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Once whisky is in the bottle keeping it serves no useful purpose. It's not like wine, so does not improve with age. I can see why Australian seeds respond to heat treatment. They have evolved in a bush fire environment, so germinating after fire, when the area is clear of vegetation and is rich in nutrients is a useful trick. I have received acacia seeds with "wrap seeds loosely in news paper and set on fire" as part of the instructions.
pass a blowtorch over the tray
I assume a plastic pot/tray is not recommended?
I am fascinated by that idea of using a blowtorch for Erica seed. I wonder if any material was placed on top of the seed to burn because I thought the received wisdom now was that chemicals in smoke were important to stimulate germination.I have a bottle of 'Liquid Hickory Smoke' which I thought I might try with seed from fire prone habitats - and if it doesn't work it 'imparts a wonderful smoky flavour to your favourite foods'!
Allium seed is germinating the best if it's not older than 1 year, but I grew some Allium seeds with that were 2 years old.I planted them in the same container as the fresh seeds. The older seeds germinated later and more irregular and the germination percentage was lower, but still very acceptable.There are some reports that older Allium seeds need a warm-cold-warm period to break their dormancy
No material on top of the seed Tim - reliance was on cracking the seed coat being enough. But - I can't guarantee a subsequent watering did not use 'smoke water'.