan's Seeds A Sustainable Cemetery Garden

Isolated away from the burial lots, on land reserved for a future celebration and reception centre, you’ll find our active veggie patch. Whatever the garden produces we share with families and visitors, and the local Food Bank. Equally isolated away is a gardener, with a passion for problem solving and for teaching folks how to grow stuff. You’ll find nothing goes to waste in Stan’s garden, and this year he’s hand-picked and scrutinized each seed from last year’s crop before packing it into a tiny envelope for you. We hope that by helping you grow your own, it will make for a fun experience with bountiful rewards at the end.

Courtesy of our beloved farmer, Stan Turner, Heritage Gardens is packaging and sharing our very own vegetable seeds for your own home-growing pleasure. They are great for you, your children, or your grandchildren to experience the thrill of growing your own vegetables. Read on for more information and planting instructions!

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS

Sustainable Cemetery Grows Veggies, shares seeds, donate to food bank

Broccolini

The seed is a dark brown or black little round shape. It is a cool weather crop and can yield one or more main harvests and many mini harvests through the growing season. As it is a cool weather crop, it can do well in partial shade, so provide a location accordingly for best growing result and flavour.

  • Plant seeds about 20 cm apart (8 inches) about 4 weeks before the last frost date. Thin when plants are 8-10 cm (4 inches) high to 60 cm apart (24 inches).
  • If you wish, you can start seeds indoors about 7 weeks before the last frost in a small (7 cm/3 inch) pot filled with potting soil. Keep soil moist yet do not over water. Acclimatize young plants (when 10 cm/4 inches tall) by setting outside for 2 or 3 hours each day around Noon, before transplanting outdoors. Plant about 5 cm (2 inches) deeper than they were in the pots, ensuring that the soil is moist and firmly packed around the roots.
  • Fertilizing with a natural fertilizer as a mulch around the plant base will assist in keeping moisture in the soil, while keeping the soil from being over compacted, and provide nutrients to boost the ‘fruit’ production. Ensure the soil is kept moist but not wet; allow soil to dry out on top in between watering.
  • Every week or two, remove the mulch and gently cultivate the soil around the plant, pulling out any weeds that will steal nutrients from the soil. Replace the mulch. Harvest the broccolini by snipping the green ‘fruit’ growth, as shown, below the first leaf. Harvest regularly or the fruit will turn to flowers and go to seed. Happy growing.

Your soil should have lots of natural organic matter, and good drainage.

- Stan

CAUTION: Do not plant, water and grow these vegetables if you have allergies! We are not a cemetery that drums up its own business.