🌿 Grow your future feast—because fresh is the new luxury!
The Open Seed Vault Variety Pack Bundle offers 44 varieties of premium fruit, vegetable, and herb seeds, with up to 3,000 seeds per variety. Designed for high germination and stored in moisture-proof packaging, this kit can yield up to 15,000 fresh produce items. It includes a detailed growing guide, making it ideal for both everyday gardeners and emergency preparedness enthusiasts seeking a sustainable, nutrient-rich garden.
K**R
Quick Returns For an Inexperienced First Year Gardener on Unprepared Beds
I just wanted survival seeds that germinate and grow. Excellent germination rate.Late last year, prior to the current apocalypse, I'd planned to plant these using the STUN method, strategic, total, utter neglect, testing different approaches. The squash seedlings proved far too tasty for the fall onslaught of birds, squirrels, rabbits and raccoons to ignore, the results are still pretty amazing. Some of the dwarf siberian kale and mustard greens even survived the winter, providing me a crop right now.With the STUN method, I used no prep, no weeding, planted in the "wrong" place, and got a small crop anyway from these amazing seeds. And believe it or not, that's exactly what I expected to happen. The next step is to let these go to seed (already in progress) and harvest their survivor genetics, getting a crop perfectly tailored to my wrong environment and neglectful practices.I also tested germinating these and some 25 year-old seeds in a bag of the cheapest, store-bought mystery potting soil. Everything came up in neat little rows. The germination rates were at least as good as advertised. The transplanted corn grew. (But not much. They were planted in September in Seattle. Not nearly enough time to grow.) I also have a suspiciously large patch of onions growing like weeds all winter. Which is neat, because I never have enough onions. I didn't even "plant" them. I just scattered them around a few places and then totally forgot about them. Nice. Turns out Jesus was right about that.If you're doing it for survival, especially given the yield I ended up with, I would suggest buying at least 3 to 5 packages if you can, and being much more intelligent and diligent about when you plant them, using compost, controlling the pests with Irish spring and similar tricks, giving the pests something else to eat to keep them busy while your plants get started to really give these seeds the best opportunity.The corn and sunflowers were seeded much too late in the year, but did grow anyway. As it is, I've already gotten much more than my money's worth from one pack of seeds, and I've only used about 20% of the package I bought.These are highly recommended. I'm looking forward to buying these again soon because it's still by far the cheapest, easiest way to replenish all the sunflowers, squash and corn I used up. I'm sold. Virtually every seed sprouted. I'm happy with everything I planted. Got compliments on my porch full of little seedlings.I don't know how it all tastes, but I'm told the flavor comes from a combination of good genes and being raising well. May have to update this when I know more.From a prior purchase of similar seeds germinated last year, I know the shelf life is easily 25 years or more if stored properly.Everything I planted germinated. With any more care (less culling and more weeding), I could have gotten a pretty big crop. All told, minimum total investment was less than $30. Less than a bag of groceries.But do I have a bag of groceries worth of produce? Yes. Easily. Despite using the STUN method and only one bag of potting soil, despite using 20% of the seeds, despite planting in the fall and only waiting until April, despite the cold, gloomy winter, despite being forced to stay indoors by the government, I can still fill up a bag with at least $30 worth of fresh, pesticide-free, herbacide-free onions, kale, mustard greens. And I still would have had enough seeds left over to Johnny Appleseed these throughout all my neighbor's yards.It's a no-brainer, IMO. Just look at the other reviews and see. And the instructions. Yes. Those are helpful. Took a look through them and studiously ignored them all. But if you're trying to grow food this year, I'd pay closer attention to those, which were simple, clear, and helpful. (Doesn't tell you how to trap squirrels, though.)I'm also looking forward to getting the medicinal herb pack from these guys. A bit higher price per variety, but still a screaming good deal. My brother (the real survival gardener of the family) planted a couple herbs that happily took over the yard for more than 10 years, managed by nothing but a string trimmer, that were reasonably well-behaved. I'd have to a little clueless not to make that kind of investment again. Put simply, even a badly neglected garden gives you rates of return you'll never see on the stock market.
C**R
Great start to any gardening journey
I recently started getting into gardening and wanted to move beyond growing herbs. I'm indecisive, so buying single-type seeds didn't appeal to me. I thought I should start looking at seed collection packets. So I found one that I thought would be a good start. It has some seeds from plants I eventually want to grow and eat, which made the decision to buy this very easy. The packet came with a small booklet with the type of seeds and how to care for them, which I'm currently following. The only downside is that some seeds are bigger than others, so you actually get a limited number for certain plants compared to others. For example, there are 8 bean seeds compared to around 30 lettuce seeds. However, there are a lot of seeds for certain plants, so I will definitely get years of use from this packet.I started with something easy and decided to grow lettuce, as many people told me it's a great plant to start with and I love eating lettuce. The lettuce grew quickly, which made me feel better about the rest of the seeds. I'm currently growing in limited quantity as I don't have the space yet and I'm still moving things around. I'm trying to grow tomatoes, beans, and peas currently. Unfortunately, I think I soaked my pea for too long because it started molding a day or two after I put it in a plastic bag. However, the bean started popping out of its shell less than a day after I put it in a plastic bag. The tomatoes took a bit longer, but in less than a week I started seeing the first leaf sprout!So far I've been very happy with the purchase as most of the seeds I've planted are growing. I can't wait to start planting next year.
C**E
Amazing value
Amazingly packaged, seeds sprout (Got them before this last purchase), and ill br buying more.
B**U
Pkg Smaller than the Impression Left by the Description but Terrific Overall Value
I have no idea about the rated features - I just filled them out to get past that road block. Seeds are contained in very sturdy heavy-duty Zip Lock type Mylar (?) pouch, but much smaller than expected. The seed pouches inside are small, plastic zip bags but each bag is easily identified. Those little pouches are what saved the space, as opposed to like, the Burpee's packaging. BUT, a very comprehensive planting and storage guide was included so the planting instructions, etc., are not necessary on each packet of seeds. I've been a seed hoarder for YEARS, so I thought this might be my SHTF seed prep, and NOT sorry I ordered it. The only two things I'd swap out on the as-built offerings are the Okra and the Kale. I'd swap them out for Snow Peas and a white corn or a bush green bean. But the variety is great and the seeds are all heirloom. Size not impressive but I'm impressed. I just expected a bigger pkg. My bad. Good deal for the conscientious just-getting-started prepper or gardener. I'm in the Southwest so the crops would best be divvied up into Spring and Fall plantings. I'm an heirloomer kinda girl just because the seed saving and true-to-type for the next generation is there. Next-gen gardening with hybrids is like a grab bag. Ya never know what you're gonna end up with. I think I'll order the Herb package as well. Yup. Recommend.
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