valencia peanut seeds for planting Tennessee Red Valencia - Peanut Seeds
SKU: 42776958678
valencia peanut seeds for planting

valencia peanut seeds for planting Tennessee Red Valencia - Peanut Seeds

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Description

valencia peanut seeds for planting Tennessee Red Valencia - Peanut SeedsDating back to before 1890 and native to the fertile plains of Tennessee, the Tennessee Red Valencia peanut is celebrated for its rich taste and distinctive red skinned kernels. Despite being a short season variety, maturing in about 110 days, it produces a generous yield, making it an ideal choice even for more northerly climates. In the garden, Tennessee Red Valencia peanuts adapt easily to different environments, particularly thriving in well

Dating back to before 1890 and native to the fertile plains of Tennessee, the Tennessee Red Valencia peanut is celebrated for its rich taste and distinctive red-skinned kernels. Despite being a short-season variety, maturing in about 110 days, it produces a generous yield, making it an ideal choice even for more northerly climates.

In the garden, Tennessee Red Valencia peanuts adapt easily to different environments, particularly thriving in well-drained soil and full sun. This bush-type plant, a member of the Valencia class of peanuts, is known for its smaller size and sweeter taste compared to Virginia types. It flourishes in minimal hilling up and can tolerate heavier clay soils than most other varieties. The plants, spreading in growth habit, reach about 18 inches tall at maturity, producing shells that contain 3-6 red-skinned kernels each.

Whether roasted, boiled, or used in homemade peanut butter, Tennessee Red Valencia peanuts bring a distinctively sweet flavour and crunchy texture to the table. By growing this heirloom variety, you are not only treating yourself to gourmet-quality, homegrown produce but also participating in a long-standing agricultural tradition.


- Latin Name: Arachis Hypogaea
- Days to Maturity: 110-120
- Life Cycle: Annual
- Canada Hardiness Zone: 9
- Start Indoors or Cold Frame: 4-6 weeks before last spring frost 
- Direct Sowing: After last spring frost
- Planting Depth: 2-4 cm
- Days to Germination: 5-12
- Optimal Soil Temperature During Germination: 18-21°C
- Seed Spacing: 10-15 cm
- Thinning Seedlings: 20-30 cm apart
- Row Spacing: 90-120 cm
- Plant Height: 30-40 cm
- Average Seeds Needed Per 10 m Row: 75
- Average Yield Per 10 m Row: 1-2 lb.
- Approx. Seeds per lb: 900

GROWING INSTRUCTIONS

Perfectly snackable peanuts can be grown right at home started from seed. The popular “nut,” commonly crushed into butter and enjoyed at ballgames is actually not a nut at all but a legume, related to beans and peas. Typically grown in warmer climates like the southern US, with the right care peanuts can be cultivated in colder regions as well. 

Because of their long growing season, peanuts can be started indoors 4-6 weeks before the last frost date. If planting outdoors, seed directly into a south-facing slope, after all danger of frost has passed. 

To start seeds indoors, fill a large container with potting soil to a depth of about 10 cm. Peanuts develop under the surface of the soil so make sure they have enough space to grow. Place 3-4 seeds on the surface of the soil and cover them with 3 cm of soil. Water the seeds well and maintain even moisture throughout germination and the seedling phase. Provided seeds receive about 8 hours of light per day, they should sprout and grow quickly. Peanuts can be kept inside permanently as an indoor plant, or transplanted outside in the garden.

After the danger of frost has passed, and the soil has warmed to at least 18 degrees, seedlings can be transplanted outside in a sunny location. Use a raised bed, organic mulch or clear plastic to help the soil warm up more quickly in the spring. Seedlings should be spaced about 20 cm apart in well-drained soil. Compost and sand can be added to help loosen up the planting site. 

When plants are 15 cm tall, gently cultivate the soil, loosening it for easy entry of the developing pegs. The plants can then be hilled like potatoes and a layer of mulch should be applied to protect the roots. Along the base of the stem small, yellow flowers will form and eventually fade, transforming into swollen pods. The pods will reach toward the ground and plant themselves into the earth. 

Plants are harvested all at once as they fade and turn yellow. Before a frost hits, use a garden fork to pry it out from under the roots. Carefully shake out all the loose soil and hang the plant in a sheltered place for about a month to dry. Then, separate the peanut pods from the stems. At this point, they’re ready to be stored for future use or eaten straight away!

The nuts can be eaten raw or roasted in the oven, shelled or unshelled, at 175 degrees for 20 minutes.

QUICK FACTS

- George Washington Carver significantly revolutionized agriculture with his work on peanuts. Carver was a pioneering agricultural scientist and inventor born into slavery during the American Civil War. Rising against considerable adversity, he dedicated his life to teaching farmers, especially in the South, sustainable farming practices that enriched the soil and provided food and commodities for self-sufficiency.

During a time when cotton crops were depleting Southern soils, he championed peanuts as an alternative crop. Peanuts had the dual benefit of restoring nitrogen to the soil and providing a new source of food and other products.

He is perhaps most famous for his bulletin, "How to Grow the Peanut and 105 Ways of Preparing it for Human Consumption," published in 1916. This guide gave farmers valuable advice about peanut cultivation and introduced numerous recipes, transforming the perception of peanuts across the United States.

- Peanuts are unique as they flower above the ground, but fruit below the soil. After flowering, their stems, called pegs, extend down into the soil where the peanuts develop.

Despite the name, peanuts are not actually nuts. They are legumes, more closely related to beans and peas.

- Peanut seeds will remain viable for three years if stored in a cool, dark place, ideally between 4 and 10⁰C. After that, the germination rate may start to go down.

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Eric Hobart
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Remarkable analysis of slaveholding women in Antebellum America
Format: Paperback
Stephanie Jones-Rogers has provided us with a book that looks at the South's "peculiar institution" through a very different lens - the slaveholders/slaveowners, but this analysis looks at women that owned slaves, thus opening up a new avenue of study that I hadn't previously seen. Jones-Rogers offers a well written account that is rich in historical details. She demonstrates through vivid historical evidence that the women that owned enslaved people were primarily driven by economic motives, and that these women were just as demanding and could be just as harsh as the "typical" slaveowner image that has been crafted over the years. The book is organized thematically, and each chapter demonstrates the economic motivation behind slave ownership. The reader is offered views of everything from young children becoming slave owners when their parents "gifted" them an enslaved person, and how these young girls were taught that this was "property" that could be used as desired to how these female slaveholders would sell their slaves to meet their economic goals. All told, this is a fascinating book that uncovers a long ignored slice of Antebellum American history that makes the historiographical literature of pre-Civil War history much richer.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2021
B
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Becca
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Poignant, truthful look at women as powerful, business-savvy, yet brutal slave owners
Format: Paperback
Women slave owners were the norm in the South, not the exception. They increased in numbers, stature, and power while the men were off fighting the Civil War. Women often owned the slaves, not the men and knew how to sign prenuptial agreements back then to insure they kept all their property (including slaves) upon divorce or death of their spouse. They traded and bought and sold slaves with business savvy that most men envied. And they could be just as brutal towards their slaves. Ironically, it was the ownership of other people that empowered these women to not be bound to their husbands.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2025
B
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Brown David
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 4
Good history, but not fun, engaging in popular literature.
Format: Paperback
The author is a very competent historian, and proves her points. She does so by stating each thesis and then reciting an exceedingly long string of supporting examples. Rinse and repeat. This is high quality, academic style history, but it’s not very engaging as popular literature. No one’s going to say “I couldn’t put it down.” That being said - I liked it! I learned a lot. Thanks.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2023
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Tsukiko Brown
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Should be required
Format: Paperback
In my opinion, this book should be required reading in high school/college history classes. It’s so important to learn accurate history when it comes to slavery and this book does that. White women played a larger role than we are taught. Please give this a read!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2025
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shaleah newmam
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
No regets
Format: Paperback
This was a good book to read! In school you only learn the male prospective during slavery! I know feel I can say white woman played a major role during slavery times. I like that fact that the Author put in the information to where we can go srwcah and read for ourselves. The visuals where an added touch. I feel like because alot of women of that time couldn't write so alot of information was missing. I feel like this is a must read.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2025

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