This year, I was able to harvest plenty of okra from my home garden. While I can still expect some more, a few okra pods have grown too large and have started to dry out, making them perfect for collecting seeds for next year.
Using these seeds, I can grow okra again next year, keeping costs to just the effort involved. This is one of the great appeals of home gardening.
In this article, I’ll introduce how to harvest seeds from homegrown okra for next year’s planting.
How to Harvest and Store Seeds from Ripe Tomatoes for Next Year
Leave overgrown and tough okra on the plant
Okra can grow significantly in a single day, so if you neglect to harvest it, it can quickly become too large and tough to eat.
When this happens, don’t force the harvest; just leave the okra on the plant.
By doing this, the okra will mature and dry out. The photo at the beginning shows this stage, where the stalk is still green, but the okra itself has turned brown and dried.
You must be patient and leave it until it reaches this state.
Harvest the dried okra to collect the seeds
Pick the okra that has fully matured and dried.
We grew star-shaped okra, and the ridges are now dry and cracking. This is the sign that the okra is ready for seed harvesting, so remember it.
Starting from the cracked part, break open the pod. Inside, you’ll find dark green to black seeds. This is the right stage for seed harvesting.
I collected quite a few seeds, but for a home garden, 20-30 seeds are usually enough since you don’t need many okra plants to get a good harvest.
You can also let green okra pods dry out to collect seeds, but those seeds will be a lighter green and visibly different. While it’s possible to grow plants from these lighter seeds, their germination rate isn’t as high. So, if you want reliable seeds for next year, leave one or two pods on the plant until they dry out completely.
コメント