Pisum sativum L.
Brand: Seklos AGRONOM
Packaged:10,0 g
Availability:In Stock
1.03€
Ex Tax: 0.85€
Wrinkled pea "Lincoln".
Early and friendly ripening of pods!
Excellent taste in fresh and canned form. Early ripe, peeling variety: the period from germination to the beginning of technical ripeness is 53-55 days (from sowing: 68-70 days).
Plant height 80-90 cm. Pods are curved, 8-10 cm long, with 7-8 peas. In one node, two pods are formed.
Recommended for fresh unripe beans, cooking and canning.
1,0 g = 3-6 seeds.

* Plants also have their own "internet".
German scientists have discovered that plants communicating with each other have created no less global systems than the Internet.
A huge network of intertwined roots helps plants communicate with each other. Plants transmit information to each other about the upcoming drought and about approaching pests, which allows them to prepare in advance for adverse conditions.
Plants transmit information about the onset of drought or the appearance of the first pests in an “encrypted” form through chemicals that they release into the soil and then absorb with water.
It is possible that plants have more receptors than animals and humans. Plants can transmit electrical signals at speeds ranging from 0.5 centimetres to centimetres per second. This is much slower than nerve impulses in the human body. But this speed is quite enough for plants. Some plant species even manage to defend themselves with poison that kills their enemies...
Have you ever wondered how the tendrils of peas without eyes “see” a twig or branch from afar, which they need to grab onto in order to continue growing?
In tomatoes, three days before the cyclone, the red skin thickens on the fruits so that the pulp with seeds is not damaged.
Tobacco in the fight against pests increases the nicotine content in one gram of green mass as much as it is contained in a hundred strong cigarettes without a filter ...
Plants are familiar with the feeling of pain, the feeling of fear sympathy, and the desire for beauty: it’s not for nothing that good gardeners recommend talking more with flowers!

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