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Old December 16, 2016   #1
Banadoura
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Default Buying Seed in SubZero Temps

Hi All,

I've been hesitant to order seed lately because our temps went below 0 (c) and will most likely remain there for at least the next 2 months.

My concern is regarding the seed packs spending a night or two in the mailbox before they get picked up. Do you think they would become harder to germinate?

Would subzero temps also affect fertilizer like tomato tone?

Thanks for sharing your experience,
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Old December 16, 2016   #2
tash11
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I worry about that too, however IME it's fine. I have an Indigo Rose that has volunteered from tomatoes that were left in the garden every year for years now. Through both really bad winters and mild winters.
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Old December 16, 2016   #3
jmsieglaff
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I don't think there will be any issues--I think extreme heat would be worse on a seed than extreme cold. I've ordered seed and traded seed during cold spells and haven't had an issue.
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Old December 16, 2016   #4
Rootwad
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I keep seeds in the freezer.
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Old December 16, 2016   #5
KarenO
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Potential freezing Will not be an issue for properly dried and packaged vegetable seeds. It would be a problem for any bulbs, tubers, corms , onion sets. Crowns, roots or plants.
Feel confident ordering seeds in winter but other plant parts wait til spring.

KarenO
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Old December 16, 2016   #6
Banadoura
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Thank you all for chiming in!

Time to order some Jaune Flamme & Taxi, my last two varieties missing from my 2017 grow list!
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Old December 17, 2016   #7
RJGlew
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I have not had issues with seeds arriving in cold temperatures. My annual Pinetree order arrived this week and sat in the mailbox at -25 for a number of hrs.
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Old December 17, 2016   #8
Banadoura
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RJGlew View Post
I have not had issues with seeds arriving in cold temperatures. My annual Pinetree order arrived this week and sat in the mailbox at -25 for a number of hrs.
We've been having the same arctic wind as you guys out east, it was -31 yesterday. By the time the seeds arrive we should be coming back to seasonal norms next week.
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Old December 19, 2016   #9
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All the seeds I've bought commercially came packed in bubble wrap - that means no risk of the seeds getting wet when the storm starts blowing sideways into our Canada Post mailboxes. As it does! Bubble mailers are great for winter seed travels.
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