I take a sheet of paper towel. Mark it with a marker as to what kind of tomato I’m saving. Squeeze the seeds onto the towel. Spread them out. When dry I fold it. Put it in a ziplock and store in the freezer. Come spring I tear off a piece of paper towel with a seed and put it in a pot. Works everytime.
My grandmother would cut the tomato in half and squeeze out the seed straight on the ground outside. Come spring she had all of the tomato starts she needed for the year. The seed survived the cold winters in NY and always gave her a fresh crop of tomatoes the following year
I'll never understand why people think seeds can't survive winter. They have an actual shell for that. What do people think happen in nature where we aren't there to collect seeds?@@robertfiorito9888
I am a former Pennsylvania resident where I learned my gardening methods from Amish friends. I live now in the Philippines where I grow 100% of my crops from SAVED SEEDS. My most valuable possession is my 100+ glass jars of Vegetable & Flower seeds. Thanks to Doug & Stacy for sharing this important video.
I had an abundance of cherry tomatoes one year and couldn’t get to harvesting them all before a few dropped and started composting. Next year I planted tomatoes in a different spot and they STRUGGLED. But then all the sudden those old tomatoes seeds from the area I had the tomatoes the year before sprouted up and were stronger and had twice the harvest than the year before! God taught me a lesson in that. When you sow a portion from the harvest He’s given you, He will blessed it. Love God math!
Best tomatoes I ever had was from old house that was removed. And I told my friends help yourself they were thrilled they were crazy big, and beautiful
When I was a child I pooped in buckets and bushes and outhouses. That was bad enough but looking at life today I think back. I'm now 74 yrs old and thank God for every blessings he showed and gave me
I’ve been a seed saver for decades. This year my seeds were 11 years old, harvested, dried and saved. Over 50 plants came up, and now I have thousands of tomatoes. Oh my.
So your 11 yr old seeds produced crops? I thought seeds had shelf life of 2-4 yrs. Heck store bought seeds have shelf life of just that one year. That's amazing!!
Lovely to meet you. I am British and live with my Egyptian husband on a desert farm. Luckily we have our own well. Working towards self-sufficiency 😊. I am the green fingered one and currently collecting seeds so we never have to buy any. 😅 Every day i thank the Lord for his provision and this beautiful life 🙏 💕
Hi guys, I had an awesome day yesterday. Father Yah blessed us so wonderful. We got 14 bags of peaches 🍑 from one tree. All tucked in the freezer now.😊🍑🌻🌼🐑
We have moved from town to the country. Lots of land and the Most High YAHUAH has definitely blessed us. We discovered there once was a blueberry orchard here. My husband cleaned it out, next, we're fencing it in. We do have apple tree's, and next we are hoping to plant a lot of peach and pear trees.
In 2002 I had over 150 tomato plants come up volunteer. I had about 120 in 2023. They froze, they got snowed on and when it warmed up they grew. I had been in a bad car accident and didn't have money to buy plants, so I was very happily surprised & grateful to the Lord for a wonderful bounty. I just left them out in the garden, never cut them or dried them or anything. They grew on their own in the decomposing wood chips. Brandy wine is my favorite tomato. I only grow heirloom. I've grown organically since before it was cool.😊❤😊
I was raised saving seeds, bulbs, rhizomes, corn, etc. This was a mile high in Colorado, so the saved seeds, bulbs, roots, were put in packets, egg cartons, or a bucket with dirt surrounding them to keep them alive through the Winter. You learn a lot doing this. Especially flowers like Gladiolas which have a bulb, and a new bulb comes on top, you have to take the old dried bulb off after it has nourished the new bulb. Knowing when to prune plants is equally important. You can kill your plant doing it wrong and at the wrong time or season. Good information Doug & Stacy, we never did the tomatoes that way, I like the idea of it! My Mother would take an empty 1/2 gallon Milk container from the store, take off one side of the Length. Lay it sideways, fill it with dirt, poke little holes and drop a seed into it. She would water it and set them in the Southern windows of the house to sprout. At night She would either cover them or move them in from the window sill for more warmth. She started tomatoes, cucumbers, Peppers, etc. Peas, Potatoes, & Jerusleam Artichokes we started on St. Paricks day in the ground, in a hill of dirt, cover it with straw to protect from the Cold at night and late winter/early spring Snows. It was fun to find which ones came up first! Recyle, restore, reuse, and repurpose was also engendered here. We never wasted a Thing!
I definitely agree with you on your local heirloom seeds. I have the honor to grow tomatoes that were grown by my friends grandparents for 50 years and saved every year. They have passed on, but I continue to grow and share their amazing tomatoes. This year they were my first tomatoes to ripen and are still going strong. I first learned this method from a mushroom farmer
" And the earth brought forth grass, herb yielding seed after its kind, and tree bearing fruit, wherein is the seed thereof, after its kind; and God saw that it was good. " (Tanakh ) God bless Doug and Stacy 😇🙏💕🇺🇲
I pulled the guts from the tomato and put them in the freezer. After Christmas I put them in potting soil in either a milk jug or a wicking barrel and covered with a milk jug. They all came up in abundance! The winter milk jug sowing is the bomb.
I just left a lot of tomatoes drop every year and after negative 25 degree winters the seeds pop up when it’s warm enough do the same with pumpkin seeds etc
As a tomato goes bad in my kitchen or grows seedlings in the tomato 🍅 🌱 on my counter, I throw it in whatever pot is closest on the patio. Come spring I have thousands of seedlings 🌱. I can’t give them away fast enough. My grandparents, Native American and Romany, would eat something, throw the seed in the yard and it grew into huge trees. The local grocery stores bought the harvests from my grandparents. No one planted or weeded or tended. We just threw seeds in the yard and they grew. Even though we had a lot of land, we didn’t farm the land. I would say we foraged our land. But, wow, we had a lot of food! Now, I live in a tiny manufactured home with a patio. No land. Without planting, I accidentally grow: - Juniper berries 🌲 🫐 (here when I got here) - oranges 🍊 (here when I got here. I’m in AZ, they’re everywhere) - prickly pear 🍐 🌵 (invasive and delicious) - cactus 🌵 (we eat it here) - sunflower seeds 🌻 (saved from being dead in the garbage) - tomatoes 🍅 - yarrow 🪴 (dead plant from grocery store garbage) - jalapeño 🌶 - mint 🌱 - potatoes 🥔 (my thanksgiving bag of potatoes turned into slips in the kitchen and they’re growing out of my ears 👂) - Jasmine 🌱 - Carrot 🥕 tops that kept growing, so I keep them for seeds. - wildflowers 💐 - cloves (dead plants I took from the grocery store garbage) - aloe 🌱 (it’s a weed here) - garlic 🧄 (grew on my bookshelf when I forgot I set it there) - lettuce 🥬 (from the grocery store. The same head of lettuce just keeps growing. 2 years) - sweet potato 🍠 (went bad on the counter) - so much more... God created food to multiply. I only have a patio and I have food and medicine and essential oils and natural remedies. All without intentionally planting a thing. I keep trying to not have a garden 🪴, so I can fix up my house and move to a farm. Isn’t working... I have a garden anyway 😊
Thanks for sharing. God bless your little farm. Mine is tiny too. But I've "accidentally" grown squash and elderberries. Everything else I've done but it includes tomatoes, peppers,herbs, and greens. I plan to add fruit trees soon. I also keep chickens.
@Elizabethtovar3603 Brilliant! I have a lettuce joke for just you...... You take a lettuce leaf or two off and Lettuce says: Hey, lettuce know when you're done! Two years! If you treat the earth right, it will give back. :)
Im from the UK and have been seed saving for 3 years now. I only have a small back yard, but manage to grow a whole range of soft fruit n veggies n edible & medicinal weeds. I'm saving to have a log burner installed begining next year. I make preserves, chutneys, jams, kombucha etc and am very lucky to live in a small street where skills are traded for produced. Grow what you can where you can x
Hi Stacy! I saved my tomato seeds a different way. I know they have to be protected from disease, so I thought of using peroxide. I squeeze the tomato seeds that I want to save into a small strainer. Then I run a little tepid water over them and keep pushing them down and turning them in the strainer until all the gel is gone. Then I rinse them again and again. I put them in little cups with some 3% hydrogen peroxide for about 15 minutes, drain them, then I shake them out onto a paper plate that has the name of the tomato written on it. I let them dry well, usually for a couple of days. Then I put them into small paper seed envelopes. All the tomato seeds I did last year germinated this year with this method. I like the method you just showed, but sometimes I only want a couple of certain plants.
I never thought of using peroxide. Thank you. I dried seeds this year straight out of 2 cantaloupes from Aldi last month. After drying in the bay window, I planted 12 in 1 hill just to see if they'd sprout. If they do, I'll transplant them.
Dovey62 your way is better for those who don’t have a cool dark spot (Florida), no basement, no root cellar. The ones in the dirt might mold pin the heat! Thank you & God bless you. 🙏
This method works. I write on paper towel the type of tomato. Then put the seeds on it to dry out. I get excellent germination the next year. Some seeds germinate from tomato that fell and remain outside over winter.👍🏽
I like to think of the Holy Bible as an owner's manual. Just like the owner's manual that came with your car and lives in the glove box, the Bible is full of essential things you need to do to keep yourself on track. I also consider myself a spirit living in a body or, in my case, I think of my body as a rental car and it just carries me from here to there. Anyway the owner's manual has all the information necessary for an abundant life no matter what your circumstance. The trick is, you have to apply it whether or not you understand it.
KJV Gen 1:29 - And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat. This is different from that narrated in the video
Lol funny Handle; "I am Elmer J. Fudd, I own a mansion and a yacht" 😂 We have been conditioned to posses more and more until those possessions 'posses' us.
Dear Stacy, I did the sliced tomatoes last season, put pot under steps in garage. I took them out and thought this failed but set them out on deck around June not expecting anything. It rained and a few weeks ago I saw that little container had actually sprouted tomato plants
Doug and Stacy, may our father bless you abundantly and cover you in grace. Truly, thank you both for all of your life saving information that I personally will pass down unto my children. ❤️
The first seeds I ever saved were Marigolds and I was hooked. I’ve been saving flower and vegetable seeds ever since and I learned much of what I know from you guys and other homesteaders that have been doing these things for years. I’m so thankful for all that God gave us. Bill Gates and his friends can eat all the bugs they want, my family won’t. 😂 God bless!
Same here…my first seeds were marigolds & echinacea. I was cleaning out clay pots on my parents porch that had marigolds that looked like they were ready to be tossed and I started examining the flower heads and noticed all the seeds, so I grabbed an envelope and collected them, then when I got home I started looking at my echinacea…. I was so thrilled and now I’m searching YT to learn more.
When you see just how many seeds come from just one plant, it's crazy to think that people aren't saving and sharing these seeds for later....this year I've saved 1000s of lettuce, basil, purslane and other seeds from my plants :)
Oh geeze, I’ve been doing it all wrong for years! 😅 I’m doing this in the fall (2023) instead of buying packages of seeds from the store every year. Thanks for sharing 🙏♥️
I live in a very small town in SW Virginia and the town was going to start taxing us on our gardens. I have to say just about the whole town showed up to the meeting and they changed their minds fast. I hate politics but sometimes you have to take a stand and be heard or get ran over 🤷♀️
I live in the Seattle area and I’m seeing things that I thought I would never see! Our police department was overrun beginning of Covid also blm, squatting/homelessness everywhere along with that the crime/drug /violence rate has skyrocketed food shortages…empty shelves, inflated gas prices, taxed and double taxed!Property taxes are ridiculously high.Required to pay RTA tax when you go to buy your vehicle tabs and I don’t even use the transit. I came across this video to look how to grow veggies…my concern is my soil is extremely rocky. Currently waiting on permits to be able to build a green house….trying to figure things out as I go. I’m blessed to have a supportive husband! At this moment I have no food growing…so I’m interested in some of the commenters favorite YT food growing / how & when to collect seeds. Love reading the comments on this thread and I learn something here and there…I do better visually by watching videos …which ya gotta begin somewhere so here I am at the beginning of a new journey!
i've done this for years - grown my own tomatoes that i originally purchased at the store, but they taste so much better when they are picked from your own garden
Just saw my post here, from 10 months ago, it does seem like forever since I started dreaming of the day I would be on our property, starting the homesteading business myself, I will be heading up right after the first of August, so it will give me time to make the raised beds before I have to plant the seeds I have been collecting. I truly enjoyed you both so much, and feel that one day soon, I will get to meet you in person, I will make it to one of the homesteading events that you tell us of, and what a happy day that will be for me. Love you both, prayers 🙏 for Many bountiful harvests from your gardens, for the livestock to all remain healthy and for the safety of everyone 🙏 God Bless you all 🙏
I live in Zone 5B and just placed my second order for rare heirloom seeds from Baker Creek Seeds out in Mansfield. We're in the process of getting rabbit ready and keeping an eye out for supplies to build a coop w/ run by spring. It has taken me 5 years to convince my husband to budge and do these things but he's finally on board! Some people need to be closer to the struggle before they understand how important it is to prepare for it; some people were raised to know nothing but that struggle, and instinctively prepare.
Great info as usual. The method I use for all 'wet' seeds (tomato, melon, cukes, squash, etc) is to take the seeds and inner meat from a ripe fruit and put them in a bowl. Add about 1 inch of water and place the bowl out of direct sunlight for about 3 days. Mold will form and break down the gelatinous seed coating. Rinse the seeds with cold water and harvest only those that sink. Spread the seeds on paper to dry for a week or two and they are good to go.
Sooo.. I am a first time gardener. This year has been super challenging with LOTS of trial and errors. Beneath some weeds I was clearing, I found a huge pickling Cucumber that was clearlypassedits prime. I opened and scraped the seeds on top of some composting soil and then covered them with more of the same soil. 😖If your method is sho nuff ironclad, I'm to pretty much expect my experiment to be a bust😓...right?.. like...ain't nothing coming?🤦♀️
@@sashacohen883 Could work out perfectly for you but it will probably take time. The coating on some seeds is there to keep them from germinating inside the fruit and delay that until the next season.
I've been doing this for a couple of years. I start them real early spring, cover with a little dirt and pick the good plants out to put in the garden. Tomatoes every time. Thank you guys
I extract the tomato seeds from those tomatoes that I want to grow again and place them in a Jelly Jar or Pint Jar and add about 2/3 jar of water. I shake the jar that day and each day for 3-4 days. By the the gelatinous coating is mostly gone. I filter out the seeds and lay them out on a paper plate and let them dry. It is easy then to put them into something like a small Coin Envelope, Label them, seal the envelope and store for the next years crops. Works very well for me!
Exactly! This is great information to make gardening easier and to keep seeds in the ground as God intended so that they sprout the following spring to provide us food.
What an amazing tip! I’ll definitely try this ….and on the subject of tomatoes I popped a whole uncooked, unbroken egg under all my tomatoes in pots and in soil this year and I’m stunned at my crop, it’s been a bumper year like never before ! 🍅
I just learned that little trick a couple of years ago from another site, Roots and Refuge Farm. She wasn't sure why it was done either. Just a "trick" from a senior farmer. Recently while reading more about tomato plants another thing they are in need of besides nitrogen in the soil is calcium. "Old dog learns new tricks just about everyday!" I'm 80 and have been small gardening at least half of my life. Oh, the shot of calcium does work!
Instead of pulling the tomatoe plants in fall, let them continue to fruit and just let the tomatoes fall and leave them. Next spring you'll have tomatoes plants popping right back up again.
Thats what I did with a couple of tomatoes that fell from my bushes last season. now, I have plants coming up from them that I didnt have to put any effort into growing, they did it all by themselves...God is good!
2) To my surprize after transplanting them, I have over 300 cherokee plants! I hope it's not too late to grow them (I've a huge raised bed I'm putting them in today. TY so much for sharing your knowledge, I hope to have a bounty of sauces, canned tomatoes, ferments, ketchup, etc...
So I have a suggestion for the folks without water, I've tried it, so I know it to be true.i keep a big dehumidifier in my basement . I decided to plug it In and put it outside and walk I got 3 gallons of water from thin air in one days time. ( when there's a will there's a way )
We’ve been having voluntary tomatoes come back for years. We had about 30 this last season, and didn’t have to start anymore from seed. Plenty of zinnias and marigolds, and peppers. I just move everything where I want it. I just squeeze a cherry tomato in the ground after it goes bad. A lot goes in the compost pile and comes back too. You can save your other seeds for other things.
I saw this when you first posted and tried it Worked so great I now have them planted in the garden thank you for the tips it really works. My one thing is I did 4 pots and forgot to label them so this year all will be surprise! lol
I'm right now chopping up tomatoes for a big batch of vegetables beef soup while watching this and now I am totally going to do this as soon as my soup is on!! I've tried drying and separating my tomato seeds and ugh, its awful ..this is GENIUS!! Thanks for sharing!!!!
That is wonderful. Thank you so much Stacy for sharing this from your Amish friend. Good information to pass along to all of us. God bless you, Doug and your family. 💜
I am passionate about saving heirloom seeds. It is a hobby that will likely turn into an etsy store soon. I'm so glad that you are making this valuable video. You are reaching many and it will make a difference in the days ahead. Can't wait to try this method. ❤- Stacy
I've done the same Dawn, and with good results. However, Stacey's way gets it done quickly, out of the way from my small kitchen, and all ready to get those seedlings going into the garden in the spring. What a clever idea to place the seeds into dirt! This will be my new way of saving seeds :):):) Thanks Stacey, I've visited the Amish and they know what they're doing with their tradition of living off the land.
This is what I do. They stick to the tissue, when ready to plant I just cut around them and plant tissue and all. They take a bit longer to germinate as the jelly stuff is still there, but they work well. This Amish way does away with all the modern things like tissue, Very interesting.
Florida also. Hardly any tomatoes 🍅 at the U-Pick farms this year. Heard it from the horses mouth. Mine also did not produce much. Just be ready for anything guys! love to all!
I'm in Ohio and have grown over 1000 tomatoes so far and plants are going strong. Even had some volunteers from last year. I live in city limits with a small backyard garden but I grow vertical as much as possible.
@@chuckruffingchuckr7263 we also had hundreds of volunteer plants, but they produced little to nothing for the bigger tomatoes. The cherries did amazing, but those bigger ones were little to nothing. The sun is so intense and some of the tomatoes split open. They rotted on the plant and once the plants yielded only one time..., they died. Watermelons are also being affected. It's really strange. There are more bees right now than when we planted for our spring summer harvest time. Butternut squash did well. Cucumbers okay. But...even our green zucchini plants which we had huge success with last year did nothing! We planted them again, and we will see if we have any success.
@@thespiritualgardenhomestea8329 Could the plants have been affected by diseases like blight? Or insects? I've been dealing with blight, just trying to keep ahead of it. If not taken care of can kill a plant quickly. Are the zucchini plants dying or just not producing? I had problems with mine this year due to squash bugs. I got some zucchini but not like last year due to them killing the plants.
I was given 4 full shopping bags of cherry tomatoes. I dehydrated some in the sun and some in the dehydrator. Both did good (make sure you cut them open and salt them-helps draw out the moisture) The dehydrator took half the time (2 days) vs 4 days in the sun. You can leave them “as is” to rehydrate for later, or you can grind them into a powder to use as tomato paste or in soups/stews.
I had to do that with my crop too - there were too many to eat before they spoiled, so I dehydrated them and did like you did - part powder, part slices.
@@andreawimer4334 my mother would dehydrate food on big backing pans that she put inside my dad's old broken down car. The heat inside that car was like an oven. She would cover the food with a new cloth baby diaper or cheese cloth. It worked great for drying apples especially. I recently dryed some tomatoes in my oven on like 200 and it only took about 3 hours. I made sun dried tomatoes in olive oil and garlic with them and they turned out great
Stacy was the first TH-camr I found about gardening. I found a video about dandelion tea. Stacy started it all! Thank you for letting us in to your everyday life and teaching us all you do!!! Blessings
After the pandemic started I turned an 4' x 40' section of our yard in to a large raised garden bed. Hugelkulture style out of necessity, we had a large amount of tree trimmings that I could not get hauled off the property. All of this was accidental if I am being honest with myself. My "brilliant" idea was to bury it all and let God sort it out. Then we started throwing all our organic waste "at" it instead of our trash because of the flies. Anyways, long story made short we now have all kinds of stable plants coming back randomly when the weather activates the particular seed. I figured out that plants are a lot like humans, they learn to adapt to their environment with each passing generation. They do not even look like market vegetables anymore, but they fill our bellies just the same. My whole point is, outside of accidentally building a "home" for plants and then throwing waste at it . . . the only effort I put in to that bed is picking what looks ripe. Something edible is always growing in that bed. Nature does not need our help as much as we think, just the basics really, keep things clean and let time and our fellow life do the work. Today I know a lot more about nature's processes because I wanted to know what happened in that bed. I read a lot but Jeff Lowenfell has three books that did the most work in aiding my understanding. Teaming with Microbes, Teaming with Fungi, and Teaming with Nutrients. Read them till you get it and you will never starve, as long as you have access to nature.
I scrape my seeds all into a little container add a little dollop of water, let it sit for a few days till a little mold grow on top. Scrape te mold off. Rinse te seeds and wash in a little screen. Spread on one of the wire screen to dry. That way you have seeds to trade .
We are gathering our water from a natural spring! I struggle getting my garden to grow right now but we are getting there. We use a lot of your videos to grow our homestead! Thanks y’all for the great ideas!
I pick the tomato seeds from the gel and place them on a paper towel to dry spaced a inch apart, when ready to plant cut a strip of paper with seeds plant it and water and then you have new tomato. Hope this helps someone else as well!
Just another tip: Don't take them all out of the dark at the same time. Space out the germination a few weeks for easier succession planting. Don't wait too long, though.
@@anneiconex1473 Q: How do l keep the bugs and mice from eating the tomatoes while they’re stored? A: First, you have to rinse and dry them all to make sure you aren't locking the bugs in the box with the veg. Then cover plastic or metal boxes with mosquito netting and then cover with 1/4" mesh metal rabbit-cage fencing (aka hardware cloth). I like to sprinkle red pepper powder on the mosquito cloth, as well. All that I mentioned, above, are very inexpensive and useful for other gardening tasks, too. You can buy mosquito netting, but I just cut the screens out of an old decaying tent that I was throwing away. I bought a roll of 1/4" x 3' x 10' hardware cloth for $20 and use it for many gardening tasks, including sifting my homemade potting mix, temporary fencing around new small plants, and to keep varmints out of my metal boxes, which used to be filing cabinets.
Thank you Doug for holding it back !!!! I did enjoy the knowledge and thank you for putting this out into the world !!!!!!!! More people will benefit and u will saving more people this way !!!! U both are amazing !!!! There's no better feeling then when my son walks out into our backyard and grabs food right from the earth and eating it !!!! I will pass this info onto him , he turns 3yrs old on 9/13 . Thank y
I’m glad I saw this at the right time. I only got about 10 tomatoes this year. I have 3 tomatoes sitting on my cabinet. I know what I need to do with them. Ty.
So happy y'all brought the Good LORD into this lifestyle, because they go together...thats how He ment for us to live as much as possible..health is on the front line .... love you sharing all your info with us. It is helpful and encouraging, I've learned a lot and enjoy new learnings...keep up the good work and. Please keep sharing! Love y'all.. saving for your cookbook! Can't wait!...
I have 80 tomato plants in the ground. Last yea after canning I dumped the scraps outside my door in my mini garden. This spring I had 500+ plants come up. So I didn't have to buy plants. I planted and gave away tomato plants to friends. Gonna do the same thing again this fall. No need to go thru this process. I am in Southern Ohio so temps do get down in the single digits in the winter.
Thanks so much for this video! Every year at harvest time I intend to save tomato seeds, but I've never actually done it, because the seed-saving method I learned is a time-consuming process involving fermenting the seeds in jars, transferring to multiple jars over a period of a few weeks, straining with cheesecloth, spreading out the seeds to dry. I just don't have the time for all that. The process Stacy has demonstrated will require just a few minutes!
On a different video, someone mentioned that they just bury (in the ground) 1 of each of certain vegetables at the end of the season and enjoy new plants the following spring.
I saved my seeds and a bunch from store-bought cherry tomatoes last winter - purple, orange and yellow cherry tomatoes. All I did was scoop the seeds out into a plastic glass with water in it, left it on the counter for a week-10 days, strained, flipped the strained seeds onto a silicone mat, let them dry for a few days and put them in envelopes. All but one grew great...the one that didn't, not sure what is with it, but there are about 30-40 clusters of tomato flowers on each branch and most of them didn't produce fruit. So I will not be saving any seeds from that plant this year! Would be great if each branch produced a cluster of 40 cherry tomatoes but it only produced flowers!
I just put my seeds and jelly in a jar with distilled or filtered water and stick it in a dark place. Check it every day and when it starts to mold, I pour out what's on top and strain the seeds through a wire strainer. After a couple hours, I dump them onto several thicknesses of printer paper, or a paper plate if I have them. Spread out and let dry. I go thru every day or so and move them around. Unstick them from each other. They don't stick as much on printer paper or the plates. After several days, when I am sure they are dry, I will put them into an envelope and label it.
@@sheilajac Where did you grow them? Did they have access to wind? Tomatoes are self pollinating but need wind or manual movement to knock the pollen onto the flower stigma. Without this the flowers will just die off and never fruit.
@@forced4motorsports along a fence, there are bees and flies and wind. It's one of the grocery store tomatoes i took seed from, it has a few tomatoes forming and all the other tomatoes have fruit, but they have normal sets of flower clusters. I've never seen so many clusters of flowers on one branch and there's at least 6 clusters, the plant is thin and not very tall either, must be something wrong with the seed/plant (the original would have come from a greenhouse) I honestly don't think a branch would be able to support as much fruit as it's got in flowers. Not exaggerating when i say 40+ flowers per cluster. It may have something to do with a very wet period we had when they were growing and it's been pretty dry since then too. But, all the other tomatoes (I have 5 or 6 cherry, one starfire and 3 siberian tomatoe plants) have fruit, no problem. it's just that one. No idea yet which cherry it is, other than it's a roma cherry. Might be an orange roma which is a bummer because i love the orange cherry tomatoes and my other orange cherry is not doing well either. very little fruit on it either. Also, i have too many peas behind the tomatoes and i think they might be starving the tomatoes. Not making that mistake again...I don't even like peas that much. Mad at myself for over-planting peas. Sorry for the over-explaining.
This is so awesome! And SO simple! I popped my head and said, why of course! Exactly how God planned it! I was out watering and saw some tomatillo plants growing from last year. I was so excited because had regretted not planting them again this year. God is so good!💗🙏
Doug I was just curious what you do to purify your drinking water from the chemicals they pour onto us from the sky?? Thank you, I love your show, many blessings to you n Stacy.
They use a Berkey water filter. It's amazing and so worth the money. We've had ours for 5 year's and it still filters pretty good. Occasionally we have to blow them out really good using a air compressor.
You might want to watch some of his other videos they also have a triple filtration system before it goes into the house it's located in the crawl space by where Stacy put the tomatoes
I take a sheet of paper towel. Mark it with a marker as to what kind of tomato I’m saving. Squeeze the seeds onto the towel. Spread them out. When dry I fold it. Put it in a ziplock and store in the freezer. Come spring I tear off a piece of paper towel with a seed and put it in a pot. Works everytime.
Great idea!
4:17
That is how I was collecting seeds only I kept it in house terras that's was getting fresh air but no sunlight.
Thank you for sharing, I'll definitely will implement this idea.
This sounds good. Living almost in Mexico, there is no place to store the pots. The freezer method will work perfectly.
My grandmother would cut the tomato in half and squeeze out the seed straight on the ground outside. Come spring she had all of the tomato starts she needed for the year. The seed survived the cold winters in NY and always gave her a fresh crop of tomatoes the following year
I love hearing that!! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I’ll try that too, hope it survives my free ranging chicken daily scavenging.
How did the tomatoes survive the freezing cold?
@@s.z.6200 The tomatoes did not survive the seeds she put on the ground did and they sprouted in the spring
I'll never understand why people think seeds can't survive winter. They have an actual shell for that. What do people think happen in nature where we aren't there to collect seeds?@@robertfiorito9888
Thank yall for being the wonderful people that you are.
I DO NOT WANT TO BE A SLAVE!
I am a former Pennsylvania resident where I learned my gardening methods from Amish friends. I live now in the Philippines where I grow 100% of my crops from SAVED SEEDS. My most valuable possession is my 100+ glass jars of Vegetable & Flower seeds. Thanks to Doug & Stacy for sharing this important video.
I'd love to live in the Philippines
That is so great.
Would love to learn and start saving heirloom / native seeds too. Also in Philippines :)
I dream of that one day! but today, I am just as happy with the seeds i do have.
😊
@@monicadzisiak7291 Curious as to why?
I had an abundance of cherry tomatoes one year and couldn’t get to harvesting them all before a few dropped and started composting. Next year I planted tomatoes in a different spot and they STRUGGLED. But then all the sudden those old tomatoes seeds from the area I had the tomatoes the year before sprouted up and were stronger and had twice the harvest than the year before! God taught me a lesson in that. When you sow a portion from the harvest He’s given you, He will blessed it. Love God math!
I always give my best first fruits to God. And he gives me plenty every year.
Just pulled extra cherry tomato plants today covered with tomatoes and threw them in compost bin. Too many this year.
We call those “volunteers”. Tomatoes are good for that. 🙃
Amen
Best tomatoes I ever had was from old house that was removed. And I told my friends help yourself they were thrilled they were crazy big, and beautiful
When I was a child I pooped in buckets and bushes and outhouses. That was bad enough but looking at life today I think back. I'm now 74 yrs old and thank God for every blessings he showed and gave me
I would rather use an outhouse than have to deal with all the modern issues of bathrooms. Pipes, leaking, updating, all the things…
❤❤❤
PRAISE GOD FOR HIS MERCY, BLESSINGS, LOVE, AND GRACE!🙏🏻✝️♥️
I’ve been a seed saver for decades. This year my seeds were 11 years old, harvested, dried and saved. Over 50 plants came up, and now I have thousands of tomatoes. Oh my.
I am groot
So cool, congrats
So your 11 yr old seeds produced crops? I thought seeds had shelf life of 2-4 yrs. Heck store bought seeds have shelf life of just that one year. That's amazing!!
@@iamgroot4706 HAHAHAHAJAJ
@@destinycoach5 Yes seed my granny saved in the 70's we grew plants from in 2019 so yes seeds are the only true magic in this world : )
Lovely to meet you. I am British and live with my Egyptian husband on a desert farm. Luckily we have our own well. Working towards self-sufficiency 😊. I am the green fingered one and currently collecting seeds so we never have to buy any. 😅 Every day i thank the Lord for his provision and this beautiful life 🙏 💕
Hi Helen, nice to see another North African person here. Sending love from Tunisia 😊
Can you please share how you regrow your head of lettice ? Thanks
I get such peace in my heart when I listen to you talk about the Father and His plans for us.
A very good video.
Amen
Hi guys, I had an awesome day yesterday. Father Yah blessed us so wonderful. We got 14 bags of peaches 🍑 from one tree. All tucked in the freezer now.😊🍑🌻🌼🐑
What a blessing!
I was gifted a bushel of pears...I've canned 42 pints so far! Not done yet.
We have moved from town to the country. Lots of land and the Most High YAHUAH has definitely blessed us. We discovered there once was a blueberry orchard here. My husband cleaned it out, next, we're fencing it in. We do have apple tree's, and next we are hoping to plant a lot of peach and pear trees.
@@minnamae25 That's so wonderful. You are setting your family up for success.
@@minnamae25HallaluYah
In 2002 I had over 150 tomato plants come up volunteer. I had about 120 in 2023.
They froze, they got snowed on and when it warmed up they grew.
I had been in a bad car accident and didn't have money to buy plants, so I was very happily surprised & grateful to the Lord for a wonderful bounty.
I just left them out in the garden, never cut them or dried them or anything.
They grew on their own in the decomposing wood chips.
Brandy wine is my favorite tomato.
I only grow heirloom.
I've grown organically since before it was cool.😊❤😊
I was raised saving seeds, bulbs, rhizomes, corn, etc. This was a mile high in Colorado, so the saved seeds, bulbs, roots, were put in packets, egg cartons, or a bucket with dirt surrounding them to keep them alive through the Winter. You learn a lot doing this. Especially flowers like Gladiolas which have a bulb, and a new bulb comes on top, you have to take the old dried bulb off after it has nourished the new bulb. Knowing when to prune plants is equally important. You can kill your plant doing it wrong and at the wrong time or season. Good information Doug & Stacy, we never did the tomatoes that way, I like the idea of it! My Mother would take an empty 1/2 gallon Milk container from the store, take off one side of the Length. Lay it sideways, fill it with dirt, poke little holes and drop a seed into it. She would water it and set them in the Southern windows of the house to sprout. At night She would either cover them or move them in from the window sill for more warmth. She started tomatoes, cucumbers, Peppers, etc. Peas, Potatoes, & Jerusleam Artichokes we started on St. Paricks day in the ground, in a hill of dirt, cover it with straw to protect from the Cold at night and late winter/early spring Snows. It was fun to find which ones came up first!
Recyle, restore, reuse, and repurpose was also engendered here. We never wasted a Thing!
No one taught me but i to found an interest in saving seeds as a child along with rocks. Where ever i go i am always looking out for seeds and rocks.
That's awesome! Self sufficient at it's best ☮️🙏☯️
I definitely agree with you on your local heirloom seeds. I have the honor to grow tomatoes that were grown by my friends grandparents for 50 years and saved every year. They have passed on, but I continue to grow and share their amazing tomatoes. This year they were my first tomatoes to ripen and are still going strong. I first learned this method from a mushroom farmer
Environment triggers genetics and genetic change it's a good thing.
It's ow we get things to grow withing the climate we live the most efficiently.
How do you keep bugs or pest from eating them without toxic chemicals?
Do tomatoes come back the next year??
Please keep this going. So many seeds today have been modified genetically 😢.
Can i buy some? 💚🙌
" And the earth brought forth grass, herb yielding seed after its kind, and tree bearing fruit, wherein is the seed thereof, after its kind; and God saw that it was good. " (Tanakh )
God bless Doug and Stacy 😇🙏💕🇺🇲
But we are in the world but not of the world.
I pulled the guts from the tomato and put them in the freezer. After Christmas I put them in potting soil in either a milk jug or a wicking barrel and covered with a milk jug. They all came up in abundance! The winter milk jug sowing is the bomb.
Yes! Winter sowing is awesome . I had a bazillion tomato’s plants from that method first time trying this sprint though the seeds came from a package.
Can you do this technique with other types of veggies and fruits?
Saving seeds from org vegs and fruit, had stored high on a shelf, now moved to cooler floor area. Hope are ok.
I just left a lot of tomatoes drop every year and after negative 25 degree winters the seeds pop up when it’s warm enough do the same with pumpkin seeds etc
@@aphillips5376 Cucumbers. Check out Melissa K Norris, Family has been seed saving for many years.
As a tomato goes bad in my kitchen or grows seedlings in the tomato 🍅 🌱 on my counter, I throw it in whatever pot is closest on the patio.
Come spring I have thousands of seedlings 🌱. I can’t give them away fast enough.
My grandparents, Native American and Romany, would eat something, throw the seed in the yard and it grew into huge trees.
The local grocery stores bought the harvests from my grandparents.
No one planted or weeded or tended. We just threw seeds in the yard and they grew.
Even though we had a lot of land, we didn’t farm the land. I would say we foraged our land. But, wow, we had a lot of food!
Now, I live in a tiny manufactured home with a patio. No land. Without planting, I accidentally grow:
- Juniper berries 🌲 🫐 (here when I got here)
- oranges 🍊 (here when I got here. I’m in AZ, they’re everywhere)
- prickly pear 🍐 🌵 (invasive and delicious)
- cactus 🌵 (we eat it here)
- sunflower seeds 🌻 (saved from being dead in the garbage)
- tomatoes 🍅
- yarrow 🪴 (dead plant from grocery store garbage)
- jalapeño 🌶
- mint 🌱
- potatoes 🥔 (my thanksgiving bag of potatoes turned into slips in the kitchen and they’re growing out of my ears 👂)
- Jasmine 🌱
- Carrot 🥕 tops that kept growing, so I keep them for seeds.
- wildflowers 💐
- cloves (dead plants I took from the grocery store garbage)
- aloe 🌱 (it’s a weed here)
- garlic 🧄 (grew on my bookshelf when I forgot I set it there)
- lettuce 🥬 (from the grocery store. The same head of lettuce just keeps growing. 2 years)
- sweet potato 🍠 (went bad on the counter)
- so much more...
God created food to multiply. I only have a patio and I have food and medicine and essential oils and natural remedies. All without intentionally planting a thing. I keep trying to not have a garden 🪴, so I can fix up my house and move to a farm. Isn’t working... I have a garden anyway 😊
Thanks for sharing. God bless your little farm. Mine is tiny too. But I've "accidentally" grown squash and elderberries. Everything else I've done but it includes tomatoes, peppers,herbs, and greens. I plan to add fruit trees soon. I also keep chickens.
@Elizabethtovar3603 Brilliant! I have a lettuce joke for just you...... You take a lettuce leaf or two off and Lettuce says: Hey, lettuce know when you're done! Two years! If you treat the earth right, it will give back. :)
Im from the UK and have been seed saving for 3 years now. I only have a small back yard, but manage to grow a whole range of soft fruit n veggies n edible & medicinal weeds. I'm saving to have a log burner installed begining next year.
I make preserves, chutneys, jams, kombucha etc and am very lucky to live in a small street where skills are traded for produced. Grow what you can where you can x
Hello from Devon UK.
@suedean8093 hello from Wiltshire UK
@@joannegratton491hello from Wiltshire UK
“We poop in buckets and we are the ungovernable.” That should be on a shirt. You made me laugh out loud!😂
I was thinking the same thing! lol
I'll buy 1 for the whole family. Even though we poop in an outhouse.
how do you clean the bucket? seriously
@@sharonmcmann-morelli4896 They wipe the buckets clean with the paperwork the government sends them saying how the government will govern them!
me too🤪
Stacey is so knowledgeable, love to hear what she has to teach
Divine Mercy image ❤️ Jesus, I trust in you!
Hi Stacy! I saved my tomato seeds a different way. I know they have to be protected from disease, so I thought of using peroxide. I squeeze the tomato seeds that I want to save into a small strainer. Then I run a little tepid water over them and keep pushing them down and turning them in the strainer until all the gel is gone. Then I rinse them again and again. I put them in little cups with some 3% hydrogen peroxide for about 15 minutes, drain them, then I shake them out onto a paper plate that has the name of the tomato written on it. I let them dry well, usually for a couple of days. Then I put them into small paper seed envelopes. All the tomato seeds I did last year germinated this year with this method. I like the method you just showed, but sometimes I only want a couple of certain plants.
I never thought of using peroxide. Thank you. I dried seeds this year straight out of 2 cantaloupes from Aldi last month. After drying in the bay window, I planted 12 in 1 hill just to see if they'd sprout. If they do, I'll transplant them.
Dovey62 your way is better for those who don’t have a cool dark spot (Florida), no basement, no root cellar. The ones in the dirt might mold pin the heat! Thank you & God bless you. 🙏
@@katcat5088 Thank you. Bless you too. 🙏
This method works. I write on paper towel the type of tomato. Then put the seeds on it to dry out. I get excellent germination the next year. Some seeds germinate from tomato that fell and remain outside over winter.👍🏽
@@CherokeeWarriorWoman You're welcome!
I love that scripture!! Thank you Doug! ❤️
I like to think of the Holy Bible as an owner's manual. Just like the owner's manual that came with your car and lives in the glove box, the Bible is full of essential things you need to do to keep yourself on track. I also consider myself a spirit living in a body or, in my case, I think of my body as a rental car and it just carries me from here to there. Anyway the owner's manual has all the information necessary for an abundant life no matter what your circumstance. The trick is, you have to apply it whether or not you understand it.
And if you pray for discernment and read it again you WILL understand it 🥰🙏
If anyone lacks Knowledge Let him ask the father
KJV
Gen 1:29 - And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.
This is different from that narrated in the video
Well said!
Lol funny Handle; "I am Elmer J. Fudd, I own a mansion and a yacht"
😂 We have been conditioned to posses more and more until those possessions 'posses' us.
Dear Stacy, I did the sliced tomatoes last season, put pot under steps in garage.
I took them out and thought this failed but set them out on deck around June not expecting anything. It rained and a few weeks ago I saw that little container had actually sprouted tomato plants
Don't mice, bugs or any other insect invade the sliced tomato in the pot while it's in your garage?
Doug and Stacy, may our father bless you abundantly and cover you in grace. Truly, thank you both for all of your life saving information that I personally will pass down unto my children. ❤️
The, though, though, sounds like the LGBTXYZABC pronoun NONSENSE.
Amen God gave us all seed bearing plants all seed bearing plants
@Nancy Drew hope you are well and safe my friend
Please pray for my whole family that we can get out of a populated area!🤲🏼🤲🏼🌱
Doug is a fearmonger. Most of his pessimism exaggerates negatives beyond reality. He and Stacy do have many useful skills for independence, though.
Gid bless you and your family in your Move! Go far Inland.
@@doloresreynolds8145what’s wrong with you?
The first seeds I ever saved were Marigolds and I was hooked. I’ve been saving flower and vegetable seeds ever since and I learned much of what I know from you guys and other homesteaders that have been doing these things for years. I’m so thankful for all that God gave us. Bill Gates and his friends can eat all the bugs they want, my family won’t. 😂 God bless!
You know that Bill Gates and his friends will be eating chickens, beef, and pigs most likely but he wants us to eat bugs.
Same here…my first seeds were marigolds & echinacea. I was cleaning out clay pots on my parents porch that had marigolds that looked like they were ready to be tossed and I started examining the flower heads and noticed all the seeds, so I grabbed an envelope and collected them, then when I got home I started looking at my echinacea…. I was so thrilled and now I’m searching YT to learn more.
This channel is an absolute gem; I appreciate everything you produce on this site. This is an awesome service to humanity and is appreciated deeply.
Thank God for the Amish and their wisdom. Thank God for Doug and Stacy.
When you see just how many seeds come from just one plant, it's crazy to think that people aren't saving and sharing these seeds for later....this year I've saved 1000s of lettuce, basil, purslane and other seeds from my plants :)
I have a very healthy purslane plant growing in my pot. How do I get seeds from it? I’m a first time Gardner at 68!🤷🏻♀️😊
@@annpissard9798 it will flower then go to seed. Collect the seed when dry (not green)
@@bseverino485 we have been growing lots of purslane but haven't seen any glower yet. I'm hoping they do at some point.
@@bseverino485 thank you
🤔..please share.. How do you save Lettuce seeds?
Thanks Doug & Stacy for caring about people!!!
Oh geeze, I’ve been doing it all wrong for years! 😅 I’m doing this in the fall (2023) instead of buying packages of seeds from the store every year. Thanks for sharing 🙏♥️
I live in a very small town in SW Virginia and the town was going to start taxing us on our gardens. I have to say just about the whole town showed up to the meeting and they changed their minds fast. I hate politics but sometimes you have to take a stand and be heard or get ran over 🤷♀️
Taxing on your gardens? That's unbelievable! Keep fighting them!
That's a great example of how we all need to stand up and speak otherwise we will get trampled
Good for you guys!
Incredible!!! “They” never quit trying to take more and more 🤨. Good on ALL of you for taking a stand!
I live in the Seattle area and I’m seeing things that I thought I would never see! Our police department was overrun beginning of Covid also blm, squatting/homelessness everywhere along with that the crime/drug /violence rate has skyrocketed
food shortages…empty shelves, inflated gas prices, taxed and double taxed!Property taxes are ridiculously high.Required to pay RTA tax when you go to buy your vehicle tabs and I don’t even use the transit.
I came across this video to look how to grow veggies…my concern is my soil is extremely rocky. Currently waiting on permits to be able to build a green house….trying to figure things out as I go. I’m blessed to have a supportive husband!
At this moment I have no food growing…so I’m interested in some of the commenters favorite YT food growing / how & when to collect seeds. Love reading the comments on this thread and I learn something here and there…I do better visually by watching videos …which ya gotta begin somewhere so here I am at the beginning of a new journey!
i've done this for years - grown my own tomatoes that i originally purchased at the store, but they taste so much better when they are picked from your own garden
👍👍
You got that rt! Same with anything you grow yourself.
Just saw my post here, from 10 months ago, it does seem like forever since I started dreaming of the day I would be on our property, starting the homesteading business myself, I will be heading up right after the first of August, so it will give me time to make the raised beds before I have to plant the seeds I have been collecting. I truly enjoyed you both so much, and feel that one day soon, I will get to meet you in person, I will make it to one of the homesteading events that you tell us of, and what a happy day that will be for me. Love you both, prayers 🙏 for Many bountiful harvests from your gardens, for the livestock to all remain healthy and for the safety of everyone 🙏 God Bless you all 🙏
HalleluYah 🙌🏽 we are learning daily and growing.
I live in Zone 5B and just placed my second order for rare heirloom seeds from Baker Creek Seeds out in Mansfield. We're in the process of getting rabbit ready and keeping an eye out for supplies to build a coop w/ run by spring. It has taken me 5 years to convince my husband to budge and do these things but he's finally on board! Some people need to be closer to the struggle before they understand how important it is to prepare for it; some people were raised to know nothing but that struggle, and instinctively prepare.
Thanks, and hi Stacey 👋 😊 God bless you
Great info as usual. The method I use for all 'wet' seeds (tomato, melon, cukes, squash, etc) is to take the seeds and inner meat from a ripe fruit and put them in a bowl. Add about 1 inch of water and place the bowl out of direct sunlight for about 3 days. Mold will form and break down the gelatinous seed coating. Rinse the seeds with cold water and harvest only those that sink. Spread the seeds on paper to dry for a week or two and they are good to go.
Sooo.. I am a first time gardener. This year has been super challenging with LOTS of trial and errors. Beneath some weeds I was clearing, I found a huge pickling Cucumber that was clearlypassedits prime. I opened and scraped the seeds on top of some composting soil and then covered them with more of the same soil. 😖If your method is sho nuff ironclad, I'm to pretty much expect my experiment to be a bust😓...right?.. like...ain't nothing coming?🤦♀️
@@sashacohen883 Could work out perfectly for you but it will probably take time. The coating on some seeds is there to keep them from germinating inside the fruit and delay that until the next season.
@@sashacohen883 your compost pile if done right will kill all seeds in it.. Don't put seeds in the compost pile
@@jacksonakson8224 Thank you, I'm going to try your method. After you do this, what do you keep the seeds in until you're ready to plant them?
@@missmollygoodgolly6088 Once they have dried for a couple weeks I use basic paper envelopes to store them.
I've been doing this for a couple of years. I start them real early spring, cover with a little dirt and pick the good plants out to put in the garden. Tomatoes every time. Thank you guys
Does the tomatoes smell?
@@LTNavyVet no they grow to be little seedlings
@@edagish1051 Thanks
@eda gish...so we dont cover w dirt before we put them away, and we also dont cover w dirt/soil when we bring them out for water + sunshine? TY!
I extract the tomato seeds from those tomatoes that I want to grow again and place them in a Jelly Jar or Pint Jar and add about 2/3 jar of water. I shake the jar that day and each day for 3-4 days. By the the gelatinous coating is mostly gone. I filter out the seeds and lay them out on a paper plate and let them dry. It is easy then to put them into something like a small Coin Envelope, Label them, seal the envelope and store for the next years crops. Works very well for me!
Remember seeds need to breath when you store them or they won’t produce the next year.
Do they go into a freezer or just keep??
No matter how many times you make a tomato seed saving/planting/growing video, I will watch it and love it and then I will live it. 🥰
Exactly! This is great information to make gardening easier and to keep seeds in the ground as God intended so that they sprout the following spring to provide us food.
God is good!
This is so good! Old gardener here, learning new tricks. I love you guys!
Great way of telling this ,We ask all Learn this...
What an amazing tip! I’ll definitely try this ….and on the subject of tomatoes I popped a whole uncooked, unbroken egg under all my tomatoes in pots and in soil this year and I’m stunned at my crop, it’s been a bumper year like never before ! 🍅
Thanks. I'll have to give this a try.
Interesting. I’ll give this a try
I just learned that little trick a couple of years ago from another site, Roots and Refuge Farm. She wasn't sure why it was done either. Just a "trick" from a senior farmer. Recently while reading more about tomato plants another thing they are in need of besides nitrogen in the soil is calcium. "Old dog learns new tricks just about everyday!" I'm 80 and have been small gardening at least half of my life. Oh, the shot of calcium does work!
@@retntxstrong27 Eggs contain all the building blocks for life. Anything can eat them and thrive.
Doug, God bless you
Godbless these people and the Amish.
You guy's are down to earth, awesome, and a great blessing to soo many people.
Instead of pulling the tomatoe plants in fall, let them continue to fruit and just let the tomatoes fall and leave them. Next spring you'll have tomatoes plants popping right back up again.
You won't be able to rotate crops that way however so you have to be very vigilant against soil borne issues and tomato loving larvae in the ground.
Thankyou I didn't know that
Not where I live. You are blessed my friend. 🙏
Thats what I did with a couple of tomatoes that fell from my bushes last season. now, I have plants coming up from them that I didnt have to put any effort into growing, they did it all by themselves...God is good!
This is what I did and I ended up with 20+ starts 😄 I'm still finding little starts popping up
2) To my surprize after transplanting them, I have over 300 cherokee plants! I hope it's not too late to grow them (I've a huge raised bed I'm putting them in today.
TY so much for sharing your knowledge, I hope to have a bounty of sauces, canned tomatoes, ferments, ketchup, etc...
Stacy, great information. I never heard of this before. Thanks.
Thank you Stacy for being positive and encouraging!!
Did this last year and had an abundant supply of tomatoes this spring. And yes; the Pink Brandywine tomatoes are my faves as well. 🙂👍🏼
So I have a suggestion for the folks without water, I've tried it, so I know it to be true.i keep a big dehumidifier in my basement . I decided to plug it In and put it outside and walk I got 3 gallons of water from thin air in one days time. ( when there's a will there's a way )
THAT IS GENIOUS!! You should sell this "Technology" to the Govt for the Draughts all over the world! 😉
Fantastic! What a great idea.
It costs you a lot to run a dehumidifier but at least you get some water.
As long as you have electricity that ‘s great. Can’t do it if the grid goes down.
@@555Revelation That was my first thought.
We’ve been having voluntary tomatoes come back for years. We had about 30 this last season, and didn’t have to start anymore from seed. Plenty of zinnias and marigolds, and peppers. I just move everything where I want it.
I just squeeze a cherry tomato in the ground after it goes bad. A lot goes in the compost pile and comes back too. You can save your other seeds for other things.
I find the volunteers do as good, if not better, than the ones I plant that year.
I saw this when you first posted and tried it Worked so great I now have them planted in the garden thank you for the tips it really works. My one thing is I did 4 pots and forgot to label them so this year all will be surprise! lol
I love learning from you, im Cristian and you have so much wisdom
I'm right now chopping up tomatoes for a big batch of vegetables beef soup while watching this and now I am totally going to do this as soon as my soup is on!! I've tried drying and separating my tomato seeds and ugh, its awful ..this is GENIUS!! Thanks for sharing!!!!
Thank you...I am growing a pineapple...avocado...lemon...limes😊
That is wonderful. Thank you so much Stacy for sharing this from your Amish friend. Good information to pass along to all of us. God bless you, Doug and your family. 💜
I am passionate about saving heirloom seeds. It is a hobby that will likely turn into an etsy store soon. I'm so glad that you are making this valuable video. You are reaching many and it will make a difference in the days ahead. Can't wait to try this method. ❤- Stacy
how will peopl pay? n digital money here
Keep us informed ok
I will visit your shop!
@@sm-hi7jt I say "Etsy" shop but it will be a shop for local folks when things completely come apart.
Any tips for saving zucchini seeds? Mine don't seem to dry out enough and they rot eventually.
@@sm-hi7jt Bartering
Great idea D&S! How can we save seeds of broccoli and cauliflower? I’d love to see more veggies seeds saving ideas. ❤
So, so, so good Doug and Stacy!!! I would love to learn more about seed saving from you guys.
Very cool guys! I've always just thrown some seeds on a paper towels until they were dry and planted in spring. This is a neat new way for me to try!
Using paper towel free of bleach or ultra thin toilet paper works best in my experience
I've done the same Dawn, and with good results. However, Stacey's way gets it done quickly, out of the way from my small kitchen, and all ready to get those seedlings going into the garden in the spring. What a clever idea to place the seeds into dirt! This will be my new way of saving seeds :):):)
Thanks Stacey, I've visited the Amish and they know what they're doing with their tradition of living off the land.
This is what I do. They stick to the tissue, when ready to plant I just cut around them and plant tissue and all. They take a bit longer to germinate as the jelly stuff is still there, but they work well. This Amish way does away with all the modern things like tissue, Very interesting.
Thoughtfulness is a virtue. Your information sharing shows how much time and effort you put into choosing something just right for your subscribers.
Florida also. Hardly any tomatoes 🍅 at the U-Pick farms this year. Heard it from the horses mouth. Mine also did not produce much. Just be ready for anything guys! love to all!
Had not good production in containers so dependent on local farm markets and orchards.
I'm in Ohio and have grown over 1000 tomatoes so far and plants are going strong. Even had some volunteers from last year. I live in city limits with a small backyard garden but I grow vertical as much as possible.
@@chuckruffingchuckr7263 we also had hundreds of volunteer plants, but they produced little to nothing for the bigger tomatoes. The cherries did amazing, but those bigger ones were little to nothing. The sun is so intense and some of the tomatoes split open. They rotted on the plant and once the plants yielded only one time..., they died. Watermelons are also being affected. It's really strange. There are more bees right now than when we planted for our spring summer harvest time. Butternut squash did well. Cucumbers okay. But...even our green zucchini plants which we had huge success with last year did nothing! We planted them again, and we will see if we have any success.
@@thespiritualgardenhomestea8329 Could the plants have been affected by diseases like blight? Or insects?
I've been dealing with blight, just trying to keep ahead of it. If not taken care of can kill a plant quickly.
Are the zucchini plants dying or just not producing? I had problems with mine this year due to squash bugs. I got some zucchini but not like last year due to them killing the plants.
@@thespiritualgardenhomestea8329 I've found cherry tomatoes to be more resilient and hard to kill.
I can’t tell you how much we appreciate these self sustaining videos. Many blessings to you both
Thanks for passing on your wisdom! It is truly appreciated!
I was given 4 full shopping bags of cherry tomatoes. I dehydrated some in the sun and some in the dehydrator. Both did good (make sure you cut them open and salt them-helps draw out the moisture) The dehydrator took half the time (2 days) vs 4 days in the sun. You can leave them “as is” to rehydrate for later, or you can grind them into a powder to use as tomato paste or in soups/stews.
I had to do that with my crop too - there were too many to eat before they spoiled, so I dehydrated them and did like you did - part powder, part slices.
How do you keep flies off of them in the sun? My dehydrator takes about 10-12 hours not 2 days.
@@andreawimer4334 my mother would dehydrate food on big backing pans that she put inside my dad's old broken down car. The heat inside that car was like an oven. She would cover the food with a new cloth baby diaper or cheese cloth. It worked great for drying apples especially. I recently dryed some tomatoes in my oven on like 200 and it only took about 3 hours. I made sun dried tomatoes in olive oil and garlic with them and they turned out great
Wow!
@@andreawimer4334 surpringly I didn’t have an issue at all with the flies. I put them on the opposite side of the house as the compost.
Stacy was the first TH-camr I found about gardening. I found a video about dandelion tea. Stacy started it all! Thank you for letting us in to your everyday life and teaching us all you do!!! Blessings
Brilliant, thankyou from Australia.
After the pandemic started I turned an 4' x 40' section of our yard in to a large raised garden bed. Hugelkulture style out of necessity, we had a large amount of tree trimmings that I could not get hauled off the property.
All of this was accidental if I am being honest with myself. My "brilliant" idea was to bury it all and let God sort it out. Then we started throwing all our organic waste "at" it instead of our trash because of the flies.
Anyways, long story made short we now have all kinds of stable plants coming back randomly when the weather activates the particular seed.
I figured out that plants are a lot like humans, they learn to adapt to their environment with each passing generation. They do not even look like market vegetables anymore, but they fill our bellies just the same.
My whole point is, outside of accidentally building a "home" for plants and then throwing waste at it . . . the only effort I put in to that bed is picking what looks ripe. Something edible is always growing in that bed.
Nature does not need our help as much as we think, just the basics really, keep things clean and let time and our fellow life do the work.
Today I know a lot more about nature's processes because I wanted to know what happened in that bed. I read a lot but Jeff Lowenfell has three books that did the most work in aiding my understanding. Teaming with Microbes, Teaming with Fungi, and Teaming with Nutrients. Read them till you get it and you will never starve, as long as you have access to nature.
I scrape my seeds all into a little container add a little dollop of water, let it sit for a few days till a little mold grow on top. Scrape te mold off. Rinse te seeds and wash in a little screen. Spread on one of the wire screen to dry. That way you have seeds to trade .
We are gathering our water from a natural spring! I struggle getting my garden to grow right now but we are getting there. We use a lot of your videos to grow our homestead! Thanks y’all for the great ideas!
This is so much easier, and probably more effective, than what we were doing. Thank you!
I pick the tomato seeds from the gel and place them on a paper towel to dry spaced a inch apart, when ready to plant cut a strip of paper with seeds plant it and water and then you have new tomato. Hope this helps someone else as well!
That's what I did last fall. I hope it works!
This totally works .. I’m so happy 🙏🙏 thankyou Doug and Stacy
I just love you guys. Wise folks. Thanks for sharing. I will do this!
Just another tip: Don't take them all out of the dark at the same time. Space out the germination a few weeks for easier succession planting. Don't wait too long, though.
@rickritchie4119 How do l keep the bugs and mice from eating the tomatoes while they’re stored?
@@anneiconex1473 Q: How do l keep the bugs and mice from eating the tomatoes while they’re stored? A: First, you have to rinse and dry them all to make sure you aren't locking the bugs in the box with the veg. Then cover plastic or metal boxes with mosquito netting and then cover with 1/4" mesh metal rabbit-cage fencing (aka hardware cloth). I like to sprinkle red pepper powder on the mosquito cloth, as well. All that I mentioned, above, are very inexpensive and useful for other gardening tasks, too. You can buy mosquito netting, but I just cut the screens out of an old decaying tent that I was throwing away. I bought a roll of 1/4" x 3' x 10' hardware cloth for $20 and use it for many gardening tasks, including sifting my homemade potting mix, temporary fencing around new small plants, and to keep varmints out of my metal boxes, which used to be filing cabinets.
I wish there was a spring video on what they look like in spring.
Thank you Doug for holding it back !!!! I did enjoy the knowledge and thank you for putting this out into the world !!!!!!!! More people will benefit and u will saving more people this way !!!! U both are amazing !!!! There's no better feeling then when my son walks out into our backyard and grabs food right from the earth and eating it !!!! I will pass this info onto him , he turns 3yrs old on 9/13 . Thank y
I’m glad I saw this at the right time. I only got about 10 tomatoes this year. I have 3 tomatoes sitting on my cabinet. I know what I need to do with them. Ty.
Evolution and natural selection are awesome giving the earth so much variety. Thank you bees for keeping things going also!
I'm learning seed harvesting and that some seeds take a few years to get depending on the plants. I enjoy it ❤
So happy y'all brought the Good LORD into this lifestyle, because they go together...thats how He ment for us to live as much as possible..health is on the front line .... love you sharing all your info with us. It is helpful and encouraging, I've learned a lot and enjoy new learnings...keep up the good work and. Please keep sharing! Love y'all.. saving for your cookbook! Can't wait!...
I have 80 tomato plants in the ground. Last yea after canning I dumped the scraps outside my door in my mini garden. This spring I had 500+ plants come up. So I didn't have to buy plants. I planted and gave away tomato plants to friends. Gonna do the same thing again this fall. No need to go thru this process. I am in Southern Ohio so temps do get down in the single digits in the winter.
Thanks so much for this video! Every year at harvest time I intend to save tomato seeds, but I've never actually done it, because the seed-saving method I learned is a time-consuming process involving fermenting the seeds in jars, transferring to multiple jars over a period of a few weeks, straining with cheesecloth, spreading out the seeds to dry. I just don't have the time for all that. The process Stacy has demonstrated will require just a few minutes!
On a different video, someone mentioned that they just bury (in the ground) 1 of each of certain vegetables at the end of the season and enjoy new plants the following spring.
I saved my seeds and a bunch from store-bought cherry tomatoes last winter - purple, orange and yellow cherry tomatoes. All I did was scoop the seeds out into a plastic glass with water in it, left it on the counter for a week-10 days, strained, flipped the strained seeds onto a silicone mat, let them dry for a few days and put them in envelopes. All but one grew great...the one that didn't, not sure what is with it, but there are about 30-40 clusters of tomato flowers on each branch and most of them didn't produce fruit. So I will not be saving any seeds from that plant this year! Would be great if each branch produced a cluster of 40 cherry tomatoes but it only produced flowers!
I just put my seeds and jelly in a jar with distilled or filtered water and stick it in a dark place. Check it every day and when it starts to mold, I pour out what's on top and strain the seeds through a wire strainer. After a couple hours, I dump them onto several thicknesses of printer paper, or a paper plate if I have them. Spread out and let dry. I go thru every day or so and move them around. Unstick them from each other. They don't stick as much on printer paper or the plates. After several days, when I am sure they are dry, I will put them into an envelope and label it.
@@sheilajac Where did you grow them? Did they have access to wind? Tomatoes are self pollinating but need wind or manual movement to knock the pollen onto the flower stigma. Without this the flowers will just die off and never fruit.
@@forced4motorsports along a fence, there are bees and flies and wind. It's one of the grocery store tomatoes i took seed from, it has a few tomatoes forming and all the other tomatoes have fruit, but they have normal sets of flower clusters. I've never seen so many clusters of flowers on one branch and there's at least 6 clusters, the plant is thin and not very tall either, must be something wrong with the seed/plant (the original would have come from a greenhouse) I honestly don't think a branch would be able to support as much fruit as it's got in flowers. Not exaggerating when i say 40+ flowers per cluster. It may have something to do with a very wet period we had when they were growing and it's been pretty dry since then too. But, all the other tomatoes (I have 5 or 6 cherry, one starfire and 3 siberian tomatoe plants) have fruit, no problem. it's just that one. No idea yet which cherry it is, other than it's a roma cherry. Might be an orange roma which is a bummer because i love the orange cherry tomatoes and my other orange cherry is not doing well either. very little fruit on it either. Also, i have too many peas behind the tomatoes and i think they might be starving the tomatoes. Not making that mistake again...I don't even like peas that much. Mad at myself for over-planting peas. Sorry for the over-explaining.
Amazing method, side note, I went to an Amish store and bought an Amish straw hat and it keeps me cooler out in the sun than any ball cap.
I made quite the same way with strawberries.
You guys are the best. God bless you. Greetings from Iceland.
So Glad to see this video. Been seed saving like this for 40 yrs.
Thanks for the Video's you guy's 🎉🌿👍 We really appreciate you....
Love love love 💕 these tips. Thank you so much. I’m definitely going to try this when my tomatoes grow. Love what God had provided us.
I've been watching and learning AND CANNING! God bless you both and now I'm saving seeds!!
Thank you so much for including Scriptures in your lives and in your videos. I appreciate it so much!
This is so awesome! And SO simple! I popped my head and said, why of course! Exactly how God planned it! I was out watering and saw some tomatillo plants growing from last year. I was so excited because had regretted not planting them again this year. God is so good!💗🙏
Doug I was just curious what you do to purify your drinking water from the chemicals they pour onto us from the sky?? Thank you, I love your show, many blessings to you n Stacy.
They use a Berkey water filter. It's amazing and so worth the money. We've had ours for 5 year's and it still filters pretty good. Occasionally we have to blow them out really good using a air compressor.
You might want to watch some of his other videos they also have a triple filtration system before it goes into the house it's located in the crawl space by where Stacy put the tomatoes
They have a filtration system, I think three filters, in their crawl space before it goes into their house.
Amen 💜💜💜 Love you two, and everyone out there ! We pray for each other.
Thanks a bunch Doug and Stacy, you two are life savers for many of us around the world.