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Lettuce blossoms and seeds |
Lettuce is a common fresh food and very easy to grow. It makes sense to allow a few lettuce plants to go to seed in the garden and claim your independence from purchased seed. Saving lettuce seeds is an exercise in being
present. Every few days, more golden blossoms ripen into fluffy parachutes,
and a new batch of seeds is ready to fly. That’s when you have to be
there! Small-scale backyard production
keeps you in touch with these big events.
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Lettuce flowering stalk |
Lettuce plants are beautifully contradictory beings. They equip their seeds with parachutes to
help them fly away on the wind, AND they ooze a sticky sap, latex, that temporarily
glues the newly released seeds to anything that blunders through the lettuce
patch, bruising leaves and stems. These
opposing traits ensure that the seeds can be carried by both wind and animals –
very clever! I’ve been watching this year's seed production since late May,
when it became too hot in my Kansas City garden for lettuces. They love cool weather but grow tall and
develop a very bitter flavor if the temperatures hit 90. That single tall stem produces many tiny
yellow flowers resembling mini dandelions, and the family resemblance is no
coincidence since both plants are in the Asteracea family.
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Lettuce seeds in bowl |
Seed-saving guides describe lettuce seed harvesting as a
complicated and messy process requiring bagging and various grades of mesh
screen. In the sustainable backyard garden, it’s done easily and with no special
equipment. To harvest lettuce seeds, break
off the fluffy-headed seed pods and keep them intact. Back indoors, rinse the sticky latex off your
fingers, then hold the seeds by the fluffy end and gently pull and twist the
pod at the opposite end to release the covering from the individual seeds. Brush the seeds into a bowl, let them sit on
the counter for a day, then package in paper envelopes labeled with seed type
and date. I harvested 5 grams of seed from a single lettuce plant, the equivalent of 5 seed packets in the store, for a savings of $10! Keep them in a cool, dry, dark place and your lettuce seeds will populate
your garden during spring and fall for the next 3 years.
When we set aside a few of our vegetable plants for seed production
we’re one step closer to self-reliance through food independence. Imagine every
yard with a small backyard garden and neighbors sharing produce, then trading
seeds. It seems beautifully
contradictory but it makes perfect sense: true food independence achieved through
neighborhood inter-dependence. I
believe we can make this dream a reality, and the time is now.
Great article! Thank you for the information!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Angelina. I'm all about getting the information out there to help everyone have more confidence to grow a little more of their own food.
ReplyDelete