Savior
Seeds
by Barry Carter
Save your seed and they will save
you!
I am not a very good seed savorer (yes, that's a real word). I always intend to save seeds but I don't always get
around to it and when I do, sometimes I don't adequately label the seeds I have saved as you can see with
these seeds I saved last year or the year before last (or the year before that):
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds00.jpg
Sometimes, however, I do label my seeds as
you can see at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds01.jpg
Several ORMUS gardeners have reported
that, when you plant seeds grown in previous ORMUS gardens, the benefits are cumulative. This means that
each year for the first few years you should get greater yield than in the previous year from your saved
ORMUS seeds. This seems to be true for plants that must be re-seeded annually but not for trees and other
perennial plants that just keep growing from year to year. Trees just seem to keep getting larger fruit
each year for the first three or four years. At:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/myplants.htm
you can see some examples of increased growth
in second year ORMUS dill, cilantro and yellow squash. The squash plant grew from a squash that I left on
the ground all winter. You can see a similar yellow squash that I left on the ground this winter in the
lower right part of the picture at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds10.jpg
To the upper right of the squash you can
see a tomato skin. Last year I had a volunteer tomato plant or two from tomatoes that dropped to the
ground like this.
In the picture above you can also see some
volunteer plants that grew from seeds that fell to the ground last fall from their parent plants. In the
upper right and lower right you can see three or four sunflower plants. To the left of the sunflower
plants on the upper right and to the right of the sunflower plants on the lower right you can see a
couple of Reuben's Red Lettuce plants. Between the upper and lower sunflower plants you can see some dill
plants that are a couple inches tall. They are a bit hard to see because the leaves are so
narrow.
Also in the upper left quadrant of the
picture above, you can see some volunteer garlic plants. They are surrounded by a couple of volunteer
pieces of plastic on the right and below as well as a volunteer newspaper advert to the left. I had to
pull the volunteer weeds in order to get a good picture of everything else.
You can see another squash that is getting
ready to volunteer at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds07.jpg
Kale generally survives throughout winter
pretty well and grows new seeds on the second year. My Russian Red Kale plants looked pretty good
on February 3, 2009:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/2009-02-03-RedRussianKale01.jpg
but they did not survive the winter. You can
see three or four of them toward the middle front in the picture at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/2009-02-03-Kale01.jpg
Back toward the back of this same picture
are a couple of True Siberian Kale plants near the fence. These plants survived the winter and I took a
picture of them on May 17, 2009at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds02.jpg
Notice that the smaller Siberian Kale
plant to the right already has flowered as you can see more clearly at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds03.jpg
I will either plant these new seeds down
the fence somewhere or forget about them and notice the new kale plants they have produced on their
own.
At:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds05.jpg
you can see some small dill plants that
sprouted on their own near the big fun dill (BFD) plants last year. In the next picture you can see the
seed head of one of the fallen BFD plants above some new dill volunteers:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds04.jpg
Sorry I did not get around to weeding this
section of the garden yet. It may be a bit difficult to find the dill in the picture
above.
You can see some volunteer onions that
showed up in my garden at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds06.jpg
somebeets at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds08.jpg
and the largest sunflower head, which I saved
for seeds, at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/SaviorSeeds09.jpg
Three types of lettuce that volunteered in
my garden can be seen at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/2009-05-13-lettuce02.jpg
My chive plants at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/2009-05-13-chives01.jpg
have been in this same place for three years
now. I want to transfer some of them to a large pot so I can bring them inside next winter. They are
about to produce new seeds in a few days.
Altogether, I have the following volunteer
plants in my garden right now:
chives
kale
strawberries
sunflowers
onions
garlic
cilantro
FormidanaLettuce
Ruben's Red Lettuce
BruneD'Hiver
Lettuce
dill
rhubarb
beets
sage
rosemary
lemonmint
Plus a couple of other herbs that I don't
remember the names for.This is about eighteen different breeds of
volunteer plants and it includes most of my favorites. I have planted some radishes from saved seeds but
they are not above ground yet. Today I also planted three different types of carrot seeds that were in
packets I purchased last year and in 2007. I also planted one packet of seeds that I got at a yard sale
with a 2000 date on it. We'll have to wait a few weeks to see if everything germinates. You can see the
seeds packets at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/2009-05-17-CarrotSeeds.jpg
I have not been able to collect any carrot
seeds yet. Maybe this year.
I also have an apple tree that I cut down
a year ago but new shoots are sprouting up from the stump and the roots. Some of these "root shoots" are
over six feet tall.
My apricot tree also seems to have
survived a late frost and it has lots of half inch long "apricots" on it. Also, my plum tree seems to
have just dropped lots of blossoms and I expect lots of plums this
year.