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  #1  
Old 03/01/12, 10:26 AM
 
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Has anybody got any open pollinated seed corn companys

That there bragging about, good prices, good selections, ect??
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  #2  
Old 03/04/12, 07:37 PM
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Originally Posted by FarmBoyBill View Post
That there bragging about, good prices, good selections, ect??
Haven't used them, but planning to : Green Haven O.P. seed group - Avoca, NY 607-566-9253
opcorn@gmail.com openpollinated.com
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  #3  
Old 03/04/12, 11:35 PM
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Try these guys

http://sweetcornorganicnursery.com/s...ree-Seeds.html

may even give you a free sample
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Old 03/05/12, 07:28 AM
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The biggest problem if they are not close, is the shipping. > Thanks Marc
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  #5  
Old 03/05/12, 09:03 AM
 
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Thats right marc. I finally found a place 75 miles above Wichita Kans. The seed is $40 and the shipping a bu is 22
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  #6  
Old 03/05/12, 09:06 AM
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Originally Posted by springvalley View Post
The biggest problem if they are not close, is the shipping. > Thanks Marc
That is what I thought at first also. Then I decided to bite the bullet the first year and spent $100. for 50#. Now my corn seed cost is only taking the time to pick a few ears and dry them. So I look at it as a one time investment.
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  #7  
Old 03/05/12, 09:15 AM
 
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From what I understand, if you keep your own corn and plant it again the next year, you run the risk of cross polination from locally grown GMO corn. Baker Creek Seed tests theirs each year to make sure it is not contaminated.
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  #8  
Old 03/05/12, 05:50 PM
 
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FarmBoyBill,

Yes there are some old books that describe some of those old OP varieties. I think Kansas Sunflower had good drought resistance and might have been grown in your area, also Hogue's Yellow Dent, Reid's Yellow Dent and maybe Krug. Leaming was planted in just about all the corn belt. I've grown Hickory King in a drought year and it did very well but you would need 120 days for it.

Here is a list of some books. I bought them on line from used book dealers. They tell of the different old OP varieties. The first one has been updated many times and so you would want an older copyright. Mine is 1937 and it does list the traits of many varieties.

Corn and Corn Growing, Henry A. Wallace and Earl N. Bressman, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1923, 1925, 1928, 1937...

The Study of Corn, Vernon M. Shoesmith, Orange Judd Company, 1910.

Corn Growing, Judging, Breeding, Feeding, Marketing, M.L. Bowman, B.W. Crossley, Published by the Authors, sold by Waterloo Publishing Co., Waterloo, Iowa, 1908, revised 1911.

There are some others but these are the best I've found for listing the traits.

Last edited by fatrat; 03/05/12 at 05:58 PM.
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  #9  
Old 03/05/12, 05:51 PM
 
Join Date: May 2004
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Originally Posted by piglady View Post
From what I understand, if you keep your own corn and plant it again the next year, you run the risk of cross polination from locally grown GMO corn. Baker Creek Seed tests theirs each year to make sure it is not contaminated.
It's just a matter of proper isolation. Either distance or tasseling time.
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