Storing leftover seeds question.`

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Posted by Dave on August 15, 2004, 4:50 pm
 
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Every time I plant a garden I always buy more seeds than I need. I heard
that if you put your leftover seeds in a jar and put the jar in the deep
freezer they will be good to use for the next Springs planting.  I have
leftover green beans, cucumber, and peas.
Is this a true way of keeping seeds good?    What about tomato seeds too?
Thanks for your opinions.




Posted by rod on August 15, 2004, 11:40 pm
 dave,
  to answer your question,you can save seed for about a year in just
an airtight jar.the key is no moisture.any longer than a year you
would need to freeze.i have heard of people saving seed for several
years in the freezer and the seeds be fine,tomatoes included.hope this
helps.





Posted by Larry Blanchard on August 16, 2004, 12:26 pm
 
I don't freeze them, I just keep the jar in the refrigerator.  I've used
seeds for 3-4 years that way.

--
Where ARE those Iraqi WMDs?

Posted by simy1 on August 16, 2004, 1:59 pm
 
A ziploc or jar in the freezer is all you need. At my place, two
shelves on the freezers door are just for ziploc bags full of seeds. I
typically use seeds for 4-5 years out of a packet, and tomatoes last
longer. You are talking about large seeds only, and they will last
even longer than tomatoes. Basically forever.

Posted by Gardñ@Gardñ.info on August 18, 2004, 5:52 am
 

my impression is that beans, peas, and tomato seeds take years to
deteriorate stored indoors.

you could search for info... borrowing a dessicant pack from vitamin
bottle might be good for your freezer storage plan.