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Guaranteed to Grow
Neonicotinoid-Free
Heirloom

Georgia Southern Heirloom Collard Greens

Quick Facts:

  • Heirloom variety dating back to the 1880s
  • Short-statured plants grow 2-3' tall
  • Blue-green leaves, mild cabbage-like flavor
  • Very cold-tolerant & slow to bolt
  • 70 days to harvest

View full description

Quantity: Packet (100 Seeds)

shipping estimated time of arrival Get it between Friday April 4th - Tuesday April 8th

Georgia Southern Heirloom Collard Greens

More about Georgia Southern

Brassica Oleracea

Georgia Southern is an heirloom collard green that dates back to the 1880's.  Short statured plants grow 2 to 3 feet tall, producing large blue-green leaves with a mild cabbage-like flavor.  Georgia Southern is very cold-tolerant and slow to bolt, and its flavor is sweetened when leaves are allowed to mature in cold weather.  This also produces a darker green leaf.  Harvests begin 70 days after transplant.  Each packet contains a minimum of 100 seeds.

Brassica Oleracea

Georgia Southern is an heirloom collard green that dates back to the 1880's.  Short statured plants grow 2 to 3 feet tall, producing large blue-green leaves with a mild cabbage-like flavor.  Georgia Southern is very cold-tolerant and slow to bolt, and its flavor is sweetened when leaves are allowed to mature in cold weather.  This also produces a darker green leaf.  Harvests begin 70 days after transplant.  Each packet contains a minimum of 100 seeds.

Tomatoes
Heirloom Tomatoes

How to Grow Collards

Girl holding basket of collard greens

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
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Justin Hinnant

These greens are not the real georgia collards the seeds i planted the leaves have a ripple look to them and also have a turnips leaf look to them there not dark green leaves like they should be

Hi Justin, thanks for your review. We'll be the first to admit that we're not collard experts—we've only been growing Georgia Southern for the past several years. What we can say, however, is that the strain we offer is exactly what is displayed in the photographs. We start a good number of plants from our bulk lot and select the most representative plants to use for photos. If you saw plants with turnip-like leaves, it is possible they were one-offs (either seed or pollen contaminates) but in either case, these would be very rare events. We've not witnessed them here. Lighter green leaves are common when the weather is warm. In fact, you can see some lighter green leaves in some of our photos, those were taken in July. The photos with darker green leaves were taken in October, after the cold weather had set in. Anyway, I hope this helps. We do sincerely appreciate your feedback. I've issued a full refund for your order, including shipping, since this was the only item on it.

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