Tomato seeds
"Ted Byers" wrote in
:
While I have grown a variety of inedible plants (mostly orchids
indoors, but irises, lilies, and crocus outside), I am not familiar
with the culture of tomatoes.
Yesterday, I saw some yellow tomatoes and some orange ones, and I am
considering taking the seeds from one of each and trying to grow them.
If I do this, do the seeds need any particular treatment, or can they
be simply taken from the fruit and placed in the pots? I ask because
I have never seen seeds for yellow or orange tomatoes in any of the
garden centres around here. I know some species require cold
treatment and/or scarification in order to germinate. I just don't
know if tomatoes require such treatment.
I am not sure how much gardening to try this year since we've had a
really bizarre spring so far, with temperatures both well above normal
and well below normal and dramatic changes in temperature from one day
to the next: imagine temperatures typical of June on a Monday,
followed by snow on Tuesday. I have never seen a winter/early spring
with such variable weather. I don't want to be spending money putting
plants in only to see them die because they've had no time to get
established before being hit by strange weather.
Cheers,
Ted
BTW: I am located in zone 5, just to the north of Toronto.
If you look at the tomato seeds as they come out of the tomato, they have a
gel or clear gooey stuff around them. The trick is to put the seeds in
water for 3 days (tomatoes are the only thing you can do this with). At
the end of three days, throw away the floaters and spread the rest on a
papertowel to dry. Once dry, you can now put them in soil with bottom heat
and bottom water, and in 2 weeks or so they will germinate.
Of course, as previously stated hybrids will not breed true, although you
will have a tomato, just not exactly like the parent.
-Rj
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