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Seed Saving Guidelines
No. 5

LETTUCE


Lactuca sativa
Family: Compositae

Carrot seed saving guideline also available here as a PDF document (187Kb)

Six different groups of lettuce are generally recognised: crisphead, butterhead, cos, leaf, stem and Latin. All will interbreed.

The flowers are perfect and self-compatible. Each "flower" head is a head that contains 10 to 25 florets, all which open on the same day, usually in the morning. The anthers form a tube, through which the style grows, picking up pollen grains to fertilise the single seed. The florets then quickly close, never to open again.

Growing and Roguing

Most lettuce varieties are annual, growing and flowering the same year. However, the main problem when producing seed is the length of time taken for seed heads to form. Some will not produce their flower stalks early enough, not giving enough time for the seeds to ripen properly.

Pollination and Isolation

The flowers are perfect and self-compatible, so good seed set is always assured. However, insects do visit the flowers and may cause some crossing between varieties. An isolation distance of 8m is adequate. If you must grow two varieties side by side you can wrap spun fleece around one variety just before its flowers start to open.

Cultivated lettuce will occasionally cross with wild lettuce (lactuca serriola).

Harvesting

Like dandelions, lettuce seeds have 'parachute'plumes, when the seed is ready. Seed will ripen irregularly, ready 12-24 days after flowering. Harvesting should take place on a dry afternoon. For maximum yield harvest every day during this period by gently bending the flower stalks over and shaking them in to a large paper bag (a potato storage sack is ideal for this), or pick off the individual white fluffy seed heads as they are ready and place in paper bag. Otherwise, cut the whole stalk about three weeks after the peak of flowering and place on a large paper or cloth bag to dry.

Leave the seed heads to dry for another couple of weeks in the bags, as the seeds will then be easier to clean.

Lettuce seed heads (from above)
Lettuce seed heads
(from above)

Cleaning

Rubbing separates the plumes and chaff from the seeds. When completely dry, shake the flower stems in the bag. Rub the seed heads between your hands to release more seeds. Put the seed through a fine mesh sieve that allows the seeds through but retains the chaff and plumes; this will give relatively clean seed. Winnowing is difficult because seeds and chaff are about the same size and weight. For extra cleaning use reverse screening, with a smaller mesh that retains the seed but lets small pieces or chaff and plume through.

The dust produced during cleaning causes irritation to the lungs and eyes. If cleaning large amounts use a mask and goggles or clean outdoors.

Storage

Seeds can be kept stored in a cool, dry place for up to 7 years, after which germination will drop off very rapidly.

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