Re: HYB: seed preparation the lazy man's way
- Subject: Re: HYB: seed preparation the lazy man's way
- From: &* G* C* <j*@cox.net>
- Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 22:32:12 -0500
- List-archive: <http://www.hort.net/lists/iris/> (Web Archive)
No lids, Christian. They just stack on top of each other lidless. Air gets to the seeds for drying because the containers aren't closed. By the same token, however, once the seeds are soaking, the stacking helps keep them moist.
A washing machine lint trap is a rolled-up wire mesh contraption that unrolls to fit over the end of the outlet hose in the washtub sink into which the washing machine drains and is secured to the hose with a plastic cinch. It's like a long, tubular sieve. Also called a filter. In a larger size, it would fit nicely over an elephant's trunk. -- Griff
----- Original Message ----- From: "christian foster" <flatnflashy@yahoo.com>
To: <iris@hort.net> Sent: Monday, November 26, 2007 5:16 PM Subject: Re: [iris] HYB: seed preparation the lazy man's way
okay, just because it feels like there are white elephants in the room...I'm assuming, though you didn't specify, that the lid of the cheese dip containers are perforated to allow airflow? Surely you wouldn't dare not having lids?You said washing machine lint trap, did you really mean the dryer? I've seen lint traps for washing machines but the one I saw was plastic and probably too big to be convenient to use.christian "J. Griffin Crump" <jgcrump@cox.net> wrote:I'm taking a break from seed planting, so thought I'd offer these thoughts.This posting is only about preparing seeds for planting in pots. There are anumber of good previous postings in the Archives about seed potting, particularly Paul Black's method. The following preparation method makes two assumptions: 1) Seeds need to dry out before planting. Then, 2) Seeds should be soaked before planting.If you don't agree with those assumptions, you needn't bother reading this.Like most of us, I'm pretty busy, and irises are only part (though a VERY BIG PART) of my life. So, I'm always looking for ways to do things that take the least amount of time and fooling-around-with. The following is what works forme: 1. Drying them out:I put each lot (all the seeds from a pod), with the tag from the cross, in the kind of shallow plastic container that your cheese dip comes in, and I stackseveral on top of each other, but not so high that they might tip over. Acouple of thousand seeds can be stored this way in about a 2' x 2' space on ashelf. They then sit undisturbed until October or November (or, in a bad year, even December). 2. Soaking them:You may have noticed that I didn't knot them in old nylons or panty-hose andhang them in the toilet tank (which I call the flush-with-success method).Being a divorced male, I don't have a ready supply of such items and wouldn't use them if I did, since I don't care to decorate the baths in that manner nor expend the time and effort required to secure each lot in its respective knot. Instead, at the end of the drying period, I pour about 1/4 inch of water into each cheese dip container and re-stack them, setting each stack in a plasticbowl that the Chinese food comes in so that they don't overflow onto the shelf. After 10 days, more or less, I rinse each lot thoroughly beforeplanting. This is to rid the seeds of the gunk that has accumulated on themduring the soaking process. To do this, I pour each lot of seeds into a washing machine lint trap and hold it under a tap, full-force, for a few moments. The wire mesh holds even the smallest seeds. (If you decide to dothis, remember to put the sieve/stopper in the drain opening, just in case youspill any.) The seeds then go back into their (also rinsed) cheese dip container, and are re-stacked until ready to be sowed. In my case, they'resowed in 1-gallon pots. This may take about 3 days, with breaks, during whichI'm careful to keep the seeds moist overnight simply by putting an empty cheese dip container over any uncovered stack. That's it. And now, back to the stack! -- Griff Zone 7 along the tidal Potomac near Mount Vernon, in Virginia --------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@hort.net with the message text UNSUBSCRIBE IRIS ---------------------------------Be a better sports nut! Let your teams follow you with Yahoo Mobile. Try it now.--------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@hort.net with the message text UNSUBSCRIBE IRIS
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