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Boogie Dwarf Pea

Pisum sativum Boogie
Garden pea, Green pea, English pea

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rather late

Jean Paul D., 18/08/2018

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

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A full season variety that offers excellent yields, with each pod containing up to 9 tender and sweet peas. This vigorous pea is resistant to all the most common diseases, including powdery mildew, making it well-suited for late sowing. It is a plant that produces relatively few leaves, which makes harvesting easy. Sowing from March to June for a harvest from June to September.
Ease of cultivation
Beginner
Height at maturity
75 cm
Spread at maturity
25 cm
Soil moisture
Moist soil
Germination time (days)
15 days
Sowing method
Direct sowing
Sowing period March to June
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Harvest time June to September
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Description

The Boogie Pea (Pisum sativum in Latin) is a full-season variety that offers excellent yields, with each pod containing up to 9 tender and sweet peas. This vigorous pea is resistant to all the most common diseases, including powdery mildew, making it well-suited for late sowing. It is a plant that produces relatively few leaves, making harvesting easy. It can be sown from March to June for a harvest from June to September.

The Pea is an annual vegetable belonging to the Fabaceae family (formerly Leguminosae) and has its ancient origins in the Middle East. It is one of the oldest cultivated vegetables in Europe and Asia. It was long consumed dried and crushed before cooking, and its fresh consumption is relatively recent.

There are many varieties of peas: dwarf or climbing (pole) varieties that produce pods filled with smooth or wrinkled round peas. They are cooked after being shelled because the parchment-like pod in which they are enclosed is not edible. Only snow peas (with flat, crunchy, and buttery pods) are consumed in their entirety.

Generally, climbing peas are more productive, but they are less early and require a support 1.5 to 2 metres (5 to 7 feet) high for them to climb. Their harvest is easy. Dwarf or semi-dwarf peas only require a few branches (from 50cm (20in) to 1 metre (3 feet)) as poles. Some recent varieties, in which the foliage is largely replaced by tendrils, support themselves, and the use of poles is then optional.

Smooth-grain peas are resistant to spring cold. They are very early or early varieties that can be sown very early under cover, but they do not appreciate excessive heat.

For late spring and early summer sowings, wrinkled-grain varieties are used, which have a sweeter flavour, tolerate heat, and offer longer harvests.

Peas are highly appreciated as a spring vegetable, but by carefully choosing varieties, they can be harvested over a long period from June to September.

In cooking, peas can be eaten raw, but they are traditionally cooked to accompany meat and fish or to prepare delicious soups. They are quite calorie-rich as they are high in carbohydrates, and contain a lot of fibre, iron, and vitamins C and B9.

Peas like mild and humid climates but suffer under extreme weather conditions such as excessive heat, frost, and both water shortage and excess, which weaken them and make them susceptible to powdery mildew and the pea moth, a small caterpillar that eats the seeds.

Harvest: Depending on the variety, peas are harvested between two and a half and four months after sowing. Harvesting should be regular and take place when the pods feel full under finger pressure. Don't wait too long... peas tend to harden as they age!

Storage: Fresh peas can be stored, unshelled, in the vegetable compartment of the refrigerator. They freeze very well once blanched in boiling water.

Gardener's tip: Peas, like all legumes, can fix atmospheric nitrogen in the soil, acting as a green fertiliser. This nitrogen supply benefits both neighboring plants and those that will be planted subsequently in a crop rotation scheme.

Harvest

Harvest time June to September
Type of vegetable Seed and pod vegetable
Size of vegetable Medium
Interest Flavour, Nutritional value, Very productive

Plant habit

Height at maturity 75 cm
Spread at maturity 25 cm
Growth rate normal

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Pisum

Species

sativum

Cultivar

Boogie

Family

Fabaceae

Other common names

Garden pea, Green pea, English pea

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Annual / Perennial

Annual

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Planting and care

Sowing:

The germination temperature for Peas ranges from 5 to 24°C, and usually takes between 6 and 15 days to sprout.

Sowing period: from March to June

Harvest period: from June to September

 

Sowing is done directly in the ground, in a sunny location, in slightly amended and loosened soil. Create furrows that are 5cm (2in) deep, with a distance of 75cm (30in) between rows. Sow the seeds every 5cm (2in). Water and keep the soil moist until germination.

Cultivation:

Once the plants reach a height of 15cm (6in), it is advisable to mound soil at the base of the plants and install supports, the height of which will vary depending on the variety: 0.5 to 1 metre (2 to 3 feet) for dwarf Peas and 1.5 to 2 metres (5 to 7 feet) for climbing Peas. Branches from hazelnut or chestnut trees work well, but you can also use scraps of wire mesh or nets sold for this purpose.

Peas are not heavy feeders and only require light fertilisation. Additional fertilisation is therefore optional and depends on the initial fertility of your soil.

Seedlings

Sowing period March to June
Sowing method Direct sowing
Germination time (days) 15 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
Soil light
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), 130
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