Free: Sugarcane Seeds (20) - Gardening Seeds & Bulbs - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: Sugarcane Seeds (20)

Sugarcane Seeds (20)
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Description

The listing, Sugarcane Seeds (20) has ended.

Sugarcane has lots of positives:
1) Very easy to grow and propagate . . . great for plant killers
2) It looks cool, kinda like bamboo with longer leaves
3) If you grow it outside a tropical zone, your neighbors will refer to you as “eccentric”
4) You can eat it (or make juice from it). Yummy
5) Slicing the stalks into segments lengthwise makes them into great skewers for bbq’ing shrimp. Also yummy
6) Makes a good privacy screen to shield your crazy activities from the neighbors. Not yummy, but useful

It also has a couple negatives:
1) The leaves are sharp. Don’t plant a field of sugarcane and then run through it lightly clothed . . . you’ll die
2) Occasional dry leaf removal is required (see note above, use gloves and long sleeves)
3) Ants like it too
4) Starting your own residential sugar plantation and becoming a sugar baron may make neighbors jealous.
It grows to a height of 8-10 feet and if planting in the spring will mature at the end of the summer. It can be planted in the spring about the same time as corn, and has similar growth habits, so plant it as you would corn. In the fall time, you gather the stalks of the cane and squeeze the juice and boil it down for the sorghum syrup. It is a great opportunity for you to try something nice, and for those that have children, they will get to see from growing and harvest, and after cooking down the juices, the sweet taste of the syrup.
Questions & Comments
Original
This is a cool auction. The sugarcane plants sounds fascinating. We have had a lot of rain and very hot and humid weather this summer. This is the first year we have had so many problems with ants after living in the same house for 22 years. I wouldn't mind having such a plant, but if it attracts ants this would not be a good plant for us. Good luck with your auction.
+1
Aug 12th, 2011 at 12:50:47 PM PDT by
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Thanks for bidding on my Chinese Snake Bean. I am going to have to bid on this. I think I need it!!!! Great auction.
Aug 6th, 2011 at 8:06:43 AM PDT by
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I won them...yay!!
Aug 7th, 2011 at 11:54:55 AM PDT by
Original
This is a neat idea ! Will this grow in all states ? I live in New Jersey....
Aug 7th, 2011 at 5:14:28 PM PDT by
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Yes, they will grow in New Jersey. My uncle successfully grew some in Michigan. I would suggest somewhere that gets Full sun all day.
Aug 7th, 2011 at 5:49:37 PM PDT by
Original
This is kool !!
Aug 7th, 2011 at 5:16:04 PM PDT by
Original
I love your sense of humor...even tho I know you probably also meant it, not to run lightly clothed through a sugar cane field LOL :)))
Aug 8th, 2011 at 7:45:56 AM PDT by
Original
Oooh, I'm going to have to watch this one!! Fanning you : )
Aug 8th, 2011 at 3:47:04 PM PDT by
Original
Are you going to have more?
Aug 10th, 2011 at 12:01:40 PM PDT by
Original
Are these difficult to grow from seed?
Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:21:05 AM PDT by
Original
The best climate for the sugar-cane is that of tropical or sub-tropical regions. Although sometimes grown in South Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky, it cannot be depended upon as a crop farther north than Louisiana. The principal varieties of the plant are the Creole, called also Malabar, the Otaheite, and the Batavian.

The plants are, in our Southern States, put in between January and March; October is the season for gathering the crop. At that time the slips or cuttings are selected for setting out, as the cane is never grown from seed. On general principles we venture to suggest that final deterioration is probable in any plant which is never renewed from seed.

For planting, after breaking up the land, furrows are run four, six or eight feet apart; in these the slips, each having several joints, are laid, from two to five feet apart, and covered not very deeply. The spaces between the rows are ploughed or hoed well. In Louisiana three crops will successively follow from a single planting; in the West Indies one laying will last from ten to twenty years. The yield of sugar to the acre is from 500 to 5000 or more lbs. to the acre; never more than 2000 in this country. (Now I'm confused. I'm in NC)
Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:24:03 AM PDT by
Original
First, you cannot grow real sugar cane directly from seed. The seeds produce only what they call “suckers”, or “greenies”. This will only produce small quantities of very low quality molasses.
But among a hundred or so suckers you may find one or two “regents”. These are identified by their stalk color and joint formation. These are cut and saved while the rest are destroyed by fire. You don’t want any more seeds. (This is the info I found online. Can I retract my bid? LOL)
Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:26:16 AM PDT by
Original
They're still pretty though. Even if I win, I hope they still grow. I wouldn't harvest them anyway... I'd just let them grow for decorative purpose...
Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:27:16 AM PDT by
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Typically, garderners and farmers wishing to cultivate sugar cane will use small stalks of mature cane as "seed cane" that will later grow to mature cane themselves. Even though sugar cane is rarely grown from seeds, the plants do produce them. The best way to store sugar cane seeds is to keep them in an environment in which they are least likely to germinate. Seeds must be kept safe from heat, moisture, and fungi.
1
Purchase dried sugar cane seeds with a high germination percentage.

2
Place seeds into an airtight jar.

3
Place silica gel into the jar with the seeds. The amount of silica gel used should be 10 percent of the total weight of the seeds being stored.

4
Fasten the lid on the jar until it is airtight.

5
Store the seeds in a cool or refigerated location. Ideal temperatures are 10 degrees Celsius or lower.
Aug 12th, 2011 at 7:42:04 AM PDT by
Original
A good thing about a plant that attracts ants though, is that it will lead the ants AWAY from the house! That's the way I look at it anyways. LOL
Aug 12th, 2011 at 1:30:37 PM PDT by
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Interesting auction and conversation! I grew up around sugar cane fields..in Florida. Daddy used to 'peel' the cane and slice it into spears and I'd suck and chew on that stuff all day long!! High fiber candy! lol I never knew (or forgot) about the seeds tho..we always just planted the canes like you would bamboo. The leaves are mean indeed...kids didn't listen about running thru the fields..ahem. Have fun on this one folks!! They are very pretty plants..
Aug 12th, 2011 at 8:49:05 PM PDT by

Sugarcane Seeds (20) is in the Home & Garden | Gardening | Gardening Seeds & Bulbs category