Corridor Plant · Library

A working edible-plant reference.

82 edible crops. Latin names, RHS hardiness bands, mature size, soil, propagation and the transit handling notes a specialist edible-plant logistics team actually uses.

Fruit trees, soft fruit, vegetables, herbs, salads, alliums, edible perennials, microgreens and edible flowers — every entry is something you can grow to eat. No ornamentals.

Why a logistics company keeps an edible-plant library

Edible plants travel differently. A bare-root Bramleyapple, a tray of basil plugs and a sack of Charlotte seed potatoes need different bracing, watering, chill protection and recovery. Transit notes live next to care notes — so the people loading the van and the people receiving the plant are reading the same page.

Fruit tree13
Soft fruit15
Vegetable22
Herb11
Salad & leaf5
Allium & root9
Edible perennial3
Microgreen & shoot2
Edible flower2

82 results · page 1 of 4

1 / 4
Reference

RHS hardiness bands.

The bands every transit decision is checked against — from frost-tender tropicals to plants that survive deep UK winters.

H1c

Warm temperate · 5 to 10 °C

H2

Tender · 1 to 5 °C

H3

Half hardy · −5 to 1 °C

H4

Average UK winter · −10 to −5 °C

H5

Cold UK winter · −15 to −10 °C

H6

Hardy throughout the UK · −20 to −15 °C

H7

Very hardy · below −20 °C

Hardiness ratings reference the Royal Horticultural Society scale. This library is a working horticultural reference for logistics and growers — not an RHS publication.

Why this exists

Plants do real work for the planet.

Orchards feed towns. Kitchen gardens cut food miles to zero. A herb plant on a windowsill replaces a hundred plastic packets. The boring infrastructure underneath that — getting the right edible plant to the right grower, alive — is logistics. That's our job.

Every entry in this library is built for two readers: the grower planning a planting, and the driver loading a van.

Move edible plants with Corridor

Specialist edible-plant logistics.

Plant-trained drivers, vans laid out for trays, canes and bare-root stock, temperature and timing decided per route by Corridor Intelligence.