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Hybrid Seeds – How Good Are They, or Are They Bad

Someone posted comments on a preparedness group blasting hybrid seeds as being a terrible thing, against natural law, and even dangerous for us to be using. I submit that the person is lacking in understanding of the facts, and is confusing hybrids with GMO seeds.

Here’s how I feel about whether or not hybrid seeds are good and valuable:

“We are all hybrids! And most of us can reproduce, just as the hybrid seeds can reproduce (the person claimed that hybrid plants were sterile). But our progeny will be different than we are, just as the progeny from hybrid plants’ seeds will be different from their parents.

In humans it makes for uniqueness and diversity and is wonderful. In vegetables and fruits it isn’t so great.

Honorable dedicated growers spend their lives painstakingly cross-breeding multiplied thousands of plants, in order to find the parental match that gives you and me the tastiest, healthiest, fastest growing, and most disease resistant fruits and vegetables possible.

And even after they have found that match they must work HARD and CAREFULLY to assure that each desirable female blossom is pollinated with the exact desired male pollen. Imagine the work involved with tomatoes, for example, where the blossom is tiny and EACH BLOSSOM CONTAINS BOTH MALE AND FEMALE PARTS!

That means they have to use tiny tweezers and magnifying classes to REMOVE the male anther BEFORE it is mature, and then introduce the CORRECT male anther to the female pistil at the exact time they both are mature, and hope pollination occurs – all the while making certain that no OUTSIDE pollinators, such as bees, get to the blossom.

The cost of producing great hybrid seeds is tremendous, and what do the seeds cost you and me? Let’s compare the best hybrid seed with a well known heirloom seed and see what it means in your garden.

Ace tomato seeds can be purchased from MVSeeds.com for $4.50 per ounce. That’s 10,000 seeds for next to nothing! How many will you plant in your garden – 10? 50? Either way the seed cost is nothing. What will it produce? Probably a few pounds per plant, but the size, taste, and other qualities we want in a great tomato are not available.

Big Beef tomato seeds, on the other hand, cost $250 per ounce! The smallest quantity MVSeeds.com sells is 100 seeds, and they cost $5.75. So, each seed costs 6 cents. That’s terrible, isn’t it!?

Or is it, really. Let’s compare what you get for your 6 cents with what you get from your virtually free Ace seed.

The Ace is a determinate plant and produces a crop of medium small tomatoes for a few weeks, whereas Big Beef is an indeterminate plant and produces great yields of large, juicy, tasty tomatoes for MANY months – even longer than a year in the tropics – until frost kills it.

Big Beef also has the best disease resistance of almost any tomato variety known to man. That single fact often means the difference between great success and total failure in your garden. How many times have you lavished MONTHS of time, energy, and money on your tomato plants only to have some disease wipe them all out about the time you finally started to harvest a crop. It’s common. Just last year disease wiped out a substantial part of the tomato crop in the entire USA!

I figure that each tomato plant in my garden produces between $30 and $60 in tomatoes. If I grew Ace tomatoes each plant would produce between $10 and $20 in tomatoes. How important is the cost of seed?

For my very limited budget Big Beef, and the other hybrids I use, are worth their cost MANY TIMES OVER!