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Bill 10-08-2005 05:00 AM

Tomato seeds
 
Never before have I tried growing a tomatos plants from seeds.

If I take the seeds from a tomato, do I dry them out...how...and for
how long...then what? ( Then I become a tomato farmer...with two or
three plants.)

Bill
William Redding
Medical Researcher at
www.linkable.org
Learn a language at
www.ITeachOonline.com

Kay Lancaster 10-08-2005 04:42 PM

On Wed, 10 Aug 2005 04:00:15 GMT, Bill wrote:
Never before have I tried growing a tomatos plants from seeds.

If I take the seeds from a tomato, do I dry them out...how...and for
how long...then what? ( Then I become a tomato farmer...with two or
three plants.)


Yup, you want to dry them for storage. But there's a little excitement
along the way -- you get to ferment them in pulp for a few days. Cut
the tomato in half and squeeze the seeds and the adjacent mucilaginous
"goo" into a shallow cup -- an old cottage cheese carton works well.
Add a couple of Tbsp of water to the goo in the cup, and lay the carton
lid over the mouth of the carton -- you want some air to get in, but the
contents not to dry quickly. Give the contents a stir every morning
(it'll stink a bit), and add more water if things are starting to dry
out. In about 3-4 days, you'll see the goo has gotten much less thick,
and most of the seeds are sitting on the bottom of the cup -- they're
the ones you're going to save.

Pour the guck in the cup off, retaining the seeds in the bottom of the
cup. Rinse the seeds well with cool running water (I use a tea strainer),
and then spread the seeds out on a piece of paper. Let the seeds air dry
for several days -- when you pick up the paper and the seeds aren't stuck,
they're ready to store. I just fold up the paper they were dried on into
an envelope, write the name of the cultivar on it, and store it in a
plastic box in the refrigerator crisper for the following year.

The fermentation process both separates the seeds from the pulp and
gives the seeds a pretty acidic environment for a couple of days, long
enough to stop the transmission of a bacterial pathogen that's seed-borne.

If you're growing "heirloom tomatoes" and you have only one cultivar,
chances are good your seedlings will come true next year. If you've got
several types, you may see some intermediates between the cultivars
next year... you've created hybrids. If you're growing hybrid tomatoes
this year and save seed from them, you're going to see a lot more variability
in the progeny next year.

Anyhow, enjoy... the process isn't difficult, and it's fun to see what
you get.

FWIW, when I lived in the upper midwest (Iowa, to be exact), I found that
if I direct-seeded my tomatoes outdoors about the time everyone else was
putting out tomato plants from those little 6-pack pony packs, my direct-
seeded tomatoes were ripe within a day or two of the same cultivar planted
from pony packs. Saves a whole lot of fussing with cold frames, fluorescent
lights, repotting seedlings, etc., etc. But then again, growing your
own veggie transplants can be fun, too.

With our very short growing season in the cooler portions of the Pacific
Northwest, I've found it does pay to transplant some pretty husky starts
for everything but the shortest season tomatoes. Our coolish temperatures
just don't make for quick early growth of tomato plants from direct seeding
in the garden.

Kay


Stubby 10-08-2005 07:07 PM



Bill wrote:
Never before have I tried growing a tomatos plants from seeds.


Note that hybrid tomatoes tend to revert to a previous generation. You
might lose some of the characteristics that were prized in the tomato.
That's the same reason that volunteer plants don't work too well.

Bill 10-08-2005 10:14 PM

Thank you both so very much.

I live in the opposite part of the country from Kay...central Florida.

Since we have two tomatoe seasons a year, I wonder if storing for a
half-year would work?

Bill
William Redding
Medical Researcher at
www.linkable.org
Learn a language at
www.ITeachOonline.com


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