Bael (Aegle Marmelos (Linn), family Rutacae, is also known as Bale fruit tree, is a moderate sized , slender, aromatic tree, 6.0 -7.5 m in height, and 90 to 120 cm in girth, with a some what fluted bole of 3.0-4.5 meter growing wild throughout the deciduous forests of India, ascending to an altitude of 1200 meter in the western Himalayas and also occurring in Andaman island.[1] Leaves, fruits, stem and root of this tree at all stage of maturity are used as ethno medicines against various human ailments.[2] Embedded in the pulp are 10 to 15 seeds, flattened oblong, about 1 cm long, bearing woolly hairs and each enclosed in a sac of adhesive, transparent mucilage that solidifies on drying. [3] Seed germination of each seed is considered as one of the first and most fundamental life stages of a plant, so that the success in growth and yield production is also dependent on this stage.