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Seed-Saving Biennials
                                            by David Cavagnaro

      I’ve been harvesting seed from all sorts of veg-     of biennial crops from my home garden: cabbages,
etables since I was a kid growing up in northern           kale, Brussels sprouts, leeks, beets, chard, carrots,
California. In a benign climate such as we had there,      rutabagas, turnips. Once you understand the basic
getting a seed crop from your vegetables happens           premise – you want to keep the plant in a dormant
almost on its own. Leave a plant – lettuce, broccoli,      state, either indoors or in the garden, through the
Swiss chard, almost anything – in the ground just a        winter and then grow it on the following spring until
little too long and pretty soon it’s going to seed. I      it sets seed – the techniques aren’t difficult, they just
never bought seed unless there was a new variety that      take a bit more time.
I was after.                                                     Maintaining my family’s supply of biennial seed
      No matter where you live, it’s easy to save seed     has become part of our routine for storing our winter
of annuals like tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, melons and     vegetables. At harvest time we simply separate out
squash. And in zone 8 and southward, biennial crops        some of the finer specimens as parent stock. We’re
– the cabbage family, onions and most root crops           lucky to have a large root cellar, where the tempera-
– are easy too. But where winters are cold enough to       ture averages 32 to 40°F and the humidity about 90%
freeze the ground hard, the biennials take a little more   – the cole and root crops keep very well. Early the
effort. A lot of people, even committed seed-savers,       following season we replant them outdoors, where
are unnecessarily afraid of trying.                        they quickly go to seed. Since seed for most of these
      Today I live in zone 4, where the winters get to     vegetables will keep five or six years, I only need to
30 below. And I’m still saving seed from all sorts         do this for a handful of crops each year.

                                                                         Brassica oleracea varieties
                                                                Many members of the family Brassicaceae are
                                                           annuals – mustards, Chinese cabbage, arugula, cress
                                                           and others – but members of the species oleracea are
                                                           biennials. Firm types of brassicas – kohlrabi, Brussels
                                                           sprouts and the hard storage varieties of cabbage – are
                                                           the easiest to save. The leafy brassicas (kale, collards
                                                           and Savoy cabbage) tend to mold and rot. Broccoli
                                                           and cauliflower behave like annuals. I’ll talk first about
                                                           cabbage because the way I handle any other brassica is
                                                           just a variation of the treatment I give cabbages.
                                                                I like to get my storage cabbages dug up and
                                                           in pots in the root cellar before the temperature ap-
                                                           proaches 20°F. I leave some cabbages in the garden
                                                           later than that for eating (throwing blankets or other
                                                           protection over them at night), but vegetables for the
                                                           root cellar must be in excellent condition. Cold-dam-
                                                           aged cabbages won’t last long before rotting.
                                                                Cabbages don’t have extensive roots. After
                                                           removing outer leaves, leaving just the heads, I lift
                                                           the plants with a shovel, shake off the dirt and place
                                                           them in five-gallon nursery containers, cramming
                                                           about five cabbages into each pot. I fill the contain-
                                                           ers with soil or sand and water well. The heads stay
                                                           absolutely perfect this way for seven or eight months.
                                                           Sometimes the humidity causes the outer leaves to
     Root Cellar with Biennials for Seed Saving
                                                           rot. I just pull those leaves off and there’s a perfect
               (Photo by David Cavagnaro)
                                                           cabbage underneath.

48                                                                                     Seed Savers Exchange
Root crops
                                                                      Carrots, beets, rutabagas, turnips and celery root
                                                                are not close relatives but are all brought through the
                                                                winter in a similar way. In mild climates they can be
                                                                left in the garden, perhaps with a little mulch to pro-
                                                                tect from cold where freezes do not penetrate deeply.
                                                                Where the ground freezes, it’s safest to dig them, trim
                                                                the leaves and store them in sawdust.
                                                                      Parsnips are the only root crop that can survive
                                                                deep freezing. Even here in zone 4, I can leave them in
                                                                the ground without mulching. The only danger is from
                                                                voles, which can ruin root crops under mulch or snow.
        Preparing Cabbages for Winter Storage                         I dig root crops for storage any time before the
                (Photo by David Cavagnaro)                      ground freezes, though it can be a hand-numbing job
                                                                if the weather is very cold. I trim the leaves about a
      With cabbages you can have your cake and eat it,          quarter inch above the root, brush off the dirt and layer
too. All you need to plant out in the spring is the root        the roots in wooden boxes.
with some stem – there are plenty of dormant buds                     Traditionally, sand is used to separate the lay-
along the stem that will sprout and go to seed. (Eat            ers of root vegetables. But sand is heavy, so I prefer
the seed cabbage heads last, though, because once the           coarse sawdust or even the chipped leaves I use for
head is cut off, the stem is far more prone to rotting.)        mulch. Separate each root from its neighbor because
If you plant out a cabbage with the head still intact,          some will inevitably rot (the separation keeps the
cut an X in the top to make it easier for the flower             decay from spreading through the whole box). Start
stalk to emerge.                                                with a fresh batch of packing material each season.
      For loose-headed cabbages (early varieties. Sa-                 As with the cabbage family, select the best speci-
voys and collards), make a special planting for the             mens for seed parents while you are sorting the crop for
seed crop, timed so you’ll have small plants with little        packing. Seed stock should go in separate boxes that
heads when killing cold arrives. Dig the plants, strip          are set aside, so there is no chance of eating them acci-
all the leaves until only a head about the size of a ten-       dentally. Any roots with insects holes or other damage
nis ball remains, and pot them up for storage like the          are most prone to decay and should be eaten first.
others. A late summer planting of kale overwinters                    All of these vegetables need cross-pollination so
right in the garden under a layer of mulch if winter            you’ll need to plant at least two of each to get seed.
temperatures are not too severe.                                But keep in mind that many more, perhaps at least 20,
      One cabbage will give you plenty of seed. Every-          are necessary to maintain long-term genetic integrity
thing in this family needs cross pollination by insects,        of these crops. Since these plants are much smaller
however, so you’ll need at least two to get a crop and          than mature brassicas, a full patch does not take too
you must separate each cabbage variety from all other           much garden space.
cabbages as well as any other brassicas. However,                     Beets are wind pollinated and will cross with
it takes far more than just two plants to maintain              Swiss chard. The others are insect pollinated. Carrots
genetic viability in these biennial crops. Geneticists          will cross with the Queen Anne’s lace, but the gene
recommend a minimum of 20 plants of vegetables like             for white roots is dominant, so any orange carrot you
onions, leeks, or brassicas. That may be more than              get the following season is sure to be true to variety
most backyard gardeners have space for. If so, you              type. Other root vegetables will cross within the group
can save seed for a generation or two (in other words,          as well as with wild relatives.
one or two times) before the genetic quality begins to                Again, the easiest way to handle the problem is to
slip, then buy in fresh seed.                                   grow just one from each group in a given year. Most
      In the home garden, it’s easier just to save seed         of these seeds will keep four years or longer with
from one brassica type each year and not worry about            little trouble. The exception is parsnip seed, which is
separation distance. The seed will last four years or           notoriously short-lived. We like parsnips, and I renew
more if kept dry at about 50°F. I routinely get five or          the seed each year, which is as simple as leaving a few
six years out of mine.                                          plants in the ground.
      Russian kale is not a true kale; it is actually related         To cover any storage losses, I like to reserve six
to rutabaga, Brassica napus, and will therefore not             to a dozen of each root vegetable for the seed crop, but
cross with other kales or oleracea varieties.                   again, if you plan to maintain your seed stock through

2008 Harvest Edition                                                                                                 49
several generations, up that number to about two dozen.   let the plants go to seed. For most varieties and best
All can be replanted outdoors as soon as the ground       insurance of success, I dig leeks in the fall and replant
thaws in spring, set very close together in the row.      them densely, as many as I can fit, if five gallon plastic
                                                          pots for root cellar storage.
                        Onions                                  I dig up my red onions in the fall and sort them
     Leeks are one of the easiest biennials to save be-   for storage like the other crops, saving the very best
cause: most are so very cold hardy. But regular onions    20 or so for the seed crop. In mild areas you could
are one of the more difficult vegetables – it’s hard to    replant the best specimens immediately and protect
bring them through a long winter in a fully dormant       with a light mulch of leaves or straw. In our climate
state. Onion seed loses viability very quickly and        where the ground freezes solid, onions tend to rot
you need to plant a good number of parents to keep        even if mulched, so we have to bring them indoors.
the seed stock from gradually declining in quality.       They will keep in a cold room (32 to 45°F) at 60 to
My family’s heirloom red onion kept getting smaller       70% humidity up to six months. They also keep well
and smaller and producing more multiple-centered          under very warm conditions – 77 to 95°F and about
bulbs, until I learned to have 20 or more parents in      65% humidity.
my seed patch.                                                  My onions sprout in late January or February. I
     Let’s start with leeks. In moderate climates you     pot them up so they can grow roots and move them
can overwinter any leek outdoors with a bit of protec-    into the root cellar. That tides them over until it’s safe
tive mulch. Here I can only overwinter the hardiest       to move them outdoors. Onion varieties will cross-
varieties, which are generally the short, stocky ones.    pollinate with each other as well as with shallots and
I dig them up and replant them in a trench at an angle,   potato onions.
so the roots and growing tips are well protected with a         For seed to remain viable a long time it’s crucial
bank of soil and only the tops of the leaves are above    that it be completely dry. Cut the partially dry plants
ground. Then I cover the leeks with a thick blanket       bearing the seed crop and move them indoors to a
of leaves. In spring, I just peel back the leaves and     very dry room. Harvest seed just as it’s ready to fall
                                                          away from the parent plant or as the pods are about
                                                          to split. If the seed still feels slightly damp, spread it
                                                          on paper in a thin layer.
                                                                Store the seed in small paper envelopes labeled
                                                          with the name of the plant, the variety and the date.
                                                          The only truly airtight containers are metal or glass
                                                          with rubber gaskets on the lids. Many small paper
                                                          packets will fit into a large-mouthed glass jar. Weigh
                                                          the seed in the packets, then put them in the jar with
                                                          an equal weight of silica gel, which turns from blue
                                                          to pink as it absorbs moisture.
                                                                After a week in the container, the silica gel should
                                                          be removed (it can be dried out slowly in an oven
                                                          or microwave and reused many times) and the jar
                                                          promptly resealed. Seed treated this way will retain
                                                          excellent viability for a long time. If the glass or metal
                                                          container is kept in a refrigerator or freezer, seed life
                                                          is even longer.
                                                                I encourage every gardener in mild climates to
                                                          give biennial seed-saving a try. For those of us who
                                                          brave our more northern arctic winters, creating some
                                                          sort of cold but not frozen winter storage space is
                                                          necessary, following the same conditions needed for
                                                          good winter-long root crop storage.

                                                            David Cavagnaro is one of SSE’s advisors. He
      Preparing Leeks for Root Cellar Storage               spent eight years as the Garden Manager at Heri-
              (Photo by David Cavagnaro)                    tage Farm.


50                                                                                     Seed Savers Exchange

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Seed Saving Biennials; by David Cavagnaro

  • 1. Seed-Saving Biennials by David Cavagnaro I’ve been harvesting seed from all sorts of veg- of biennial crops from my home garden: cabbages, etables since I was a kid growing up in northern kale, Brussels sprouts, leeks, beets, chard, carrots, California. In a benign climate such as we had there, rutabagas, turnips. Once you understand the basic getting a seed crop from your vegetables happens premise – you want to keep the plant in a dormant almost on its own. Leave a plant – lettuce, broccoli, state, either indoors or in the garden, through the Swiss chard, almost anything – in the ground just a winter and then grow it on the following spring until little too long and pretty soon it’s going to seed. I it sets seed – the techniques aren’t difficult, they just never bought seed unless there was a new variety that take a bit more time. I was after. Maintaining my family’s supply of biennial seed No matter where you live, it’s easy to save seed has become part of our routine for storing our winter of annuals like tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, melons and vegetables. At harvest time we simply separate out squash. And in zone 8 and southward, biennial crops some of the finer specimens as parent stock. We’re – the cabbage family, onions and most root crops lucky to have a large root cellar, where the tempera- – are easy too. But where winters are cold enough to ture averages 32 to 40°F and the humidity about 90% freeze the ground hard, the biennials take a little more – the cole and root crops keep very well. Early the effort. A lot of people, even committed seed-savers, following season we replant them outdoors, where are unnecessarily afraid of trying. they quickly go to seed. Since seed for most of these Today I live in zone 4, where the winters get to vegetables will keep five or six years, I only need to 30 below. And I’m still saving seed from all sorts do this for a handful of crops each year. Brassica oleracea varieties Many members of the family Brassicaceae are annuals – mustards, Chinese cabbage, arugula, cress and others – but members of the species oleracea are biennials. Firm types of brassicas – kohlrabi, Brussels sprouts and the hard storage varieties of cabbage – are the easiest to save. The leafy brassicas (kale, collards and Savoy cabbage) tend to mold and rot. Broccoli and cauliflower behave like annuals. I’ll talk first about cabbage because the way I handle any other brassica is just a variation of the treatment I give cabbages. I like to get my storage cabbages dug up and in pots in the root cellar before the temperature ap- proaches 20°F. I leave some cabbages in the garden later than that for eating (throwing blankets or other protection over them at night), but vegetables for the root cellar must be in excellent condition. Cold-dam- aged cabbages won’t last long before rotting. Cabbages don’t have extensive roots. After removing outer leaves, leaving just the heads, I lift the plants with a shovel, shake off the dirt and place them in five-gallon nursery containers, cramming about five cabbages into each pot. I fill the contain- ers with soil or sand and water well. The heads stay absolutely perfect this way for seven or eight months. Sometimes the humidity causes the outer leaves to Root Cellar with Biennials for Seed Saving rot. I just pull those leaves off and there’s a perfect (Photo by David Cavagnaro) cabbage underneath. 48 Seed Savers Exchange
  • 2. Root crops Carrots, beets, rutabagas, turnips and celery root are not close relatives but are all brought through the winter in a similar way. In mild climates they can be left in the garden, perhaps with a little mulch to pro- tect from cold where freezes do not penetrate deeply. Where the ground freezes, it’s safest to dig them, trim the leaves and store them in sawdust. Parsnips are the only root crop that can survive deep freezing. Even here in zone 4, I can leave them in the ground without mulching. The only danger is from voles, which can ruin root crops under mulch or snow. Preparing Cabbages for Winter Storage I dig root crops for storage any time before the (Photo by David Cavagnaro) ground freezes, though it can be a hand-numbing job if the weather is very cold. I trim the leaves about a With cabbages you can have your cake and eat it, quarter inch above the root, brush off the dirt and layer too. All you need to plant out in the spring is the root the roots in wooden boxes. with some stem – there are plenty of dormant buds Traditionally, sand is used to separate the lay- along the stem that will sprout and go to seed. (Eat ers of root vegetables. But sand is heavy, so I prefer the seed cabbage heads last, though, because once the coarse sawdust or even the chipped leaves I use for head is cut off, the stem is far more prone to rotting.) mulch. Separate each root from its neighbor because If you plant out a cabbage with the head still intact, some will inevitably rot (the separation keeps the cut an X in the top to make it easier for the flower decay from spreading through the whole box). Start stalk to emerge. with a fresh batch of packing material each season. For loose-headed cabbages (early varieties. Sa- As with the cabbage family, select the best speci- voys and collards), make a special planting for the mens for seed parents while you are sorting the crop for seed crop, timed so you’ll have small plants with little packing. Seed stock should go in separate boxes that heads when killing cold arrives. Dig the plants, strip are set aside, so there is no chance of eating them acci- all the leaves until only a head about the size of a ten- dentally. Any roots with insects holes or other damage nis ball remains, and pot them up for storage like the are most prone to decay and should be eaten first. others. A late summer planting of kale overwinters All of these vegetables need cross-pollination so right in the garden under a layer of mulch if winter you’ll need to plant at least two of each to get seed. temperatures are not too severe. But keep in mind that many more, perhaps at least 20, One cabbage will give you plenty of seed. Every- are necessary to maintain long-term genetic integrity thing in this family needs cross pollination by insects, of these crops. Since these plants are much smaller however, so you’ll need at least two to get a crop and than mature brassicas, a full patch does not take too you must separate each cabbage variety from all other much garden space. cabbages as well as any other brassicas. However, Beets are wind pollinated and will cross with it takes far more than just two plants to maintain Swiss chard. The others are insect pollinated. Carrots genetic viability in these biennial crops. Geneticists will cross with the Queen Anne’s lace, but the gene recommend a minimum of 20 plants of vegetables like for white roots is dominant, so any orange carrot you onions, leeks, or brassicas. That may be more than get the following season is sure to be true to variety most backyard gardeners have space for. If so, you type. Other root vegetables will cross within the group can save seed for a generation or two (in other words, as well as with wild relatives. one or two times) before the genetic quality begins to Again, the easiest way to handle the problem is to slip, then buy in fresh seed. grow just one from each group in a given year. Most In the home garden, it’s easier just to save seed of these seeds will keep four years or longer with from one brassica type each year and not worry about little trouble. The exception is parsnip seed, which is separation distance. The seed will last four years or notoriously short-lived. We like parsnips, and I renew more if kept dry at about 50°F. I routinely get five or the seed each year, which is as simple as leaving a few six years out of mine. plants in the ground. Russian kale is not a true kale; it is actually related To cover any storage losses, I like to reserve six to rutabaga, Brassica napus, and will therefore not to a dozen of each root vegetable for the seed crop, but cross with other kales or oleracea varieties. again, if you plan to maintain your seed stock through 2008 Harvest Edition 49
  • 3. several generations, up that number to about two dozen. let the plants go to seed. For most varieties and best All can be replanted outdoors as soon as the ground insurance of success, I dig leeks in the fall and replant thaws in spring, set very close together in the row. them densely, as many as I can fit, if five gallon plastic pots for root cellar storage. Onions I dig up my red onions in the fall and sort them Leeks are one of the easiest biennials to save be- for storage like the other crops, saving the very best cause: most are so very cold hardy. But regular onions 20 or so for the seed crop. In mild areas you could are one of the more difficult vegetables – it’s hard to replant the best specimens immediately and protect bring them through a long winter in a fully dormant with a light mulch of leaves or straw. In our climate state. Onion seed loses viability very quickly and where the ground freezes solid, onions tend to rot you need to plant a good number of parents to keep even if mulched, so we have to bring them indoors. the seed stock from gradually declining in quality. They will keep in a cold room (32 to 45°F) at 60 to My family’s heirloom red onion kept getting smaller 70% humidity up to six months. They also keep well and smaller and producing more multiple-centered under very warm conditions – 77 to 95°F and about bulbs, until I learned to have 20 or more parents in 65% humidity. my seed patch. My onions sprout in late January or February. I Let’s start with leeks. In moderate climates you pot them up so they can grow roots and move them can overwinter any leek outdoors with a bit of protec- into the root cellar. That tides them over until it’s safe tive mulch. Here I can only overwinter the hardiest to move them outdoors. Onion varieties will cross- varieties, which are generally the short, stocky ones. pollinate with each other as well as with shallots and I dig them up and replant them in a trench at an angle, potato onions. so the roots and growing tips are well protected with a For seed to remain viable a long time it’s crucial bank of soil and only the tops of the leaves are above that it be completely dry. Cut the partially dry plants ground. Then I cover the leeks with a thick blanket bearing the seed crop and move them indoors to a of leaves. In spring, I just peel back the leaves and very dry room. Harvest seed just as it’s ready to fall away from the parent plant or as the pods are about to split. If the seed still feels slightly damp, spread it on paper in a thin layer. Store the seed in small paper envelopes labeled with the name of the plant, the variety and the date. The only truly airtight containers are metal or glass with rubber gaskets on the lids. Many small paper packets will fit into a large-mouthed glass jar. Weigh the seed in the packets, then put them in the jar with an equal weight of silica gel, which turns from blue to pink as it absorbs moisture. After a week in the container, the silica gel should be removed (it can be dried out slowly in an oven or microwave and reused many times) and the jar promptly resealed. Seed treated this way will retain excellent viability for a long time. If the glass or metal container is kept in a refrigerator or freezer, seed life is even longer. I encourage every gardener in mild climates to give biennial seed-saving a try. For those of us who brave our more northern arctic winters, creating some sort of cold but not frozen winter storage space is necessary, following the same conditions needed for good winter-long root crop storage. David Cavagnaro is one of SSE’s advisors. He Preparing Leeks for Root Cellar Storage spent eight years as the Garden Manager at Heri- (Photo by David Cavagnaro) tage Farm. 50 Seed Savers Exchange