Thanks so much for taking the time to reply Neilshibui wrote: ↑September 25th, 2024, 5:58 pm Great to see someone offering seed suitable for bonsai![]()
Just some of my thoughts and experience with collecting and selling seed. Feel free to take no notice if you wish.
JBP, JRP and JWP are in demand but difficult to obtain and a bit more involved in collecting and processing so I think they should attract a premium. The JWP price list you posted is what I've been charging for JBP I collect here.
Maple seed is generally much easier to collect so I offer 50 seeds for $10 or 100 for $20 but that's for regular unnamed maples. Maybe you can ask a bit more for selected characteristics.
Not sure where you are getting ginkgo seed but I've never been able to collect a lot from any of the trees I know of. My experience is more time consuming to collect and then they also need to be cleaned and dried.
Crab apples are abundant and easy to collect the fruit but takes time and effort to separate the seeds.
Prunus are a little easier to separate the seeds but there's still some time and effort involved to get clean seed out and ready to send.
Happy to offer suggestions re processing seed if you want any assistance.
Couple of questions if i may just so I'm sure i follow. You say my pricing for the JWP/JRP is in line with your JBP seed pricing; does that mean you think it's about right, or that they perhaps should command a little extra for being a little more uncommon and desirable? Just didn't quite pick that up sorry mate. My concern is that there have been some struggles with germination on the JWP specifically and i don't want people to feel like I've shortchanged them on seed if only a very small percentage germinate from.
Yep the JM seed is dead easy to collect, clean and sort, bare minimal effort in those and even less so as they are literally in my back garden. That's kind of what prompted me to think more about price as it's no time at all to do really. I appreciate you sharing the kind of price per number you go with and i'll take that on board for sure.
As far as the Ginkgo go, i specifically know a couple of mature trees that fruit readily that i originally collected from probably 5 years ago now. It requires a specific trip to them for me, so i need to consider that. You are right that it is uncommon to find Ginkgo bearing fruit, let alone any significant number. The cleaning is a royal PITA having done it before; cleaning drying and sorting fruit that smells like rancid butter is never fun. Similar type situation with cleaning crab apple seed being time consuming but not stinky to clean and sort.
As far as packaging goes for postage, do you have any preference for a paper bag/ paper-based packaging vs a zip/ sealable plastic bag or some other container? I have some convenient size small plastic bags, or heaps of paper bags. Just thinking a sealed plastic bag might promote fungal development if the seeds aren't completely dry before being packaged.