Question: if packets of tomato seeds contain an average of ten seeds, what is the chance that one will contain just four? I will come back to this later.
Thirty years ago, the most popular television gardener in the U.K. was Geoff Hamilton. Here he is on the cover of the Radio Times wearing the same Marks and Spencer air force blue shirt as I had (Radio Times also lists TV programmes but has kept the same title since 1923).
In 1996, he wrote a column praising the virtues of Thompson and Morgan’s orange ‘Sungold’ cherry tomatoes:
Ever since I first grew Thompson and Morgan’s cherry tomato “Sungold” I’ve rejected all others. For me, it has just the right balance between sweet and acid that makes it melt in the mouth. Mind you, I can’t afford to be a stick-in-the-mud, so I shall try others…
The column has been folded at the bottom of our seed box ever since.
Sadly, Geoff Hamilton died shortly after it was published. He may not
even have got to try the Sungolds he grew that year. His gardens at Barnsdale, Rutland, remain a much visited attraction.
They are pretty expensive as seeds go. They only put a small number in each packet, and, being F1 hybrids, they don’t re-seed themselves true to type so you have to buy new ones each year. Nowadays, they work out at between 30 and 50 pence per seed, and would probably be more if the patent had not expired and they were still only available from Thompson and Morgan.
We followed the advice and bought some, and, being able to afford not only the seeds but also to be sticks-in-the-mud, we have since rejected all others too. They are as good as Geoff Hamilton said.
To return to the question I started with, about the probability of
getting only four seeds in packets that have an average of ten. After pondering for some time, I’m afraid I still don’t
know the answer, and neither do you unless you work for Johnsons Seeds of
Newmarket, Suffolk, and can say how accurately the seeds are counted and
whether packets are just as likely to contain more than ten seeds as
less than ten seeds (in other words the spread and skew of the
seed-count-per-packet distribution). I don’t think the question can be
answered without this information. So let’s just guess the answer is:
“very unlikely”.
What I do know is that I was pretty
annoyed when it happened to me. About a month ago I opened a packet of
Johnsons F1 Sungold tomato seeds, average contents ten, and found only
four seeds. I am not sure when and where I bought them. I got them early
last year, forgetting I had some left over from the year before.
I
complained to Johnsons and after a few weeks received a replacement packet,
but in the meantime I had bought another new packet to get things
started. Tip: have a good feel of the packet before buying. Even if the
seeds are too small to count, you can certainly detect the difference
between four and ten.
Here are this year’s seedlings on their
way from the house to the greenhouse to be moved into bigger pots. I
always grow six seeds on the assumption they won’t all come up, but, as
you can see, this year they did. Now, what are the odds of that?