I'm continuing to have real problems with bought compost and I really don't know what to do about it. I am becoming increasingly convinced that in bags of compost there are pockets that are simply poisoned with weedkiller, presumably from green waste (probably grass cuttings from treated lawns). I have a bag of compost that I bought earlier in the year that I have been using to grow various seedlings, with mixed results. While some plants (including peas, beans, tomatoes and courgettes) have grown well from this bag of compost, some of the peas and beans simply haven't germinated, and neither did most of the courgettes and some of the tomatoes and peppers sown in an earlier bag of compost. Towards the end of the sowing season I had pots of compost that had been tried with beans and failed, and I had some saved seed from some peas that I wanted to check for viability as the pods had been picked green and dried. I decided to plant 4 peas in one of the pots that had failed to grow beans. I put another 4 peas to chit on damp kitchen paper. These started to grow roots in a couple of days and I planted them in another pot that had failed to grow beans. I dug the ungerminated beans out of the compost before sowing the peas. All 8 seeds failed to grow, including the ones with roots. This mirrors exactly what had been happening with beans that I chitted earlier in the year.
I also had some saved seeds from some mixed brassica salads that had bolted in the spring. I wanted to check the viability of these seeds as they were also picked before the pods were completely ripe as the plants were in the way. I sowed pinches of seeds in 15 small modules in my propagator, using compost straight out of the bag. The result a couple of weeks later is that I have one seedling. After the pea experiment I decided to double check before I throw the seeds away. I had some used compost saved from last year's fence pot plants so I sieved some and used it to sow pinches of seeds in 10 modules alongside some pak choi, germinating these in the greenhouse. This was done on 21st July and there are already signs of germination in 7 of the modules as well as some of the pak choi. There is clearly absolutely nothing wrong with my seeds.
I don't mind using recycled compost from last year's plants in the garden and the greenhouse - I do this all the time. But the compost is full of wildlife and I really don't want it in the house. So I have this problem - what do I do for compost for my seeds and seedlings that I keep indoors and for my indoor tomatoes and peppers. Does anyone have any ideas or recommendations for compost that isn't contaminated with weedkiller?
I also had some saved seeds from some mixed brassica salads that had bolted in the spring. I wanted to check the viability of these seeds as they were also picked before the pods were completely ripe as the plants were in the way. I sowed pinches of seeds in 15 small modules in my propagator, using compost straight out of the bag. The result a couple of weeks later is that I have one seedling. After the pea experiment I decided to double check before I throw the seeds away. I had some used compost saved from last year's fence pot plants so I sieved some and used it to sow pinches of seeds in 10 modules alongside some pak choi, germinating these in the greenhouse. This was done on 21st July and there are already signs of germination in 7 of the modules as well as some of the pak choi. There is clearly absolutely nothing wrong with my seeds.
I don't mind using recycled compost from last year's plants in the garden and the greenhouse - I do this all the time. But the compost is full of wildlife and I really don't want it in the house. So I have this problem - what do I do for compost for my seeds and seedlings that I keep indoors and for my indoor tomatoes and peppers. Does anyone have any ideas or recommendations for compost that isn't contaminated with weedkiller?
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