I pretty much do what Mandrake outlined above, but without the paper towel part:
1) gently nick pointed end of seed until inside, white part visible
2) boil water and allow to cool until no bubbles, steam still present.
3) place seeds in a cup, add hot water
3.5) place on seedling heating mat
4) leave overnight, sometimes longer
5) sow seeds in 10:1:1 of potting soil : perlite: vermiculite
6) place in propagation chamber or humidity dome
Here are some notes I took on 22-2-13 (d/m/y) using the method described above. They're not complete but its what I have.
The prior procedure, steps 1-3.5, done on various species:
1) A. Maidenii
2) A. Acuminata var. Narrow phyllode
3) A. Simplix
4) A. Burkei
5) M. Hostilis (jeruma)
6) D. Illionensus
At time = to 1 hour on seedling mat:
1) A. maidenii--swelling apparent from nicked end, outer coating showing cracks forming
2) A. Acuminata var. Narrow phyllode-- swelling apparent, looks like needs more time
3) A. Simplix-- very little swelling, slightly lighter in color
4) A. Burkei--outer coating peeling off, inner part of seed very swollen, does not look good
5) M. Hostilis--swelling apparent from nicked end
6) D. I. -- swelling apparent, seed coat separating off
At time = 24 hours:
1) A. maideni.--showing small white point where nicked, fully swollen
2) A. Acuminata var. Narrow phyllode--same as before
3) A. Simplix-- slightly swollen, needs more time?
4) A. Burkei--outer coating completely fallen off, looks bad
5) M. Hostilis--already showing small tap roots, fully swollen
6) d.I.--same as mimosa hostilis
Results:
The simplix and Burkei never germinated. All the rest were sown, germinated, and are alive and very happy.
Also, with mimosa verrucosa, the same thing happened as with A. Burkei. Maybe the seed coatings are too thin to withstand this method of scarification and soaking. Perhaps the paper towel method is better for these two. I do not know.
Hcc