Seed Collecting and Storing

Why collect seed?

Collecting and sowing your own seeds can be a fun and

gratifying experience for the home gardener. At first, the

details may seem overwhelming, yet as you gain experience,

and are rewarded with new seedlings, you may find yourself

inspecting your flowers closely in anticipation, and seed saving

could become second nature to you.

Home gardeners can collect their own seeds from their own

plants. Information that is normally found on commercial seed

packets can be located in books or websites. While your

choices are limited by how many plants grow in a particular

garden area, joining a seed exchange group increases the

availability of saved seed for your future planting. The joyful

thought of watching seeds magically sprout next year, or the

great disappointment if they fail, encourages us to look into

best practices for collecting and storing plant seeds.

How to Collect Seed

The first step is to choose healthy plants with high quality

seedpods and fruits for seed collection. Healthy plants show

vigorous growth, exhibit resistance to pests and diseases,

produce good quality fruit, and produce high yields. As the

chosen plants finish flowering, look for swelling seedpods or

ripening fruit. Wait until they are fully mature. It is important

to collect only fully mature or ripened seed. Sometimes, nearly

mature seeds may ripen off the plant, if they remain in their

seedpods. If picked too early, the embryo will not survive the

drying out process, or if picked too late, the wind may blow

away the seed.

Fine, nylon-mesh bags work universally well for collecting

seeds and seed structures. Paper bags work well for seeds,

cloth bags for panicles or dry fruit, and open baskets for fleshy

fruit but be sure not to squash the fruit. Do not let seeds

become hot or moldy.

Seed propagation preserves and promotes genetic diversity.

The result of the sexual union of flower parts (male and

female). Each contains an embryo, a packet of energy and a

protective coating. Some annual flowers and vegetables have

been developed to come as true to type as possible from seed,

others will result in a wider variety of offspring types. Plants

reproduce either by seed or by vegetative parts. Asexual or

vegetative propagation duplicates exact copies or clones of a

given plant resulting in no genetic variation. Vegetative

propagation includes layering, division, cuttings, grafting,

budding and tissue culture.

Dry seed pods With dry seed pods, extract the ride seeds by

hanging them upside down over a paper bag in a shaded, dry, airy

place and wait for the seeds to fall. An occasional gentle tap will

help. Cut clustered seed heads such as those of marigolds whole

and lay on a newspaper to dry. Whenever you harvest your own

seed, remove as much of the chaff and other vegetable material as

possible before storing. This material, if sown along with the

seed, tends to rot and may encourage fungal diseases.

Moist fruit For moist fruit, such as ripe tomato or cucumber, the

seed is surrounded by mucilage. When the fruit is fully colored

and ripe, scoop out these seeds and wash them in a fine sieve

under running water to remove the mucilage. Allow them to dry in

the shade.

If the mucilage is difficult to dislodge, with a gloved hand gently

rub the seed against the wire mesh screen of the sieve. Once the

mucilage is removed, place the seeds to dry in a single layer on

absorbent newspaper in the shade. Turn over so both sides dry or

dry both sides at the same time by suspending the seed between

layers of mosquito netting. Label batches of seed to keep track of

what is drying where.

 

How to Store Seed

Clean & Dry Only clean and well-dried seed should be stored.

The two deadly enemies of stored seed are warmth and moisture.

So, inspect the seed one last time before it is stored. Is it the very

best you could collect? Is it clean, dry, and free of chaff and other

debris? To keep stored seeds cool and dry, store them in clean,

airtight containers or in small paper bags in the bottom drawer of

your refrigerator. Paper bags, unlike plastic, allow the moisture to

escape from the seed, so mold and rot is less likely. The cool

refrigerator temperature slows down the natural respiration and

deterioration of the seed. Clearly label the containers with the

name of the plant and the date and place of its collection.

Cool & Dry How long seed last in storage depends on the type

and quality of seed saved and the storage conditions. Some

deterioration is inevitable. Aim to use all stored seed next year or

within two or three seasons from the time of collection, as

sprouting or germination rates will go down with time. In general,

the lower the humidity and temperature in storage, the longer the

viability of the stored seed.

Go to our download page to download specific information on 

seed saving for the future