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Seeds And
Seedling Growing
Any reliable seed
house can be depended upon for
good seeds; but even so, there is
a great risk in seeds. A seed may
to all appearances be all right
and yet not have within it
vitality enough, or power, to
produce a hardy plant.
If you save seed from your own
plants you are able to choose
carefully. Suppose you are saving
seed of aster plants. What
blossoms shall you decide upon?
Now it is not the blossom only
which you must consider, but the
entire plant. Why? Because a
weak, straggly plant may produce
one fine blossom. Looking at that
one blossom so really beautiful
you think of the numberless
equally lovely plants you are
going to have from the seeds. But
just as likely as not the seeds
will produce plants like the
parent plant.
So in seed selection the entire
plant is to be considered. Is it
sturdy, strong, well shaped and
symmetrical; does it have a
goodly number of fine blossoms?
These are questions to ask in
seed selection.
If you should happen to have the
opportunity to visit a seedsman's
garden, you will see here and
there a blossom with a string
tied around it. These are
blossoms chosen for seed. If you
look at the whole plant with care
you will be able to see the
points which the gardener held in
mind when he did his work of
selection.
In seed selection size is another
point to hold in mind. Now we
know no way of telling anything
about the plants from which this
special collection of seeds came.
So we must give our entire
thought to the seeds themselves.
It is quite evident that there is
some choice; some are much larger
than the others; some far
plumper, too. By all means choose
the largest and fullest seed. The
reason is this: When you break
open a bean and this is very
evident, too, in the peanut you
see what appears to be a little
plant. So it is. Under just the
right conditions for development
this 'little chap' grows into the
bean plant you know so well.
This little plant must depend for
its early growth on the
nourishment stored up in the two
halves of the bean seed. For this
purpose the food is stored. Beans
are not full of food and goodness
for you and me to eat, but for
the little baby bean plant to
feed upon. And so if we choose a
large seed, we have chosen a
greater amount of food for the
plantlet. This little plantlet
feeds upon this stored food until
its roots are prepared to do
their work. So if the seed is
small and thin, the first food
supply insufficient, there is a
possibility of losing the little
plant.
You may care to know the name of
this pantry of food. It is called
a cotyledon if there is but one
portion, cotyledons if two. Thus
we are aided in the
classification of plants. A few
plants that bear cones like the
pines have several cotyledons.
But most plants have either one
or two cotyledons.
From large seeds come the
strongest plantlets. That is the
reason why it is better and safer
to choose the large seed. It is
the same case exactly as that of
weak children.
There is often another trouble in
seeds that we buy. The trouble is
impurity. Seeds are sometimes
mixed with other seeds so like
them in appearance that it is
impossible to detect the fraud.
Pretty poor business, is it not?
The seeds may be unclean. Bits of
foreign matter in with large seed
are very easy to discover. One
can merely pick the seed over and
make it clean. By clean is meant
freedom from foreign matter. But
if small seed are unclean, it is
very difficult, well nigh
impossible, to make them clean.
The third thing to look out for
in seed is viability. We know
from our testings that seeds
which look to the eye to be all
right may not develop at all.
There are reasons. Seeds may have
been picked before they were ripe
or mature; they may have been
frozen; and they may be too old.
Seeds retain their viability or
germ developing power, a given
number of years and are then
useless. There is a viability
limit in years which differs for
different seeds.
From the test of seeds we find
out the germination percentage of
seeds. Now if this percentage is
low, don't waste time planting
such seed unless it be small
seed. Immediately you question
that statement. Why does the size
of the seed make a difference?
This is the reason. When small
seed is planted it is usually
sown in drills. Most amateurs
sprinkle the seed in very
thickly. So a great quantity of
seed is planted. And enough seed
germinates and comes up from such
close planting. So quantity makes
up for quality.
But take the case of large seed,
like corn for example. Corn is
planted just so far apart and a
few seeds in a place. With such a
method of planting the matter of
per cent, of germination is most
important indeed.
Small seeds that germinate at
fifty per cent. may be used but
this is too low a per cent. for
the large seed. Suppose we test
beans. The percentage is seventy.
If low-vitality seeds were
planted, we could not be
absolutely certain of the seventy
per cent coming up. But if the
seeds are lettuce go ahead with
the planting.
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