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Physalis 'Marys Niagara'
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Physalis 'Marys Niagara'

Physalis 'Marys Niagara'

$1.29

Original: $3.68

-65%
Physalis 'Marys Niagara'—

$3.68

$1.29

The Story

Marys Niagara is strictly suited to gardeners with a sweet tooth who welcome a little wildness into their gardens. Also known as cape gooseberries, these berries are all individually wrapped in a papery husk. The orange berries inside taste like the layer of caramelized pineapple you get on a pineapple upside down cake. Totally delicious.

Despite having their roots in North America, these grow with wild abandon - the plants are big and the fruits are plentiful. They grow 30cm up and then start to bush outwards to almost 3 foot wide! We think they would look tremendous cascading down the side of a container.

Fruits fall off the plant when ripe. You can give them a little shake to encourage them and leave to ripen fully on a window sill. Fruits keep well.

Sow: March-April with heat (21-25C)
Plant: 50-100cm apart
Harvest: July-September
Kitchen: Eat straight off the plant or incorporate into fruity desserts - they're particularly good in pavlova
Notes: This variety grows well outside.

Approx 20 seeds. We pack seeds by weight, the number of seeds in a packet is an estimate.

Germ 91% Aug 25
Physalis 'Marys Niagara' - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Physalis 'Marys Niagara' - Image 3

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Physalis 'Marys Niagara' - Image 4

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Description

Marys Niagara is strictly suited to gardeners with a sweet tooth who welcome a little wildness into their gardens. Also known as cape gooseberries, these berries are all individually wrapped in a papery husk. The orange berries inside taste like the layer of caramelized pineapple you get on a pineapple upside down cake. Totally delicious.

Despite having their roots in North America, these grow with wild abandon - the plants are big and the fruits are plentiful. They grow 30cm up and then start to bush outwards to almost 3 foot wide! We think they would look tremendous cascading down the side of a container.

Fruits fall off the plant when ripe. You can give them a little shake to encourage them and leave to ripen fully on a window sill. Fruits keep well.

Sow: March-April with heat (21-25C)
Plant: 50-100cm apart
Harvest: July-September
Kitchen: Eat straight off the plant or incorporate into fruity desserts - they're particularly good in pavlova
Notes: This variety grows well outside.

Approx 20 seeds. We pack seeds by weight, the number of seeds in a packet is an estimate.

Germ 91% Aug 25