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northforker

Zinnia: Saved vs. commercial seed

northforker
14 years ago

With the exception of profusion zinnias, I have not been as big a saver of zinnia seeds as I have of many other annuals. Figured they were cheap enough to buy. But a friend who had a gorgeous healthy stand of a slightly smaller type zinnia saved seed for me and I planted it this year. While she saved from a wide variety of colors, almost all my blooms are PINK. (my least favorite zinnia color). Why might that be?

Even where I am getting a variety of color (from saved or traded seed) I feel like the plants are just NOT doing as well as places where I planted commercial seed.

I am thinking about just purchasing all my seed (except profusion) for Zinnia next year.

This is the only seed I would say this about - I save LOTS of seed and often feel the "home grown" actually does BETTER than the commercial seed.

Anyone have any thoughts on this?

Nancy

Comments (17)

  • kqcrna
    14 years ago

    My experience has been much the same. Profusions seem to stay true to the type in both color, size, and vigor. Other zins generally don't resemble the parent plant at all. I had beautiful Dreamland coral zins a few years ago- big double coral blossoms on plants under a foot tall
    {{gwi:428362}}

    Their harvested seeds produced everything from butt-ugly orange things a few inches tall, to pink single types
    {{gwi:421046}}

    to tall reddish ones, seen in the back here
    {{gwi:435568}}

    Now I only use saved OP profusions, would prefer to buy fresh commercial ones and have a better chance of getting what I want.

    Karen

  • karendee
    14 years ago

    There is a post here on GW somewhere about "you can breed your own zinnias too" or something like that. It seems it is easy to change the plant by polinating them. I have tons of bees so I wonder how my saved ones will look. I bet some cross polination will happen for me.

    I planted mine in July and they are budding now...
    I did buy a bunch of seed packs when walgreens had them on clearance...
    Karen

  • ghoghunter
    14 years ago

    Any time you save seeds from a hybrid you take the chance of having plants that resemble any of the parents or even ancestors further back in time. Hybrid seeds are always chancy when you plant them. Only Open pollinated types will come true. That's why people pay money for the seeds and hybrid seeds are usually more expensive.
    Joann

  • laura_in_cinti
    14 years ago

    Does anyone know off-hand which types are hybrids and which aren't. I have tons of zinnia seeds and would love to know which are which. I've checked the web, but it seems there's some unreliable info out there as even the profusion series was labeled as hybrid in a few links.

    Laura

  • northerner_on
    14 years ago

    I had much the same experience. I started with saved seeds two years ago and the profusion continue to be the same and beautiful. The other types (striped etc.) have got smaller each year and I have ended up with mostly shades of pink and cream. I have been disappointed in a white one whose seeds I bought this year. I find they are also small. Perhaps they were cheap seeds, can't remember. This year I plan to try something called 'Red Cap Zinnia' that was mentioned and pictured here on this forum.

  • northforker
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    So I have lots of company in thinking that, for zinnias, commercial seed may be the way to go. But even "those guys" still have to get seed from a plant like the rest of us! I wonder what they do to get perfect genetic matches from one season to the next - maybe hand pollenating? Or grown in very controlled greenhouses? Anyone have a good link to info on how commercial seeds are "grown"? I'm interested.

  • laura_in_cinti
    14 years ago

    Along with the Profusion series, I've also had good luck with Benary's Giants (but they're mixed colors anyway, so that might not be the best example) and Purple Prince which has come true for three seasons now. I planted T&M's Pulcino Mix this year. I'm curious to see what they'll look like next year.

    I'm interested too to find out more about this!

  • ghoghunter
    14 years ago

    If you want OP Open Pollinated types of Zinnia you can buy your seeds initially from someone like Baker Creek Heirlooms...They only sell open pollinated types of plants. Here is a link to their zinnias..they carry about 12 types. Mostly if you google a zinnia type it will say if it is a hybrid. Anyway once you get Open Pollinated seeds like from Baker Creek then you can save your own seeds and they should come true!

    Here is a link that might be useful: Baker Creek Heirloom Zinnias

  • albert_135   39.17°N 119.76°W 4695ft.
    14 years ago

    Here is a link to GWs breeding Zinnia forum: It can be fun to breed your own zinnias .

  • trudi_d
    14 years ago

    Dollar Store zinnia seeds are all OPs.

  • karendee
    14 years ago

    Thanks Albert that was the thread I meant.

    Karen

  • karendee
    14 years ago

    YEAH my zinna I sowed in July Bloomed.

    Thanks Nancy! You gave me such good advice and good seeds!

    I have some pretty ones. I will save seed and see what happens.

    Karen

  • northforker
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Yes,do..we'll see. I know some of what I sent to you were commercial seed, not (saved)trade seed. Do you remember which was which? Try to evaluate to see any difference and report back to us.........

    We are learning all the time us WSer's!!!
    Nancy

  • karendee
    14 years ago

    I wish I did know which was which. I think so far all comercial. most are pink so far.

    I can take pics when they all bloom

    Karen

  • terrene
    14 years ago

    I like the tall colorful types of Zinnias, like Cut & Come Again, California Giants, and State Fair. This year I'm growing State Fair and they are beautiful. Does anyone know if these are generally open-pollinated and come true to seed?

    I am not a big fan of the poofy pom-pom type Zinnias, and prefer the singles and semi-doubles. This is because it makes the nectar tubes readily available to pollinators. The bees, hummers, and butterflies love them.

  • lblack61
    14 years ago

    Last year, I had some that were either Elegans or Magellans (they were between the height of the two), that didn't have florets, only really big centers...They looked like Blow-pops!
    It was interesting, but not what I was wanting for that spot.
    So I think I'll always purchase seed every year for them.

    Linda

  • ghoghunter
    14 years ago

    Terrene...I looked up the State Fair Zinnia and one place that was selling seeds for it was the Southern Exposure Seed Exchange. They listed themselves on the home page as a Heritage Seed Exchange using only Open Pollinated seeds so I am guessing then that State Fair is open pollinated.
    Joann

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