Free Garden Seeds From Your Landscape
Free garden seeds, How? Take them right from your own landscape.
This page
will give you simple tips on how to collect seeds from your own garden
and have them for the future.
I have been collecting seeds for years from existing plants.
Here is a little basic information that may come in handy.
There are
nonhybrid plants that produce flowers similar
to the parent plant.
The nonhybrid flowers and plants
are the best to use. There is a chance to get cross-pollination
or birds carrying seeds that will result in a mixture of colors
if there are other varieties of that same specie near by.
The result will be a chance of the following year having
a mixture of these colors.
The
hybrid flowers are the least successful when collecting seeds. These are plants that are intentionally
cross pollinate specific parents. The flowers
will actually look like their grandparents
and not their parents. This may sound a little strange,
but plants today are specifically grown as nonhybrids or
hybrids.
Annuals are the best producing flowers for collecting seeds.
The great characteristic about annuals is one or two of the heads
is enough for the following year for the an average garden. Below
are a few simple tips to follow to get your own free garden seeds.
- Some flowers have pods that the seeds will spray out when
they are ripe. It is important before they dry out and once pollination takes place,
to either place squares of panty hose or a small paper bag over the flowerheads.
Never use a plastic bag as this could actually produce some types of mold.
Some flowers that will work well doing this method are, Impatiens, Pansies, and Lupine.
- Other pods hold their seeds until they have totally totally
dried out. Take the ripe heads and shake the seeds into a bowl. Some flowers that will do well
with this process are Poppy, Petunias, and Pot Marigolds.
- Another method is tearing apart the heads. The seeds are
tightly packed into their heads. Take a bowl and tear apart the
heads. This is a popular method and can be done throughout
many different seasons. Some flowers done this way are
Marigolds, Zinnia, Morning Glories, and Hollyhocks.
- The final method is by protecting the pods. These pods
are inviting to birds and other animals. The key to accomplishing
this method is to protect the pods before the birds or other
animals get to them.
Protect the heads by taking a small
paper bag and putting it over each pod. This should be done
when the pod is near its maturity. Some flowers that should
be done this way are Sunflower and Cosmos.

I start many of my plants by purchasing seeds and germinating them either inside or directly into the ground. The
Burpee Company is highly successful company that gives you an enormous selection of different seeds. You can get seeds for the first
time and then collect them at the end of the growing season for the future.
There are many
spices and herbs that you can collect for free seeds from your garden.
that you can use any of these methods above.
I love collecting the seeds from Garlic Chives
and planting in different areas or containers
the following year. In the
variety of plants section,
there is a page on Sedum. This is a great
late summer and winter flower where the
heads can be put over a bowl and shake well.
Remember to find out if your flowers or plants
are pure nonhybrids or if they are hybrids.
If there is a specific plant color you are
looking for, a general rule of thumb is to buy
the seeds or bedding plants from a quality company
or nursery.
Collecting free garden seeds from your flowers and
other plants will give you the option of returning your
favorite specie in the future to the same garden, or
giving them a new environment in which to flourish. This
is a great simple solution as well as your very own
free garden seeds.