#270723 - 03/07/08 09:59 AM
IMPORTING SEEDS
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Please tell me if it is OK to bring vegetable seeds into Belize?
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Harriette Take only pictures leave only bubbles
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#270727 - 03/07/08 10:10 AM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: LOANSUM - AL K.]
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e-mail BAHA at baha@btl.net, they respond pretty quickly to enquiries.
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"Your vacation should be special, grocery shopping isn't... We shop so you don't have to!"
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#270870 - 03/08/08 09:17 AM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: Amanda Syme]
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Good tips Amanda. Thanks
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Harriette Take only pictures leave only bubbles
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#285048 - 06/16/08 10:33 AM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: flip flop]
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Coleen, owner of Island Perk, has started a gardening group and wants to focus on teaching schoold children how to raise their own food. Melons, cucumbers, etc. are the most easily grown here. If you want to bring some and donate to this cause it would be greatly appreciated. We have lerned that it is ok to bring in packaged seeds, it is soild that is not allowed, so no potted plants. Visit The Verde Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ACVerde/
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Harriette Take only pictures leave only bubbles
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#286645 - 06/28/08 07:21 AM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: dabunk]
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I used to bring seeds down all the time for a friend. She had several kinds of melons, green beans, squash, zippers, and a few other things. She constructed an area, covered with screen and fencing, used potting soil, and had a great little garden.
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#287354 - 07/05/08 06:30 AM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: Bill Thornton]
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I was growing melons but the land crabs loved them. As to tomatoes , there is a hybrid out now that is bred for tropical climates and it does really well in San Pedro. It also tolerates the salt pretty well. The problem when it is really hot is that you get flowers but they do not bud in to tomatoes easily. Ash helps a but when mixed in the soil and water water water. Oh, and do not plant next to habaneros or you get hot tomatoes.
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#287396 - 07/05/08 04:04 PM
Re: IMPORTING SEEDS
[Re: Lan Sluder/Belize First]
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Nobody, and I mean nobody, loves a big ripe jucy red tomato more than this writer. I come from California and the area of the Sacramento Valley where summer temperatures reach 115 and above, yet, each year I grew some of the most succulent tomatoes ever seen. Heat can destroy your plant but if you use good growing practices, a good hybrid variety, mulch heavily to keep the soil cooler, water sufficiently but not too heavily, perhaps even do a little hand pollinating with a Q-Tip, you should succeed. I'll be growing my own in the ground, in pots and elevated beds in the partial shade of my place in Armenia Village once I become established sometime in Late July and early August. Will keep you advised of my success and/or failure. I'll be bringing down a ton of seed from the US when I arrive in July.
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Harvey Wood
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