The fall is a great time to reflect on the year's garden and appreciate the fruits of your labor. If you've been putting in even just a little bit of effort, usually Mother Nature will reward you with a few asters, goldenrods, and some grasses, even with some benign neglect. But fall is also really important for collecting seeds, both from your vegetable garden and from your perennials and wild plants. Here's some pointers to help you if you would like to save seeds.
What's Going to Seed Now in October
For native plants and perennials, species like purple coneflower and black-eyed susan have mature seed heads that can be collected this time of year. Leaving some of these seed heads on your plants also provides a vital food source for birds throughout the fall and winter.
In the vegetable garden, your summer crops are wrapping up. You may find mature fruit and seed pods from some crops that have been left to fully ripen. For example, for beans and peas: Look for pods that are dry, brown, and rattle when shaken. Bring the whole pods indoors to finish drying; for peppers: Peppers for seed saving should be left on the plant past their eating stage until they are fully ripe and have reached their final color.
Why Save Seeds?
When you grow a plant from seed, you are growing a new genetic individual. There has been genetic recombination that happens and the individual that you're growing is different from the parent plants. This is exciting because that means there's a whole new set of genetics in the local gene pool, and sometimes you can get some fun offspring from hybridization, especially in the garden. However, it also can mean that sometimes things don't come true from seed and may not perform as well as the plants you collected them from.
To ensure your new plants closely resemble the parents, choose open-pollinated or heirloom varieties to save seed from. Avoid saving seed from F1 Hybrids, as these seeds may produce a mix of inferior and varied offspring that do not resemble the parent genetic. On the flip side, there's a concept in horticulture called hybrid vigor, where the offspring of two individuals is much more vigorous and advantageous in the garden or in nature.
When to Collect Seed
It's important to understand what the seed looks like on the plants you are collecting seed from. There's a lot of diversity in what seeds look like, and they can vary widely among related individuals. Harvesting at the right time is essential; a fruit might be perfect for eating, but the seed inside may still be too immature to be viable. Mature seeds are generally plump and heavy for their size. I have certainly seen folks think they've saved seeds before and actually ended up saving chaff or the immature flowers of a plant. There are guides to identify seeds and when to collect different plants.
How to Clean and Store Seed
How you clean and store seed again will be determined by what plant you are saving it from. Generally speaking, you either have dry seeds or wet seeds. Dry Seeds (e.g., Beans, Peas, Lettuce) need to fully dry down on the plant. After collecting, they may require "threshing" (separating the seed from the pod/chaff) and "winnowing"