Erythronium, along with other spring blooming flowers, sheds seeds with undeveloped embryos. They need months of warm weather for the embryos to develop within the seeds. Putting them in the fridge will halt that development. Diane Jan Jeddeloh via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote: > > Off hand the only old bulb seed I’d be leery of offering is eryththronium. In my experience they don’t seem to like storage but maybe I’m not storing them correctly. If anyone has further information on the subject of erythronium seed storage I’d like to hear it. > _______________________________________________ pbs mailing list pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net http://lists.pacificbulbsociety.net/cgi-bin/… Unsubscribe: <mailto:pbs-unsubscribe@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> PBS Forum https://…