huntsman53 wrote:Brad,
I understand where you are coming from in your reasoning but explain this! I received the gifted stratified seed from Mike last fall and placed them immediately into my' refrigerator. The temperature in my' refrigerator is kept well below 50 degrees but I am sure that the temperature in it rises occasionally every time myself, one of my two daughters or 5 granchildren open the refrigerator's door to get something out. However, the stratified seed should not be significantly affected by opening and closing of the door (temperature-wise) but yet, about 10 percent of the stratified seed's embryos had begun to emerge by the time I removed them this Spring to plant them.
By the way, even though those 10 percent of the seeds had emerging embryos when I removed them from my' refrigerator, I planted them along with the other seeds. I was very careful in handling and planting them and from what I could tell, most if not all of the seeds that had emerging embryos survived and are doing well.
Frank
First of all, we are not being scientifically exact on temperatures, but speaking of general guiding principles.
Secondly, the germination in the refrigerator is exactly why folks like me -especially in more northern climates- caution against spring planting. Ginseng held in a refrigerator will ALWAYS be sprouting before we can get it into the ground in the spring on a normal year.
You handled your sprouting seed with tender loving care. However, if you had broken any of those little tails the seed would have died. that prohibits rake and scatter (if you can do that around here in the spring anyway) and using any form of mechanical device to assist in planting those seed that have started to germinate. That might not be a big deal for someone who has the time or for planting 100 seeds. But when we are talking a pound or so, most of us can't do that, and should not since we can plant it in the fall and it will do just fine.
Please understand that when you hold seed in the fridge, it is already at the temperatures of germination in the spring. So as soon as that cold requirement is satisfied, if enough moisture is present, it germinates in the fridge. Normally, about 6 months in the fridge and you will start seeing tails.
So, the point is not that seed in the fridge will not germinate. The point is that seed held in the fridge until FALL planting may delay germination for another year.
Again, my recommendation is to never plant in the spring and never hold seed in the fridge unless planting in late fall after the temps of the ground are about the same as the fridge.
Frank, for you, if you insist on planting in the spring. I would recommend that you initially put your seed in the fridge for maybe a month or so, and then move it to the freezer. In a frozen state, the period of time you can hold the seed can be extended. It will not germinate until it begins to again warm up.