Seeds and their sow by dates
I recently found an old packet of Mr Fothergill's
Cayenne Pepper seeds marked as "Packed in July 2004", "Sow by 2006". Though, what the heck... sow them anyway (4th May). Lo and behold, there seems to be plenty of them sprouting :-) Do I risk death if I continue ? ;-) |
Seeds and their sow by dates
On May 23, 2:02 pm, "R.A.Omond" wrote:
I recently found an old packet of Mr Fothergill's Cayenne Pepper seeds marked as "Packed in July 2004", "Sow by 2006". Though, what the heck... sow them anyway (4th May). Lo and behold, there seems to be plenty of them sprouting :-) Do I risk death if I continue ? ;-) Every time a new road is dug and you see masses and masses of poppies (or every time a war is fought and the craters get covered in poppies), some of those will be from decades earlier. Some seeds have to be able to last for ages. There are urban legends of seeds surviving in pyramids but that may be just rumour. So some seeds do last ages, especially if kept cool and dry. The best by dates are to cover themselves in case of people trying to grow old seeds and nothing coming up. I have also had the reverse happen. Fairly fresh seed that just went off (got damp or just dried out too much) within a year of buying. It just occurs to be that tomato (and I guess pepper) seeds can survive passage through humans so they are tough. As for death, you do know you risk coconut Gdang Gdang worms by eating old pepper seeds. Des |
Seeds and their sow by dates
In article , "R.A.Omond" writes: | I recently found an old packet of Mr Fothergill's | Cayenne Pepper seeds marked as "Packed in July 2004", | "Sow by 2006". Though, what the heck... sow them | anyway (4th May). | | Lo and behold, there seems to be plenty of them | sprouting :-) | | Do I risk death if I continue ? ;-) Nah - they're probably a variety for wimps, anyway :-) I am a bit annoyed that my Jamaican Red Hot haven't germinated properly, though my Bird's Eye have done OK :-) More seriously, most seeds keep for some years if kept dry, and some keep for decades. If they are kept very dry (and preferably cold), many seeds will keep indefinitely (which is NOT the same as forever!) Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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