Global Coalition for Peace presents Basic Seed-Saving Workshop

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Planting a Garden Essential Standard Apply procedures to plant a garden.
Advertisements

Today's Lecture Classification of vegetables
Planting and Designing a Garden. Step 1 Research the location of where you are planting Determine the amount of sunlight and shade Determine the amount.
Fruits and Vegetables.
Write these… The term "vegetable" generally refers to what?
EDIBLE GARDENING EDIBLE GARDENING BY BY Venkappa Gani Venkappa Gani September 28, 2008 September 28, 2008.
Vegetables Creative Foods Created by: Miss Young.
Thomas LeRoy Montgomery County Extension Agent – Horticulture.
Artichoke Bean Beet Broccoli Brussel sprouts Burdock.
Global Coalition for Peace presents Basic Seed-Saving Workshop.
Planning a Garden – PLAN A GARDEN Research Plan for the location of the garden. Include  Sun  Shade  water  air.
Saving Seeds. Seed Saving Hybrid vs. heirloom seeds Hybrid vs. heirloom seeds Isolating plants Isolating plants Methods for cleaning and storing Methods.
John Coffey NC State University Spring Section 1.
Vegetables Vegetables.
Vegetables. Vegetables are grouped according to the part of the plant from which they come. FLOWERS: artichokes, broccoli, cauliflower FRUITS: tomatoes,
Prep Gardening Saving Seeds. Myths and Rumors of Saving Seed They Won’t Grow(Hybrids) They won’t produce/weak It is difficult to isolate varieties.
Creative Cooking 1 VEGETABLES
 List four things to consider when choosing a site for a vegetable garden.  Draw a simple garden plan that allows for successive planting of early and.
Classifying Vegetables
1.  Bulbs- Garlic and onions  Flowers Artichokes, broccoli, cauliflower 2.
Vegetables! Nutrients, Storage, cooking…. Plant Parts Root: carrot, radish –Grow deep in soil, smooth skin Stem: celery, asparagus –Edible stems and stalks,
Vegetables What You Will Learn In This Unit: 1. How to properly select and store veggies 2. How to prepare veggies 3. How to preserve their colors, textures,
Vegetable Gardening. Plot Preparation Level ground Full Sun 10’ X 10’ is fine Work soil when dry enough Remove sod Break up and turn the soil Add compost.
 Briefly talk with students about how humans use plants to protect the soil, provide fresh air, and create visual interest. Ask the students if they.
3 DIVERSIFY CROPS Home Gardening and Nutrition Training Material Increasing the variety you get from your homestead garden.
Vegetable Production Guides Sustainability in Vegetable Production Oregon Processed Vegetable Commission Vegetable Production in Oregon News Forums and.
Objective 7.01/ 7.02 Plan a Garden Maintain a Garden.
7.02 – ESTABLISH A GARDEN. Seeds Fall  Vegetable seeds such as lettuce, kale, mustard, broccoli, cabbage, collards, radish and onions are examples of.
Raising Vegetables For Market Part Two 1. Review of Last Workshop’s Main Points 2. Where to Plant Your Different crops 3. Information about Different Vegetables.
Vegetable Gardening for Beginners Your Garden Throughout the Year.
Vegetables. Vegetables are low in calories. You can serve them raw or cooked. They add color, flavor, texture, and nutrients to meals. You can purchase.
HOME GARDEN GUIDE Guide for maintaining a healthy, thriving garden.
How Do You Know When to Plant Seeds for the Garden? Knowing when to plant seeds indoors or directly in the garden comes with experience, and this information.
August 2008 Planning and Preparing a Vegetable Garden Original by Melinda Goplin Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office July, 2002.
Plant Reproduction and Development Chapter :1 Asexual Reproduction in Plants Asexual reproduction: When an organism creates offspring that are IDENTICAL.
Gardening Plan a Garden. Research  Location of the garden including: Sun Shade Water Air.
Vertical Gardening the Sustainable Way Definitions Vertical Gardening- To grow and maintain a garden when you have limited space available growing up,
VEGETABLES Essential Question: What is the value of vegetables in the diet and what is the best way to select, store, and prepare them? Food for Today.
Your Best Garden Yet. Soil Type  Soil is made up of clay, sand and silt. Loam, the best soil for gardening has all three parts equally.  If your soil.
Unit 41 Favorite Garden Vegetables and Herbs. Vegetable plants need various methods of proper preventive care and overall maintenance Only a few introduced.
Vegetable Gardening For fun and flavor! Site Selection Where? Water Rotation.
VEGETABLES Versatile Choices. TYPES Come from different edible parts of the plant –Flowers –Fruits –Seeds –Stems –Leaves –Roots –Tubers –Bulbs What’s.
Vegetables Oh so good for you…. Vegetable Classifications Bulbs – Garlic, Onion Flowers – Broccoli, Cauliflower, Artichokes Fruits – Tomatoes, Cucumber,
Starting A Home Vegetable Garden A Seminar on Home Vegetable Gardening
Essential Standard Apply procedures to plant a garden.
Essential Standard Apply procedures to plant a garden.
Crops that grow in June Crops that grow in June.
Objective 7.01/ 7.02 Plan a Garden Maintain a Garden.
Essential Standard Apply procedures to plant a garden.
Mrs. Karen Swope Family and Consumer Sciences Columbian High School
PARTS OF A PLANT.
Putting Your Garden To Bed
Or should that be “succession planning”?
Culinary Arts I.
VEGETABLES.
Gardens.
Classification of vegetable crops
Judging Criteria for Vegetable Exhibits
Principles of Sustainable vegetable production.
Chapter 19: Vegetables Classification: Grouped according to part of plant from which they come Bulb: Garlic and Onion Flower: Artichoke, broccoli, cauliflower.
Growing food in small spaces Feb 2018
Chapter 9 Fruits and Vegetables.
Introduction Potato is important crop in global food system ranking first in vegetable production and area 4.5 % per annum. One of the main.
Workshop 1 Growing Organic Vegetables in Containers
How to Care for Your CSA Share
Vegetables.
Vegetables.
Seed saving.
Handout for Canadian Organic Gardening Workshop: Starting Seeds Indoors and Out David Hinks March 10, 2018.
Growing with Fabric Containers
Presentation transcript:

Global Coalition for Peace presents Basic Seed-Saving Workshop

Why Save Seeds? A. Self-sustainability: You will always have seeds, never have to wait for someone else to provide them and they will not cost you anything. B. Adaptation: Seeds that come from your own garden will be stronger and more adapted to the climate and soil conditions of your little piece of the earth, so you will have better crops. C. Preservation: You can preserve the varieties that have worked best for you. ie., if you grow a particularly beautiful, tasty tomato, you can reproduce it with the next harvest. D. Protection: Saving your own seeds will protect you against being at the mercy of large seed companies or corporations that want to control what seeds you plant and what you grow. In other words, you will have control over what you eat and your ability to feed yourself and your family.

Types of Seeds 1. Open-pollinated versus Hybridized: a. Open-pollinated: OP seeds produce plants that will be like the parent plant. b. Hybridized: The problem with seeds you buy: Many of the seeds that you can buy are what is called hybridized. Seed companies cross breed two different varieties of plants to produce a new variety that has the best qualities of the two. However, they may or may not produce seed that will grow when planted. If they do produce viable seed it may produce a plant that is like the parent plant or it may produce something very different, with traits from more distant relatives. 2. Terminator seeds, on the other hand, currently produced by Monsanto, are specifically bred so that seeds from the crop will be sterile. The purpose of that is so that farmers and gardeners can only purchase their seeds from Monsanto. Types of Seeds

Types of Seeds (cont.) 3. Heirloom Seeds: These are seeds from non-hybrid plants that have been grown for generations. Because they have specific traits that are desirable, they have survived. The seeds will be true to the parent plant. Such varieties are usually hardy, pest resistant and have other desirable qualities, as well as being open pollinated. Heirloom seeds are important store houses of genetic diversity. 4. The Seeds I Use: I order from companies that sell organic and biodymanic seed and when my plants produce seed, I save my own. Seed saving, or seed conversation, is the practice of saving seeds that reproduce through natural means. Plants grown from your own seeds will rapidly adapt to changing conditions and produce an ever-abundant succession of yields. This process is necessary for the continued survival of a diverse variety of plants.

General Information A. If you research how to save a particular seed you may get conflicting instructions. That is due to the fact that seed saving for the backyard gardener and seed-saving for the farmer can be two different processes. For example: Seed-saving instructions to a farmer may tell him that if he is going to grow two different varieties of cucumber he should separate them by a half a mile to avoid cross-breeding. Obviously, the backyard gardener can't do that. B. If as a gardner, you are planning to save seeds it's a good idea to plant just one type of each plant in close proximity, to avoid the chance of cross-breeding. In other words, if you plant two varieties of one vegetable, they may cross-breed and form a hybridized variety that will not reproduce. So, at least for your initial experiments with seed-saving, I would recommend that you plant only one variety of each plant that you want to save. C. Always make sure that your seeds are thoroughly dry before storing.

Three Main Types of Seeds that We're Going to Discuss A. Seeds from flowering vegetable plants B. Seeds from pods C. Seeds from fleshly fruits – tomatoes, melons, squash

Another Classification - Annuals, Biennials, Perrenials A. Annuals - These are plants that produce seed in one season and have to be replanted each year. B. Biennials – Biennial vegetables normally require two growing seasons from seed to flowering. Biennial vegetables include beets, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, chard, collard, endive, kale, kohlrabi, leek, onion, parsley, parsnip, rutabaga, salsify, and turnip. You may see seed pods or flower heads on one of these plants the first year that you plant. When that happens it is because they have been subjected to a spell of cooler weather early during their growing season, tricking them into thinking it is a new season C. Perrenials – flower and produce their seeds in a specific time of the growing season. Perrenials die down in the winter and begin growing again when the weather warms up. They do not require re-seeding. Examples of perrenial vegetables are asparagus and rhubarb.

Choosing Which Seeds to Save Seeds from flowering plants are mature or ripe when flowers are faded and dry or have puffy tops. Plants with pods, like beans and peas, are ready when the pods are brown and dry. When seeds are ripe they usually turn from white to cream colored or light brown to dark brown. The seeds from fleshly fruits are ready to save when the fruit is a little bit overly ripe. Always Choose A. Seeds from best specimen(s) of the crop: B. Seeds from plants that don't bolt (go to seed) too early C. Seeds from plants that are fully mature before harvesting

Seeds From Flowering Plants A. Examples of flowering vegetables are lettuce, basil, onions B. After the flowers fade away, the plants will eventually form seed heads, which, in the case of lettuce,look a lot like miniature dandelion seed heads ( the white fuzzy things that appear after the yellow dandelion flowers).

Lettuce Seed Heads

Lettuce Seed Heads (cont.) Once these seed heads form and are dry, remove the whole seed head(s) from the plant before the seeds blow away! Choose a day when the weather is sunny, dry and calm rather than windy. You might want to use scissors, as your hands will get pretty sappy while trying to pull off the seed heads! Now, just take the seed heads indoors and pluck the seeds from them. You can also remove the white chaff that lets them get blown around, but it isn't absolutely necessary. Set them on a paper plate to dry, and leave them for at least a week or two. Then, just put them in an envelope, glass container, or some other container, and treat them like any other seeds. C. Basil is another flowering plant. It produces many, many flowers and each flower has a number of seeds. Lettuce Seed Heads (cont.)

Onions Each onion will produce only one flower but it has many, many seeds.

A. Examples of seeds that grow in pods are peas, beans, lentils, chickpeas (garbanzo beans) B. To Harvest these seeds leave the pods on the plants to dry, if possible, or remove the entire plant and hang to dry. When the pods are crispy dry and the seeds make a rattling sound, split them open and remove the seeds. Seeds from Pods

To Store: Make sure the seeds are completely dry (they will shatter when hit with a hammer on hard surface). Store in a cool, dry place until ready to use. Bean Pods

Seeds from Fleshly Fruits Tomato, melon, squash, cucumber (Seeds are inside the fruits) Seeds from Fleshly Fruits

To Save Seeds from Fleshly Fruits To save seed from fruited crops (tomato, melons, cucumbers, squash, and pumpkins), begin by selecting clean, disease-free, fully ripe fruits (a little beyond the eating stage). Cut the fruit open using a clean knife and scoop the seeds into a clean container. Add water to the container and keep the container at room temperature, allowing the mixture to ferment for several days. Stir daily to help separate seed from the pulp. After several days the mixture should be good and frothy. You will notice many seeds floating to the top of the container: these ‘floaters’ are nonviable, or at best will produce weak plants. Strong, viable seeds will sink to the bottom of the container. Pour off the pulp and floaters, leaving the good seeds in the bottom of the container. Repeat this process several times, adding a little fresh water each time and allowing the seeds to settle before pouring off the water.

Spinach produces male and female plants Spinach produces male and female plants. Female plants produce seeds; male plants produce pollen. After the plants "bolt" you'll notice the female plants producing seed clusters, while the males wither and die. Once the pods turn brown, the seeds are ready to harvest. Strip off the pods and to separate the individual seeds from the clusters. Spinach

Many herbs are perrenial. You do not have to replant them every year Many herbs are perrenial. You do not have to replant them every year. These include mint, rosemary, oregano and thyme. However, some will get tired after several years, for example, thyme will often need to be replanted after 3 years, rosemary after 5-7 years. Oregano seeds are so tiny, like pepper, so it may be a good idea to mix them with some sand and then spread the mixture thinly and evenly over the bed where you want to plant them. We will look at some perrenial herbs later in the slide show. Perrenial Herbs

Storage Containers: Most important thing is that the seeds are thoroughly dry before storing them. They can be stored in paper envelopes or plastic or glass containers. Paper envelopes will absorb moisture and allow fungus to develop. So, if you're going to use paper envelopes put them inside a large plastic bag. Store your seeds in a cool, dry place. A refrigerator is a good option. Some people freeze their seeds and seed companies apparently do this but moisture control is very important. If you do freeze seeds they should be brought back to room temperature gradually rather than exposing them to a blast of warm, humid air.

Testing Your Seeds for Viability Take a sample of seeds from their storage container. Make sure that the sample is big enough – ideally about two dozen seeds. Plant in loose soil in a seed-starting tray or an egg carton. Place the tray(s) in a warm location (at least 65-75o). Check the seeds regularly and mist the soil when they start to dry out. Allow one week past the expected germination time. When testing time has elapsed count the number of germinated seeds. 80% germination is very good

Usually Not Grown From Seed Some vegetables do not require seed. They are grown from existing vegetables. Potatoes – need potato with eyes Garlic – grown from a single clove Onion - grown from sets

Other Common Seeds and Seed Heads

Beet Seeds

Swiss Chard Seeds

Carrot Flower Seed Head

Celery Flower

Parsley Seed

Coriander Seed

Rosemary Starting to Flower

Eggplant Seeds

Okra Seeds

Broccoli seed pods look very similar Radish Seed Pods

Leek Seed Heads