DIY Seed Vault-Save Seed For 10 Years | PreparednessMama

Drying and Saving Seeds for Long Term Storage
DIY Seed Vault - Save your seed for 10 years | PreparednessMama

It is the end of the seed growing season and the local hardware store will soon have their seeds on sale – dirt cheap. Just because seed packets are given an expiration date, it doesn’t mean that the seeds actually EXPIRE after the current year. I’m going to save seeds in my own seed vault. They will be viable for 10 years.

Why 10 years? I can start now to build a supply of family favorites, which we can use to be more self-reliant. Once my plan is implemented, I won’t have to be dependent on those big seed companies in the future.

First a Little Seed Primer, What Kinds of Seed Should You Be Storing?

Heirloom Seeds have been around for a long time, some are even from the early 1800’s. So far, experts in the field agree that heirloom vegetables are old, open-pollinated cultivars. To be an heirloom, the plant must have a reputation for being high quality, have good taste and be easy to grow.

Once hard to get, heirloom seeds are now easier to purchase, thanks to businesses like Seed Savers Exchange. Hundreds of thousands of people, worldwide are interested in saving these old time seeds for future generations. Some local nurseries are also carrying them as part of their yearly stock.

If you are growing a garden with the intent of being self-reliant and saving your own seeds for the next year harvest, then heirloom and open pollinated seeds are what you want to grow. They will produce a reliable and consistent crop, year after year.

Hybrid Seeds (F-1, F-2) are relatively new in the gardener’s world, only being available since 1951. This seed will produce true to form only once. So, if you grow your favorite F-1 hybrid broccoli – that one that puts out great side-shoots – you cannot save the seed and expect to get the same plant next year. Hybrid seeds are only good for one year.

That doesn’t mean that you should not put hybrid seeds in your seed vault, it just means that they cannot be the ONLY kind of seed you are saving.

I have not yet perfected the art of seed saving from my yard. Each year I try to learn how to save a different seed. I only pick the ones that have produced especially well. It seems that every kind of vegetable and flower has its own unique process to be followed and I have much to learn about when to harvest seeds and how to store them.

“Seed saving is a skill largely lost these days. With seed packages widely available, who needs to save seeds anymore? You can simply buy more in the spring, right? The problem with many common garden seeds is their origin as a hybrid. And many of these hybrid varieties have been bred for size, or resistance to a particular disease, and not for that old-time flavor.” (source)

Genetically Modified Crops (GMOs) are becoming more ingrained in the seed industry every year. They are defined as plants used in agriculture, the DNA of which has been modified using genetic engineering techniques. In most cases, the aim is to introduce a new trait to the plant which does not occur naturally in the species.

Examples in food crops include resistance to certain pests, diseases, or environmental conditions, reduction of spoilage, or resistance to chemical treatments. (source Wikipedia) I’m going to let you make your own decision about whether you want to introduce this type of seed into your seed vault. Do the research!

Reason number one for saving seeds is that it is cheaper than buying pre-packaged seeds from your local supermarket or nursery. Saving seeds involves a moderate amount of work but it will pay dividends as there are several other reasons to save seeds:

Why Saving Seeds?

  1. Saving seeds helps you become more self-reliant. You won’t have to rely on seed companies to get your seeds every year.
  2. By saving seeds, you’ll help varieties adapt to your local conditions; the more plant generations you plant from the same seed, the more likely the plant gets fully adapted to your local microclimate and soil conditions, which will result in a healthier, happier and very productive crop.
  3. You’re in full control. By knowing which kind of seeds, you have on hand, you know exactly what you’ll be eating. Seeds sold in supermarkets are chemically coated or genetically engineered. Heirloom varieties are the best, but hybrids can turn into heirlooms over the years too, with the caveat that they’re highly unpredictable, which is why you should source your heirlooms from professionals.
  4. You’ll help promote biodiversity by bringing your input to the reproduction and breeding of seed. The current trend is to uniformize seeds on an industrial scale. According to National Geographic, in less than a century we lost a staggering 93% of variety in our food seeds. Currently there are just 12 corn varieties left in the U.S.A. In the 1900s, there were more than 300 varieties and the list can go on with many other staple food crops.
  5. You contribute to plants’ natural resistance against bugs and disease. Monocultures do not only remove the nutrients in soil while giving nothing in return, they are also less resilient when it comes to pests and disease, and more reliant on chemicals to stay bug- and disease-free. Also, chemicals will kill the good guys in your soil too, not just the bad guys, which can wreak havoc on the health of our soil. Crop variety will take care of pest control issues in the most natural and gentle way, even though many farmers would rather sacrifice variety for the profits. You can understand more about the importance of biodiversity for farming by researching permaculture.
  6. Extending the harvest. There’s a practical reason there are so many early, mid-, and late season varieties of seeds out there: You cannot eat or sell all the harvest before it goes bad if all your seeds ripen at the same time. Commercial seeds (we call them hybrids) will usually provide an all-at-once harvest, which is great if you’re an Agribusiness behemoth, but a real pain if you’re a small family of farmers.
  7. Flavor matters. Reckless genetic hybridization and altering have rendered the taste of most our beloved food crops horribly bland. Heirloom varieties are often tastier and more colorful than their hybrid counterparts, even though hybrids may produce more than heirlooms (at least the first generation). So, if you’re sick of tomatoes or green beans tasting like cardboard, start saving seeds today!

I’ll let Dr. Vandana Shiva bring more reasons to start saving seeds.