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Corn salad Verte de Cambrai seeds

Valerianella locusta Verte de Cambrai
Corn salad, lamb's lettuce

3,0/5
1 reviews
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0 reviews
1 reviews

Sown in different pots with each having different soil (compost, potting soil, etc...), not a single seed has germinated. Useless.

Sébastien, 10/11/2022

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

Traditional variety, quite late but very cold-resistant. It produces beautiful, tasty, wide and rounded leaves that you will enjoy eating in the heart of winter. Sowing from August to October for a harvest from autumn to the end of winter.
Ease of cultivation
Beginner
Height at maturity
15 cm
Spread at maturity
15 cm
Soil moisture
Damp soil
Germination time (days)
10 days
Sowing method
Direct sowing, Sowing under cover
Sowing period August to October
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Harvest time January to March, October to December
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Description

The 'Verte de Cambrai' Lamb's Lettuce is a traditional variety, quite late but very cold-resistant. It produces beautiful, tasty, wide and rounded leaves that you will enjoy eating in the heart of winter. Sowing from August to October for a harvest from autumn to the end of winter.

Lamb's Lettuce, also known as Corn Salad, is a small salad with rounded leaves grouped in rosettes. It is the perfect autumn and winter salad, even though some varieties called "all-season" can be sown and harvested throughout the year. Varieties with large seeds have larger leaves but are less cold-resistant than those with small seeds.

Lamb's Lettuce belongs to the Caprifoliaceae family (like Honeysuckle) and grows wild throughout Europe, to the point where it is sometimes referred to as a "weed."

This small salad is mainly consumed raw, alone or accompanied, for example, by kiwi and avocado or beetroot, but can also be cooked, like spinach. Its nutritional value is remarkable, it is low in calories but particularly rich in vitamin C (three times more than Lettuce), vitamin E, and beta-carotene.

Cultivating Lamb's Lettuce is easy, but sowing should be done in firm soil and it is important to ensure that it remains moist.

Harvest: Lamb's Lettuce is harvested as needed, by cutting the rosette just above the collar with a knife.

Storage: It can be stored for a few days in the vegetable compartment of the refrigerator.

The gardener's little tip: If you belong to the category of gardeners who, even in the vegetable garden, tolerate a bit of disorder, don't hesitate, in spring, to let a few rosettes go to seed. They will self-sow and provide you with some greenery on your plate at no cost or effort!

Harvest

Harvest time January to March, October to December
Type of vegetable Leaf vegetable
Size of vegetable Medium
Interest Flavour, Nutritional value, Productive

Plant habit

Height at maturity 15 cm
Spread at maturity 15 cm
Growth rate normal

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Valerianella

Species

locusta

Cultivar

Verte de Cambrai

Family

Caprifoliaceae

Other common names

Corn salad, lamb's lettuce

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Annual / Perennial

Annual

Product reference2016

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Planting and care

Sowing:

The germination of Lamb's Lettuce occurs at a temperature of around 14°C. The emergence takes approximately 10 days.

Sowing is done from mid-July to the end of August for varieties with large leaves (autumn harvest) and from mid-August to mid-October for smaller and hardy varieties (harvest until the end of winter).

On firm soil, not dug up, just raked, draw furrows spaced 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8in) apart, with a depth of one centimetre. Sow in rows, spacing the seeds 0.5 to 1 cm (<1in) apart, cover with a little fine soil and firm down the sowing with the back of a rake. Keep the soil moist during the germination period. Lamb's Lettuce is preferably sown in full or partial shade. If this is not possible, cover your sowing with a light mulch such as a very thin layer of crass clippings to maintain good moisture until the arrival of autumn rains.

Sowing can also be done by broadcasting, using a dose of 5 to 7 grams (12 grams for varieties with large seeds) for 10 m2.

Cultivation:

Lamb's Lettuce is not demanding and does not require any prior fertilisation. Varieties intended for winter cultivation are hardy, but only up to a certain point. During severe winters, remember to protect them from extreme cold by covering them with a winter fleece or a layer of straw.

It is a salad that grows very well in cold greenhouses or under temporary tunnels.

In terms of companion planting, Lamb's Lettuce is a good neighbour. You can sow it at the base of many vegetables and interplant it between rows of Endive, Spinach, Radish etc.

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Seedlings

Sowing period August to October
Sowing method Direct sowing, Sowing under cover
Germination time (days) 10 days

Care

Soil moisture Wet
Disease resistance Good
Pruning No pruning necessary

Intended location

Type of use Vegetable garden
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Any
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), 192
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