"Gardening is a way to say that you believe in tomorrow." If that saying is true, than I believe! And if that is true, I need to save some seeds to have tomatoes tomorrow...or in this case, the spring.
Saving seeds is easy if you follow these steps:
1. Seed a tomato
2. Place said seed into a very fine sieve:
3. Rinse the seeds gently. The goal here is to remove the gelatinous material that the seeds swim in and the thin membrane around each seed. This takes longer than you think because those membranes can be really stubborn. For the really difficult ones, you can gently rub them between two paper towels. This is what it looks like before and after:
4. Dry them on a paper plate. See how many seeds I got from a half of a tomato?
5. Once they are dried, wrap the seeds in a paper towel and place them in a labeled food storage bag.
6. Store them in the refrigorator until them at ready to plant in the spring.
Happy Saving:-)
9 comments:
Thank you for this info.Is there a time in the season to harvest for the best seeds? Will definitely attempt.
Thanks, S
When you wrap them in the paper towel to put in the frig, is the paper towel wet or dry?
Oh thanks! I will show this post to the DH!
I love that expression. Its so cheerful.
Thanks for this. I'm gonna try this this fall. I'm excited.
We saved green beans last year, but this year the beans got huge before we can actually eat them. I think we'll try using them again next year. Thanks for the reminder, I almost forgot!
I totally remember this post!!!!
I never thought about saving the seeds.
I do this with heirloom varieties, but not with hybrids as the seeds do not always replicate the plants they came from.
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