Home improvement, gardening, upcycling, arts and crafts: proving a streetcar-suburb homestead in the lungs of Seattle.

This is rarely a "How-to" blog and more of an "I did" journal, a record of the ideas, innovations, and renovations that go into my DIY-lifestyle.

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50 posts tagged seedlings

The brown paper pots were an excellent idea, but not very useful. In just two weeks, basically all of the bottoms of the pots have decomposed without a trace. I’m looking into getting plastic pots for the next round.

Also, I think some of my seedlings aren’t getting enough water. Maybe I should start over-watering and trust that the drainage is good.

Four tomato seedlings after their first spell outside (about three hours in the walls o’ water this afternoon). These are Taxi, Black Prince, Sun Gold, and Indigo Rose varieties.

I transplanted one tray of the Round I tomato seedlings to larger containers this evening.  This tray contained Sun Gold, Taxi, Black Prince, and Indigo Rose varieties. All are very vigorous, and I’m loving the very dark green/purple leaves on the Indigo Rose plants.  If the tomatoes are as lovely as the leaves, they’ll be amazing!

All are planted in 4”x4” origami pots made out of chicken feed bags. A few are planted in leftover homemade seed starting soil (equal parts worm castings, perlite, sifted compost, and coco coir), but most are planted in a homemade secondary soil (equal parts worm castings, sifted compost, and coco coir). 

Most seedlings had three sets of true leaves. I stripped the lower set off and buried the plant in dirt up to half an inch or so below the middle pair, then mulched the top with my go-to Soil-Building Compost that I use as mulch. Then I watered them thoroughly.

The roots are very well-developed: some seedlings had to be pried apart from their neighbors.  I probably should have transplanted them a week or two ago.  Also, I noticed that even though I’d soaked the top thoroughly, the lower dirt of many seedlings were dry.  Needs moar water! 

Now, to note this and several other garden events in my paper 2013 garden calendar, which I’ve gotten behind in updating…

Round I tomatoes are thriving, though one tray more than the other. I need to figure out why.

March sprouts: garlic, peas, and clover are all out of the ground!

Some lovely true leaves on some Round I tomato seedlings.

Round II Seedling Trays: Tomatoes! And Peppers!

Planted more tomatoes today, as well as peppers. This is “2013 Seedlings Round II,” and consists of:

Also pricked some of the double- or triple-sprouts from Round I seeding into their own cells. Of the Round I seeds, the TS “Taxi,” UPS “Black Prince,” TS “Sun Gold,” and UPS “Stupice” being the most vigorous and reliable, and the TS “Indigo Rose” and TS “Brandywine” the lowest rate of germination. Round I has been in the dirt about three weeks, and everything that’s planning on germinating likely has at this point. Several of the most vigorous seedlings already have true leave, but all at least have healthy cotyledons. 

I haven’t decided what I’ll be planting in Round III yet; I’ve planted all planned varieties of tomatoes and peppers for 2013, so I might start broccoli and lettuce to get a head start on main season greens.

Tomato sprouts moved to the higher shelf tonight, to make room for a new planting. There’s about five cells without sprouts, but overall an excellent rate of germination.

Tomato update: nearly all the cells have a sprout in them, and the earliest sprouts are getting pretty big and strong. I watered again this morning and set up a tinfoil reflector between the lamps.

I’ll probably move these up a shelf and plant two new trays later this week.

More tomato sprouts! Both Sun Gold batches, the Brandywine variety, and the Black Prince varieties are coming up. I watered them all thoroughly this morning, and have pulled back the plastic sheeting on the seed-starting rack to discourage damping-off.

First tomato sprouts, March 1st!

Update on tomatoes planted last Saturday: there is no update, and no signs of germination yet. I watered the dirt on Monday, and it still looks appropriately damp, so I just need to be patient.

Two flats of newspaper cells, planted with eight varieties of tomatoes.

I’m calling this Round I for tracking purposes, and I’ve labeled each cell using a wooden stir-stick cut into a stake.  I’m using codes, which aren’t really visible here — the first is for the seed company, the second is for the variety, so Sungold Tomatoes from Territorial Seed Company are TS SGT.  The flip side of each stake has the date planted.

So, Round I is eight to sixteen seeds of the following tomato varieties:

Now, to wait. Luckily, I have plenty else to do.

Planting seeds…

Two trays of newspaper cells filled and dampened and ready for seeds. Hopefully I’ll get a chance to plant in them tonight.

Note the new hose nozzle; it’s a misting head, and makes a fine strong spray of water that soaks without disturbing the surface. Watering is so much easier already.

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