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Your search for 'claytonia' returned the following 2 results:

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Chickweed -Stellaria media
Claytonia
Overall Rating:
(5.0 Stars) Overall Average 5
1 Review
Days to Maturity:
NA
  USER ENTERED : Unable to find a category for chickweed--this is not claytonia. For the last couple of years I have been pulling chickweed out of my flower pots, then someone asked me why I didn't eat it. So..I tried some in my salad and I liked it. Decided I would incorporate it into my garden.. but I had just pulled it all out I knew that more would come up but it would take time to get to where I could transplant it into my edible garden. So I ordered seed from Wild Garden Seed. Yup. I intentionally planted chickweed seed. And that decision has really paid off! I constantly experiment with my garden, each year trying to find plants that I like better than the ones last year, or that are easier to grow, or new to me. It's fun! So... I planted those chickweed seeds in a bed that had beets and lettuce and up they came! There is lots and lots of chickweed. I pull out the extras.No one I knows is willing to taste it (YOU EAT WEEDS????) But here's the deal...it's good. It is mild tasting. Sometimes it seems to have a grassy taste, especially when it is older (I don't like that). It works great in salad or chopped onto sandwiches as a substitute for alfalfa sprouts. I just have more than I can use. But.. this year there has been a side benefit to growing it. As it has been an unusually hot year, the chickweed has shaded the soil, helped prevent water evaporation. It also helps to block out other weeds... which means when I am planting something new (more lettuce...etc) I may have to keep the chickweed weeded out until the other plants get a head start on it. I have discovered it is a slug magnet..which is both good and bad. It keeps the slugs away from my other crops (good). It's hard to see the little slugs when they get on the underside of the leaves (bad..especially if you are eating it!). So, no regrets about planting it..and it's a weed. It can grow without any care!
Not Specified
Claytonia
Overall Rating:
(3.8 Stars) Overall Average 3.75
4 Reviews
Days to Maturity:
40
  Open pollinated. Small, paired, heart-shaped leaves wrap around flower stem. Resistant to moderate frost. About 40 days to maturity. Also known as 'miner's lettuce' and 'winter purslane.'
 
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