Pre-designed Envelope Templates to Print & Use Storing and Testing Your Seeds Pre-designed Envelope Templates to Print & Use Storing and Testing Your Seeds Harvesting and Saving Your Seeds Harvesting and Saving Your Seeds

You Grow Girl™

Harvesting Seeds



bachelorís button
nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus)
forget-me-not
pansy/viola (Viola x wittrockiana)
marigold (Tangetes)
foxglove (digitalus)
snapdragon (Antirrhinum)
poppy (Papaver)
love-in-a-mist (Nigella damascena)
blanket flower (Gaillardia)
columbine (Aquilegia vulgaris)
black-eyed susan (Rudbeckiahirta)
cosmos
zinnia
tomatoes
beans
squash
pumpkin





Related Links
The Perfect Flower An interactive diagram that shows the parts of the flower.

Seed Trade Reap the benefits of your seed harvest and trade seeds with other gardeners.

Seed Starting Learn how to start your seeds growing next spring.

Talk about growing veggies from seed in the forums

Dandelion Wishes Make a wish and scatter some seeds.

National Gardening Association More info on differences between open-pollination and hybrids.

Read-- Botany for Gardeners: An Introduction and Guide by Brian Capon


by Gayla Trail

Harvesting and Saving Your Seeds

There are a variety of reasons for harvesting your own seeds; some personal, some environmental. Perhaps you have a variety that you like and you are concerned that seed companies may discontinue stocking it. Ripe Seeds You saw some wildflowers while on an outdoor hike that you'd like to grow in your own garden. You have a heritage variety and you want to continue growing it in future years. You want to trade some of your seeds with some of a friend's seeds, you want to grow organic seeds, or maybe you just want to save money and avoid buying new annuals next year. Whatever the reason, you don't need to be a botanist or a farmer to do it. If you can grow plants, you can produce your own seeds. There are however, a few things you may want to know before you get started.

Self-pollination and Cross-pollination

Plants either have all the parts to pollinate themselves, (called self-pollinators) or they are aided in accomplishing this by insects, the wind, or human intervention (cross-pollinators). Self-pollinators are commonly referred to as 'perfect flowers' Self-pollinating Floweras they contain all the parts to successfully pollinate themselves. The comparatively imperfect cross-pollinators produce all the parts to pollinate, but not all in one place. Parts are divided between blooms or are 'self-incompatible', identifying their own pollen as foreign material. Pollen must find its way from one plant to the next. This method is preferable for the survival of the species because it ensures that the plants produce genetically diverse seeds-- seeds that contain different genetic information or traits then the original plant. This enables the plant to better adapt itself to the environment it is in, or acquire traits that will help it become more disease resistant. Self-pollinators on the other hand, essentially produce clones, which makes them more susceptible to any problems that may arise.

Be aware that if you want cross-pollination to occur in your garden, you need to make your garden favorable to pollinating insects or be prepared to do all the pollinating yourself. Grow plants nearby that attract pollinators--butterfly bush, Queen Anne's lace, bee balm, salvia, and cleome are a few, and avoid using chemical sprays that will kill all insects both harmful and beneficial.

In some cases you might want to keep cross-pollination from taking place. Plants that are closely related, for example different varieties of melons, will cross-pollinate producing seeds that are a mix of the two varieties. If you want to keep your varieties true, plant similar species of plants on opposite ends of your garden.

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