How to Save Cucumber Seeds (including an extra step most people skip!)

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2022
  • Saving seeds from your garden can not only help reduce the cost of gardening, but over time you can actually create a plant that does well in your particular garden via genetic selection!
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    Welcome to Auxhart Gardening! I’m Rachel, a small-scale southern gardener growing near Clemson, SC, zone 7b. I mainly garden in-ground, with containers as secondary production spaces.
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Комментарии • 25

  • @ScottHead
    @ScottHead Год назад +3

    This is one of the best seed saving videos on RUclips.

  • @CynStone
    @CynStone 3 дня назад

    🥒 🥒 🥒🥒🥒
    FANTASTIC !
    You did the best explanation for cucumber seed saving that I've ever seen.
    WELL DONE.
    Cynthia 🌷

  • @lukewilson3271
    @lukewilson3271 Год назад +3

    Great video!

  • @ScottHead
    @ScottHead Год назад

    Nice to see your channel growing, you will be at 10K before you know it!

  • @altoncheatham7383
    @altoncheatham7383 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing

  • @cleverclogs2244
    @cleverclogs2244 Месяц назад

    I didn't bother remove the membrane from mine, and they were perfectly viable, sprouting their root in 3 days. I feel that the membrane dries, and seals the seed to prolong its shelf life...

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  21 день назад

      Interesting! I've not seen anyone talk about not removing the membrane before.

    • @cleverclogs2244
      @cleverclogs2244 20 дней назад

      @@AuxhartGardening Maybe I was just lucky they didn't go mouldy 😬

  • @cliveburgess4128
    @cliveburgess4128 Год назад +2

    I have a terrible time with cucumbers here in fl. grow, bloom, die, that's about it, any variety you think might work here? Thanks for the videos, Clive.

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  Год назад +2

      Have you tried growing them over winter? Usually dropping flowers without fruiting is due to heat or lack of water.

    • @chiefredbird7315
      @chiefredbird7315 Год назад

      T u

    • @cliveburgess4128
      @cliveburgess4128 Год назад

      @@AuxhartGardening Yes, it seems to be disease, fungal or otherwise, lack of water perhaps, big problem here, I have been trying to build decent soil, hopeful that this fall garden will be much improved, thrown everything at it I can think of, thanks!

  • @JohnFerrerAkaEric
    @JohnFerrerAkaEric Год назад

    Greetings from a Cola area gardener! That bug on top of the male flower you showed... is that bad for plants? My cayenne peppers are always covered in them, I keep killing them but they keep coming back!

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  Год назад

      I think it's a leaf-footed bug of some sort. They are a pest, but a mild one in my experience. Sunflowers are a great trap crop for them though, as they gravitate toward them. Your sunflowers may look sad, but everything else will get largely ignored.

    • @JohnFerrerAkaEric
      @JohnFerrerAkaEric Год назад

      @@AuxhartGardening Do the sunflowers need to be close to the garden or could they be like ten feet away to get the benefit? My garden/yard isn't terribly big but I think dwarf sunflowers may be something that could be a good functional decoration on my deck. For what its worth, Jerusalem Artichokes did not seem to have the same effect.

  • @wardsdotnet
    @wardsdotnet Год назад

    Is this the same protocol for a saving seeds from a melon? Like if you have a cantaloupe and you want to save seeds from it

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  Год назад

      As far as I know, melon seeds don't have that mucus coating (but to be honest I don't eat any melons regularly). If they don't have that gel/mucus coating, they don't need to be fermented. For example a pumpkin wouldn't need this process, you could just dry the seeds immediately.

    • @wardsdotnet
      @wardsdotnet Год назад

      Cucumbers are melons though, we just eat them in a less mature phase.

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  Год назад

      @@wardsdotnet well I have the most experience with watermelons and those seeds definitely don’t have that gel coating. So I’m not sure which do or don’t have it.

    • @wardsdotnet
      @wardsdotnet Год назад

      Yeah, watermelon are so different from cantaloupe or honeydew. It's almost like they're different species and hard to believe they're not. I tried saving seeds from cantaloupe following pretty much the same steps here, which is also how I did it in the past with tomatoes, and I think it was just not a good cantaloupe and none of the seeds were viable

  • @lekgotlatgae5955
    @lekgotlatgae5955 7 месяцев назад

    Uhm.. whats the problem with cross pollination with more than one variety?
    Also i’d like some advice on how to get the algorithm to work for me because i too want to start posting my gardening adventures in the harsh climate of Botswana.. it’ll be my first time doing it at such a scale..
    my ashley cucumbers are super fragile but next season i’ma strictly plant them under a shaded area cause my they sure cant tolerate the heat

    • @AuxhartGardening
      @AuxhartGardening  7 месяцев назад

      Cross pollination isn't a problem unless you care about keeping the same type of cucumber year over year. Crossed seeds will grow a cucumber, sure, but you won't be able to control what you get as well. It also makes it harder to select for the strongest seeds when you don't control the pollination.
      As for the algorithm, I'm not really the one to ask. I mostly just post videos that I would've wanted to see, and I do so regularly.

  • @wardsdotnet
    @wardsdotnet Год назад

    When you start talking about the test, you said "put my seeds up on that" but you didn't point out that you're only testing a few of the seeds! I worry a beginner might think they should put ALL the seeds in the bag!!!