Showing posts with label seed starting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seed starting. Show all posts
Monday, March 11, 2013
Heating Update
The results from my experiment planting tomatoes with and without bottom heat :
Germination average using bottom heat: 5 days
Germination at room temperature: 8-9 days
Germination percentage wasn't affected.
I don't think the 3 day advantage is worth the effort (side note: if you try the Christmas lights route, don't use a styrofoam cooler. Either the heat or the weight of the plants or both caused the lights to partially imbed themselves in the cooler).
So my holiday lights are back in storage 'til next winter and the cooler is back in the garage and all of my seed pots are toughing it out without special treatment.
Have any of you tried bottom heat? Did it make a real difference for your plants?
Saturday, March 9, 2013
All the News that's Fit to...
...pot.
We get our news mostly from the internet and the radio but I'm glad that newspapers are still being printed.
Did you ever try to start seeds in a webpage?
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Ready for my Closeup
I started seeds today.
I slipped into my organic cotton, size 8, white dress, threw on my favorite sustainably grown bamboo hat and went out to my heated greenhouse. There I filled some handmade artisan pots with potting soil and lovingly tucked each seed into it's soil cocoon. Then as I watered them I sang a Native People's blessing in the original language.
And that bit of nonsense boomeranged me back to reality in a hurry.
Starting seeds here involves very little that you'd see in a magazine layout. Nothing is new or remotely artisan but rather a tangible reminder of heavy duty make-doism. It also involves a lot of running back and forth from the house to the garage trying to find everything; this is great exercise but it sure hasn't helped me into a size 8 anything.
I start with sterilized potting soil in a turkey roasting pan that I scored at an auction. The plastic pots are originally from I don't know where and the rest are take-out coffee cups from my caffeine addicted husband. I label each pot with a stake cut from an old venetian blind and put them in kitty litter pans I bought several years ago at a dollar store. Even the seeds are mostly from previous years and some are saved from our own plants.
There is no greenhouse at our place and the plant shelves with lights that we built are mostly full already. Today I had to scout around for another spot to put the latest pots. We have a small chest freezer by a sunny window and near the furnace that should do; I hope I can remember I put them there.
I realize none of this makes me a candidate for a feature spread in Starting Seeds Monthly. But the seeds don't care if I'm in organic cotton or my ripped thrift store jeans, they grow anyway. And that is one great reason to garden.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Heating Up
Do you use bottom heat for seedlings? I never had but when I planted some tomatoes today, I decided to experiment a bit.
I don't have a heating mat and refuse to pay $20+ for one. I remember reading about using Christmas lights instead so I retrieved our one string of lights from the holiday decoration box and stuck them in the bottom of a styrofoam cooler (continuing the Christmas theme--the cooler was part of a present. Thanks, Grandma!). I set the pots in a pan on top of the lights, then put on the top to conserve heat and we went out frivoling the entire day.
When we returned, I checked the temperature in the cooler.
Whoa! Tomatoes like it warm but 105 degrees is probably a bit much. I left the lid off and soon it dropped.
Much better.
I also left some seedlings on the grow shelves, unheated, to compare.
Yes, that's really the temperature in our house*.
Now this isn't set up like a real scientific experiment as I have used different varieties of seeds from different years:
In the cooler: 6 cells of Stupice(2011 seeds), 6 of Aunt Ruby's German Green (2012).
Unheated: 6 cells of Yellow Pear Cherry (2011), 3 pots of Principe Borghese (2010), one pot of Matt's Wild Cherry (2010), and 2 pots of Morena Paste (unknown year but at least several years old).
Despite that, it should give me an indication whether bottom heat is worth it for warmth loving seeds. I'll keep you posted. And even if it doesn't work, the cooler makes a great nightlight!
*Yes, the plant stand is right next to the woodstove. However, the two plus ricks we bought last month turned out to be too green to burn. So they're aging for next year and we're back to propane.
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