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collecting and storing seeds

Hi

we have been dutifully collecting seeds (or what we think are seeds) from the plants during harvest. they've been left to dry out and we're in the process of putting the best ones in envelopes to plan next season.

we've got a bit stuck with beetroot and sweetcorn which we've never grown before and had varied success with this year.

here's 2 pictures of what we've collected. are they really seeds and what should we do with them?

also, what do i do with the beets when picked from the containers? the first few i picked didn't store well and went woody and dry. i had put them in a hessian sack.

all help would be very greatfully received

many thanks

Mizz

Posts

  • MizzMizz Posts: 26

    image

    image

     

  • sotongeoffsotongeoff Posts: 9,802

    Sweetcorn seeds are like- well- sweetcorn-not what you have there at all-but I am not sure if that is what you were asking?image

  • MizzMizz Posts: 26

    ah ok, so what do we have here? this grew from the top of the plants....

    the mystery continues....

  • sotongeoffsotongeoff Posts: 9,802

    The tassels?-I think most people just discard

  • nutcutletnutcutlet Posts: 26,974

    Could the tassels be the male part of the system. The cob is mosr definitely the seeds



    In the sticks near Peterborough
  • nutcutletnutcutlet Posts: 26,974

    Did you get any corn cobs?

    I'd not save seed from beetroot that had bolted (seeded in the first year) they're biennials that sometimes flower and seed in the first year but this is not advantageous and may be related to the woodiness you mention. It's not a trait you want to reproduce. I buy some more next year and look for the words 'bolt resistant' on the packet

     



    In the sticks near Peterborough
  • Busy-LizzieBusy-Lizzie Posts: 20,924

    The tassels are definately the male part, needed for fertilisation. The female part is the cob, the seeds are the yellow niblets - which you leave to dry out. I would rather eat them and buy a new packet of seeds next year. You grow corn fairly close together in blocks, not long rows, so that the pollen from the tassels can fall onto the female bits.

    It's best to buy beetroot seed. Beetroot can be stored in damp sand, but cut the leaves off to about 2 inches and they must be young. Old woody beetroot doesn't store well. The best way of storing beetroot is to cook them and freeze them.

    Dordogne and Norfolk. Clay in Dordogne, sandy in Norfolk.
  • WelshonionWelshonion Posts: 3,114

    I think it would be a mistake to save sweetcorn seeds as they are probably a hybrid seed.  What you would get is a rather boring sweetcorn, when I presume you were trying to grow a 'super-sweet' one.

    The photo you have at the top is the male tassel.  It hasn't been a good year for ripening corn, did you get any?

    Beetroot seed will also, I suspect, be a hybrid and not at all what you would like to eat. Buy packets until you are more experienced, otherwise you will  waste your time, money and energy growing inferior vegetables.

  • ItalophileItalophile Posts: 1,731

    Good advice from Welshonion. The vast majority - or just about all - of domestic sweetcorn and beetroot are hybrid varieties that won't produce true to type. Bought seeds will last a good few years, stick with them for best results.

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