Crops
At Seed Dynamics, we are vegetable seed specialists. We also treat a range of crops, from vegetables, to flowers, to native plants. If you don't see a crop you're looking for below, contact us and we will discuss whether our seed treatments are right for you.
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Primary Vegetables
Seed Dynamics primarily treats vegetable seeds such as lettuce, onion and carrots. Other vegetables that end up on the tables of millions of families, such as the cabbage, peppers, and tomatoes, also benefit from our treatments.
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| Anise | • | • | • | |||||||
| Brassica: broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, kale | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Beet | • | • | • | |||||||
| Carrot | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Celery | • | • | ||||||||
| Chicory | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||
| Cucumber | • | • | • | |||||||
| Endive / Escarole | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||
| Fennel | • | • | • | |||||||
| Leek | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||
| Lettuce - learn more... | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Melon | • * | • | • | |||||||
| Onion | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Parsley | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||
| Parsnip | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Pepper | • | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Radicchio | • | • | • | |||||||
| Rutabaga | • | • | ||||||||
| Tomato | • | • | • | • | • | • |
*Diploids Only
Specialty Crops
Flowers and spices are some of the specialty crops that benefit from our seed treatments. One of our clients has reported longer lifecycles of perennials due to the treatments we've applied to their seeds. Contact us if you have a specialty crop that could benefit from pelleting, priming, encrusting, or protectants.
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Organic Compliant Pelleting Pulse® Gro-Coat® |
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| Basil | • | • | • | |||||
| Celeriac | • | • | ||||||
| Echinacea | • | • | • | |||||
| Rosemary | • | • | • | |||||
| Shallot | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Zinnia | • | • | • |
Reclamation Seed
Seed Dynamics is a preferred vendor to organizations that perform land reclamations of native plants, for example in areas that may have experienced wildfires or former industrial sites being restored back to the wild. Often the seeds are sown using aerial applications, so it’s important to get the exact density of the seeds correct so they will fall in the specified areas. It’s also important to accurately combine the seeds into blends of several species that will thrive together in the wild once planted.
| Alkalai sacaton | • | • | • | ||||
| Annual Gulf Ryegrass | • | • | • | ||||
| Arrowleaf balsamroot | • | • | • | ||||
| Basin wildrye | • | • | • | ||||
| Beeplant Rocky Mt. | • | • | • | ||||
| Big mountain sagebrush | • | • | • | ||||
| Bitterbrush | • | • | • | ||||
| Black sagebrush | • | • | • | ||||
| Blazing star | • | • | • | ||||
| Bluebunch wheatgrass | • | • | • | ||||
| Blue Flax | • | • | • | ||||
| Blue grama | • | • | • | ||||
| Bottlebrush squirreltail | • | • | • | ||||
| Cliffrose | • | • | • | ||||
| Desert globemallow | • | • | • | ||||
| Desert marigold | • | • | • | ||||
| Fourwing saltbush | • | • | • | ||||
| Forage kochia | • | • | • | ||||
| Greasewood black | • | • | • | ||||
| Hycrest crested wheatgrass | • | • | • | ||||
| Indian ricegrass | • | • | • | • | • | ||
| Lewis blue flax | • | • | • | ||||
| Lupin argenteus alpesti | • | • | • | ||||
| Mormon tea Nevada | • | • | • | ||||
| Mountain Mahogany Curli | • | • | • | ||||
| Needle and thread grass | • | • | • | ||||
| Penstemon palmer | • | • | • | ||||
| Rabbitbrush rubber | • | • | • | ||||
| Sagebrush basin | • | • | • | ||||
| Saltbush shadscale | • | • | • | ||||
| Saltgrass (Distichlis spicata) | • | • | • | ||||
| Sand dropseed | • | • | • | ||||
| Siberian crested wheatgrass | • | • | • | ||||
| Sulfur buckwheat | • | • | • | ||||
| Western wheatgrass | • | • | • | ||||
| Western yarrow | • | • | • | ||||
| Wyoming big sagebrush | • | • | • |