In preparation of trying to grow more cinnamon ferns I collected the spores back in May. I took two of the three fertile fronds off my 5 year old or so cinnamon fern. On a cinnamon fern the spores when ripe are green, once the spore fronds turn brownish-gold you're out of luck. I didn't store them in any complicated way as i was planning on sowing them fairly quickly. I just folded up the paper I had left the fronds on and taped it closed into an envelope. I stuck it to my fridge with a magnet, though my next set I'm probably not going to do that after my reading.
I found a few fern books and at least two said osmunda spores don't store well long term, so I set them up a few weeks ago. I mostly followed the instructions in this book, Native Ferns, Moss, and Grasses.Monday, June 15, 2009
Cinnamon Fern Spores
In preparation of trying to grow more cinnamon ferns I collected the spores back in May. I took two of the three fertile fronds off my 5 year old or so cinnamon fern. On a cinnamon fern the spores when ripe are green, once the spore fronds turn brownish-gold you're out of luck. I didn't store them in any complicated way as i was planning on sowing them fairly quickly. I just folded up the paper I had left the fronds on and taped it closed into an envelope. I stuck it to my fridge with a magnet, though my next set I'm probably not going to do that after my reading.
I found a few fern books and at least two said osmunda spores don't store well long term, so I set them up a few weeks ago. I mostly followed the instructions in this book, Native Ferns, Moss, and Grasses.
Labels:
fern,
propagation,
spores
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