• Re: scarification?

    From songbird@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 19:14:07 2023
    T wrote:
    Hi All,

    What is the easiest way to perform "scarification"
    on small seeds?

    how small?

    sometimes such is provided by the environment
    via erosion/washing around and being abraded by
    hard things.

    so pehaps you could put the seeds in a container
    with some sand and small pebbles and shake it a
    little.

    if you have a lot of seeds you could break them
    into batches and apply different methods for
    different lengths of time to find out which one
    works best.


    And do you do this before or after performing
    stratification (freezing) on them?

    Many thanks,
    -T

    Me thinks a bird eats the berry, his digestive
    system scars the seed, he poops out the scarred
    seed, the weather freezes for the winter, the
    seeds germinated in the spring. But then again,
    I do not know what I am doing.

    we all have to start somewhere.


    songbird

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 15:24:00 2023
    Hi All,

    What is the easiest way to perform "scarification"
    on small seeds?

    And do you do this before or after performing
    stratification (freezing) on them?

    Many thanks,
    -T

    Me thinks a bird eats the berry, his digestive
    system scars the seed, he poops out the scarred
    seed, the weather freezes for the winter, the
    seeds germinated in the spring. But then again,
    I do not know what I am doing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From T@21:1/5 to songbird on Sat Sep 23 02:24:09 2023
    On 9/22/23 16:14, songbird wrote:
    T wrote:
    Hi All,

    What is the easiest way to perform "scarification"
    on small seeds?

    how small?

    sometimes such is provided by the environment
    via erosion/washing around and being abraded by
    hard things.

    so pehaps you could put the seeds in a container
    with some sand and small pebbles and shake it a
    little.

    if you have a lot of seeds you could break them
    into batches and apply different methods for
    different lengths of time to find out which one
    works best.


    And do you do this before or after performing
    stratification (freezing) on them?

    Many thanks,
    -T

    Me thinks a bird eats the berry, his digestive
    system scars the seed, he poops out the scarred
    seed, the weather freezes for the winter, the
    seeds germinated in the spring. But then again,
    I do not know what I am doing.

    we all have to start somewhere.


    songbird

    30 bilberry seeds. I'd posit they are about
    the size of blueberry seeds or maybe onion seeds.
    They are small, but I do not have them in
    hand yet.

    I like your idea of the rocks! Got lots
    of clean, pretty, small round ones.

    Do I freeze the first? Or ruff them up them first?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)