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Saving your own seeds for the self-sufficient homestead Off-the-grid back-to-the-land homesteading articles
Saving Seeds of Flowers & Vegetables![]() Top photo: Kale plants produce a lot of seeds, which are enclosed in pods. Let the seed heads dry on the plant. Open a pod to see if the seeds have filled out and turned black. Once the seeds are hard and black, you can cut all the seed stalks and dry them in a warm, dry place (to prevent molding). Once everything is dry, put all the pods into a big bin and squish them gently with your booted feet. The seeds will fall to the bottom. Compost the dry pods and stalks. Keep the seeds in a cool dry place for sewing from early spring to September. Saving seeds is simple and saves you money We specialize in growing greens year-round for our garden because apart from fruits, raw organic greens form the bulk of our diet. We have found that saving seeds is simple and free. You can have a great variety of greens in perpetuity by simply doing what plants do anyway: after you're done eating from the plants, just let select plants go to seed. Many of the common vegetables, like lettuce and kale, bear prodigious amounts of seed so for most families saving a plant or two per variety is more than enough. Saving seeds for us fall into two categories.
All lettuces were bred from dandelions or chicories/escaroles, and the seed heads give this fact away with their white puffy dandelion-like crowns that make seeds airborne for scattering. When the seeds have filled out and dried to their cream or black color (depending on the variety), they are ready to be gently squished into a container and stored in a cool, dry place for planting anytime of year except January. When the temperature is cold, sow in a greenhouse or coldframe.
Garden-fresh spinach is amazing and bears little resemblance to the waxy spinach you get in the grocery stores that often leaves an aftertaste on your tongue. Spinach likes cool weather so is perfect to grow in early spring, fall, and winter (under a cloche or in the greenhouse or coldframe).
Chard is a traditional standby in Switzerland and Germany. It's a very hardy plant that produces well year-round. Chard has a very thick root system (it's in the same family as beets) and will produce tasty and nutritious leaves for 3 to 4 years, especially if you keep cutting back the flower stalks, thereby discouraging it from going to seed. Chard seeds are actually seed pods as 2 or 3 plants may emerge from one seed pod.
Escarole or chicories produce very well both in hot and cold weather. We always have tons growing in our garden and greenhouses. If watered regularly, they will remain crisp and sweet through the summer months. They produce hard little seeds that germinate easily with some moisture. Some varieties that we really like are tres fin frisee (serrated, crispy leaves), broadleaf Batavian (broad, lettuce-like leaves with a hint of bitterness), and Neos (frilly, crunchy leaves). Escaroles are great for bulking up your salads during times when lettuce isn't very productive, like in the hot months of summer. Escaroles and chicories have purple flowers, much like wild chicories.
Sunflower seeds are ready to be harvested when the flowers have dried on the stalk. Test by picking a few seeds out to see if they have filled out. We always have so many plants. We usually grow black oil seed sunflowers for sprouting. If it rains when the seeds are done, they have a tendency to mold in the seed head. These we discard by throwing at the chickens, who avidly peck every last one of the seeds in no time. Send Touch Jamikorn your question or comments: Spotlight on Denman Island ArtistsRawForLife Raw & Sustainable Living Ezine
All opinions expressed herein, excellent though they may be, are those of their authors and do not in anyway imply agreement from us or our staff. We publish them here solely in the spirit of sharing and in the hope that they may be of service to others who are also seeking a simpler, more sustainable, and healthier way of life. We do not give recommendations or advice and cannot be held responsible for them. Please seek advice from professionals if you need help. There are also many excellent books out there by qualified professionals to help you on your path to health. May your journey be a gentle, loving, happy, safe, and fulfilling one. |
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