Here is post to share my limited experience growing cold hardy and drought tolerant avocado trees from seeds.
I started doing this in 2010 and have tried a lot of different seeds and methods and I am myself quite surprised at what seems to work best, so I thought I would share.
Background: I live in the Netherlands, in Northern Europe, climate zone 8b. I have a small garden in Portugal, climate zone 9a, with a very dry summer and I want to get some avocado trees going there. I have no irrigation or winter protection.
Over the years I have read so much in the web and I have tried most methods that one can find, so here is what worked best for me in the end: sowing massive amounts of seeds of a diversity of avocado's in small 'nursery patches' and then let Darwinism do the rest of the job.
The first two years I started doing the traditional way: germinating seeds of store-bought avocado's in pots at home and planting them out when one or two years old. I transported around a hundred seedlings like this from the Netherlands to Portugal, planted them one by one carefully and NONE of these survived. This seems to be the preferred method for professional growers, but when you don't have irrigation or the time to give the seedlings aftercare when you plant them it is very easy to lose them.
These first two years I also just planted loose seeds all around the terrain. All of them came up, some took more then a year, but all of them came up, but they had a lot of trouble competing with the weeds and ferns, and they somehow stayed very weak and small in the dry ground.
The third year I really took the time to dig a small garden bed and amend the soil with two large bags of good potting soil and planted around one hundred seeds of Hass, Reed, Pinkerton, Zutano and Bacon avocados, that I found at the local market in the Netherlands and I kept eating the rest of the year. It basically took me seven years of eating three avocados a week to get my trees going - but I am not complaining

This worked very well the next year the bed was full of seedlings - they were doing fine for two years, but I lost them all in a very dry year - one hundred seedlings competing with each other on one square meter in a dry summer is too much!
But I already started to notice that there was really no pattern in which seeds survived either the summer or winter well - of all the cultivars it was equal amounts.
I started making small amended nursery beds all over the terrain in which I showed only eight to ten seeds and let them germinate by themselves. From all these beds at least one grew into a healthy tree.
Now they are starting to become as tall as myself and next year I will be ready to do some grafting.
