I have a brand new pack of lettuce Emerald Oak that has not managed a single germinated seed in 4 attempts (including putting the pot in the fridge for 24hrs after sowing).
I often use out of date seeds and sometimes you get good plants, sometimes not. It depends a bit on the variety but also on the individual plants themselves. If I am sowing from an old packet I will often sow a few more seeds than I need to make up numbers (I've sown 6 seeds from courgette green bush, sow by 2012 this year and 3 of them germinated although 2 took some time). Some species, particularly things like parsnips really don't like being kept and it is better to start with unopened packets each year. Often unopened packets will keep well regardless of sell by date (within reason) - its when they are opened that the seed starts to deteriorate.
I think the temperature they are kept at also makes a difference - often when I have had poor germination from new seed they have come from a garden centre which is basically a greenhouse, and I have stopped buying seeds from there (although some were fine). Keeping them in a warm room over winter may not be helpful as some seeds require a cooler period before they will germinate.
I often use out of date seeds and sometimes you get good plants, sometimes not. It depends a bit on the variety but also on the individual plants themselves. If I am sowing from an old packet I will often sow a few more seeds than I need to make up numbers (I've sown 6 seeds from courgette green bush, sow by 2012 this year and 3 of them germinated although 2 took some time). Some species, particularly things like parsnips really don't like being kept and it is better to start with unopened packets each year. Often unopened packets will keep well regardless of sell by date (within reason) - its when they are opened that the seed starts to deteriorate.
I think the temperature they are kept at also makes a difference - often when I have had poor germination from new seed they have come from a garden centre which is basically a greenhouse, and I have stopped buying seeds from there (although some were fine). Keeping them in a warm room over winter may not be helpful as some seeds require a cooler period before they will germinate.
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