I've been doing this for many years now (about 45) this is a great way to take your favorite flowers to your next home. Planting them and re-harvest them frequently so they don't become stagnant is very important!
Seed saving for flowers is one of my favorite gardening activities! My daughter likes to sit down and save seeds with me, too. We get some good quality Daddy-Daughter time this way 😁
I saw a seed. saver say that a few grains of rice will draw moisture from the air from seeds and only need about 7 for a spoon full of seeds. Great advice like you always seem to teach. Gardener Scott again Sir I thank you for the teaching
The brown paper lunch sacks are definitely the way to go! My local Dollar Tree regularly caries the 40 pack regular size, I have occasionally come across 100 packs there too. I have just rolled each labeled sack closed and put them all together in an xl drawstring mesh laundry bag hanging in a spare room to dry out until a rainy or (eventually) cold winter day keeps me away from the garden. Its been a good task for the littles too, keeps their hands busy while teaching them about seed saving! Using the strainers is a great idea, I will definitely try it out next time!
Thank you sir. I was looking for months to find informations about how to collect seeds. You explain very well the entire process. Greetings from Italy
Wow this was a fantastic video! Thank you so much. I had no clue how to get seeds from my garden until this, now I feel confident for when the time comes.
What a great resource - A to Z coverage on harvesting from such a diverse plants and how to care for. Thank you for sharing your successful methods and thorough, efficient process.
I am a bit OCD about this. I collect seeds on walks and almost all my seeds. I have to resist now because I just have too many seeds and sometimes, too many plants. 15 stands of chives is more than enough. I am now cutting off the flower heads once they are mosty done flowering. You should get to this point too. Plants put out so many seeds and they last so long, that you will end up with more seeds than space.
I always look forward to your videos. Thank you for making these. It's inspired me to convert my ecologically sterile lawn into a pasture for the birds and bees. I've built a rain garden so far, and the next step is a robust vegetable garden with fruit trees.
Hi Gardener Scott. I have been collecting seeds for many years both flowers, heirloom veggies, etc. However, I store the seeds in a small paper bag with the date, and the type of seeds written on the bag. Interestingly, I am able to plant and germinate these seeds that are 7 to 8 years old. I believe that it's due to the fact that they have been stored in paper bags which keeps them dry with circulating air. Seeds stored in plastic bags and glass jars do not germinate after usually one year. This would be similar to using desiccate in a glass jar as you have shown.
Thank you so much for all the Gardening Tips, I have learned so much from you Gardener Scott. I have also been collecting my own seeds for a while and your tips will speed the process for me. Instead of writing all the details about the flowers I got the seed from, I find it faster to take a photo, with my cell phone, of the Flower and print it out on my cheap color printer, I then actually affix the pic to the envelope I am saving the seeds in. I still write the name and date I harvested the seeds but the pic really helps with knowing exactly what the flower looks like. I sometime even just drop the pic in the envelope or Jar with the seeds.
If you do regular CoVid testing, at least in the UK, there are small silica packs in each one of the test packets. I have been keeping them in my seed box, but the smaller ones would be better for your small jars.
I've seen other experts recommend storing seeds in the freezer over winter. Certainly is cool, dry, and dark. And if you have seeds the require stratification (cold period) to germinate, freezing the seeds certainly would satisfy that requirement. So, my question is, have you personally seen any need to store seeds in the fridge or freezer over winter? Thx!
I do store some seeds in the refrigerator to aid stratification but I stay away from the freezer. Many freezers have a frost-free mode that periodically cycles the temps and it could damage seeds that aren't completely dry.
I am just starting to collect seeds. Do you get the seeds from plants that die before freezing or do you wait to collect them after they freeze or does it make a difference. First time I've seen any of your videos. Very interesting. Thanks
This was my first year doing a cut flower garden and I’m excited to save the seeds for next year! You mentioned something about “hybrid” flowers. Some of my sunflowers are hybrid. Can I not save those seeds to plant for next year?
I'm only a garden junky but like veggies saving the seeds from hybrid plants are about the worst way to get great plants and will not breed true to parent plants. Do just buy the hybrid and enjoy them so your season will not be wasted your time, work and the beauty of your garden is worth it or just plant more of the heirloom type plants for they will be as the parent plants and help you plan your gardens outcome.
You can save the seeds but the plants won't grow into the same plant you're growing now. Purchased hybrid seeds only grow what you want in the year you first plant them.
Great video. I'm ok with everything but how on earth do you sow those tiny poppy seeds. Also, with all of these tiny seeds, how deep would you plant them?
Can you please show harvesting the amaranth seeds. I'm in zone 9 and maybe i tried to get the seeds too early? I got a huge pile of pink fluff but couldn't see any seeds.
Hello I was trying to let mines dry out until I seen some white bugs so I cut the seeds off the plant is there a different method I can use to finish drying them out
Just rub a bit between your fingers to check for seeds and check whether they are hard. You can start collecting any time you have some mature seeds. Some years, I wait for the whole plant to die. This year, my seed heads were so big, they were breaking off. Parts were starting to dry plus I have buckets of seeds from previous years, so I cut them off and lay them on trays to dry.
So when do you start planting the seeds? I picked a lot of different seeds last year and planted them in the fall in little pots, which I placed in the flower bed. Not a single seed sprouted - or maybe they did but instantly got eaten by snails?
I think over wintering fall planted seeds in pots might be tricky unless you mulch over the pots to protect the seeds. Try again with 4-6 in of shredded leaves on top & around the sides of the pots. That may help. Brush off when danger of frost is over & soil temps are reliably warming. Or try late winter/early spring sowing outside in milk jugs to get an early start. There's about 1M UA-cam vids on winter sowing.
My climate is similar to Gardener Scott's. I have some wooden raised beds that have been in place for 12 years. They are showing their age but they are still usable. I am replacing a few every year, and this year I plan to use corrugated metal roofing for the sides. But in a dry climate, wooden beds work pretty well for a lot of years.
Do u sale your seeds, I’d love to get a mixed variety from you, trying to get started in flower gardening. Just thought I would ask. Please! Poppy and cosmos or anything that you might be interested in thank u
different milkweed plants host different butterflies. so i believe that butterfly weed may not offer the same wildlife benefits as, say, Heartleaf Milkweed
Bob Ross of the garden. Thank you for these tips!
I've been doing this for many years now (about 45) this is a great way to take your favorite flowers to your next home. Planting them and re-harvest them frequently so they don't become stagnant is very important!
Finally I found a great Gardner that properly explains every trick of gardening ! thank you
I find Gardner Scott to be the most genuine person and I have learned a lot since discovering his channel. From South Africa 🇿🇦
Seed saving for flowers is one of my favorite gardening activities! My daughter likes to sit down and save seeds with me, too. We get some good quality Daddy-Daughter time this way 😁
I saw a seed. saver say that a few grains of rice will draw moisture from the air from seeds and only need about 7 for a spoon full of seeds.
Great advice like you always seem to teach.
Gardener Scott again Sir I thank you for the teaching
I love that you are really wise and calm.
The brown paper lunch sacks are definitely the way to go! My local Dollar Tree regularly caries the 40 pack regular size, I have occasionally come across 100 packs there too. I have just rolled each labeled sack closed and put them all together in an xl drawstring mesh laundry bag hanging in a spare room to dry out until a rainy or (eventually) cold winter day keeps me away from the garden. Its been a good task for the littles too, keeps their hands busy while teaching them about seed saving! Using the strainers is a great idea, I will definitely try it out next time!
Thanks Gardener Scott !!!
Thank you sir. I was looking for months to find informations about how to collect seeds. You explain very well the entire process. Greetings from Italy
Thank you
Very systematic way to collect seeds. I really like those small jars with the golden tops.
Wow this was a fantastic video! Thank you so much. I had no clue how to get seeds from my garden until this, now I feel confident for when the time comes.
Excellent presentation! Scott is a very good teacher.
What a great resource - A to Z coverage on harvesting from such a diverse plants and how to care for. Thank you for sharing your successful methods and thorough, efficient process.
I save ALL the seeds so I can share them with my friends
I am a bit OCD about this. I collect seeds on walks and almost all my seeds. I have to resist now because I just have too many seeds and sometimes, too many plants. 15 stands of chives is more than enough. I am now cutting off the flower heads once they are mosty done flowering. You should get to this point too. Plants put out so many seeds and they last so long, that you will end up with more seeds than space.
I always look forward to your videos. Thank you for making these. It's inspired me to convert my ecologically sterile lawn into a pasture for the birds and bees. I've built a rain garden so far, and the next step is a robust vegetable garden with fruit trees.
Forgive me what is rain garden
Thank you very much for the seed collecting lesson Gardener Scott!
Hi Gardener Scott. I have been collecting seeds for many years both flowers, heirloom veggies, etc. However, I store the seeds in a small paper bag with the date, and the type of seeds written on the bag. Interestingly, I am able to plant and germinate these seeds that are 7 to 8 years old. I believe that it's due to the fact that they have been stored in paper bags which keeps them dry with circulating air. Seeds stored in plastic bags and glass jars do not germinate after usually one year. This would be similar to using desiccate in a glass jar as you have shown.
Thanks for the video! Just started planting perenials from seeds so its nice to see what im getting myself into in a bit.
Thank you so much for all the Gardening Tips, I have learned so much from you Gardener Scott. I have also been collecting my own seeds for a while and your tips will speed the process for me. Instead of writing all the details about the flowers I got the seed from, I find it faster to take a photo, with my cell phone, of the Flower and print it out on my cheap color printer, I then actually affix the pic to the envelope I am saving the seeds in. I still write the name and date I harvested the seeds but the pic really helps with knowing exactly what the flower looks like. I sometime even just drop the pic in the envelope or Jar with the seeds.
Thank you! A very helpful video on seed saving.
Your channel is a god send. Thank you for making awesome videos!
Hollyhock seeds are so easy to save :)
Thank You for this video! It was extremely helpful. You gave some great tips for harvesting seed. I will have to get some of those jars.
Thank you for a great video!
Awesome
Thanks for the great lesson!
You are an inspiration
If you do regular CoVid testing, at least in the UK, there are small silica packs in each one of the test packets. I have been keeping them in my seed box, but the smaller ones would be better for your small jars.
I would happily send some seeds and a SASE to anyone who would be willing to send me some seeds 😊
Thank you for another excellent video. I love your calm style too.
Your old snail mail envelopes might be good, too
Thank you for responding to my comment . Next question : What size absorbent packet goes inside ?
I just use the ones I get free in electronic boxes and match the size to the container I use.
Love this, recycle reduce reuse!!! @@GardenerScott
I've seen other experts recommend storing seeds in the freezer over winter. Certainly is cool, dry, and dark. And if you have seeds the require stratification (cold period) to germinate, freezing the seeds certainly would satisfy that requirement. So, my question is, have you personally seen any need to store seeds in the fridge or freezer over winter? Thx!
I do store some seeds in the refrigerator to aid stratification but I stay away from the freezer. Many freezers have a frost-free mode that periodically cycles the temps and it could damage seeds that aren't completely dry.
I am just starting to collect seeds. Do you get the seeds from plants that die before freezing or do you wait to collect them after they freeze or does it make a difference. First time I've seen any of your videos. Very interesting. Thanks
I try to collect before freezing, but for most flower seeds exposure to frost is not a big problem.
This was my first year doing a cut flower garden and I’m excited to save the seeds for next year! You mentioned something about “hybrid” flowers. Some of my sunflowers are hybrid. Can I not save those seeds to plant for next year?
I'm only a garden junky but like veggies saving the seeds from hybrid plants are about the worst way to get great plants and will not breed true to parent plants.
Do just buy the hybrid and enjoy them so your season will not be wasted your time, work and the beauty of your garden is worth it or just plant more of the heirloom type plants for they will be as the parent plants and help you plan your gardens outcome.
You can save the seeds but the plants won't grow into the same plant you're growing now. Purchased hybrid seeds only grow what you want in the year you first plant them.
@@GardenerScott I’m fine if they grow differently or will they just not grow at all?
They should grow and it can be a fun experiment.
@Gardener Scott, is that you in the military picture on the wall behind you?
It is. I retired from the Air Force.
@@GardenerScott that's a really nice photo to see. Thank you for your service!
I harvested many blanket flower heads too early. They're not dry yet. Should I dry them on the flower heads or remove the seeds to dry?
Go ahead and leave them on the flowerheads. They might mature more.
Hi Scott! May i ask you, can i do the same thing with the flowers od Calycanthus Floridus???
Yes, you can. They are propagated from seed.
@@GardenerScott Thanks!
Great video. I'm ok with everything but how on earth do you sow those tiny poppy seeds. Also, with all of these tiny seeds, how deep would you plant them?
I just sprinkle them on the soil and water them in.
Screen some sand and mix in with that
Can you please show harvesting the amaranth seeds. I'm in zone 9 and maybe i tried to get the seeds too early? I got a huge pile of pink fluff but couldn't see any seeds.
The seeds are quite small but noticeable. You probably tried too early.
When do you plant them up ?
I sow seeds outside in fall and start some seeds indoors to transplant in spring.
@@GardenerScott Thank you 👍😃
Hello I was trying to let mines dry out until I seen some white bugs so I cut the seeds off the plant is there a different method I can use to finish drying them out
If they have matured enough they can be dried off the plant.
Didn't see where you bought the small jars ?
Here they are: amzn.to/3gq2Vmt
I can't find where the black eyed Susan seeds are. I've saved every year but don't ever find any.
Was that Amaranth in this video ready to harvest seed? I'm waiting for mine to ripen right now.
Just rub a bit between your fingers to check for seeds and check whether they are hard. You can start collecting any time you have some mature seeds. Some years, I wait for the whole plant to die. This year, my seed heads were so big, they were breaking off. Parts were starting to dry plus I have buckets of seeds from previous years, so I cut them off and lay them on trays to dry.
So when do you start planting the seeds? I picked a lot of different seeds last year and planted them in the fall in little pots, which I placed in the flower bed. Not a single seed sprouted - or maybe they did but instantly got eaten by snails?
I start most of my seeds indoors in late winter.
I think over wintering fall planted seeds in pots might be tricky unless you mulch over the pots to protect the seeds. Try again with 4-6 in of shredded leaves on top & around the sides of the pots. That may help. Brush off when danger of frost is over & soil temps are reliably warming.
Or try late winter/early spring sowing outside in milk jugs to get an early start.
There's about 1M UA-cam vids on winter sowing.
@@GardenerScott Thank you, I don't have a lot of indoor space, but I will probably still try it that way.
@@flatsville1 Thank you for the advise.
How long do you expect your wooden raised beds to last?
In my dry climate the boards may show cracks after 3-5 years. I've had beds for 10 years that were still fine.
My climate is similar to Gardener Scott's. I have some wooden raised beds that have been in place for 12 years. They are showing their age but they are still usable. I am replacing a few every year, and this year I plan to use corrugated metal roofing for the sides. But in a dry climate, wooden beds work pretty well for a lot of years.
Do u sale your seeds, I’d love to get a mixed variety from you, trying to get started in flower gardening. Just thought I would ask. Please! Poppy and cosmos or anything that you might be interested in thank u
I don't sell my seeds, but thanks for asking.
👍👍
do cosmos flower the 1st year? I started mine from seed this year and it still hasn't flowered
I started sonata white cosmos from seed this year and They did not bloom until late summer.
They usually flower in the first year. Too much nitrogen in the soil can hinder blooming.
Pumpkin seeds make
Will you send sseeds for me sir
Isn't that butterfly weed the same thing as milkweed? At least grown-up that's what I was told
different milkweed plants host different butterflies. so i believe that butterfly weed may not offer the same wildlife benefits as, say, Heartleaf Milkweed
Yes, mine is a type of milkweed.