| Coming
next week: Tips for the aspiring commercial organic
seed grower |
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| Additional
resources on seed saving
Seed to Seed: Seed Saving Techniques for
the Vegetable Gardener, 2nd edn, by Suzanne
Ashworth
A complete seed-saving guide describing specific techniques
for 160 vegetables, including botanical classifications,
flower structure and pollination, population size, isolation
distances, and techniques for caging, hand-pollination,
harvesting, drying, cleaning and storage.
Restoring Our Seed www.growseed.org
A coalition of farmers, researchers, and heirloom
seed enthusiasts, includes extensive information about
the why and how of seed saving, links to seed savers
projects around the world, and details on upcoming conferences,
workshops, and 'seed schools'.
Eastern Native Seed Conservancy
www.enscseeds.org
Based in Great Barrington, Mass., non-profit ENSC offers
native crop varieties for sale and exchange. Their links
page has an enormous collection of resources for seed
savers.
Native Seeds/SEARCH
www.nativeseeds.org
A non-profit seed conservation group based in Tucson,
Ariz., and concentrating on cultivars indigenous to
the American Southwest and northwestern Mexico. At their
website you can become a member to support a range of
biodiversity and cultural projects and purchase seeds
for your own use.
Seed Savers Exchange
www.seedsavers.org
A non-profit member organization devoted to preserving
heirloom varieties of vegetables and fruits. For a membership
fee of $35.00, SSE members receive a yearbook that offers
access to 11,000 rare varieties. Non-members can purchase
Seed Savers seeds directly through their catalog.
USDA Germplasm Repositories
www.ars-grin.gov/npgs/
Information about the USDA's national network of seed
banks, including how to request material for your own
use.
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Posted January
12, 2004: Every year, come winter, in a harbinger of the
season akin to the first robins of spring, seed catalogs begin to
fill the mailboxes of avid gardeners everywhere. Starved for color,
fragrance, and fresh juicy homegrown tomatoes, we pore over the
catalogs, planning the perfect garden. New varieties appear, and
old ones--sometimes old favorites--disappear. Some gardeners, however,
have begun to approach the gardening season with a slightly different
twist on the yearly seed order. They save their own seeds, and swap
with others who also save seeds.
Why save your own seeds in the first place when seed companies
are so plentiful and seeds easily ordered by phone with a credit
card? At a seed savers conference titled “Restoring Our Seed”
and held in Brattleboro, Vt., on November 15-16, 2003, over 100
seed saving enthusiasts gathered to learn more from the experts
in the field. Conference attendees ran the gamut from large-scale
commercial growers to backyard gardeners.
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| You don't
have to be a scientist to save seeds but it can't hurt:
Above, seed curator Will Bonsall currently grows 3,000
varieties for the Seed Savers Exchange. Below, Dr. Mark
Hutton, a vegetable breeder with the Maine Cooperative
Extension. |
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There are many reasons for saving seeds and many different levels
at which to undertake seed saving. In the past, there were no commercial
seed companies. All farmers saved their own seed, as did gardeners.
Over the years, we have grown to depend on huge seed companies for
all of our seed needs. Today, five companies control over 75 percent
of the world seed market. When these large companies drop varieties
from production, they often disappear forever.
The Seed Savers Exchange estimates that over 90 percent of the fruit
and vegetable varieties grown in the United States in 1900 have since
been lost. Large seed companies are often concerned with characteristics
that matter to large-scale growers, such as the ability to withstand
cross-country shipping. They are often not interested in growing varieties
suited for small regions of the country like New England. Seed saving
helps preserve older and regional varieties. It also grants us a level
of independence from the large seed companies that have swallowed
up the seed market.
You can save favorite heirloom seeds for your own use in your garden,
breed and improve varieties, swap with friends, join seed-saving
organizations, or grow seed commercially at many levels of scale--the
possibilities are numerous. As speaker Matt Rulevich observed, there
are many niches in seed saving and there’s a place for everyone.
If you have an interest in growing seed, there’s a niche for
you. In addition, saving seed develops a sense of community, noted
Dr. Mark Hutton. It’s going back to the past and “making
what is old new again,” he said.
You don't need a Ph.D.
It is of great importance to disabuse yourself of the notion that
seed saving is horribly complicated. You don’t need a Ph.D.
to do this, stressed Will Bonsall, curator of over 3,000 varieties
of seeds for the Seed Savers Exchange. But “doing it is so
very important,” he observed. Workshop sessions at the conference
were devoted to providing the beginning backyard seed saver with
the basic information necessary to get started. Additional information
is available from a variety of sources (see the resources box accompanying
this article).
Probably the first thing that an aspiring seed saver should be
aware of is the difference between open-pollinated and hybrid seeds.
Open-pollinated seeds will produce plants that resemble the parents
a great deal, and their parents, and so on. These are the types
of seed you want to grow plants from in order to save seed for future
use.
Hybrid varieties, often denoted as “F1” in seed catalogs,
are specially bred from two distinct parent plants. Seed saved from
them will not produce plants resembling their parents. They will
not “breed true”.
Selfers vs. crossers
The next piece of information you need to understand is the difference
between self-pollinators, known as “selfers”, and cross-pollinators,
known as “crossers”. Selfers are able to achieve pollination
within one flower on an individual plant. Selfers almost always
self-pollinate, although on occasion they can cross-pollinate. Crossers,
on the other hand, require insects or wind to carry pollen from
the anther of one plant to the stigma of another for pollination
to occur.
The reason this information is so important is that it enables
you to determine if plants need to be isolated from each other in
order to prevent cross-pollination between varieties, causing your
seed-stock to no longer be that of a single variety. Corn, for instance,
is a cross-pollinator, so growing more than one variety of corn
in a small area will result in mixed seeds. Beans, however, rarely
cross-pollinate, so you can safely grow several varieties in close
proximity.
Tomatoes are somewhat curious, as they are generally thought to
be selfers, but some of the older heirloom potato-leaf varieties
tend to be crossers since they have longer styles. These should
be isolated in order to prevent cross-pollination.
Pay attention to those Latin names
A basic understanding of species names is also valuable. Beets
and Swiss chard are both Beta vulgaris, and thus can cross with
each other. Zucchini, acorn squash and pumpkins are all Cucurbita
pepo and will therefore readily cross. You could, however, safely
plant pumpkins, Hubbard squash, and butternut squash in the same
small garden plot and not risk cross-pollination, as they are all
of different species. A seed catalog will provide species names
and is a good resource to consult.
Another issue is that of the number of plants to save for seed.
The short answer is, it depends. Different varieties sport different
degrees of diversity. If you save seed from only a few plants of
a genetically diverse variety, much of its diversity will be lost.
Other varieties are not as genetically diverse so you can get away
with saving less seed. As a general rule, selfers require fewer
plants than crossers in terms of saving seed.
One possible solution to this problem is to share seeds with friends
and neighbors and then pool the saved seeds of the same variety.
So for instance, as Bonsall pointed out, 200 leeks may be just right
for eating, but way more seed than a backyard gardener wants to
deal with. To preserve their genetic diversity, however, it is beneficial
to save seed from a large number of leeks. If several gardeners
all grew out the same variety and pooled their saved seed, they
will be more likely to preserve the leek variety's full range of
variation.
Biennials versus annuals
The next piece of critical information to know is the difference
between annuals and biennials. In a nutshell, annuals complete their
life-cycle in one season. Commonly grown annuals include beans,
peas, corn, cucumbers, melons and tomatoes. Biennials take two growing
seasons to complete their life cycle and produce seed. Examples
of biennials are beets, carrots, onions, chard and cabbage.
For a beginning seed saver, a self-pollinated annual vegetable—such
as beans, peas, or many tomatoes--is the best place to start. Biennials
are more difficult, since they involve over-wintering the plant,
often in a basement, and replanting out early in spring. Full instructions
for this are available in seed-saving guides.
Where to find open-pollinated seed
Where should you obtain your initial seed? Sources for open-pollinated
(OP) seed are many. You could obtain some from regional seed catalogs,
which specialize in open-pollinated seeds that will produce well
in your region. Other sources include neighbors, relatives, and
a whole host of seed-saving organizations such as the Seed Savers
Exchange.
The USDA and Ag Canada are also good resources for OP seeds, with
huge seed collections. The Eastern Native Seed Conservancy in western
Massachusetts will offer seeds to those who will grow them and provide
feedback. Bonsall noted that there is a great trove of seeds available
to those who wish to grow them in order to save seeds. But the basic
understanding is that they will provide you with the seeds and then
expect you to take it from there, saving seed from that variety
for your future planting needs. This is, of course, the polar opposite
of commercial seed companies, which want you to come back year after
year.
All presenters stressed that the curators of OP seeds in general
are very open to seed savers at all levels and will be helpful to
them. Seed curators tend to be passionate about seed-saving and
will happily share their knowledge with others who wish to participate.
Harvesting, cleaning, and storing seed
Basic information is available to seed savers which will explain
the process of harvesting and cleaning saved seeds. In general,
vegetables such as pumpkin, squash, peppers and melons are harvested
when fully ripe, and the seeds are scooped out, washed and allowed
to dry thoroughly before storing. An added benefit to saving these
kinds of seeds is that you can often eat the vegetable but save
the seed.
Others, such as peas and beans, are allowed to dry on the plant
and then harvested when dry. Tomatoes and cucumbers require that
the seed be allowed to ferment for 3-5 days in a warm place. The
scum layer and floating seed is then discarded, the remaining seed
rinsed with water, and the seed allowed to dry.
Seed should be stored in an environment the opposite of that required
for sprouting seed; basically you want it cool and dry. All saved
seed should be carefully marked on a label as to the variety. In
fact, several speakers stressed the importance of labeling all of
the rows of plants you grow for seed in a manner in which there
is little room for error. Black permanent markers on stakes, flags,
etc., work well.
Cleaning dry seed on a home garden scale is simple. The basic idea
is to separate the seed from the plant material without damaging
it. Fans, buckets, bags, etc., can all be utilized in doing this,
but essentially, at a small scale, it is a simple process.
So, try it out this year and see for yourself how rewarding it
can be. Pick a few varieties to start with, keep it simple, and
experience a link back in time to those who first grew that same
seed, in an unbroken chain through the years.
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