Posted by Dave on August 15, 2004, 4:50 pm
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.
> 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 Larry Blanchard on August 16, 2004, 12:26 pm
> 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.
>
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
> 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.
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
> 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.
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.
> 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.