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RARE ENDANGERED Caucasian Caper Seeds Extremely Rare Endangered Plant Species

RARE ENDANGERED Caucasian Caper Seeds Extremely Rare Endangered Plant Species

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RARE ENDANGERED Caucasian Caper Seeds Extremely Rare Endangered Plant Species
Caucasian Caper (3 Seeds)
Capparis herbacea

PLEASE FULLY READ DISCLAIMER BEFORE PURCHASE

(This is an actual endangered species of plant that is on the verge of extinction and so it is a once in a lifetime opportunity to buy some of the endangered plants that we carry and their seeds so please share with us your experiences and pictures as you are one of very few people on the planet that will be able to share in this experience and we are still collecting data, photos and information on these plants as we grow and research them and help to preserve their species and so buying them is not just buying a plant it is actually helping in our quest to preserve it's existence and save it from extinction so that our 4 year old son and other children and generations have a chance to experience some truly beautiful and remarkable one of a kind plants so when buying this please know you're a part of our quest to save a number of plant species from extinction and any and all pictures and information you are kind enough to send is very very very helpful in our work to save this and other plants)

Caucasian Caper
Capparis herbacea
Uses: Culinary Duration: Perennial
When to Sow: Spring Ease of Germination: Moderate
(Kapersi) Just like the Mediterranean species, Capparis inermis, the flower buds and young fruits are pickled and used as a seasoning or garnish. This species is more cold tolerant and could be hardy in more northern areas of North America. It grows throughout the Caucasus and Central Asia where the local people traditionally collect the buds for use in cooking, and in some areas collect the buds on an industrial scale. Our seeds were collected in the dry steppes of Kyrgyzstan by Joseph Simcox, the botanical explorer who inspired the SeedZoo project. The collection site was at lower elevations where it gets quite cold in winter, and he guesses that this plant will survive at least zone 6 in North America.

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