Seed Saving 101: 10 Things to Know If You Want to Start Saving Seeds - Modern Farmer

Seed Saving 101: 10 Things to Know If You Want to Start Saving Seeds

Want to save your own seeds this season but don't know where to start? This is the guide for you.

Legumes are by far the easiest seeds to save, and among the easiest to germinate.
Photography Charlotte Lake on Shutterstock.

Beans. That’s right. If you want to start saving seeds, we recommend beans. Or peas. Why? Legumes are by far the easiest seeds to save, and among the easiest to germinate. You can’t go wrong. With that, let’s learn more about the basics of seed saving.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Growing a Plant to Save Its Seed Is Different Than Growing It to Eat[/mf_h2]

And usually, you’re not getting both. In order for a plant like lettuce to produce seed, you must wait for it to send up its gangly flower stalks, which eventually produce tiny seed pods. By this time. the lettuce leaves are becoming yellow, shriveled, and bitter. It’s the same with most crops – you don’t get to eat it and save the seed; it’s either one or the other. The good news is that a single plant produces many seeds. So you usually need to grow only a few extra for seed-saving purposes.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Don’t Bother Saving Seeds of Hybrid Varieties[/mf_h2]

Seeds denoted on the package as “F1” are hybrids, meaning two varieties have been bred with one another (cross-pollinated, that is) to produce a third variety with a combination of traits from each “parent.” If you were to save seed from this hybrid offspring and plant it, each seed would grow into a plant with a random combination of the traits found in the gene pool of the original parents, which rarely produces something you’d want to eat. The only way to reproduce the hybrid “true-to-type,” as plant breeders say, is to cross the two original parents. That’s a big part of why most seed savers stick with old-fashioned heirloom varieties, which by definition are not hybrids.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Save Seeds from the Best Plants[/mf_h2]

To save seed is to participate in the process of natural selection. If you save seed only from the biggest tomato of the bunch and replant them year after year, you’ll eventually end up with seeds that produce plants on which all the tomatoes are bigger. The same holds true for almost any other trait. Want tomatoes that ripen earlier? Save seed from the first fruits to ripen each year. Want disease resistant plants? Then definitely don’t save seed from those that are disease-infested. This is essentially what professional plant breeders do. You don’t need to get too scientific about it, but as a rule of thumb, only save seed from your healthiest, most robust, tastiest plants.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seed Saving Can Be Tedious[/mf_h2]

Bean seeds are big and easy to remove from their pods. But this is the exception rather than the rule. Carrot seeds, for example, are no bigger than a baby flea and easily disappear into the nearest crack or cranny as you try to knock them loose from their seed heads. Plants hold their seeds in an array of husks, pods, capsules, and other coverings, which are often not easily removed. This process varies depending on the species in question, but typically involves threshing (separating the seed from the plant) and winnowing (separating the seed from its hull). If you’re collecting only a very small quantity of seed, you’ll probably perform these tedious tasks by hand, but specialized tools are available for processing larger quantities.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seed Saving Can Be Stinky[/mf_h2]

Seed that develops in a wet, fleshy fruit (tomatoes, melons, and cucumbers, for example), as opposed to a dry seedhead or pod (the case with most greens, herbs and legumes), often requires extra steps to extract. Such seed is typically encased in a gooey substance, from which it is not easily removed. The best way to remove the goo, as it turns out, is to put it in a jar or bucket with a bit of water and let the concoction rot for a bit. The fermentation process dissolves the goo and improves the germination rate of the seed. You then strain the seeds from the stinky liquid and dry them.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seeds of Some Crops Are Easier to Save Than Others[/mf_h2]

Seeds are the products of pollination, the botanical version of sex. Some crops are self-pollinators, which means individual plants are fertilized by their own pollen. These crops, including beans, peas, tomatoes, peppers, and cauliflower, are among the easiest to save because you don’t need special botanical knowledge to ensure that the seeds grow out true-to-type.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Plant Sex Makes Things Complicated[/mf_h2]

It’s with cross-pollinating crops – those that need pollen from a neighboring plant in order to set seed – where things get complicated. This group includes cucumbers, corn, squash, pumpkins, and melons. If you have more than one variety of the same cross-pollinating vegetable (a butternut squash and acorn squash, let’s say) growing in close proximity, pollen from one will inevitably end up in the flowers of the other, resulting in seeds that are a mutant hybrid of both varieties. Seed savers employ various strategies to prevent this, ranging from growing different varieties on opposite ends of their property (pollen only travels so far on the wind or via insects) to placing plastic bags over some flowers to exclude unwanted pollen (you must then use a paintbrush to pollinate them with pollen from the same variety). Another option? Simply grow only one variety at a time of these particular crops.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seeds Aren’t Viable Until Fully Ripe[/mf_h2]

Just like picking the perfect tomato, you have to wait until seed is fully ripe before you harvest it – if picked from the plant too soon, the seed will not germinate. As explained above, optimal seed maturity is usually later than optimal crop maturity. Bean and pea seeds are not ready until the pod is brown, dry, and beginning to split open. This is true of any seed that grows in a pod, which includes most greens. Corn seed should be allowed to dry on the cob in the field. Some vegetables, including cucumbers and eggplant, should not be picked for seed until they are overripe and beginning to shrivel up and rot.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Well-Dried Seed Is Viable Seed[/mf_h2]

In order to preserve seed for future plantings, it must be thoroughly dry. Drying out is essentially the final stage of ripening, and ensures that the seed does not become moldy while you’re waiting to plant it next year. Wet seed, once it has been extracted from its fermented goo, must be spread out to dry on screens in a warm location, ideally with a light breeze from a fan to hasten the process. Most other types of seed my be dried while still on the plant, but if the weather turns wet and cool before that can occur, you’ll need to bring them indoors to finish the process. To determine if seed is sufficiently dry, push a fingernail into it – if it gives, it’s not yet ready.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Proper Storage Is Important [/mf_h2]

Dried seed should be placed in paper envelopes or seed packets labeled with the name of the variety and the date it was harvested. To ensure longevity, keep the seed packets in mason jars in a cool dark place. Any seed stored this way should remain viable for at least a few years, though some crops may keep for a decade or more.

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4 years ago

Throughly dried seed can also be stored in Jars, ziploc baggies or paper coin envelopes and stored in a freezer. Now we are talking about adding decades to a seeds viability. However when you want to remove your seed to share and send to someone else or to plant in your own garden. Always allow the seeds and the container they are in to warm naturally to room temperature before opening the container. Frozen seed suddenly expose to warmer air what ever it’s humidity level is can destroy the viablility of that seed. The larger the container the longer you… Read more »

susan gortva
5 years ago

love all this information. thank you

Marlaena Herbert
4 years ago

This information is great. I planted some purple sprouting broccoli cant remember when harvested the heads and left some to flower, which subsequently turned into seeds. I planted some of the seeds last week in a raised bed to see if I can get another crop as the initial crop was grown in a pot on my balcony hopefully ill get more as it was so sweet and tasty ? happy growing ??❤

Robert Markwell
3 years ago

I know this post is over a year old, but maybe you can help point me in the right direction. I live on 3 acres that is surrounded by corn, wheat, and beets. I grow piel de sapo wonderfully. Big juicy melons. I sell em for $2 a piece, and sell out just to my neighbors. they say it tastes like sugar is added. How ever I want to cultivate an acre that is just weeds. I don’t have enough seeds from the ones I’ve grown here for 4 years. So the question is will I mess up these beautiful… Read more »

5 years ago

I planted ox heart tomatoes this year and have fell in love with them. If I dry the seeds and plant next year will they be the same type tomato. I ask because I’ve had self seeded plants (seeds that have grown from lying in soil from last year) and all I get is small cherry ones. Thank you.

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