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Saturday, September 10, 2016

Seed starting 101



My garden in early spring



Growing your own plants for your garden has several advantages. 

1. There is a wider selection of varieties including using organic seeds, hybrids that are best for your area, and heirlooms.
2. If you are planning a large garden, it is much less expensive to start from scratch.
3. You don’t have to worry about a nursery having the plants you want when you want them.
4. By putting the seedlings in a cold frame for several weeks before planting in the ground, you will have large healthy plants that do not need to be acclimated to full sun when you set them out in the garden.

You will need a south facing window, which will provide adequate sunlight to grow seedlings up to their first set of true leaves.  For my area, I start my seeds in early February for garden planting the first week of April. 

I use rubber warming mat (specifically designed for seeds) to keep seeds at a warm 85 degrees, and a seed starting plug system which has worked well for me for many years.  The plugs are made of sterile peat moss, and set in Styrofoam ‘cells’, which keep seeds moist at just the right level so they germinate without worry of damping off disease. 

Make sure you mist the seeds daily or more often as needed with warm water a 1 or 2 drops of liquid fertilizer per gallon.

Once the seeds have germinated and formed their true first leaves (the second set that forms), and have well established roots, you will need to boost them up to a larger container (a 12 oz Styrofoam cup with a hole poked in the bottom works well and lasts for many, many years) filled with regular potting soil.  From here they go into a cold frame until it’s time to plant. 

If you used a purchased cold frame, the most important thing to remember is that it cannot have glass for a lid.  The intense southwest sun will fry your tender seedlings in hours.  I use a piece of heavy floating row cover, which provides sun, but does not build up heat as glass does.