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I pre-germinate them - on damp kitchen roll inside a clear poly bag so I can see when they have sprouted. As soon as they do I transfer them into a loo roll.
They usually take a long time to germinate hence the old saying " They go three times to the devil before breaking the surface!"
My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Hi, i have mine also in loo rolls. I have mine it a very warm airing cupboard and although i spray them well twice a day ,come morning they are as dry as a bone.....maybe i should move them ??. Minty X
" If it tastes like chicken THEN EAT CHICKEN " :- Kermit The Frog
Hi, i have mine also in loo rolls. I have mine it a very warm airing cupboard and although i spray them well twice a day ,come morning they are as dry as a bone.....maybe i should move them ??. Minty X
I don't think they require a lot of heat Minty, in fact I think they can be sown outside shortly!
My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
I still don’t have any thing; think you were right Snadger “They go three times to the devil before breaking the surface!" Think the devil forgot to send mine back
Hi, i have mine also in loo rolls. I have mine it a very warm airing cupboard and although i spray them well twice a day ,come morning they are as dry as a bone.....maybe i should move them ??. Minty X
If you're spraying that often, then your compost wasn't wet enough to start with. Same advice with seeds as with open ground - a little sprinkle every day is not good. A good soaking to start with and then enough water to keep thoroughly moist is the ideal.
If you're spraying that often, then your compost wasn't wet enough to start with. Same advice with seeds as with open ground - a little sprinkle every day is not good. A good soaking to start with and then enough water to keep thoroughly moist is the ideal.
Hi. I removed them from the airing cupboard 3 days ago and they are coming through now. So hopefully fhey dont get too leggy and i can plant them out soon.
Minty X
" If it tastes like chicken THEN EAT CHICKEN " :- Kermit The Frog
I think you can sow direct from now on. The packet I have says mid Feb onwards so mine will be done anytime soon. If you are sowing in small pots/seed tray with the plan to transplant later be aware they don't like root disturbance. Last year I tried the paper pot method and probaly left them in too long because the roots were poking out of the bottom when I moved them on. Of the few I got they had badly suffered forking.
This year I'm sowing direct into huge cardboard tubes filled with a fine soil and sand mixture. I'll sow a few seeds per tube then thin to the strongest asap. No disturbance and hopefully a decent crop.
Hmm i'm doing mine in cell trays. Myself and a fellow allotmenteer have decide to trial what would be best, he is doing the tissue way and i'm doing the propargate in cells and i think he has someone else doing them staight in the ground. I'll let you know how we go.
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