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Difference between revisions of "40d:Seed"

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The 6 underground ("genuine dwarven") plant seeds can be purchased at the beginning of the game (see [[Starting Builds]]).
 
The 6 underground ("genuine dwarven") plant seeds can be purchased at the beginning of the game (see [[Starting Builds]]).
  
Fortresses can have a maximum of 200 seeds of each type. If your fortress has 200 seeds of a given type, no more seeds of that type will be produced until the seeds are consumed (either through planting or cooking) or otherwise destroyed.
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Fortresses can have a maximum of 200 seeds of each type. If your fortress has 200 seeds of a given type, no more seeds of that type will be produced until the seeds are consumed (either through planting or cooking) or otherwise destroyed (you can however acquire more than 200 seeds by trade, but why would you?). This is good in that all plant related jobs will no longer cause huge hauler bee-lines. It is bad in that a (though marginally) amount of food and value is lost.
  
All seed types can be cooked, producing one unit of edible food per seed. Cooking seeds is only recommended for seed types you cannot plant, or when you have more seeds of a given type than you need. Considering that a farm plot of 50 tiles is more than one will ever need, anything upwards from 100 should be more than safe to cook. Caveat: You will have to keep an eye on the cooking and disable seed cooking in time, otherwise your seeds will all be used up.
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All seed types can be cooked, producing one unit of edible food per seed. Cooking seeds has the danger of cooking all seeds, sabotaging your own farming. So better only cook seed types you cannot or want not to plant. Seeds have the further disadvantage that they tend to produce small meals thus using up lots of barrels.
  
Even though your dwarves will do a decent job of consolidating seeds into as few [[bag]]s as possible, massive seed stocks will still use up a huge number of bags. This can be controlled somewhat by [[dump]]ing surplus seeds from inside bags, especially if a single seed sits in a bag.  You can also use the [[stocks]] screen to dump all of a seed type that you do not intend to plant.
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Even though your dwarves will do a decent job of consolidating seeds into as few [[bag]]s as possible, massive seed stocks will still use up a huge number of bags. This can be controlled somewhat by [[dump]]ing surplus seeds from inside bags, especially if a single seed sits in a bag.  You can also use the [[stocks]] screen to dump all of a seed type that you do not intend to plant. You will however hardly ever need more than 40 bags and that is for more than, say, 2000 seeds. So buy some cheap leather soon, get your leatherworker to it and make those bags, so you can forget about one more micromanage thing.
  
 
== Seeds plantable indoors ==
 
== Seeds plantable indoors ==
 
 
There are six types of seeds that can be used to plant crops underground (in [[soil]] or in stone that has been muddied by [[irrigation]]):
 
There are six types of seeds that can be used to plant crops underground (in [[soil]] or in stone that has been muddied by [[irrigation]]):
  

Revision as of 20:51, 20 July 2009

You may be looking for world generation seeds, listed at Pregenerated worlds.

Dwarves can use seeds to grow crops in farm plots. Every plant in the game produces seeds. 1-2 seeds are created when a plant is processed/milled, brewed, or eaten (but not when cooked!)

The 6 underground ("genuine dwarven") plant seeds can be purchased at the beginning of the game (see Starting Builds).

Fortresses can have a maximum of 200 seeds of each type. If your fortress has 200 seeds of a given type, no more seeds of that type will be produced until the seeds are consumed (either through planting or cooking) or otherwise destroyed (you can however acquire more than 200 seeds by trade, but why would you?). This is good in that all plant related jobs will no longer cause huge hauler bee-lines. It is bad in that a (though marginally) amount of food and value is lost.

All seed types can be cooked, producing one unit of edible food per seed. Cooking seeds has the danger of cooking all seeds, sabotaging your own farming. So better only cook seed types you cannot or want not to plant. Seeds have the further disadvantage that they tend to produce small meals thus using up lots of barrels.

Even though your dwarves will do a decent job of consolidating seeds into as few bags as possible, massive seed stocks will still use up a huge number of bags. This can be controlled somewhat by dumping surplus seeds from inside bags, especially if a single seed sits in a bag. You can also use the stocks screen to dump all of a seed type that you do not intend to plant. You will however hardly ever need more than 40 bags and that is for more than, say, 2000 seeds. So buy some cheap leather soon, get your leatherworker to it and make those bags, so you can forget about one more micromanage thing.

Seeds plantable indoors

There are six types of seeds that can be used to plant crops underground (in soil or in stone that has been muddied by irrigation):

These are the only plants (aside from Tower Caps) that will grow inside the cave; all other (gatherable) plants can only be found and grown aboveground. Most (but not all) aboveground plants will produce seeds (see List of crops), which in turn can be planted to grow crops. Traders will almost always bring seeds with them (if the biome fits) which can be used for farming if you cannot find any yourself.

Seeds plantable outdoors

There are several types of seeds that are grown aboveground. They generally work the same way as underground crops: plant them in a farm plot, wait for them to grow, harvest them, and then process/mill, brew, cook, and/or eat them raw. Note that there is an important distinction between "inside" and "aboveground": these crops can be grown in any space marked "Above Ground", regardless of whether it's inside or outside. This means that via the usage of a skylight or greenhouse, they can be grown in a secure location, perhaps even adjacent to your underground crops.

Aboveground crops include: