Saving Your Own Seeds - Storage

Asparagus Seeds

Brocolli Flowering, Going to Seed
By Gloria Logan, Canada
Storing Collected Seeds
To store seeds for next year, most important is that all seeds be thoroughly
dry and all chaff (waste) removed.
Larger seeds like corn, beans, peas, squash,
melons, etc need more drying time than appears. Allow an extra two weeks
in open, non-humid conditions before storing them away. It takes only a few,
not quite dry seeds to cause the rest to mold in storage.
Once dry, place
each variety in its own little paper bag or envelope and label with
variety and year saved, and source if other than your own. If you’re unsure
of dryness, avoid plastic-type bags which don’t breathe and encourage rot.
If you’re sure your seeds are dry, the small zipper storage bags are fine.
Then store the packets in a tin with a lid or a large jar with a lid, and
again, label contents. Desiccants are highly recommended such as the little
silica gel bags found in shoe boxes, new handbags, etc, or simply add some
dry, uncooked rice or a bit of milk powder to each closed container. These
further ensure no moisture problems.
The containers then need to stay in an
area out of sunlight (which can heat the container contents) and which
is constantly cool but won’t freeze or become hot. Around 10 degrees C is
recommended.
Seed Viability Decreases with Time
As it is, seed viability (life) decreases over time, but poor storage conditions
greatly shorten viability so dryness of seeds and storage container as well
as a constant, cool storage area ensure success.
Despite your best care, some seeds simply aren ’ t worth saving. Seeds from
dwarf fruit trees won’t give you another dwarf tree. A variety stem is
grafted (cut into) a dwarfing rootstock which will then control, by hormones,
the tree’s ultimate size. Any seed saved will only give you a larger
parent plant.
On the opposite side, many roses are grafted onto wild rootstock
simply to give better vigour to the otherwise less hardy flowering end.
Look for grafting bumps near the stalk base of fruit trees and roses
Garlic seed is simply the garlic head, which at planting time is separated
into cloves and planted. A flowering stalk (scape) will produce tiny bulblets
at the expense of the root bulb. The bulblets need three years to produce
useful sized bulbs.
Potatoes do put out a flowering seed head, useful mostly to breeders developing
new varieties. Home growers can simply save the best and not too large
of their potato tubers for future seed. About hen's egg size is ideal.
These grow as ‘fingers’ from the ‘mother’ which rots when done. With
roots like potatoes, it’s important that you not grow from the same ancestors
for more than 5 yrs, otherwise you also propagate ground diseases like
scab, heart rot, blight, etc.
Find another grower you trust with the same
variety and swap tubers saved for seed. Most importantly, never grow
potato seeds in the same ground space for more than a year; always use
a 4 year rotation. Not only is this for good seed/crop health, this is
most important if you grow varieties no one else does. Certified seed growers
avoid disease problems by growing at high altitudes where almost no diseases
can survive and there are no aphids to spread disease, hence Scottish Certified
Seed Potatoes
Dahlias put out both viable seeds as well as tubers which need to be
stored indoors for winter in cold areas. Gladioli put out new ‘seeds’
from the original corm which then dies off. Lift the plant for winter,
twist off the dead ‘mother’ corm and dry the new youngsters for storage
in slightly damp peat moss or coir. All tubers and corms need constant
cool, dark storage.
Approximate Viability for Home Saved Seed
If you can store your seeds well, consider the approximate life times
for viability:
- 1 Year : onion, parsley, parsnip, salsify, some lettuce
- 2 Years : sweet corn, pepper, okra, leek
- 3 Years : asparagus, bean, broccoli, carrot, celery, kohlrabi, spinach,
pea, lettuce
- 4 Years : beet, brussel sprout, cabbage, cauliflower, chard, chicory,
eggplant, fennel, kale, mustard, pumpkin, rutabaga (swede), squash,
tomato, turnip, watermelon
- 5 Years : collards, cucumber, endive, muskmelon, radish
These are not absolutes, merely approximates. Some seeds simply weren’t
viable at the start. Some seeds degrade during storage, faster still if
the storage conditions were poor. For the best success, collect fresh seed
every year and mark carefully.
Saving your own seed is a satisfying joy as well as a responsibility to future
generations who might otherwise miss this opportunity to sample and treasure
what we enjoy today.
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