Your Order >>

0 items, 0 varieties
Subtotal: $0.00

Art Packs
Each designed by a different artist. >>

Library Packs
Grown by small farmers and gardeners, mostly in New York State. >>

Garden Packs
Quality seeds for the home gardener. >>

Arugula
Asian Greens
Beans
Beets
Brassicas
Broccoli
Cabbage
Carrots
Corn
Cucumbers
Eggplant
Flowers
Greens
Herbs
Kale and Collards
Lettuce
Melons
Okra
Parsnips
Peas
Peppers
Radishes
Spinach
Summer Squash
Swiss Chard
Tomatoes
Turnips
Winter Squash

Gifts and Artwork
Artful gifts for the grower. >>

-------
Join Our Mailing List
Email:
Oops! No photo for this variety
Ashworth Sweet Corn
Warning: Although delightfully sweet when eaten off the cob, this corn cannot be used to make high fructose corn syrup.
Garden Pack
Eligible for Membership Deal
$2.50 / $2.00 for members
As you might have deduced from our seed packages, we have an affinity for rats. What does that have to do with this delicious corn? According to FEDCO Seeds, Fred Ashworth of St. Lawrence Nurseries originally named his variety "'Rat Selected' in honor of the rodents who broke into his seed storage room and alerted him to certain kernels that they preferred." Derived from Ashworth's original varieties, this corn germinates well in cool soil, has short stalks with 6-7" yellow ears with good flavor. For more information on the dangers DIY corn syrup, we recommend seeing the documentary King Corn.

Plant seeds 1 inch deep in rows or clumps, two weeks after the last frost date. Corn needs rich soil, full sun and adequate moisture to produce good ears. Seed Saving Tip: Corn cross pollinated by wind for miles. To save seed stagger the planting time of different varieties, plant them 1/2 mile apart, or come to one of our seed saving workshops and learn how to hand pollinate corn.

100 seeds per pack.
How to Grow Ashworth Sweet Corn

Growing corn is pretty easy if you provide your seeds with highly fertile soil. Seed can be sown in early- to mid-May depending on the year (corn likes a slightly-warmed-up soil for germination). For continued harvest all season, sow crops at two-week intervals until mid-summer. Drop seeds into furrows about 1 inch deep. Begin with spacing of three to four inches and thin the plants once up to a spacing of six to eight inches. Rows should be a good 30 or 42 inches apart with this spacing, which matches common widths of garden beds.

Some years corn needs very little attention, but in dry years it will need irrigating. It thrives during the summers when subtropical weather settles in for a couple months. Many critters love to munch on corn, including rodents and, most notoriously, raccoons. Avoid growing corn near chicken coops or pest attractants, and be sure to surround your garden with a good critter fence.

When ears fill out, check regularly for sweetness; open-pollinated corn does not last long in the field at peak ripeness. Peel back the husk and press your thumb into a kernel; if it pops open and yields a sweet milky fluid, pluck a dozen and throw them in a pot. It's hard to beat sweet corn fresh from the garden--even the freshest ears from roadside stands do not compare.

(Date suggestions reflect our early- to mid-May last frost date here in the Hudson Valley)
This website is hosted on servers that run on solar power. Thanks, AISO!
All contents copyright Hudson Valley Seed Library LLC, 2009