By the way, imagine my surprise when I Googled sunflowers and harvesting sunflower seeds from the heads! Holy smokes, but I found so many content scrapers out there who don't have a clue how to be original and authentic, but feel the need to steal other people's work. Shame on you. Why don't you try and grow your own gardens and then you can share your own photography.
Dried Sunflower Head Before Harvesting Seeds |
Dried Sunflower Head Before Harvesting Seeds |
Completely Removed Top Layer of the Dried Sunflower Head |
Some Sunflower Seeds Removed from the Dried Sunflower Head |
More Sunflower Seeds Removed from the Dried Sunflower Head |
All Sunflower Seeds Removed from the Dried Sunflower Head |
Grading the Sunflower Seeds Removed from the Dried Sunflower Head |
How Many Sunflower Seeds Can You Harvest From One Dried Sunflower Head?
You can see I made 4 little piles of seeds. I was rather "grading" the types of seeds by A, B, C and D grades. To the far right is A; to the far left is the D group. After completing the counting and grading, I found that A and B were pretty comparable in quality and size.
Piles A and B have 100 sunflower seeds each. Pile C has 90 sunflower seeds. Pile D - I did not count but estimate that there are at least 50 little seeds. That's 290 good seeds from one dried sunflower head plus the 50 little seeds = 340 seeds!
I was more than a little impressed with the amount of seeds that I harvested from that one sunflower head. It measured 3.5 inches in diameter and weighed about 4.5 ounces. So, that's about 100 sunflower seeds harvested per 1 inch.
These sunflower seeds were harvested to be used as seeds for planting more sunflower plants. I hope to be distributing my sunflower seeds before the end of the month.*
By the way, I started with Burpee! You can get a variety of Burpee Sunflower Seeds on Amazon. I have enjoyed the Autumn Beauty variety the most. The colors are quite outstanding!
And, now I have a 7 foot sunflower garden -- how about that? All from little Burpee sunflower seeds.
*UPDATE: I started The Sunflower Project on June 11, 2013. Within the first three days of the project, I had a number of early adopters - participants who signed up. I've sent out free packets of sunflower seeds to everyone on the list. Don't miss out! Add your name to this pay it forward project.
2 comments:
I remember watching sunflowers grow when I was little. I kept on waiting for the seeds to show up and had no idea you had to remove the top layer to get to the seeds :)
Well, I too wondered, "where the heck are all those sunflower seeds?" It's pretty amazing when you see how neatly packed they are within the honeycomb of the sunflower head. It's a marvel of Mother Nature for sure!
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