Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Great Gift Ideas for Gardeners

 

Hello Gardeners

Are you still wondering what to gift that gardener on your list? How about some free native plant seeds bundled with a great book? I can help you with both! Pick up some free packets of native plants seeds from the White Bear Lake seed library. Add some empty water or milk plastic jugs and a bag of potting soil for winter sowing. Print out the directions below for winter sowing. Add a great book on native plants for long winter nights reading.

Here are some great native plant books:

Nature’s Best Hope – Douglas Tallamy

Brining Home Nature – Douglas Tallamy

Bees: An Identification and Native Plant Forage Guide – Heather Holm

Pollinators of Native Plants: Attract, Observe and Identify Pollinators and Beneficial Insects with Native Plants – Heather Holm

Attracting Native Pollinators: The Xerces Society Guide, Protecting North America's Bees and Butterflies – Xerces Society

A Sand County Almanac – Aldo Leopold

Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants - Robin Wall Kimmerer

 

Winter Sowing

Most native plants produce a flower which, if pollinated, will make a seed head or pod. Late in the fall collect the seed pods and allow to thoroughly dry. Remove the seeds before placing in paper envelopes or paper bags. Store in a cool, dry location. It is important seeds are dry before storing to prevent mold. Most native seeds require a moist cold period of time called stratification before they will germinate.

 

Germination Methods

 

Many native plant seeds have a dormancy mechanism that helps them to germinate at an optimal time. This prevents them from germinating right before winter or during a drought.

 

Easiest Methods: The easiest way to grow native plant seeds is to plant them in the late fall and let them go through the winter where they will sprout in the spring. Another way is to do snow sowing, used mostly for large sites. Prepare the site for planting in the fall. During the winter, scatter the seeds on top of the snow above the prepared site. As the snow melts in spring, the seeds will sink and germinate on the soil surface.

 

Winter Sowing Method

 

1. In late fall or early winter, prepare containers for growing seeds. Take a clean one gallon clear or semi-clear plastic container (such as a milk or water bottle) and poke holes in bottom and all over the sides and top of the container. Be generous with your holes. This is needed so water can get into and out of the container. Remove lid so that water can also get in through the top.

2. Cut 7/8 ways around the diameter about 6” from the bottom. Leave the top part attached by a small piece of plastic as the ‘hinge’. You are making a little greenhouse.

3. Turn the container over and label the bottom of the container with a permanent marker with the type of seed you are planting. Labelling the bottom prevents fading of the marker due to sun and rain. Yes, even permanent markers will fade in the sun, rain and snow.

4. Fill bottom of the container with at least 4” of potting soil. Use any kind, but don’t use soil from your garden as it is too heavy in texture and may have diseases.

5. Plant seeds in the soil to the depth stated on package. A good rule of thumb is to plant seeds to the depth of 2 ½ the diameter of the seed. Some seeds need light to germinate, which means don’t cover them, just sprinkle on the top of the soil.

6. Water until moist.

7. Replace top part of container and close with a piece of duct tape on the corner opposite the hinge. You just need one piece of tape to hold the lid in place so critters can’t get in to rummage around in your soil. Do not tape the entire sides. It is not necessary and some water will get in through the sides, which is a good thing.

8. Place containers outside in a sunny location. Yes, you put them outside in the winter in the cold. The seeds need a period of cold moist stratification before they will germinate. If you have persistent critters you may need to secure your mini-greenhouses so they don’t cart them off or play with them.

9. No need to do anything with the containers until spring. Check containers periodically to make sure they are still moist. Start checking containers as early as March. Things heat up quite a bit inside these little greenhouses on sunny days. There may still be snow on the ground, but it could be warm enough inside them to cause the soil to be dry. Remember seeds need moisture to germinate. You may have to open the tops on very warm days or when seedlings outgrow the container.

10. Transplant seedlings in the spring to your garden. No need to harden off seedlings as they have been growing outside all the time!

 

Moist Sand or Coffee Filter Method

 

You need to simulate winter by placing the seeds in moist sand or between a folded moist coffee filter and storing in the refrigerator for a set number of days before starting inside.  Find the number of days to stratify on online or catalog sources.

Place a handful of moist fine sand in a plastic bag. Add seeds and mix. Or moisten a coffee filter and place seeds on filter and fold in half. Place filter in plastic bag. Label bag and place in refrigerator for the required number of days needed to stratify. Check bag occasionally and add water to keep moist. After appropriate number of days has gone by, place sand and seeds in potting soil medium in flats or pots and grow as you would other seeds.

 

Resources:

Prairie Moon Nursery: https://www.prairiemoon.com/

White Bear Lake Seed Library blog site: www.wblseedlibrary.blogspot.com

Any questions, email me at: wblseedlibrary@gmail.com

 

Seed Packaging

The next seed packaging will be sometime after the first of the year. I’ll send an email and post a flyer at the White Bear Lake seed library when the date and time has been set.

If you would like to package seeds at home, send me an email and I will make up a bag of seeds and supplies you can pick up at the library.

Email: wblseedlibrary@gmail.com

 

Native Plant List

 

I have updated the online list of native plant seeds at the library. Note that this is a constantly changing list and was only accurate at the date listed at the top of the document.

 You can access at: native plant list

 

An Act Locally Opportunity!

Now is a great time to harvest most seeds as long as their seed heads or pods are dry. Yes, you can do this even in the winter! The seed library would love any native plant seeds or non-hybrid seeds from peas, beans, lettuce or tomatoes.

Though the seed library gets donations of commercial seed packets, I especially like getting locally grown seeds. These locally grown seeds have started adapting to our local environment and in time will grow better than produce, flowers and seeds from plants grown elsewhere in the country.

 

Pam

 

Local Greenhouses and Nurseries

As a request from our volunteers, I am adding a list of various local greenhouses or garden centers that sell plants. Many of these establishments do not use neonicotinoids on their plants that they grow. But the buyer should beware: they may sell plants that were grown previously at a different wholesaler which did use systemic pesticides. You should ask the growers at these establishments whether neonics were used on the plants you wish to purchase.

Neonicotinoids or ‘neonics’ are a systemic pesticides used on plants to kill insects. Unfortunately, these insecticides also harm pollinators as the insecticide gets into all parts of the plant including the pollen and nectar.

The only way to be sure a plant has not been treated with neonics is to buy certified organic seed and grow it yourself, or buy a certified organically grown plant.

More information here.

 

Goldman’s Greenhouse – East Bethel, MN

Website: Goldman's

 

MNL – Ecological restoration and native species landscaping, retail and whole sale seeds.  Website: MNL

 

Norther Hollar – Specializes in growing native plants of the Midwest. Website: Northern Hollar

 

Outback Nursery – Hastings, MN

Seller of Minnesota native trees, shrubs and perennials.

Website: Outback

 

Prairie Moon Nursery – Winona, MN and order online

They have hundreds of varieties of native plant seeds, plants and bare root stock.

Website: Prairiemoon

 

Prairie Restorations – Scandia, MN

Seller of Minnesota native plants.

Website: Prairieresto

 

 

Contact info:

Email: wblseedlibrary@gmail.com

Website: https://wblseedlibrary.blogspot.com/

No comments:

Post a Comment