Seed Starting Time Redux
8 years ago
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TIme of year or light needs for starting seeds? Seed Source?
Comments (3)Keep in mind that it can take several years for some of them to go from a seedling to a mature plant I think the first link will keep yah busy enough until someone comes by and suggest Something pre-grown Yeah it only gets easier after that.... With all the potting mixes and cool container ideas you can see on just about every thread on the forum and then some added lighting. Sounds to me you're ready for.... the traditional ole Welcome to the forumNice to met you too...See MoreSeed starting time!
Comments (107)Well hopefully that shouldn't happen this year. A warm season is predicted and we should have warm soil sooner than normal for sure. The LFD are different, there is a 50% chance, up to 100% chance. Generally the LFD given is the 50% chance... which isn't as useful as 100%. So they generally say, 2 weeks after the 50% chance at a minimum for planting. So Mid-May for tomatoes, I would definitely wait to start them IMHO. 6 weeks last year and they reached the point they needed to go out ASAP, or be transplanted to large containers and get past prime transplant size. That was under a T5HO grow light. Peppers and eggplants need warm soil (65F+ I have seen as a guideline) and warmer nighttime temperatures (50F+), some wait longer, up to a month after LFD to plant them. The peppers grew for me in 8-10 weeks and the eggplant in 7-8 weeks. Tomatoes will suffer setbacks in cold soil but they should hang in there, they are more cold tolerant IME....See MoreSeed Starting Time VI
Comments (482)Chris - Just don't try to crack them open in the morning when you are still half asleep...you don't want to bruise them!! lol. I have 16 (1.5 lbs.) French Fingerlings in a paper bag in my extra frig that are looking as perfect as they did last fall when I first put them in there. I will use this method again next year to store seed tubers for the German Butterball and Austrian Crescent seed tubers I ordered this year. As a side...I was looking at Johnny's prices for potato seed and my jaw just about dropped off my face. I just don't understand how they can charge so much and get people to pay it. Then most online potato vendors won't ship in March to areas that need to plant in March....See MoreTime to start saving seeds!
Comments (2)I literally stumbled across winter sowing back around 2007 and was intrigued by the idea of it. I WS 500+ recycled gallon milk jugs of perennials and shrubs. Those plants are now thriving in my own & my neighbors' garden beds. I'm loving my WS stokesia in bloom, in part because I love the electric blue ruffly 2-3" flowers each July but equally because I know they'll produce oodles of viable seeds when fall rolls around here in southern New England. Shasta daisies also tend to yield a quantity of seeds; my favorite is 'Crazy Daisy." My last job was in IT (Information Technology for the uninitiated) so details were critical. Generally, if you're looking for information, it's available on the Internet. If you want to research seed-germination information, check out the Clothier database. Seeds are listed by type (perennial/annual/tree/vegetable, etc.) + botanical name (you won't find 'daisy' but you will find Leucanthemum). The database will describe what conditions are necessary for seeds to germinate. Stuffing your garden beds with WS perennials as well as annuals & vegetables is fun. I don't ski. What else is there to do (in New England) from January to April?...See MoreRelated Professionals
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