By Kim Deel
Whether we’ve been gardening for years or learning how to Guerilla Garden more recently, we’re at a point in the US where many feel the need to grow at least some of their own food. What if you can’t find the specific seeds for plants that you want to grow this season? Let’s explore what we can do if the seeds we want are already sold out because this is about getting-food-on-the-table! I hope you are ready for a FUN challenge!
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The Law of Supply and Demand
Even in 2024, the law of supply and demand is still very much in effect. Seed companies, like all other businesses, base their expected future sales on averages of sales from past years to help determine how much inventory they anticipate will be needed for the upcoming season.
New Demands
Since the 2020 seed shortage, the demand for seeds is higher, companies and individuals will begin to save more seeds to meet consumer demand. And still in 2024, we can sometimes feel the pinch as seed companies are trying to figure out what the changing needs of the comsumers are.
Getting Creative
So, we have a big question—What are we going to do about it? Well, we are going to get creative and find seeds! This is going to be a challenge. But I hope you will choose to make it fun, like going on a treasure hunt! I need you to shift gears a bit, I want you to focus on our mission, which is to save seeds for our future. In the past, we’ve been all about growing the biggest, get-food-on-the-table harvest, but today we will take a step back, and focus on seed saving to prepare for our future, because the tortoise wins in the end, right?
Challenge#1
Learning how to save seeds. Any time spent on learning how to save seeds will give back more seeds than you can possibly plant in your lifetime. My favorite, hands-down winner of a reference guide is “Seed to Seed” by Suzanne Ashworth. My copy was published in 2002 and it has paid for itself many times over. This book will teach you how to properly gather and prepare seeds for storage. This is an absolute must for your prepping library.
Seed Storing tip #1
Choose your sacrificial fruit wisely. For example, tomatoes– choose the most beautifully-perfect tomato from your entire plant, even if a worm has chewed on part of it, it’s still a great choice for saving seeds for next year. You don’t want to save the seeds from a sickly tomato because we don’t need sickly tomato plants in our future gardens. Seed saving is a savings account and as we invest those beautifully-perfect seeds, you and your family can enjoy many beautifully-perfect tomatoes in the coming years.
(Your future self will thank you!)
Seed Saving Tip #2
Let your sacrificial fruits stay on the vine until they are over-ripe, past the point that you want to eat it, but not rotten. Doing so will yield large seeds that are hardy and will give you the best success at growing plants next season.
Saving Problematic Seeds
Start in your own backyard. Look around and see what you can “pay forward” to your future garden. Do you have any herbs that have flowered and “gone to seed?” If so, snip those flowery seeds off, stuff into a paper bag, and let dry. Remember to label them because once they are drying on your dining room table, they all look the same! (Trust me on this: been there, done that.) Transplant something. Even if you don’t want to, please transplant! Divide some of your overgrown herbs and place them into pots to bring in the house over the winter. Share with a friend or pay-it-forward — put out a curb alert on social media and share your bounty with a total stranger! Got Flowers? Marigolds, zinnias, cosmos, sunflowers, or hundreds of other varieties? Even if these always re-seed for you, pick off a few dried flowers anyway and save them to share with someone.
Back to the garden – cucumbers, and tomatoes – these seeds need to be fermented before storing. Simply put the seeds in a bowl of water to break down the slick coating for a few days until a white film forms at the surface, then rinse well and place on a paper towel until dry and you are ready to store. I like to store my seeds in snack-size plastic baggies, as paper envelopes can absorb moisture and ruin the seeds.
My Melon Story
Last spring I purchased Kajari melon seeds. I was super excited, as this was my first time growing them. I only planted 5 seeds, but they grew quickly and soon began to sprout softball-size melons—they are so good! Below you will find a picture of the seeds that I was able to harvest from ONE single melon. Beyond that one melon, one Kajari plant has over a dozen melons on one single plant! One tiny seed has the potential for thousands of Kajari melon plants! How cool is that? Now you understand why I say there isn’t a shortage of seeds, there is a shortage of SAVED SEEDS. We must band together to collect, save, and share the seeds!! If every gardener would save their seeds and share with others, we could go from the Seed Shortage to the Seed Abundance in a very short period of time!
Keep your eyes out
Next week, we’re going to continue discussing creative ways to save seeds – or to gather seeds for the 2024 growing season.
What About You?
Have you ever saved seeds before? Do you know about any good seed exchanges? Are there any other creative ways of which you are aware that people can obtain seeds? Share with us in the comments below so that we can all be better prepared!
Together lets Love, Learn, Practice, and Overcome.
I’ve been saving seeds for years, green beans, tomato’s, hot peppers, green peppers, etc. the key is to use good seeds put them on a dry paper towel out of the sun in a dry place. let them sit for a full month or so and then put them in a dry container in the cabinet until late winter or early spring. then I plant them in plastis wash basin until the temperature is steady above 50 degrees. the bean seeds I am using are 4 years old but have done very well this year to. the tomato seeds re 3 years old. for some reason I had no green pepper seeds stored so I had to use plants from walmart but I will save those seeds.
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We save and share lots of seeds. FreePlantNGardenStands.org has a map of front yard free garden stands across the country, set up in the same vein of Little Free Libraries. These are a great place to get seeds, starts, supplies, and more! And also so fun to give back with seeds, excess produce, fruit tree trimmings for scions, extra pots, etc.
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