Sugar Snap Snap Pea

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Sugar Snap Snap Pea

Pisum sativum
(68 days) Open-pollinated. Always a top seller, this breakthrough variety was ten years in the making after breeder Calvin Lamborn made his first cross in 1969. Upon its release Sugar Snap was awarded the coveted AAS Gold Medal and later voted the #1 all-time AAS. The late Lamborn, known as the father of the snap pea, was at age 80 still breeding experimental snow and snap pea varieties of remarkable colors and marketing them to top chefs. His original is one of the very best raw treats in the garden, far tastier than the dwarf varieties, although more work to grow. Tall Sugar Snap vines climb 5–7' and need strong stakes. Pods reach superb sweetness only when completely filled. Then they are incomparable. Our production still has 10% off-types. Resistant to W, very susceptible to PM.


892 Sugar Snap
Item Discounted
From
Quantity
A: 2oz for $3.75   
unavailable, no new supply coming
B: 8oz for $7.25   
unavailable, no new supply coming
C: 1lb for $11.25   
unavailable, no new supply coming
D: 5lb for $39.00   
unavailable, no new supply coming
E: 10lb for $71.00   
unavailable, no new supply coming

Additional Information

Snap Peas

Don’t pick snap peas too soon: snaps taste sweetest when completely filled out.

Peas

  • 2 oz packet sows 25 ft; 1 lb, 200 ft. Avg 160 seeds/2 oz pkt.
  • All peas are open-pollinated.
  • Days to maturity are from direct seeding.

Culture: Sow as early as ground can be worked for best yields. Minimum soil temperature for pea seed germination: 40°. Optimal range 50–75°. Peas are legumes with moderate fertility requirements. Avoid excess nitrogen: they can fix their own. Use legume inoculant at planting. They prefer cool, moist weather and dislike dry heat. All peas produce more when staked; varieties over 2½' must be supported. Use either Trellis Netting or chicken wire. Install support at planting time to avoid disturbing seedlings. Plant 8–10 seeds/ft on each side of supports in double rows. Set supports for rows 3' apart (5' if very tall varieties).

Young plants are very hardy but frost stops production at the blossom or pod stage. If you love peas as much as we do, try for a second crop in the fall. Timing is crucial, as peas ripen slowly in the cool of September, and frost will halt production. We recommend planting the first two weeks of July for a fall crop in central Maine. Warmer areas try later July. If the summer is hot, cool the soil with a hay mulch in advance of planting, or shade peas with tall crops to hold in soil moisture.

Peas are 25% sucrose by weight and lose nearly half their sugars within 6 hours at room temperature. That’s why they taste best grazed right off the vine. Keep cool and shell as soon as possible after picking for freezing.

Not well adapted to southern climates where the spring heats up too quickly. Pam Dawling in Virginia has great success with Sugar Ann but cannot grow the tall longer-season Sugarsnap in her climate. Smooth-seeded peas germinate better in colder soils than wrinkle-seeded peas, but are not as sweet. Dawling suggests that forsythia flowering signals time to sow snap and snow peas.

Saving Seed: Saving pea seed is easy! Leave pods of spring-planted peas on the vine to dry. Hand shell, or stomp pods on a tarp. To ensure true-to-type seed, separate pea varieties by 30 feet.

Diseases:

  • CTV: Curly Top Virus
  • PM: Powdery Mildew
  • DM: Downy Mildew
  • PPR: Pythium Root rot
  • F: Fusarium
  • PSV: Pea Streak Virus
  • PEMV: Pea Enation Mosaic Virus
  • W: Common Wilt race 1

Powdery mildew looks like someone sprinkled talcum powder over the vines. It spreads rapidly when picking occurs in hot dry weather. Pick in early morning while the dew is still on the foliage to slow its spread and ensure best flavor. Fusarium causes vines to dry out, yellow, then brown and die. As a preventive, always sow peas on well-drained soil. Fusarium-infested soils are said to be pea sick. Do not save seed from plants afflicted with fusarium, which can be seed-borne. Rotate out of legumes for at least 4 years. Brassicas, especially mustards, are good disease-suppressant successions.

Off-types in peas continue to be a problem across the industry. Over the past several years we have eliminated some old favorites that got beyond the bounds of what is acceptable and added several more reliable varieties. We’ll keep working at it!

Germination Testing

For the latest results of our germination tests, please see the germination page.

Our Seeds are Non-GMO

Non GMO

All of our seeds are non-GMO, and free of neonicotinoids and fungicides. Fedco is one of the original companies to sign the Safe Seed Pledge.