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Old 12-03-2007, 05:39 PM posted to austin.gardening
dt dt is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 31
Default seed expiration?

Vern wrote:

Old or outdated seeds are far more viable than you might think. I have a
gardening bag that has unused seeds dating back to the eighties. I do buy
some fresh seeds but seem to always end up with leftovers. Last year I
planted some Israeli melons from a 1998 crop and they came up as if they
were fresh and produced beautifully. I once read about an old desk that was
found in an agricultural extension office that had a bunch of seed in a
drawer from the 1940's. (I read this in the mid '80's) They planted several
of the seeds and if I remember correctly there was about an 85+% rate of
germination. Naturally seed companies are going to always tell you to buy
fresh, but why would you buy seeds if you grew a crop the season before and
saved your own seeds from the biggest and best you grew? That is if you are
not growing hybrids. My 2 cents worth.

"oldhickory" wrote in message
...

Silly question...how much does age affect seeds ability to germinate?

I have some left over herb seeds from 2005 and 2006. Is it worth trying
to plant or will they fail and are my efforts best spent on buying new and
planting those.

Anyone have experience?

--
ie
ride fast, take chances.


"Ride fast, take chances"? Take a chance: sow 'em thicker than usual,
but be prepared to thin like a maniac if they all germinate. Be
prepared to go buy new seed if they don't; it's still early.

DT