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Allotment Stuff => The Basics => Topic started by: Karen Atkinson on March 27, 2016, 10:27:23

Title: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Karen Atkinson on March 27, 2016, 10:27:23
I've a range of old seeds. Is it false economy (compost; time invested) sowing them? All are over 3 years old
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: johhnyco15 on March 27, 2016, 10:51:32
try this link should help you decide http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/hortnews/1999/4-2-1999/veggielife.html personnaly i think its aways worth a go i sow old seed early so if it dont germinate i have time to buy  more stock hope this helps
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Vinlander on March 27, 2016, 14:31:59
Quote from: spudcounter on March 27, 2016, 10:27:23
I've a range of old seeds. Is it false economy (compost; time invested) sowing them? All are over 3 years old

FIRST: Record each years' germination rate for next year - or look at the lists.

Consider chitting as an easy way to get a few living seedlings from a mass of seed - but even if you expect poor results it's just as important to space them out so the mouldy dead ones don't infect the viable ones before you can get them out.

Otherwise: The key word in your post is compost - if the germination falls much below 50% then it may be worth sowing in cells - but not worth sterilising/washing them first (horrible job).

If it falls well below that then it's only worth sowing direct in a bed/row - if timing allows (a bit late for toms).

Cheers.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: ancellsfarmer on March 27, 2016, 17:42:19
Faced this dilemma with some onion seed from 2013. The method: Placed 20 seeds on a strip of kitchen paper towel ,moistened slightly. rolled up strip and placed in clear plastic bottle (cadged from the vet, its a 5ml blood sample size, with cap)( actually got a selection for a £1 donation to the PDSA box)
Bottle placed beside the gas boiler in its cupboard. 4 days later, removed and counted 18 with little white radicles. Planted in compost and grown on , That sample has passed the test.Planted the rest with consistant results. Wont work with small seeds , specsavers moment!
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on March 27, 2016, 18:41:23
Quote from: johhnyco15 on March 27, 2016, 10:51:32
try this link should help you decide http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/hortnews/1999/4-2-1999/veggielife.html personnaly i think its aways worth a go i sow old seed early so if it dont germinate i have time to buy  more stock hope this helps

I agree and always try old seed.  But don't agree with the numbers given in the list.  Maybe they are for commercial seed, because we don't know how old it was when it went into the packet.  We only know that a germination test at packeting time was still ok. 

For home saved seeds you get longer viability, especially if the seeds were stored cool and dry (not in a shed on the allotment).  Tomatoes are 10 years plus, squash at least 6, peas 6-9, beans 6 or 7, pepper 2.  3 years for onion family maybe 4, the same for lettuce, 4 for brassica. 
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: johhnyco15 on March 27, 2016, 20:20:02
Quote from: galina on March 27, 2016, 18:41:23
Quote from: johhnyco15 on March 27, 2016, 10:51:32
try this link should help you decide http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/hortnews/1999/4-2-1999/veggielife.html personnaly i think its aways worth a go i sow old seed early so if it dont germinate i have time to buy  more stock hope this helps

I agree and always try old seed.  But don't agree with the numbers given in the list.  Maybe they are for commercial seed, because we don't know how old it was when it went into the packet.  We only know that a germination test at packeting time was still ok. 

For home saved seeds you get longer viability, especially if the seeds were stored cool and dry (not in a shed on the allotment).  Tomatoes are 10 years plus, squash at least 6, peas 6-9, beans 6 or 7, pepper 2.  3 years for onion family maybe 4, the same for lettuce, 4 for brassica. 
galina i think this is a guide you never know how old your seed is no matter what it says on the packet and as i said always give it a go i was just trying to give the poor fellow a start a point of reference each seed even of the same variety has a different lifespan the same as us some live to 100 others dont so again as i said its always worth a try
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on March 28, 2016, 02:44:34
 For the last three weeks I have been sewing old seeds of all sorts of things. tomatoes about 30 varieties, cukes, onions, peppers, and various brassicas including some perennial, they were a combo of saved seed and commercial seed. They have all been sown indoors, not direct. The only things that haven't shown are onion seed , one pots of TPS but there is still time for that some very rare bell pepper seeds and  one variety of tomatoes which oddly were one of only three that were F1 hybrids, everything else has popped. All were at least  older than double there usual  life, some of the tomatoes were 12 years old.

Go for it, you have nothing to lose but a bit of time.

XX Jeannine
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Silverleaf on March 28, 2016, 02:51:05
Remember too that even if germination is poor you could get enough plants just by sowing loads more seeds than usual.

And if you get absolutely nothing, you can still reuse the compost.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on March 28, 2016, 06:25:11
There is one slight proviso about using old seeds.  I find that really old squash seeds that only just about still germinate, make fairly weak plants that need more tlc initially.  Old pepper seeds often come out weaker as well and have a harder  time coming out of their seed coat.  Old bean seeds (especially the non-white ones) can take up to 3 weeks to germinate (and some gardeners might not wait that long before they sling them).  :wave:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Garden Manager on April 07, 2016, 19:11:57
Interesting topic. I am always pushing my luck with seeds and try to make them last, even with cheap seed. Hate waste, and would rather spend money on other things like compost and plants I can't grow from seed. That said certain plants like parsnips I do buy fresh each year, even if it means throwing away a load of seed (why do they put so many in a packet - who wants 100s of parsnips a year?).

Imy tightness with seed has found me out this year. I have had failures I can directly trace back to seed that was probably too old.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 08, 2016, 12:37:50
Sorry you had failures.  Usually there is a tailing off with germination rate and you get some warning the year before.  And sometimes seeds don't germinate (especially outdoors) for other reasons.

I just had a success with ancient seeds of Mandan squash.  I don't particularly like this squash and don't grow it often.  I have seeds safely stashed in the freezer, but the rest were just cluttering up my seed box.  They were dated 2004!  So I tipped them into a plastic Chinese food container with a bit of wet tissue and left them.  12 years old and just about every seed germinated!  Anybody want some mandan plants?  :wave:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: johhnyco15 on April 08, 2016, 14:03:25
wow galina that really is impressive  yesterday sowed some tomato seeds 5 years out of date found them in the shed roof thought of this post so ive given them a try but its very hot and dry up there i have sliding false roof for storage for netting and stuff but forgot about the seeds time will tell
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 08, 2016, 15:21:52
Good luck with them.  If it gets much above 37C there isn't much hope, but you never know! 
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: artichoke on April 08, 2016, 15:30:19
I am just sorting out a mass of old lettuce seeds - ashamed of having so many out of date packets. They are sprinkled onto damp old J cloths retired from the kitchen and put into plastic boxes. Of the first three packets, one germinated rapidly, and the seeds have been tweezered into a gutter of compost and started to show the next day. The others I will throw away after 24 more hours if they don't do anything. They are no older than the germinating one, so you never can tell (around 2010 - 2014).

I put just about all my seeds into wet cloth to check them unless they are really fresh. It doesn't seem to do the slightest harm, even to sweetcorn. But I have stopped putting them in a warm place in case real life is too much of a shock.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Vinlander on April 08, 2016, 18:22:23
The problem with J cloths is their strength - if (like me) you ever leave the seeds a few hours too long the root goes into the cloth and only the biggest toughest seeds can stand being extricated - and even then they lose all their root hairs.

This is why I choose the crappiest kitchen roll possible for my 'seed mat' - so I can always tease the mat apart with two pointed things - and make sure the parting goes between the seedlings - an actual tear in a stronger material is far too difficult to control.

I recommend the cheapest offerings from the better supermarkets - it's always of appalling quality whereas the stuff from 99p shops can occasionally turn out to be top quality... Waitrose's crap range is the worst I've found - it hurts to pay top dollar for it but it does the best (most lousy) job. Or use serviettes - they are always rubbish.

I've been chitting for years and I feel a Top Tip coming on...

Cheers.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 08, 2016, 18:56:19
Artichoke, there is a bit of a trick to waking up old lettuce seeds and that is cold.  They are known not to germinate too well if they are sown on a hot summers day.  But the same is true for the seeds themselves.  If these packets were exposed to direct sunlight or heat they will struggle, even sown on a cool day.  But you can (up to a point) 'reset' lettuce seeds.  Take the whole J-cloth with seeds and the container they are in and shove them in the bottom of the fridge for two days.  I have even put some of mine in the freezer for a day, but fridge is probably gentler.  After this, the seeds that were reluctant to germinate, might well feel the urge.  Unless of course they are too old - older than 4 years is not so good for lettuce.  Good luck - you've got nothing to lose.   :wave:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 08, 2016, 19:09:24
Another thing to do if germinayion is poor, is to chuck th whole packet or blend of packets in to a tub, then if some come up you will have baby greens, I do this all the time with lettuce and I get a good salad crop all year round.Kale seed is especially good fro this too.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 08, 2016, 19:27:43
Jeannine,  that sounds familiar - I chuck into the corner of the greenhouse rather than a tub.  I do this anyway for overwintering or early germinating lettuce and other salad plants - chuck right beside the tomatoes which are still growing in October.  The seeds will come up as and when they like for winter salad greens. 

I found some pretty old carrot seeds that I had saved yonks ago late last year.  Not long now and we'll eat new carrots - way earlier than any grown normally. 

I can't remember who to credit with this.  Somebody on A4A reported success sowing in October in a cold frame.  I found it hard to believe at the time, but for two year's running now, we have enjoyed a taste of super early carrots.  And to use up old seeds this way, there is just nothing to lose.   :wave:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 08, 2016, 20:57:21
Galina when I was living in the UK, I kept a small greenhouse in my back garden with large oblong tubs in it, I managed to grow all through the winter with salad greens, green onions, radishes and carrots. There are some pictures somewhere on A4A with harvested stuff in my hand .

I have a few  small jars of mixed lettuce, mixed kales, and another mixed lot with all sorts in. If my seed packets get a bit old they get chucked in there, they are frequently topped up and I just scatter them in a long tub, when they start to get a bit thin I chuck some more in. I figure the ones that don't grow end up as mini compost. Sometimes I do them in a jar. Anyway either way nothing wastes.

I have a ton of old carrot seeds, apparently you can eat the greens but I don't fancy them, anyway a full packet of Parisienne, the little round ones just got tossed in a tub.

Have you ever read Elliot Colemans book, gardening through the winter, I loaned it out and lost it but there was some good info in there. I looked on Amazon for a replacement but bought a different one, written by a Canadian woman. forgotten her name, anyway it is supposed to be excellent for cold weather areas, so if stuff grows in her part of Canada it should surely grow in mine and in the UK.

I am getting all geared up to seriously growing in the greenhouse this year again.

XX Jeannine
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: artichoke on April 09, 2016, 11:11:23
Vinlander, you are absolutely right, and I spend a lot of time teasing baby roots out of J cloths.....but I have a guilt complex about chucking them out when they are too manky for kitchen use.....but now you have mentioned it, I will move over to lavatory paper, I think..... (I have a guilt complex about buying kitchen wipe, too....) Thank you for pointing out what should be obvious.

And thanks also for the lettuce info, Galina. My two unresponsive packs will go into fridge, though it may be too late now. Thinking now of putting all my lettuce packs into the fridge so that over the season, when I try them out, they have already been chilled.

Excellent advice to sprinkle mixed aging seeds in odd corners as potential salad leaves!
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 09, 2016, 11:53:24
Quote from: artichoke on April 09, 2016, 11:11:23
Thinking now of putting all my lettuce packs into the fridge so that over the season, when I try them out, they have already been chilled.



I would not put them in the fridge now.  Putting seeds in the fridge, unless they are in a moisture proof jar, means that they attract moisture, which will definitely shorten the seed life.  Putting them in the fridge just before you intend sowing, on the other hand is very recommended for lettuce seeds.  Good luck :wave:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Vinlander on April 09, 2016, 12:05:51
Quote from: artichoke on April 09, 2016, 11:11:23
I have a guilt complex about buying kitchen wipe, too...

You could use the cheapest kind of black non-woven 'sheet mulch' over the J cloth - that's re-usable and definitely a barrier to roots - forces them to crawl over the damp surface rather than through it (see my Top Tip on capillary mat systems), but I think that breaking up paper pulp around the roots in it protects more root hairs.

I have meanness complex about using toilet paper - it's pure paranoia (ie. I haven't proved it yet) - based on the idea that because we don't have to buy kitchen roll, and seldom have a need to buy it urgently, it's actually cheaper than the other stuff we "have to" buy; (the alternatives aren't really worth considering unless eg. you're too poor to have access to a computer).

I'm pretty sure this idea is very likely to be true in terms of £/Kg but I haven't yet worked out if it is powerful enough to be true in terms of £/m2...

I use old J cloths as capillary strips embedded in the bottom of pots and bags over a reservoir, and as  mini-capillary matting for platforms in small trays (I always use the aforementioned barrier).

Oh, and I carry clean-ish or cleaned ones when going to the allotment - they are great as flannels/towels when washing mud off my hands.

Cheers.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 09, 2016, 20:17:29
Have you found a use for dryer sheets yet?
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Vinlander on April 10, 2016, 11:20:20
Quote from: Jeannine on April 09, 2016, 20:17:29
Have you found a use for dryer sheets yet?
I had to look up dryer sheets because we use the house as a dryer when it's raining - my wife uses radiators exclusively (it keeps them clean) but I'm not above hanging coloured stuff over open doors, handrails and banisters...

It depends on how fluffy they get in use? - they look like a white version of the black barrier mulch stuff, but they'd have to stay really hard and smooth after use to be any good as a substitute.

On the other hand if they go really fluffy like make-up removal wipes? then they would be as good as used wipes are as flannels/towels for muddy hands.

If the texture's in between then I'm not sure. In its fresh state it looks like the stuff they lay to stop floor coverings sticking themselves to the floor or the underlay...

Cheers.
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 10, 2016, 18:28:01
Quote from: Jeannine on April 09, 2016, 20:17:29
Have you found a use for dryer sheets yet?

Are they impregnated with chemicals that might harm defenseless seedlings?   :BangHead:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 10, 2016, 19:27:05
I did hear they contain formaldehyde but I don't know if this is true,,need to google I think. It seems a bit harsh to me, and if it is good for babies bum nappies one would think it is Ok for baby plants :toothy10:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 11, 2016, 10:21:38
Quote from: Jeannine on April 10, 2016, 19:27:05
I did hear they contain formaldehyde but I don't know if this is true,,need to google I think. It seems a bit harsh to me, and if it is good for babies bum nappies one would think it is Ok for baby plants :toothy10:

Sorry Jeannine!  I was being a bit sarcastic here, but am personally very wary of using them for their intended purpose, let alone for seedlings.     
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 11, 2016, 20:18:54
 Galina, I am pretty careful about most things but when I way up the options, it's kinda like taking meds one has to weigh the good with the bad for oneself. If I don't use them I get awful static from my clothes and I am very prone to it, it really hurts, the sheets completely eliminate that, plus I no longer iron anything much either. So for me it a necessary evil. I don't like the liquid stuff one pours in the last rinse though.

Once through the dryer, they do resemble lightweight baby wipes, very very thin though,

XX Jeannine
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: galina on April 12, 2016, 11:06:24
Jeannine they can do that?  I thought they were only to give clothes freshness and a nice smell.  Live and learn.   :sunny:

Sorry everybody, a bit of a thread drift into general frugality.  I think most serious gardeners have it in their blood to re-purpose something for the garden and to make purpose-bought items last, like seeds.

As much as I try to match my purchases to my actual sowing, every year I find some old seeds somewhere.  At the planning stages the garden always seems bigger and energy seems boundless and the weather always co-operates.  Reality soon sets in though.

Half the problem is the maxim 'never sow all of anything' - if it is a rare variety don't sow all seeds in case there is a disaster.  Usually there is not such a disaster and that leaves the second half.  Often I sow the following year, sometimes these seeds end up in the freezer and sometimes in the back of the drawer.  Every year at 'audit' time there are some rather elderly seeds.  And let's face it - when they germinate it is a thrill, otherwise they become 'seed compost' ?  :BangHead:  :tongue3:
Title: Re: Old seeds - false economy?
Post by: Jeannine on April 12, 2016, 22:26:23
I have  heap of really good brassica seeds fro, 2011 and 2012, I wonder just how long they will be good for. I have been using some for microgreens but of course then I sow a whole packet so would have no idea what the % would be.

Galina..yes 100% static free

XX Jeannine