Tuesday, 4 August 2020

Edible Nut, Fruit and Berries Week at Sheffield's

HAPPENING THIS WEEK
Join our Facebook Group to participate.  

We're Celebrating
 "The Best of Edible Berries, Fruit and Nut Trees"

  August 5-14
This is a chance to fill your news feed with helpful tips and fun facts.


Planting berry, fruit or nut tree seed in your yard adds beauty, shad and color plus the added reward of edilbe, nutritious fut and nuts. Flowering trees in the spring add color and texture to your landscape with brilliant golds to red in the fall. We aim to make seed shopping easier for all of you, so we created a new dedicated page on our website where you can browse the best edible nuts, fruit and berry tree seed! See the page here: https://sheffields.com/Fruits-and-Berry-Tree-Seed

grow fruit trees from seed


Monday, 18 February 2019

Old Seeds, New Seeds, Red Seeds, Blue Seeds?

My Seeds have been Sitting Around,
are they still Good?

Maintaining Seed Viability
Non-viable seeds are often the cause of failure during sowing. There are many causes of poor viability.
- A seed may never have been viable in the first place. Poor pollination causes many seeds to look good on the outside but be empty inside.
- Insects or disease may have attacked a viable seed.
- It may not have been stored properly to maintain viability.
- It is just too old and has lost its vigor.

At Sheffield’s, we check all seed to ensure that it is viable.
There are two very simple tests that work quite well to quickly check quality.
1. The float test… Many times viable seeds can be separated from non-viable seed by floating in water.
If you float seed in water and some floats and some sinks, try cutting some of the floaters and also some of the sinkers.
If the floaters look empty or bad and the sinkers look full and good then you know this is a good method to easily separate out the bad seeds.
This method works well for many species of oak acorns that do not hold their caps. Occasionally in a dry year, good seed will float. You need to cut some floaters
to see if this method should be used.
2. The cut test….Like the float test, this method is not 100% accurate, but one thing it will tell you for sure is if a seed is definitely bad. If you cut a seed and it is hollow inside,
with no visible embryo or endosperm, it is more than likely not going to germinate. Of course, the cut test is a destructive test so do not use it on seeds where you have a very limited amount, or can’t waste any.



Most seeds keep better at cool or cold temperatures. There are species from the tropical rainforests that do not keep well at all, such as Cocoa. However, most seeds from colder or drier climates store relatively well at refrigerator temperature, for those that can’t be dried down such as Oaks and Chestnuts. Or frozen, if they can be dried to 10% moisture content or less such as Pines and Firs.
www.sheffields.com




Wednesday, 7 December 2016

Treestalk 🌲 Thursday Tis the Season for Holly

Tis' the Season for Holly🎄
Holly, or European Holly to distinguish it from related species, may also be called Christmas Holly or Mexican Holly.


Planted extensively in parks, gardens and hedges, particularly for its winter berries. 
An excellent hedge plant, tolerating hard clipping and maritime exposure and forming a dense stock-proof shelter. This species is a large evergreen shrub or pyramidal tree, growing up to 25 m tall, with glossy, dark green (though occasionally variegated), wavy-edged, spiny leaves 3-10 cm long and 2-5 cm wide. On higher branches (where grazing animals pose less of a threat) the leaves have virtually no spines.


The small, fragrant white flowers ðŸ’® each have four petals and are insect-pollinated. The fruits are globe-shaped, 7-10 mm in diameter and are normally red, but can occasionally be yellow. They each contain four seeds, are usually borne in clusters, and are eaten by birds which disperse the seeds,
Ilex aquifolium was once among the traditional woods for Great Highland bagpipes .
Ilex aquifolium. Grow your own from Seed You can have your own, a wonderful yard shrub🌱 : Lean More.
https://www.sheffields.com/…/////English-Holly/English-Holly