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2 Sheds we must order from the same chinese. I use exactly the same container fro my peas. Haven't thought about the damp kitchen towel before but will try it tonight as I have some chitting away.
Colin
Potty by name Potty by nature.
By appointment of VeggieChicken Member of the Nutters club.
We hang petty thieves and appoint great ones to public office.
I've got loads of pots, and loads of places to PUT pots (and not so much soil), so I'm going to try a pot of peas as well as sticking them in the ground. See what happens
Am interested to know how big the container is, please? (Hey, I never said I wasn't nosy!)
- soak the seeds overnight in tepid water - I use a glass or plastic dish, it doesn't much matter
- in the morning, drain the water off
- cover peas with damp kitchen paper (optional, but it keeps the moisture in)
- rinse them every day
- when chitted I put the lids on to take them up the lotty
They are on a windowsill from day one: I'm not allowed to have seeds & plants anywhere other than windowsills
within 2-4 days at room temp
Thanks TS, that's really useful. But ... why do you rinse the peas? That seems a little odd to me?
Is it not also to get them wet? Just thinking out loud here ... but with smaller seed that I chit on kitchen paper (Parsnips for example) I put a sheet either side of them - "seed sandwich"
For larger seeds (Peas and Beans), or if there is a larger volume to be germinated, then I just put them loose in a Tupperware box with a lid, and rinse them 2 or 3 times a day - there is enough water left in the box to provide the moisture they need, and kitchen paper not really much in contact with the actual seed. Sometimes I put a sheet of kitchen paper in the bottom of the box too (but never done a side-by-side test to compare ...)
I chit all my peas & beans first, so I can see which ones are viable, and I don't waste time & compost on those that don't germinate.
Do you find pea germination a problem then? I find that of the 50 odd I sowed a couple of weeks ago in guttering, all but a couple of germinated and if I was that bothered about them then I'd just stick and extra couple of seeds in. I find that along with brassicas they're about the most reliable thing for germination
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
No, but I sow the seeds direct, not into pots (usually). Sprouting them is meant to deter mice attack
Ah, see what you mean, I do my early ones in guttering but later ones direct - not really a mouse problem on our site, thankfully
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Thanks everyone, I've seen the guttering trick before on the lottie but I don't have the room at the mo so that's why I asked about chitting them so I can plaint them already germinated.
Thank I'm going to try it the T_S way when I've got the spot where I'm growing them ready...
My first time with peas, and intend growing them in pots against an East facing fence. I have 6 plants in the greenhouse, mange tout, kelvadon, and hurst, 2 of each, will those 30" ish troughs from wilkinsons be ok to put 3 each in?
i see the spacing is 3cm which can be in staggered rows like a zig zag, ie a 3m row could have 600 plants in? surely with this number it is easier to sow direct?
apologies if i'm missing something, first time with peas!! and mangetout which i gather are similar spacings/plants
surely with this number it is easier to sow direct?
Yes it is, that's why I sow chitted peas direct, not start them in pots first. I space them in a double row, each seed 5cm or so apart.
From 6 rows (no idea how many plants that is) I got a freezer bag full of peas (what you'd pay about 99p for in Iceland). Many more got eaten while picking
I would guesstimate that I get 6-8 pods from each (dwarf) plant, and about 6 peas in each pod
All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
That's a good idea, actually, warm up the soil! I think I will do. I think here in Edinburgh we're generally three weeks behind the standard recommended UK sowing times, as they seem to be based on the southern English climate. So, maybe seeing as my peas were just sown on Sunday, they might be ready to put in the ground late April?
Mice, ugh. I spilt a packet of bird seed in our garage a couple of weeks ago and now we have mice in there. Horrible things. My husband's doing something with traps and poison, dunno what, I'm keeping RIGHT out of it!
My OH is great at catching mice with a bucket and then he lets them back into the fields we back onto. We also have lots of cats up here. Two terriers are also a deterrent
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better...Albert Einstein
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