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kenny 23-12-2003 02:02 AM

Saving Tomato seed
 
I have the book Seed to Seed by Suzanne Ashworth and am going to start
saving seed from my garden this year. I am ordering only heirloom
open pollinated seed to start with.
I am unsure about the tomatoes if I can grow several types and not
have them cross. The book says tomatoes are inbreeding plants and
that seed savers should have no problem with cross pollination if you
grow one currant tomato or one potato leaved variety if the styles
are covered by the anther tubes.
I want to plant Brandy wine and Black from Tula and Amish Paste all in
the same 40' x 100' area. I will probably put one type on each end
and one in the middle but just want to make sure since I am going to
be saving these seed for years to come.
Thank you
Kenneth
From Lufkin TX


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Steve 23-12-2003 05:02 AM

Saving Tomato seed
 
Tomatoes are very strong self pollinators. You could probably grow them
right next to each other and never see a cross.
I assume you will grow several plants of each kind. Save seed from a
couple of the best plants each year. It's easy to save way more seed
than you need. It's easy to keep seed for several years. Plant the fresh
seed every year but keep the older seed on file for a few years. If you
ever get unlucky and get a cross, you can go back to the older seed
(next year) and not loose the variety.
Of course you could just buy new seed if that happened but what fun is
that? Besides, by taking seed from only your best plants, you might fine
tune the variety to your conditions and end up with something slightly
better over time.
As an alternate plan, if you do get some off type plants, simply don't
save the seeds from those plants. Unless you grow only a very few of
each variety, I can't imagine you would not always get some pure type
plants. As I said, you'll probably never have trouble with them crossing
in the first place.

Steve

kenny wrote:
I have the book Seed to Seed by Suzanne Ashworth and am going to start
saving seed from my garden this year. I am ordering only heirloom
open pollinated seed to start with.
I am unsure about the tomatoes if I can grow several types and not
have them cross. The book says tomatoes are inbreeding plants and
that seed savers should have no problem with cross pollination if you
grow one currant tomato or one potato leaved variety if the styles
are covered by the anther tubes.
I want to plant Brandy wine and Black from Tula and Amish Paste all in
the same 40' x 100' area. I will probably put one type on each end
and one in the middle but just want to make sure since I am going to
be saving these seed for years to come.
Thank you
Kenneth
From Lufkin TX


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http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----



kenny 23-12-2003 01:02 PM

Saving Tomato seed
 
On Tue, 23 Dec 2003 04:48:26 GMT, Steve wrote:

That puts my mind at ease. For starters I will have to buy the seed
so I will probably start 1/2 of the seed in each pack. The ones I
ordered from Seed Savers Exchange had 30 seed each.
45 tomatoe plants should be about right for eating fresh and canning.
I still have half in case a late frost comes through and wipes me out.

Tomatoes are very strong self pollinators. You could probably grow them
right next to each other and never see a cross.
I assume you will grow several plants of each kind. Save seed from a
couple of the best plants each year. It's easy to save way more seed
than you need. It's easy to keep seed for several years. Plant the fresh
seed every year but keep the older seed on file for a few years. If you
ever get unlucky and get a cross, you can go back to the older seed
(next year) and not loose the variety.


Good Idea I will try that.

Of course you could just buy new seed if that happened but what fun is
that? Besides, by taking seed from only your best plants, you might fine
tune the variety to your conditions and end up with something slightly
better over time.


I was thinking that also I read about plants adapting to certain areas
in The Heirloom Gardener magazine

As an alternate plan, if you do get some off type plants, simply don't
save the seeds from those plants. Unless you grow only a very few of
each variety, I can't imagine you would not always get some pure type
plants. As I said, you'll probably never have trouble with them crossing
in the first place.

Steve



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Charles Quinn 24-12-2003 04:32 AM

Saving Tomato seed
 
Xref: kermit rec.gardens.edible:65948

In article , kenny wrote:
I have the book Seed to Seed by Suzanne Ashworth and am going to start
saving seed from my garden this year. I am ordering only heirloom
open pollinated seed to start with.
I am unsure about the tomatoes if I can grow several types and not
have them cross. The book says tomatoes are inbreeding plants and
that seed savers should have no problem with cross pollination if you
grow one currant tomato or one potato leaved variety if the styles
are covered by the anther tubes.
I want to plant Brandy wine and Black from Tula and Amish Paste all in
the same 40' x 100' area. I will probably put one type on each end
and one in the middle but just want to make sure since I am going to
be saving these seed for years to come.
Thank you
Kenneth
From Lufkin TX


If you have a dominant prevailing wind, make sure to plant them so the
downwind types are not pollinated by a different upwind type.


--

Charles
The significant problems we face cannot be solved
at the same level of thinking we were at when we
created them. Albert Einstein



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