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Seed Saving Circle 2025

Started by JanG, May 01, 2025, 20:54:49

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markfield rover

Grandpa's cress is a land cress , it's from HSL , it's very easy to grow with a great flavour I will now grow it instead of rocket. I think viola plants see me coming , ripe seeds ... now you see them now you don't ... but I have plenty to share . Ipomoea Tutu, the first few flowers are the standard sort but as the plant grows the show begins, fingers crossed they come true .

JanG

I shall for one be very happy to receive your land cress seeds. I was just this week reflecting on the fact that for a few years I'd relied on land cress to self-seed but that it now seems to have finally died out, and all my saved seed is old now.
And the Ipomoea and Viola much looked forward to too.

galina

#42
This is the isolated/handpollinated Golden Marbre that I cut up earlier this year.  It was grown last year, but too late for the seed circle.  It is producing true offspring from a few seeds I used this year to verify that handpollination.  A candidate for the seed circle. 

galina

#43
Here is the Early Prolific Straightneck Squash also growing this year.  This fruit is isolated/handpollinated and I hope its seeds will be ready in time for the circle distribution. 

galina

Just noticed that RealSeeds retail this too, but a different strain of it.  Mine were from Denali Seeds in Alaska, bought when getting seeds from the USA was still widely possible some twenty years ago.  This strain has the number 353, but its history also goes back nearly 90 years. 

Here are both urls, first RealSeeds
https://www.realseeds.co.uk/courgettes.html

then Denali, my source of seeds
https://www.bestcoolseeds.com/collections/squash/products/squash-summer-early-prolific-straightneck-353

JanG

It will be great to have your Golden Marbre squash, Galina. I've become more and more of a fan of pattypan squash over the last two or three years. One cuts up and roasts so easily for two or three people as an accompaniment for summer vegetables.
It seems to take a lot of application in the UK to catch any cucurbits for hand pollination,so that I'm lucky if I succeed with more than one or two a year. This year I have one large hand pollinated courgette from your Hungarian zucchini, galina, which I think I successfully hand pollinated. It's a courgette I value for being early and productive, so I hope to have those seeds ready in time to contribute.

galina

#46
Yes, it is less of a struggle here, I will freely admit.  But I managed to keep almost all of my varieties going in Rushden too, at times resorting to growing them in the greenhouse.  So I sympathise.  Most parts of Britain are at the edge of what squashes love in terms of growing conditions. 

This was my rationale when I bought these Straightneck squash seeds from an Alaskan seed company.  If they succeed there, surely they also do in Rushden!  And they did.  So I hope all will go well with this fruit.  It has changed shape, put on at least another 2 inches in length and is now getting fatter at the bottom, more club shaped. 

Congratulations on getting the Hungarian to work for you, Jang.  It is so frustrating to have several male flowers and waiting for a female, or when we have a heatwave, it is the opposite, the plants develop female flowers, but there are no males.  it is nice when it all comes together. 

By the way, that Golden Marbre Squash was still perfectly edible in March, when I harvested the seeds.  I cut it into wedges along the bumps and fried them.  Almost like winter squash, - patty pans do tend to keep reasonably well. 

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