Llyn, with a variety of bean seeds |
There are many good reasons to save your own seed:
- It will be more adapted to your local growing-conditions
- You can "select" for certain qualities/characteristics (early ripening, sweetness, cold-tolerance etc)
- The flowering plants provide food for pollinators
- You have better control over the quality of your seed
- You are not as dependent on supplies being available from outside sources
- It's fun!
Chris, winnowing lettuce-seed. |
Some plants easily cross-pollinate with other plants of the same family (see below). It is difficult to control the outcome of these crosses and, you won't know the results until you grow out the seed the following year. For example, many gardeners have had the experience of having a squash seed germinate in their compost pile, grow to gigantic proportions and discover at harvest time that their "zucchini" is funny shaped, or has a woody skin or poor flavor. These variations are due to cross-pollination. Peppers also cross easily so, if you grow hot- and sweet-peppers close to each other, the seed you save may either have "sweetened" your hot peppers, or "heated" up the sweet.
Squash-blossom with bees. |
- Squash - with other squashes (some varieties won't cross with each other but for specifics, do more research HERE)
- Cucumbers - with other varieties of cukes
- Melons - with other varieties of melons
- Peppers - with other peppers
- Lettuce - with other lettuce
- Broccoli/Cabbage/Kale/Cauliflower - with each other
- Chard/Beets - with each other
Some plants won't easily cross, even with other plants in the same family. Tomatoes are a good example: you can grow two, five or ten varieties in close proximity with each other and the seed you save will almost always have the same characteristics as the plant you picked it from. On rare occasions we've had tomatoes that were a 'cross' from two varieties of plants we grew the year before. (Though we haven't experienced it ourselves, we've heard that 'potato-leaf' varieties such as Stupice or Brandywine are especially susceptible to crossing.)
Brandywine Heirloom tomatoes |
- Tomatoes
- Beans
- Peas
- Onion family (includes garlic, shallots, leeks)
Can my garden seed cross with "weed" seed? Yes! There are wild relatives of domestic vegetables that, if flowering at the same time, can 'cross' making your seed produce fruit that is woody, or bitter or has other undesirable characteristics. Learn to identify your local weeds (especially if there are big, open fields of them nearby). Consult expert sources to learn of techniques to avoid this problem (i.e. hand pollinating, bagging the flowers, timing your bloom to avoid the wild varieties' blooming. etc). Examples: Wild lettuce can cross with domestic lettuce; Queen Anne's Lace is a wild variety of carrot.
Dustin saving sunflower seed |
This post just covers some of the most basic aspects of seed-saving. For more detailed info, read our posts below and/or consult other sources through books or the internet.
Please leave us comments about your own experiences of saving seed below. It's great when we can all learn from each other!
Here are several posts we've written that include information on saving seed: (click on the bolded text.)
Tomato Seeds: Tomatoes are a good plant to start with if you're learning to save seed. As long as you know that the plant you're saving from is not hybrid (see above) you are bound to be successful!
Peas: are easy (if you can restrain yourself from picking every last ripe pea-pod <smile>). Be sure to follow the instructions in the post and, once the seed is fully ripened and dry, freeze the seed to prevent pea-weevil larvae from ruining your batch.
Potatoes: If you're already growing potatoes, saving seed is as simple as sorting out the smaller egg-sized ones and storing them till next season. You can also find seed-potatoes in the organic section of your grocer's in the spring.
Saving your own seed is only one of the many benefits of a sharing-type garden (one big garden, instead of many separate plots). To read about how a sharing garden works, and many of its other benefits, CLICK HERE- Overview of the Sharing Gardens).
Ismael trimming dill seed-heads; lettuce going to seed in lower-left corner. |