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Saving Maize Seeds — The Wind-Pollinated Outbreeder
Bob

सिर्जनाकर्ता

Bob

3. जुलाई 2026BE

Saving Maize Seeds — The Wind-Pollinated Outbreeder

Save true corn seed — the hardest pollination lesson of all. Maize is wind-pollinated and a fierce outbreeder: its tassels dust pollen onto silks on the breeze, each silk feeding one kernel, and it crashes in vigour if you save from too few plants. Grow a big block, isolate it, dry the ears on the stalk, and select kernels from MANY ears. A serious maker build in wind pollination and genetic diversity.
मध्यम
One growing season

निर्देशनहरू

1

Two flowers, married by the wind

A corn plant carries two separate flowers: the TASSEL at the very top makes pollen, and the EAR lower down pushes out a tuft of SILKS. Each silk is a thread leading to one future kernel — and pollen must blow from a tassel onto that silk for the kernel to form. Gappy, half-empty cobs are just silks that never caught pollen.
2

Plant a big block

Grow an open-pollinated variety in a BLOCK of several short rows, never a single long row — a block lets wind-blown pollen fall evenly on every plant. Grow a big population: at least 100 plants (200+ is better) to keep the strain healthy, for the reason in the last step.

Materials for this step:

Corn SeedsCorn Seeds1 packet
CompostCompost1 bag
3

Isolate from other corn

Maize pollen rides the wind hundreds of metres, so any other flowering corn nearby WILL cross into your seed. Keep it pure one of three ways: DISTANCE (a few hundred metres from other corn), TIME (plant so your block sheds pollen weeks before or after any neighbour's), or hand-pollinate under bags as below.
4

Hand-pollinate for a pure cross (optional)

For guaranteed purity: cover each ear shoot with a bag BEFORE its silks emerge so no stray pollen reaches it. Bag a tassel to catch its pollen, then tip that pollen onto the caught silks and re-bag. Tag the ear. This makes you the wind, choosing exactly which pollen meets which silks.

Materials for this step:

Foil-Lined Kraft Paper BagFoil-Lined Kraft Paper Bag2 टुक्रा
Garden TwineGarden Twine1 रोल
5

Dry the ears on the stalk

Leave the seed ears on the plant long past eating-ripe — well past the milky sweetcorn stage — until the husks are papery brown and the kernels are hard and dented. Corn seed finishes filling and hardening right on the standing stalk (the 'dry-down').
6

Select from many ears

Harvest and pull back the husks. Choose your best ears from as MANY different plants as you can — well-filled, true to type, healthy. Take a share of kernels from each of many ears rather than all the kernels from one; this keeps the gene pool wide. Discard the tips and any shrivelled kernels.
7

Shell, dry and store

Twist and rub the kernels off the cobs by hand. Dry them further until a kernel is too hard to dent with a fingernail, then store cool, dark and airtight, labelled. Corn seed is shorter-lived than beans — use it within 2-3 years.

Materials for this step:

Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids1 टुक्रा
Adhesive LabelsAdhesive Labels1 पाना
8

Compendium — wind pollination and the outbreeder's rule

Maize is the opposite of a bean in every way that matters to a seed-saver, and it teaches the deepest rule of the craft. Where the bean pollinates itself in a closed flower, maize is monoecious and WIND-pollinated: its male tassels release clouds of pollen to the breeze, which must drift down onto the female silks — and because each silk is a private tube feeding exactly one kernel, every single kernel on a cob is a separate act of pollination (miss a silk and you miss a kernel). Wind is a promiscuous matchmaker: it carries pollen far and mixes every corn plant for hundreds of metres around, so maize is a fierce cross-pollinator (an 'outbreeder') that will never stay pure next to another variety without real isolation of distance, time, or the bag. But the subtler danger is genetic. Self-pollinators like beans are perfectly happy inbred — they do it every generation. Outbreeders like maize are built to mix, and if you save seed from only a few plants they suffer INBREEDING DEPRESSION: within a few generations the strain grows weak, short and low-yielding as harmful recessive traits double up. The cure is population — save from a large block (100+ plants) and take kernels from MANY ears, not all from one prize cob, so the wide gene pool that keeps maize vigorous is preserved. This is why traditional maize was always grown and saved by whole villages, not single gardeners, and why the same 'big population, many parents' rule applies to every wind- or insect-crossed outbreeder — spinach, beetroot, brassicas and the squash it shared a field with. Domesticated from wild teosinte in Mexico around nine thousand years ago, maize was bred entirely by exactly this careful mass selection, one saved handful at a time, into the most productive grain on Earth.

सामग्री

6

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

सम्बन्धित ब्लुप्रिन्ट

यी ब्लुप्रिन्टहरूले ज्ञान साझा गर्छन् — प्रविधि, सामग्री वा सिद्धान्त

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ब्लुप्रिन्ट मार्फत उत्पादनहरू किनेर सिर्जनाकर्तालाई सहयोग गर्नुहोस् सिर्जनाकर्ता कमिसन विक्रेताले तोकेको, वा यो ब्लुप्रिन्टको नयाँ संस्करण बनाउनुहोस् र आम्दानी बाँड्न आफ्नो ब्लुप्रिन्टमा जडानको रूपमा समावेश गर्नुहोस्।

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