Posted by James on June 1, 2007, 5:22 pm
I've had varying success using food as a cheap source of seeds. Most
of the dried peas and beans work. A small packet these days usually
cost over $1. A pound of Fava Beans or whole green peas cost less
than that and they usually work.
This year I used Goya green peas for seeds because that's what was
available at the grocer. They turned out to be about 4' tall, didn't
need support, and not bad in taste or yield. Peas are iffy here
because of the climate. I just had a 3' short row this year. Next
year I might try a whole row.
Seeds from a ripe bitter melon always works. I had no success from
sun dried peppers probably because the seeds were too old. Green
pepper seeds are not matured enough to work.
Fruits seeds work but it that too many years for them to produce
fruit.
Bulk seeds like alfalfa, wheat, barley, etc. from health food stores
usually works for sprouting.
Posted by The Real Bev on June 1, 2007, 11:52 pm
James wrote:
> Fruits seeds work but it that too many years for them to produce
> fruit.
I gathered some tabebuia tree seeds from the parking lot across the street
two or three years ago, and one of the treelets produced four yellow flowers
this year. WOO-HOO!
--
Cheers, Bev
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
"I love to go down to the schoolyard and watch all the
little children jump up and down and run around yelling and
screaming...They don't know I'm only using blanks." --Emo
Posted by Rick on June 2, 2007, 3:28 pm
James wrote:
>
> I've had varying success using food as a cheap source of seeds. Most
> of the dried peas and beans work. A small packet these days usually
> cost over $1. A pound of Fava Beans or whole green peas cost less
> than that and they usually work.
>
> This year I used Goya green peas for seeds because that's what was
> available at the grocer. They turned out to be about 4' tall, didn't
> need support, and not bad in taste or yield. Peas are iffy here
> because of the climate. I just had a 3' short row this year. Next
> year I might try a whole row.
>
> Seeds from a ripe bitter melon always works. I had no success from
> sun dried peppers probably because the seeds were too old. Green
> pepper seeds are not matured enough to work.
>
> Fruits seeds work but it that too many years for them to produce
> fruit.
>
> Bulk seeds like alfalfa, wheat, barley, etc. from health food stores
> usually works for sprouting.
Do some reading and searching around about seed preparation. (Try
searching on "seed saving") AIRC some seeds, like tomato and green
pepper, don't work "as-is" and need to be fermented and then dried.
Rick
> fruit.