Seeds, Lettuce Iceberg Dillon (West Coast Seeds)

C$3.69 Excl. tax
Availability:
In stock

Iceberg type, with dense green heads.

This small, compact iceberg as tasty, crisp, refreshing dark outer leaves, and a creamy green interior. Its iceberg-type heads are well filled and dense. It handles heat and sun well, so it’s good for late summer production. Dillon holds well in the field and has an excellent disease resistance package: High resistance to downy mildew races 16-32, and intermediate resistance to lettuce root aphid. This lettuce has such a nice, crunchy texture, and enough water content that it is genuinely refreshing in a sandwich or burger.

Matures in 45 days

Season Cool season

Exposure Full-sun to partial shade

Timing
Lettuce grows best in cool weather in the spring and fall, but it can be grown in the summer, and all winter long in milder regions. Sow short rows every 2-3 weeks following the last average frost date for a continual harvest. Using a cloche, cold frame, or greenhouse over mid-late summer plantings can extend the harvest period right into winter. Optimal soil temperature for germination: 10-22°C (50-72°F). Seeds should sprout in 7-15 days, depending on conditions. Lettuce seeds don’t sprout easily when the soil temperature is over 22°C (72°F) in summer. Get around this by sprouting them indoors in a cool area, or pre-sprout by sprinkling seeds on a damp paper towel and placing it in a plastic bag in the fridge for a few days. In hot weather most lettuce goes to seed rapidly, so have new plantings ready to go, and watch for "good resistance to bolting" in the product description.

Starting
Direct sow or start indoors and transplant. Sow seeds 5mm (¼”) deep, or on the surface of the soil where the soil can be kept evenly moist.. Space or thin heading lettuce to 30cm (12″) apart. Space or thin looseleaf varieties to 20-25cm (8-10″) apart. Space rows for all types 45-90cm (18-36″) apart. Babyleaf lettuce can be planted quite densely, as it is harvested at an immature size. Sowing babyleaf lettuce seeds closely together in narrow rows makes harvesting simpler.

Companion Planting
Lettuce plants make good companions for beets, Brassicas, carrot, celery, chervil, cucumbers, dill, garlic, onions, radish, spinach, squash, and strawberries.

Add
Use commas to separate tags

Shop in Little Italy

Located in the Heart of Edmonton's Little Italy

Local Delivery

Delivery or Curbside Pickup Available

Plants & Gifts & Flowers

Something for Everyone!

 

 

was added to your shopping cart

Out of stock

The requested quantity for is not available