Harvesting Garden Seeds

You’ve planted a bountiful garden and enjoyed an abundant harvest.  Now what?  If you’re keen on saving some money next spring, now’s the perfect time to harvest some seeds for winter storage.  Harvesting seeds is easy work, all you need is a dry, sunny day, some envelopes, a sieve and a pen.

1.  Identify seeds ripe for the harvest.  Mature seeds come from mature fruit or flowers–pick good ones, not small or damaged ones.  In flowering plants, you’ll find the flower turns brown and the petals curl back, revealing the seeds.  The seeds are just waiting to drop out into your hands if you brush across their surface.  To harvest seeds from fruits or vegetables, remove seeds from ripe fruit and let them dry on newspaper in a cool, dark spot.  Pumpkins, squash, zucchini, peppers, really ripe cucumbers, tomatoes and eggplants require splitting the fruit/vegetables apart and prying or squeezing the seeds onto clean newspaper.  Rinsing with water will not hurt the seeds, but it’s not a necessary step.  Lettuce, spinach, carrots and beets are plants that “go to seed” which means they’ll flower and release mature seeds.  Peas and beans require drying while in the pod before you can remove the seeds for future use.   A good seed has a plump body and tough shell.

2.  Drying out the seeds is the first step.  After you’ve harvested your seeds, lay them on clean newspaper and let them dry for a few days in a cool, well-ventilated, dark spot.  When the seeds are adequately dried, the “chaff” can get blown away or sifted out using a sieve.  If seeds get moldy at any time during the drying or storage process, throw them in the compost pile, they’ll do you no good.  Trust Enviro Girl on this–she had a lot of sunflowers come to no good end a couple winters ago.

3.  You need to store the seeds in paper–any type of envelope will do.  Label the envelopes, then put the seeds in a refrigerator.  Enviro Girl likes to store her seed envelopes in glass jars for extra protection against moisture.

Heirloom or heritage varieties will result in the best seeds to save.  Unfortunately, many hybrid varieties have been genetically altered so they cannot replicate themselves–the seeds are “duds” mainly so that customers have to return again and again to buy new seeds each season.

To test seeds after you’ve dried them, just to check on your success, place a few inside a damp paper towel and place the works inside a plastic baggie for a week.  Most viable seeds will sprout in this situation.

Enviro Girl recommends flowers and sunflowers as the easiest seeds to save. She got started with some Cosmos about 7 years ago and never looked back–now she saves all sorts of prairie seeds in addition to carrots, lettuce, spinach, herbs, tomatoes, pumpkins and sunflowers.

Some really useful links for further reading include:

Harvesting Seeds:  You Grow Girl (great photos alongside basic explanations)

Seed Saving Tips:  Planet Green.com (good general information)

Seed Harvesting (lots of super little tips, charming British site)

University of Illinois Extension  (excellent advice & instructions on the ‘wet method’ of seed saving)

 

Go Green & Save Green in Your Garden: Save Seeds

As fall weather cools the temperatures and gardeners harvest the remnants of their crops, it’s a good time to save seeds.  Saving seeds saves a thrifty gardener money and preserves plant species, especially if the gardener is saving the seeds  of heirloom varieties.  Saving seeds also reduces consumer exchanges involving energy use and packaging.

Heirloom plants haven’t been genetically altered, they’re the most fertile breeds of plants, their ability to reproduce hasn’t been stripped.  Often hybrid seeds and plants do not reproduce.  A gardener will try to save the seeds, but find they’re useless to plant because the company selling those seeds wants repeat business.   Hybrid seeds are also designed to tolerate pests and disease, but in the process, a lot of diversity in plant species and other desirable traits, like flavor, are lost.

That said, Enviro Girl is a huge fan of planting heirloom varieties in her garden.  She’s also a huge fan of saving money and preserving biodiversity, so saving seeds is a labor of love–and an easy one at that.

The easiest way to save seeds is to wait for the flower head to grow brown and dried out.  Enviro Girl simply holds an envelope beneath the spent flower heads and rubs her thumb across the dry flower, knocking the seeds off into the envelope.  She’ll leave the envelope in a cool, dry spot until the following year when she’ll plant those seeds in springtime.  She’s had excellent luck using the envelope method with cosmos, sunflowers, lettuce, spinach, carrots, corn and coneflowers.   Any fruit or vegetable that “goes to seed,” that is, grows flowers, will become dry enough to harvest the seeds in this fashion.

The second method is equally easy–any fruit or vegetable that grows seeds in a pod–beans, peas, gourds–will become dry enough for a gardener to crack open and extract the seeds.  The key to saving seeds is to make sure they’re totally dry so they don’t get moldy and rot, so you’ll want to lay them out flat in a dry, cool space for a week or two before storing them in an envelope, bag or jar.  Enviro Girl suggests storing your seeds in a refrigerator or in a basement over the winter.

The third method deals with pulpy fruits or vegetables, like tomatoes, strawberries, melons, cucumbers or squashes.  Allow the fruit to get REALLY ripe, then extract the pulpy seed sacks onto a sheet of newspaper and allow it to fully dry.  Store the newspapers with the dried seeds in a cool, dry spot or in the fridge and plant in the spring.  You can plant the newspapers right in the garden with the seeds, making this job really easy.  Another method for pulpy fruits or vegetables involves fermenting the seeds.  Enviro Girl has never done this, but it involves squeezing the pulp into a jar and adding water.  Stir the contents every day and the water will first grow icky and gross before growing clear, the healthy seeds separated out of the pulp and “dead” seeds by sinking to the bottom of the jar.  Pour off the top of the jar’s contents and scatter the seeds remaining at the bottom of the jar onto newspapers to dry fully before storing.

By harvesting, drying and saving your garden’s seeds, you’ll save green and go green in your garden by propagating heirloom varieties of plants that taste great and preserve diversity.

The University of Illinois Extension and  Virtual Seeds are helpful websites to further explore this topic.