trust me, this works

Found this baggie in the crisper drawer in the fridge. (I knew it was there.)

Very attractive. I know not to put it into a stir fry because it’s labeled “nuttallii white”, as in Calochortus nuttallii.  There are seeds in there, along with some pretty damp vermiculite and some Bordeaux mixture to keep it from turning into something from The X Files.

In her book on calochortus, Mary Gerritsen writes “The enzyme that degrades abscisic acid is activated by cold temperatures. It takes about four weeks at 4 degrees C [about 39 F] to activate this enzyme and degrade all the abscisic acid in the embryo.”

This prevents cold-hardy species from germinating at the wrong time. One thing to note here is that when people say that once seeds have fully imbibed (taken up water) they must not be frozen or they’ll die. Hearing that, you would wonder how seeds scattered from the plants in late summer or autumn make it through the winter.

The answer is simple. What people who say this really mean is that imbibed seeds should not be placed in the freezer. (Dry seeds are okay with this.) Freezers are much, much colder than actual soil temperatures, which in many cases don’t go below about +25F.

So it’s perfectly safe to sow seed of the cold-hardy species outside in the garden in autumn, just like would happen in real life. Best to label the area where you do that, though.

Now, back to the baggie. This is what you might call “controlled germination” instead of just sowing seeds with abandon, but there is a slight flaw in this plan. Can you see the seed? Nor can I. In fact, I have to scan each baggie every couple of days with a magnifying glass. If I see one seed germinated, I get excited, but not delirious. I wait one or two more days, and if a large percentage have germinated, then delirium sets in.

See, this works!

It’s at this point, unfortunately, where I have to be the most focused, because those little things (I guess they’re coleoptiles) are very, very fragile. I get some seed pots ready (filled with a mix of peat moss, perlite, and sand), make sure the mix is completely wet, tamped down (not level with the top of the pot), then fill the baggie with a little water and gently pour the vermiculite with the seeds onto the top of the pot, label it, and sprinkle a little sand on top of the pot.

Then they go under lights, in the laundry room, in a pan periodically filled with water, where they’re stay for at least a whole year.

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like a wave

I hear I get a free coffee mug for making a lot of posts.

Why miserable? Though I’m not entirely miserable, having a garden to play in, I miss my wife, and that emotion pervades everything I say, think, and do. I just noticed how Chess, the border collie, is starting to look like an older dog now (he’s ten), and went in to tell her that, and remembered she was gone. Even though it’s been 35 months and one day, my mind still works like that.

The URL means “miserable” in the language of the gods (Sanskrit), though I did originally typo it as meaning “parrot faced”.

Anyway. Here’s a shot of Anemone sylvestris. One flower out of the herd turned to look at me as I was taking the picture. Sorry I disturbed you.

Funny, these plants are growing in the front yard, mostly in shade, but don’t get any water at all. Maybe a little falls on them when I water the shade garden around the corner, but probably not much. The colony ebbs and flows according to drought, surging like a wave during wetter years, shrinking back almost to nothing during the frightfully dry ones. But it’s been here for at least twenty years, through good and bad times.

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