Search
Latest topics
» Happy Birthday!!by AtlantaMarie Today at 7:11 am
» How best to keep a fallow SFG bed
by KiwiSFGnewbie Yesterday at 9:14 pm
» Thai Basil
by markqz Yesterday at 1:40 pm
» Preserving A Bumper Tomato Harvest with Freezing vs Canning
by plantoid Yesterday at 11:36 am
» New SFG gardener in Auckland
by sanderson Yesterday at 12:14 am
» Mark's first SFG
by sanderson 11/6/2024, 11:51 pm
» Need Garden Layout Feedback
by sanderson 11/5/2024, 2:33 pm
» What Have You Picked From Your Garden Today
by OhioGardener 11/5/2024, 2:29 pm
» Greetings from Southeastern Wisconsin
by sanderson 11/5/2024, 2:01 pm
» N & C Midwest: Nov. Dec. 2024
by Scorpio Rising 11/3/2024, 3:51 pm
» Spinning Compost Bin-need some ideas
by rtfm 11/2/2024, 7:49 pm
» Kiwi's SFG Adventure
by KiwiSFGnewbie 10/31/2024, 9:55 pm
» Growing fruit trees in Auckland
by OhioGardener 10/31/2024, 4:23 pm
» Vermiculite -- shipping sale through 10/31/2024
by markqz 10/30/2024, 2:27 pm
» N & C Midwest: October 2024
by Scorpio Rising 10/30/2024, 10:38 am
» What are you eating from your garden today?
by Scorpio Rising 10/27/2024, 10:27 pm
» Old Mulch and Closing Beds for Winter
by sanderson 10/26/2024, 11:00 pm
» Ohio Gardener's Greenhouse
by OhioGardener 10/25/2024, 7:17 pm
» Hello from Land of Umpqua, Oregon Zone 8b
by sanderson 10/25/2024, 3:14 pm
» Hello everyone!
by SFGHQSTAFF 10/24/2024, 3:22 pm
» Senior Gardeners
by sanderson 10/23/2024, 6:09 pm
» Hello from South Florida
by markqz 10/23/2024, 10:30 am
» Confirm what this is
by sanderson 10/11/2024, 2:51 pm
» Harlequin Beetles?
by sanderson 10/7/2024, 3:08 pm
» N & C Midwest: September 2024
by OhioGardener 9/30/2024, 4:13 pm
» The SFG Journey-Biowash
by OhioGardener 9/29/2024, 8:33 am
» Fall is For Garlic Planting
by Scorpio Rising 9/28/2024, 12:19 am
» source for chemical-free lanscape fabric
by Woodsong 9/19/2024, 10:51 am
» Hurricane
by sanderson 9/14/2024, 5:42 pm
» Pest Damage
by WBIowa 9/8/2024, 2:48 pm
Google
Stratify Seeds
3 posters
Page 1 of 1
Stratify Seeds
New seeds came today from a mail order company. The instructions say to stratify them for x# days. The Internet leads me to various sites and blogs with different methods to stratify. The seeds requiring this technique include riverbank grape seeds, raspberry seeds, blueberry seeds, and pawpaw seeds.
Does anyone have a favorite and proven method? Do the different types of seeds require diverse methods?
Does anyone have a favorite and proven method? Do the different types of seeds require diverse methods?
mijejo- Posts : 161
Join date : 2011-05-25
Location : Cincinnati, Ohio
Re: Stratify Seeds
mijejo wrote:New seeds came today from a mail order company. The instructions say to stratify them for x# days. The Internet leads me to various sites and blogs with different methods to stratify. The seeds requiring this technique include riverbank grape seeds, raspberry seeds, blueberry seeds, and pawpaw seeds.
Does anyone have a favorite and proven method? Do the different types of seeds require diverse methods?
Stratifying seeds is often different for different seeds and differing sized seeds so I'd tend to use a search engine and ask it about each type of seed you have .
Ie ask " Stratifying Rasberry seeds " or " Rasberry seed + stratification " etc. etc.
Some are just covering seeds in damp sand and leaving on a cold wall out of the sun for " X " weeks etc , others ask for use of a refridgerator , others ask for wetting seeds , rubbing off bits of casings and others simply just covering with a damp cloth for a few days at nigh on room temperature.
plantoid- Posts : 4095
Join date : 2011-11-09
Age : 73
Location : At the west end of M4 in the UK
Re: Stratify Seeds
Last year I ordered Sea Kale seeds from Nichols Garden Nursery. Funny things...each seed appeared to be encased in a cork-like substance (I guess to assure the sea kale's seeds float on the ocean currents to wash up on new beaches before sprouting). Anyway, I found it easy to file a notch in each seed with an old nail file. I now have four sea kale plants which have gone into 'hibernation' for the winter. I'm looking forward to seeing them emerge next spring...one of which I will cover with a pot to blanch so we can cook it in the European manner.
Nonna.PapaVino- Posts : 1435
Join date : 2011-02-07
Location : In hills west of St. Helens, OR
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum