Even though this blog post was written a decade ago I update it often. It is the year 2024, and I am still selling seeds and plants. If you are viewing this on your mobile phone you may need to scroll down below the comments and click on 'view web version'.
To order send me an email, my email address will need the spaces removed, @ instead of the 'at' and . in place of the word 'dot': damien_beaumont at yahoo dot com dot au
This is my For Sale
page, with heirloom vegetable seeds, berry plants, and perennial
vegetable plants for sale in Australia, this page is updated regularly.
For notes on how to grow perennial vegetables
please visit here. Many of the plants or seeds below also have a hyperlink to a blog page on growing them. If you would like growing notes on anything that is not listed on the
growing notes page please let me know and I can email them through to you. I can't tell you the 'right' way to grow them, or even the 'best' way to grow them, I can only tell you what works well for me.
For a list of vegetable days to harvest from planting seed please click here.
To order: please send me an email saying what plants/seeds you would like and I will reply with prices/payment methods.
My email address will need to remove the the spaces, put @ instead of the word 'at' and . in place of the word 'dot': damien_beaumont at yahoo dot com dot au
Organic Perennial Vegetables for sale – plant once, harvest forever!
POSTAGE: for plants/bulbs I post at cost $10.90 for regular post. I post plants bare rooted on the Monday after payment has cleared.
Babington's Leek (Allium ampeloprasum var. babingtonii) This is an extremely rare and fun perennial vegetable to grow. Similar to a tree onion it grows many bulbils on the flower stalk instead of producing seed. It is used in the same way and has the same taste as a regular leek. This will prove to be a talking point in any garden and a great heirloom to pass on to your kids. Extremely hardy and productive but for some reason it is so rare that it is almost extinct. Please read my Babington's leek growing notes prior to ordering
Perennial Leek (Allium ampeloprasum) rare and hard to find but one of the best plants for home growers. These grow and taste like regular leek but instead of growing viable seed they reproduce by sending up numerous babies from their base. Much faster and easier than growing from seed. If hot and dry over summer they can die down to bulbs. These are hardy once established and incredibly productive $4 per small plant SOLD OUT FOR NOW
Everlasting Onion (Allium cepa perutile) grows like a spring onion but does not often produce viable seed, reproduces quickly by splitting in half. Will also grow a small bulb similar to a French shallot in some climates. This is possibly the hardiest, most productive, and easiest to grow of perennial vegetables. One of the best permaculture vegetables. Very easy to grow, you will never have to buy spring onions or shallots ever again! $5 each
Tree onion, aka topsetting onions, aka Egyptian walking onion (Allium × proliferum, formerly Allium cepa var proliferum). It is a stable hybrid dating back to the 1850s that is worth having around. Bizarre looking plant grows a golf ball sized onion that divides underground then grows tiny onions instead of seed on the flower stalk. Sometimes a flower stalk will have a tiny onion with its own flower stalk with tiny onions on that and you end up with three or four levels on the one plant. These flower stalks bend under the weight of all the onions allowing the plant to “walk”. These were very common once and are now rare and hard to find $3 per small plant or bulbil
Jerusalem Artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus) a massively productive low maintenance perennial vegetable that is high in inulin. Can be eaten raw or cooked and is used in any way that you would use a potato. Very productive, one small tuber fragment can produce well over 1kg! When grown in good soil and watered occasionally each plant can produce well over 3kg of tubers. Great food for people, pigs, poultry, sheep, cattle, guinea pigs etc. Masses of yellow sunflower like flowers in autumn attract honey bees and are good to use as cut flowers. ONLY available in Winter/Spring, $3 each tuber
Azolla (I'm not certain of the species, likely Azolla pinnata) also known as mosquito
fern, fairy moss, and a few other cute names. Azolla is a free floating water fern.
It sequesters nitrogen from the atmosphere and can be used as living
mulch, biofertiliser, animal feed, human food, water cleanser, mosquito control etc. This has high percentage of protein and is readily eaten
by poultry and fish. It grows fast and doubles every day under ideal conditions $3 for a scoop
Pink dandelion (Taraxacum pseudoroseum) is a different species than regular lawn dandelions. All parts are edible by people, poultry, and livestock. Leaves are more nutritious than most vegetables, roots can be made into a caffein free coffee substitute, and the flowers are pink with a yellow center. The pink gets darker each day the flower is open. These perennial plants are more fragile than common dandelions so tend not to escape into your yard. $5 per bare rooted plant SOLD OUT FOR NOW
Skirret (Sium sisarum) very rare, endangered, and ancient perennial root vegetable which is very simple to grow. Sweet roots taste like a delicious sweet potato or parsnip but far better. Used in any dish that calls for potato, carrot or parsnip. The celery tasting leaves can be added to salads and the seeds are edible but it is the sweet roots that are the main crop here. This is the most delicious roasted vegetable ever. Flowers attract many beneficial insects to your garden $5 per small plant or offset
Affiliate program - follow the link, buy some of these
Fruit shaping moulds - grow square lemons, heart shaped apples, scary face pumpkins, square watermelons and more. It is so much simpler than you think, plus you do it at home with your organic produce. To order plastic fruit shaping molds use this link and note this is an external site, and I do earn a commission from each sale.Organic Heirloom Vegetable Seeds - most are not perennial but it is certainly worth growing these.
Postage of seeds only within Australia: $3.50 for any number of packets. If also buying plants use the plant postage rate as I will send everything in the one package. I can also post some seeds overseas but I post at cost so need to confirm postage costs with the post office.
Immali Corn (Zea mays) a beautiful and delicious coloured sweet corn. I have created this amazing variety myself, the colours are not changed during cooking (we ate the cob in the photo). Produces 2 to 6 cobs of coloured sweet corn per plant. This is high in anthocyanin, antioxidants and vitamins. Why grow yellow corn when this is prettier, tastier, and healthier for you! Corn will cross pollinate with other varieties of corn so you may have some yellow seeds if someone is growing yellow corn near by $4.00 per packet of about 20 seeds
Giant Heirloom Tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum) a mix of seeds containing both "Julia Child" and "Giant Siberian Pink" (known in Russian as: Sibirskiy Velikan Rozovyi). They are both delicious and large tomatoes. 'Julia Child' grows regular leaf and 'Giant Siberian Pink' grows potato leaf so you can tell from a young age which seedlings are which. These are open pollinated varieties that are both indeterminate. $4.00 per packet of about 20 seeds
Angora 82 tomato small plant which grows to about 1 foot tall, may or may not be dwarf, very productive with about 20 flowers per truss. Small, red, round tomatoes which taste really nice and sweet. This plant gave a large yield very early, has regular leaf and appeared to be determinate but kept putting out occasional new branches with flowers until the frosts. $4 per packet of about 20 seeds
Igloo tomato, stocky plants, around 1 foot tall. Highly productive, producing about 12 kg of remarkably consistent red round fruit that weighs just under 50g each. Each truss usually contains about 16 flowers. Very early cropping, great for producing a lot of food under short seasons and small spaces. $4 per packet of about 20 seeds
Little Oak Like tomato small determinate tomato that produces red ping pong ball size tomatoes. Like many other old Russian varieties it has a very rich tomato taste. Looks much like 'Igloo' but slightly less stocky, a bit tastier, and less productive. Very early cropper great for areas with a short growing season. $4 for a packet of about 20 seeds
Micro Tom tomato the smallest variety of tomato in the world! I have never had one grow over 10cm tall. Being so small they can easily be grown in a cup of soil, easy for kids to grow, easy for elderly people who no longer have a garden, easy to grow in apartments if you have a sunny window, and great for school experiments due to its short life cycle $4 for 15 seeds
Yellow Pear Tomato (Lycopersicon lycopersicum) a sweet, yellow, pear shaped cherry tomato. This is an old and loved heirloom variety dating back to the 1700’s. It was the first yellow tomato I ever grew. It can grow to be a large plant if given support and is very productive if treated well. Beautiful, delicious, sweet and easy to grow, kids love the look and taste of the fruit. Heirloom tomato can and will cross with other varieties of heirloom tomato so be a little careful if saving seed $4.00 per packet of about 20 seeds
Skirret (Sium sisarum)
very rare, endangered and ancient perennial root crop which is simple
to grow. Sweet roots taste like a delicious sweet potato or
parsnip. Used in any dish that calls for potato, carrot or parsnip.
Leaves can be added to salads but it is the sweet roots that are the
main crop here. Flowers attract many beneficial insects to
your garden. Unlike many other perennial vegetables, seed grown plants
will produce a crop, divide numerously, flower, and set seed the first
year $4 per packet of tiny seeds
Superior Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) mixed seeds of around a dozen varieties including 'slow bolt', 'long standing', and 'Bengal Giant'. This is an excellent producer of both leaves and seeds. There has been deliberate crossing of varieties so you will have great genetic diversity and be able to breed a superior variety that performs well in your garden. Cull plants that flower early and only save seed from later flowering plants to quickly and easily develop your own variety that is is slow to flower and produces abundant leaves $4 per packet of seeds
Hillbilly tomato has firm flesh that is reasonably dry and somehow smells very fruity. Produces a medium yield of glossy fruit over the season, it has regular leaf and is indeterminate. Good size for slicing on a sandwich, the colour, glossiness, and fruity smell are all enjoyed by my kids. $4 per packet of 20 seeds
Japanese Black Trifle (spelled various ways, originally called "Yaponskiy Trufel Chernyi" or in Russian "Японский трюфель черный"). This old Russian variety has a deep, rich, sweet, tomato taste that is difficult to describe but easy to remember. One of my all time favourite tomatoes. Japanese Black Trifele tomato has potato leaf and is indeterminate. $4 per packet of 20 seeds
Helsing Junction Blues are great high anthocyanin cherry tomatoes. These taste sweet and are very productive. The unripe fruit is bright purple, only goes blue/black where the sun hits and stays red when shaded by a leaf so you can make patterns using stencils similar to apples. Ripe fruit is red with black where it used to be purple. Plants have regular leaf and are indeterminate. $4 per packet of 20 seeds
Tommy Toe tomatoes (I didn't take a photo) grow into a large plant with high yields of small tomatoes. An excellent tomato for back yard growing due to their rich tomato taste, abundant yield, and pretty red round cherry tomatoes. One of the more common varieties I grow as they are well worth growing. Plants have regular leaf and are indeterminate. $4 per packet of 20 seeds
Giant Parsley (Petroselinum crispum) is an absolutely massive strain of flat leaf parsley that is very simple to grow. Leaves can be used as vegetable or herb, petioles can be used in place of celery, roots are delicious roasted. Contains wide genetics and will produce a diverse population containing some large plants and some stunningly massive plants. If allowed to flower it will attract many beneficial insects and pollinators, and will gladly self seed. $4 per packet of seeds
Giant Edible Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) produces incredibly large plants from improved parent stock. Dandelion leaves are more nutritious than most vegetables, the thick long roots can be roasted or turned into delicious coffee substitute, even the pretty flowers are edible. Poultry and livestock love to eat dandelions. Deep tap roots mine minerals from deep in the soil, leaves can be used as compost activators. They are great companion plants for most fruits and vegetables. The flowers are pretty and are great for bees, and kids love to blow the seed heads. Open pollinated plants may display some genetic diversity $4 per packet of seeds
Purple Mustard - back in 2012 I bought some seeds for purple mustard. My son loved purple mustard, and has saved seed and grown it every year since. Leaves can be used as vegetable, or garnish, and seeds can be used to make condiment. They produce large purple leaves with some green, profuse yellow flowers attract honey bees and other beneficial insects. All profits from this go to my son for pocket money $4 per packet
Senposai (Brassica napus) - this is a stable cross between an Asian cabbage (Komatsuna) and a European cabbage that combines the best of both worlds. These plants are vigorous growers, take up a lot of room, and produce a lot of food. Like all brassicas the flowers are adored by bees and other pollinators. Can be eaten raw or cooked, and used in any way you would use a cabbage. $4 per packet
Glass Gem Corn (Zea mays) - this is good popcorn, beautifully coloured and incredibly ornamental. These cobs grow all the colours of the rainbow and are incredibly beautiful. If popped as pop corn they still pop white (just like regular yellow popcorn). The cobs average around 15 cm long, and I average 4.5 cobs per plant but could have had more if I gave them more space. Do NOT grow near other types of corn, popcorn, sweet corn, as it will cross pollinate and ruin your cobs. $4 for packet of about 20 mixed seeds
Litchi tomato (Solanum sisymbriifolium) also known as Morelle de Balbis, Fire and Ice plant, or my kids call them "Prickle Tomatoes". Litchi tomatoes are somewhat related to tomatoes, tomatillos, and ground cherries. Like many of the fruiting vegetables we grow, they are a perennial that is treated as an annual. Intriguing plants with delicious berries. Difficult to describe the taste as they vary depending on how ripe they are when picked. They can taste like cherry, kiwi fruit, or sometimes really bland. I am told you need more than one plant for pollination and fruit set so I grow several seeds in one hole to save space $4 per packet of about 20 seeds
Black Nebula Carrot (Daucus carota sativus) these heirloom carrots are the darkest of the dark. They are so dark purple I would almost call them black. They really are incredible to see. They are dark purple/black all the way to the core and will have a small amount of white flecked through. I am told that these have undertones of berry taste, but I can't taste berries at all. I found them to taste like a mix of carrot and beetroot, which I really like. Even if you are not a fan of carrots these taste great. These carrots retain their intense purple colour when cooked. The juice can be used as a dye, and if you add some acidity it will turn bright pink. Carrots will cross with other varieties of carrot and Queen Anne's Lace so take care if seed saving $4 per packet of seeds
Huacatay (Tagetes minuta), is also called Peruvian Black Mint, is an annual herb. It is not related to mint, but does taste and smell similar to mint, and can be used in similar recipes. Used in sauce or herbal teas and an essential ingredient in many Peruvian dishes. This herb is very simple to grow and very productive. It grows tall over the warmer months, often about 5 or 6 feet tall (I had some reach over 9 feet tall) or shorter in poor soils. Simple to save seed and grow the following year $4 per packet of seeds
Pink dandelion (Taraxacum pseudoroseum) is a different species than regular lawn dandelions. All parts are edible by people, poultry, and livestock. Leaves are more nutritious than most vegetables, roots can be made into a caffein free coffee substitute, and the flowers are pink with a yellow center. The flower opens white/light pink with a yellow center, pink gets darker each day the flower is open. These perennial plants are more fragile than common dandelions so as much as I wish they would they tend not to escape into your lawn $4 per packet of seeds
Organic Culinary Herb Plants
Unless
started all herbs will have been grown from cuttings so that I can
assure the quality of the plants, some herbs grow true to type from seed
whereas others tend to be a little variable. Most herbs (other than
root cuttings, which are just a segment of root) are sold bare rooted,
or with minimal soil on the roots to lower weight and reduce the postage
cost. Most will be wrapped in damp newspaper and put into a plastic
zip lock bag. Some may be dormant over winter and will not put on a lot
of growth until Spring.
I
do not have large quantities of any herbs, if you want a larger
quantity please ask me and I will let you know if I can help out.
Native Water Mint aka native rivermint, native peppermint (Mentha australis) this perennial Australian native herb is very rare in the bush and is rarely found in shops or gardens. Flowers are great for native bees and other native pollinators. It likes being well watered but can cope with reasonably dry soil. It is used in much the same way as regular peppermint but is far less invasive and the small flowers are great for native pollinators. It makes an excellent herbal tea served hot or iced $5 per small plant
Variegated Water Celery aka water parsley, Java waterdropwort, Japanese parsley, Chinese celery etc (Oenanthe javanica - flamingo) is a perennial vegetable that is under utilised and strangely uncommon. Extremely prolific and simple to grow. Can be grown in the vegetable garden or as an emergent water plant. Smells and tastes a lot like celery, add at the end of cooking or much of the taste will disappear $5 per small plant
Vietnamese Coriander aka Vietnamese mint, laksa herb, hot mint, Cambodian mint, praew leaf (Persicaria odorata) is an amazing perennial edible herb. Simple to grow, extremely productive, delicious, and versatile, I can't believe how uncommonly this is grown in Australia. The internet says Vietnamese coriander has a “lovely coriander taste with a clear citrus note; refreshing with a hot, biting, peppery after taste”. I grow as an emergent water plant but also happily grows in vegetable garden. It goes well with chicken and combines well with lime, chillies, garlic, ginger and lemon grass, what is not to love about this plant! $5 per small plant
Vietnamese Fish Mint (Houttuynia cordata) also known as dokudami, 'poison blocking plant', lizard tail, heartleaf, fishwort, bishop's weed, and a bunch of other names. Commonly used in Vietnamese cooking, herbal tea, as well as a host of different traditional medicines. It tastes like fish sauce. I am selling small plants of the vigorous green form. This plant can become invasive if planted in the garden so please restrict it to growing in a pot. Dormant over winter $5 per small plant or well rooted cutting
Common Spear Mint (Mentha spicata) this fragrant, strong smelling plant is one of the easiest and most rewarding herbs to grow. Great plant to get children introduced to gardening and connected to the land. Used to make mint sauce, garnish and in a host of different ways while cooking. When I was a child it was grown in every garden, starting to become difficult to find for some reason. Grown organically from cuttings as seeds can be variable and often give undesirable traits. Grow in a pot to prevent it from taking over your garden $5 per small plant
Lavender mint (Mentha piperita 'Lavendula') this edible mint smells like lavender! I use it in herbal tea and my kids love it, it also goes well in cold summer drinks, and I am told it goes well with chicken and other white meats where it imparts a floral aroma. Lilac flowers attract bees and butterflies. Large almost fluffy leaves not only smell great they also look and feel nice. Lavender mint is my second favourite variety of mint, and it is the most vigorous in growth so please grow it in a pot to prevent it taking over your garden $5 per small plant
Willow herb (Epilobium parviflorum). Other common names include 'small flowered willow herb', 'hoary willowherb' and 'small flowered hairy willow herb'. This is a perennial edible herb, the leaves can be added to a salad and eaten raw or cooked, or dried and used in herbal teas. This herb has been used as medicine to treat prostate and kidney issues and to reduce tumor growth, there are a few studies indicating it could be effective in treating these ailments. This plant loves water. $5 per small plant
Atilla Alpine Strawberry (Fragaria vesca) is a red fruited wild strawberry that is day length neutral. It is an extremely rare alpine strawberry that produces runners and can form an edible ground cover. The strawberries are much smaller than supermarket strawberries, but they taste meltingly delicious and they smell truly amazing. If you have never eaten a wild strawberry you don't know what you are missing. Alpine strawberries are also known as gourmet strawberries or fraise des bois $5 per plant
Virginian strawberry (Fragaria virginiana) are a species of wild strawberries from North America. They taste similar to garden strawberries you can buy from the markets but with far more intense and sweet flavour. These have been selectively bred for larger sized berries as wild plants produce tiny berries. Berries have deeply set seeds. Grows lots of runners, flowers twice per year in my garden. Very hardy plants $5 per plant
Carnivorous Plants
I
know this page is mostly for perennial vegetables and other organically
grown edibles, but please don't get confused and start to eat your
carnivorous plants!
Venus Flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) are the most famous and one of the most intriguing of carnivorous plants. They grow best in areas with frosts but can be grown in frost free climates. Never shut the traps with your finger, don't feed them, and don't fertilise them. Growing notes can be found here. $8 each small bare rooted plant SOLD OUT UNTIL LATE SPRING
Ancient cultures
Milk kefir grains: this is a living, reusable, traditional heirloom starter culture which dates back thousands of years. Save money by making healthy probiotic milk kefir at home. It ends up very similar to a drinking yogurt, but far simpler to make and much more beneficial for your health. My grains have an extremely diverse profile probiotics that is vastly superior to supermarket kefir or starter sachets. They have been growing in A2 milk and multiply well in warmer weather. Milk kefir is extremely simple to make using grains. I can send you instructions and provide advice via email if required. $5 per spoon full
String of Pearls plant (Senecio rowleyanus). Very simple to grow and very beautiful. They grow tiny white flowers in winter that smell like cinnamon. Grow them somewhere that they can trail over the side of their pot. When you receive the cutting please remove the lower few pearls (leaves), plant the stem in soil and water it well. If you buy a plant it will need to be planted in a pot of soil. These look delicate but are surprisingly hardy and grow reasonably fast. These are ornamental only, please never eat any part of them $5 per small bare rooted plant, $2 per cutting
Muscari seeds (Muscari armeniacum) also known as grape hyacinth, are a spring flowering bulb that produces sweetly fragrant blue flowers, sometimes blue and white, or even just white. Simple to grow, naturalises well, loved by honey bees, and dies down over summer so is water wise. Simple to grow from seed but won't flower the first year. Seeds are far cheaper than bulbs so you get far more plants for your money. Each seed grown plant will be genetically unique but most look similar to their siblings $4 for packet of 35 fresh seeds
Candle Making
I have seen these candles for sale for
up to $13, with $9 each being about average, so buying a mould and
making some of your own works out well. If you enjoy it
you can get more wax and make more candles, or experiment with
fragrances and essential oils etc.
Candle making kit - owl
This mould is easy to use and produces little owl candles with an incredible amount of detail. Candle making is a great project to do with kids on a rainy day. The price is for one
owl silicone mould can be used to make hundreds of candles, and I can provide simple instructions $10 for the mould
Note: candle not included, you are buying a pink silicone mould to make your own candles
1 Corinthians 3:6-7 I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow.