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So you've got some heirloom seeds, perhaps you've been given some or you collected some
in a far away place, and you're not sure if they're any good, and you don't want to waste
your time on seeds that are no good. So what do you do? Well there's a simple test. Here
you have some sugar snap peas. One of my favorites. The seeds are several years old. They may
be good. They may not be good. How do we know? Okay. So she's going to take, she's going
to take ten seeds and put them in a napkin and fold it over and put the napkin into this
little baggie and put a little tiny bit of moisture into the baggie. Good. Just enough
to activate those seeds. Now left in a warm room, seventy degrees, we should know within
three to five days how many of these seeds have some life left in them. If six germinate
we have sixty percent germination. If two germinate it's pretty low. That's twenty percent
of course. I might still plant these seeds, but it'll give me a better idea the viability
of the seed. We also have some information about seed viability that we can apply to
the situation. We know that the big fleshy wet seeds have a shorter, a shorter shelf
life, and the hard rock little seeds they tend to last a long time. In fact I heard
they took wheat out of pharoh's tomb and germinated it. Several thousand year old seeds and they
still germinated. That's pretty miraculous.