Saving Heirloom Tomato Seed

in steemit •  7 years ago 

Do you want to save some money on garden seeds? I grow mainly heirloom and/or open pollinating seeds, especially for my tomatoes. The first time I tried this I had no idea how to do it. So I saved the seeds on a paper towel. I was unable to use the seed when they were dry due to them sticking to the paper towel.

Then I found the way to do it from several sources. When you cut open a tomato that you want seeds from, scape them into a small jar with water in it.

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The jar on the left I will use to save different tomato seeds. The one on the right I started a couple of days ago. You let the jars sit until they start to ferment, stirring them daily. After a couple of weeks you should be able to smell the change in the jar. Sometimes there will be mold floating on the surface. You need to use a spoon and get that out of the jar. The viable seeds will sink to the bottom of the jar. You can see this in the jar at the right.

The jar on the right contains the seeds from a new heirloom that I tried this year. I bought the plant and it was called "Old German". If anyone recognizes this tomato and know it under a different name please let me know. Here is a picture of a couple tomatoes from the plant. (my photography is not the best on this photo):

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In the jar at the right I will be saving seeds from a yellow pear tomato called Morning Sunshine. It is one of the sweetest and most delicious small tomatoes I have grown. They are slightly larger than most cherry tomatoes.

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The reason for putting the seeds in water and letting them ferment is to allow the “jelly like” sack around each seed to breakdown. The reason my first attempt failed is the “jelly like” sack stuck to the paper towel, making it almost impossible to get the seeds off the paper towel.

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Once the seeds are dry, and I do not rush this part, I then put them in small jars I have collected over the years. Colored jars, or jars you cannot see through would be best, although I have some seeds in clear jars.

I would like to to thank all my followers for viewing my posts. I have heard from a few of you about why so long between posts... I have been very busy working 3 jobs, although by the end of August I will have closed down 90% of my business and have more time, thus more posts. Thank you for your patience.

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Awesome Post! Thanks for sharing this great information :D

Thank you. Glad you enjoyed.

Thanks for your most important article explaining how to save garden seeds.

Good information for #gardening...Thanks @r2cornell

Thank you. Pretty scene

You are welcome Boss!! Have a great wish for your Garden @r2cornell

I just love it sir..

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If you mind checking out my blog for latest posts and updats, Thank you.

Thank You and will do

Informative tip. I'll resteem this and share on our other social media for our gardening followers. Thank you for sharing!

Thank you! I appreciate at it @preppers.

You're welcome. We'll get this info out there. @AmericanPreppers will share on Facebook, and @Tomtrademore will summon some upvote bots to help with this post.

Thank you very much. I never considered myself a prepper, but have followed this movement. I happened to be raised by parents who grew up during the depression and WWII...Survival meant taking care of your own and growing and preserving your own food. When I was young I observed,and learned... as an adult I found how they survived appealing and continued. Seed saving being only 1 of the many skills needed. Thanks again

Well, anyone who prepares is by definition a "prepper". Homesteaders prepare for the long term and are among some of the most advanced preppers.

Amen to that. I do not like being dependent upon anyone or entity. I was taught to take care myself and how to live off the land. I passed that on to my daughter and still working on my granddaughter. Thanks for your response!

Resteemed and shared to our facebook followers. Thanks for teaching!

Hope to have more as time allows, especially after I get into the Fall. Canning and preserving has just begun!

Upvoted and @Randowhale and other upvoting bots on the way

Thank you!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Awesome Post , Great info , thanks so much for sharing
Followed

Thank you!

wecome , thank you for the support :)

Great Post. Great information.

Thank you!

Are tomatos a fruit or a vegetable? Biologically, they're a fruit. But I'm fine classing them as a veg.

@mathiasian, the thing trolling me that @scilwa delgates SP to?

Is it a nice jew-hating neo-nazi scumbag?

Or a nasty jew-hating neo-nazi scumbag?

This might help you decide: https://steemit.com/politics/@mathiasian/brendan-fraser-was-blacklisted-after-being-sexually-assaulted-by-homosexual-movie-producer-philip-berk

Oh, yeah. "Great post!"

Nice Information....
Great! keep it up sir...

Thank you

Amazing post! Thank you for that 👍
Pls check out my latest post.

Thank you. Will check it out

Very interesting tip really useful. Thanks

Thank you!

great work.it is an interesting way to save tomato seeds.
good luck👍

Thank you.

I do the same but only use a regular plate so they scrape off easier! Great vid! Love saving my own seeds. My seed bank is quite large at this point but you can never have enough! Green thumb on my friend!

A plate for drying would be nice. I also use old plastic yogurt containers, but the plate might prove to be easier. I too have a sizable seed bank. Once I slow down with work I will begin saving other seeds. Thank you!

No worries. Maybe down the line we could trade? :)

Sounds like a plan

very very interesting one, worth to give it a try, let me try at my home and will post my outcome. thanx

Sounds good. Let me know if you have questions along the way.

sure sir..will let u know

wow thanks for this i try this sooner :)thank you for sharing

Thank you.

Good job, i hope the tomato seeds good, and can bw use for plantingg

Thank you. Most the time I get good germination from what I save.

I also have planted some tomatoes at home, The plan in a few days ahead I will post in steemit.

Sounds great. Look forward to your post.

Pretty enjoyable to read your blog.. 👏👌

Hey bro Good job, i hope the tomato seeds good, and that tamoto looking nice quality..did you cultivate it by organic methode or using fertiliser...@r2cornell

Thank you I appreciate it

Bro do you cultivate organic vegitables like only using water and other feed which is not having chemicals...or by using fertilisers to grow...

I use organic methods for all my out door gardening. Hydroponics I do use a chemical solution but i am gradually adding organic solutions. So when I start up my units I will use a combination this year. The goals is to go fully organic with the hydroponics

Ho nice.. very good plan bro organic food is very good for health and saved from side effects of chemicals..greate job bro...@r2cornell

Thank you

Always a pleasure bro....have a nice day...take care while you going to the forest...

Thanks for the tip on how to break down the “jelly like” sack around each seed !

Thank you!

Wow, that's awesome dude. Home grown tomatoes are the best. My favorite veggie. Now, in summer time I eat them literally everyday. The most delicious. :D

Thank you. I love fresh tomatoes and can a lot of them as well. I love the heirloom tomatoes

I don't think I've ever heard about them so far but being home grown tomatoes I bet they are brilliant. :)

Sweet! Thank you!

I love sweet tomatoes. I've never tried Morning Sunshine. I will try them if I see them in stores!

Thank you! I have been growing this tomato for years and do not recall where I originally found it. Let me know if you find a source

Tomatoes are very good for some people use as a deterrent and cure disease. thanks for share...

Your welcome. Thanks fr viewing/reading.

Thanks...

Nice tips, maybe I should show this to my mother, she will probably find it useful ^^

Thank you!

That's an amazing idea to save money and grow naturally :)

Thank you! At the price of seeds these days it is well worth the effort.

That was great to read learnt something new
Great to see you back :D

Thank you! I appreciate your comment. I am looking forward to this Fall and being more active.

That will be more awesome to read new great stuffs from you :D

I am so happy to read this! Here I have been being a novice getting my seeds stuck to the paper towel when clearly there was a better way! To think of all those wasted tomato seeds now long gone and not growing in my garden due to my lack of googling... ugh. Well, now I am on the hunt for tomatoes again I guess! I hope I can get my hands on some lovely ones like you have here! Thanks for sharing this!
XO

Thank you and your welcome! http://www.rareseeds.com/ is an excellent source of heirloom seeds. Most of our seed companies have been bought out by huge conglomerates. This source is a family run business. They even have a magazine called Heirloom Gardener, which is not very expensive for the education you receive.

Thanks for the informative tips. I learned something new today :D

Great. Thank you.

Great content. Thanks

Thank you!

very great! I'll tell my friend he's totally in to this. Thanks

Thank you. I hope he enjoys my post

i never knew this before thanks a lot for sharing this very useful.

Thank you glad you enjoyed it.

you are doing really good that a great idea very nice

Thank you

:) welcome @r2cornell

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

That's a creative and Brilliant use of it , i will try to use it too !!

Thank you

my pleasure,keep updating with more interesting things.

best tip i have ever seen :) thanks buddy :)

Thank you!

Thank you

your most welcome buddy :)

I love saving tomato seeds! Good post! I upvoted and resteemed!

Thank you! It is a great past time. I have one tomato seed that was passed to me by my father. It was given to him by a Polish immigrant. I never knew what it was called so I call it "Polish Paste" tomato. It is the largest past tomato I have ever seen. In a good year one tomato will come close to filling a quart canning jar. As soon as they ripen I will do a post.

awesome post, home made tomatoes are the best :D

Thank you. I appreciate it.

Very helpfull info thanks

Thank you. I appreciate it.

Looking for more posts like this
Best of luck for your business

Thank you. After 32 years of self employment it will be good to slow things down a little. Thought of cutting back in the past but did not feel ready. Now I feel good about this change. I will have more time for gardening and even indoor winter gardening, as well as my wood shop. Should give me plenty to post.

This same method works for passionfruit, goji berri, kiwi fruit and other berries

Great information! I want to start growing kiwi. There is a variety that is suppose to grow in our climate.

what climate is that?

Northern panhandle of Idaho. Suppose to be zone 5, although we plan for Zone 4 due to cold air coming down slope from the local mountain.

That is difficult. Not getting enough heat units to ripen the fruits..
Can you reccomend varieties for those conditions?

I grow most of my tomatoes in a hot house (hoop style greenhouse) to get around our cold nights. We can go from a high of 99 degrees Fahrenheit (37 Celsius) to the around 38 (3.33 Celsius) at night. Growing under plastic has worked well for me.

That is rather extreme! i wonder of theres a way to balance out your temperatures using thermal mass.
Using the mass a flywheel to moderate the extremes
have you heard of the Walipini system?

https://thehomestead.guru/whats-a-walipini-underground-greenhouses-101/
https://au.pinterest.com/yolimk/pit-greenhouse/?lp=true

Years ago I looked at underground greenhouses like in your link. I forgot about it. Thanks for the links. I will investigate. This could help.

Actinidia arguta may be ok there
And its delicious.
Cv Issai is self fertile

Very good article. And great knowledge

Thank you!

@r2cornell Cool beans... err... seeds.

Thank you!

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Thank you!

Thank you for the tips @r2cornell I'll try to use it. Very creative.

Thank you!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

119 seed taken from one Thai Pink Egg heirloom tomato. Wish I had acreage.
urban farming Central Florida USA

Thank you for the info! This tomato sounds interesting. Something new to look for!

yes it is.. thanks for replying sir..

I found the Thai Pink Egg Tomato on http://www.rareseeds.com

I printed a page. Sounds like worth a try.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

i'm happy that u tried thanks @r2cornell
today my friend Peter in London, England shows his Thai Pink Egg tomatoes. I sent him those seeds as a gift.

They are coming along nicely!

yeas they are.. he wanted to show me. he was so happy

here what i have now

I am definitely going to have to try this tomato next season.

ohh wow that's great .. i wish u very best of luck sir..
stay blessed

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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Wow, I didn't knew about this. This is very useful.

Thank you!

Useful Techniques to save the seeds from being dry and useless.
Will You plant the Tomatoes seed that you are saving in the jar? or planing for something else ?

I try and save a couple years worth for my use in case of crop failure. I do give some seed away and give plants away to some in the spring.

Sounds like you really love your plants and sharing them with others shows the beautiful colors of your Heart .
Respect @r2cornell.
😄

This post has received a 18.75 % upvote from @lovejuice thanks to: @tomtrademore. They have officially sprayed their dank amps all over your post rewards. GOOD TIMES! Vote for Aggroed!

Thank you!

This post has received a 2.58 % upvote from @booster thanks to: @tomtrademore.

Thank you!

Hey, nice post .. collecting seeds this way is good idea i think :)
i used tissue papers to remove seeds from tomatoes in past.

It is the easiest way I found. I also do this with watermelon and cantaloupe, mostly to get the stickiness off. I do not leave them as long as tomatoes. Thanks for viewing and commenting.

You grow cucumbers ? as that's something everyone grow :)

Yes I do. I have been eating from those I grew in greenhouse and now those in the garden are growing. I eat them daily. Once the pickling kind are ready I will ferment some (ferment like making sauerkraut).

great. I personally used to grow, ladyfingers, tomatoes, cucumbers, potatoes.
and other vegetables like that. also had different fruit trees
specially apricots , dry them and then eat them. Yumm

I have a nice crop of potatoes coming along (planted them late), a cold hardy variety of sweet corn, green beans, peas and beets to name a few. My carrot seed was old and not much came up. I have a nice variety of fruit trees. Would love apricot tree but they do not like our cold winters. I have considered growing a dwarf tree in a container so I could better protect it.

Good work. Saving seed is so much productive and money saving fun. We have gotten a little carried away over the last two years and now have thousands of seeds from various varieties and types of veggies. Capt'n also made two short videos about saving Tomato and Carrot seed. Here is the Tomato post on steemit that leads to where we host our videos on minds.com. https://steemit.com/homesteading/@piratefoodco/saving-seed-easy-and-productive-focus-on-tomatoes

Thanks. I saved your link to review. Today I am canning plums. I will have something to look forward to.

Mmmmm. Plums good! :) We currently have to eat through as many kg of frozen plums as possible as we are in the process of moving home. Last summer we harvested about 30-40 kg. Not all frozen. Lots made into preserves, smoothies and pies/crumbles. Have you ever made plum cordial? Very easy. Essentially liquid jam. :)

I have dried plums as well, but they were a different variety. Forgot about that this year with this new variety. Next year.

I have made plum jam but not plum cordial. Sounds like it would be good over pancakes. :o) I have frozen some fruits, although even with 2 freezers not a lot of room this year. I freeze my strawberries and raspberries though.

I got a bellyRub and this post has received a 4.00 % upvote from @bellyrub thanks to: @tomtrademore.

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Awesome post! Thanks for help the community :D

Thank you!

Thanks for this great information....
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Thank you

Thank You

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