CorrieSC
Sprout
At work this summer, we grew a local variety of flour corn, with the intention of giving out some of the seed to local gardeners and a community seed bank. We ended up with enough seed to fill about three 5-gallon buckets, but some weevils found their way in as well. I'm worried that if we keep the kernels at room temperature until spring, the bugs will have plenty of time to ruin a lot of the seeds, but I don't think I can pick them out by hand without missing some.
Most of the advice I found online for dealing with weevils seemed to be aimed at large-operations (fumigating, taking the corn to market early), but I also found a suggestion to freeze the corn for a few days, just long enough to kill the eggs, larvae, and adults.
Has anyone had luck freezing corn for seed? Should I follow the advice of only freezing for a few days, or just leave it in cold storage until spring? It's been drying since the first week of September, so I don't expect moisture to be an issue, and we have a chest freezer that doesn't get opened often, so changes in temperature won't be a concern either.
Most of the advice I found online for dealing with weevils seemed to be aimed at large-operations (fumigating, taking the corn to market early), but I also found a suggestion to freeze the corn for a few days, just long enough to kill the eggs, larvae, and adults.
Has anyone had luck freezing corn for seed? Should I follow the advice of only freezing for a few days, or just leave it in cold storage until spring? It's been drying since the first week of September, so I don't expect moisture to be an issue, and we have a chest freezer that doesn't get opened often, so changes in temperature won't be a concern either.