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I've done this with herbs, trees and perennials in the past and it is exciting watching the different seedlings coming through and matching them to what you think should be there. In most cases it doesn't really matter whether you're right or wrong as they'll all turn into something you want
Agree, but you need a general idea as you don't want to put a cabbage in a space you may only fit an onion.......
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Agree, but you need a general idea as you don't want to put a cabbage in a space you may only fit an onion.......
Aah, but that's the thing. If a cabbage went next to a lettuce then the lettuce will have long gone by the time you came to harvest the cabbage. The chances are that there will nearly always be space on the other 3 sides to let the crop grow.
Trying to think this through! I can see 12 half seed trays. each with a different weeks' sowing, with seedlings of various types at different stages of development in each. Each week you prick out the most advanced seedlings and ?maybe have to pot them on until they reach planting out size. The advantage is that you have staggered sowings of everything but, once they're at planting out stage you'll have a pretty good idea whether they're cabbage or lettuce. You'll also have a lot of pots and trays.
I feel I'm missing something here and I'm not sure what
Trying to think this through! I can see 12 half seed trays. each with a different weeks' sowing, with seedlings of various types at different stages of development in each. Each week you prick out the most advanced seedlings and ?maybe have to pot them on until they reach planting out size. The advantage is that you have staggered sowings of everything but, once they're at planting out stage you'll have a pretty good idea whether they're cabbage or lettuce. You'll also have a lot of pots and trays.
I feel I'm missing something here and I'm not sure what
I'd prick the larger ones into larger deeper seed trays and resow into that same tray. Just adding a bit more compost into the gaps.
So probably only 4 or 5 on the go at once.
Remember it's random!
Larger deeper flats [seed trays] taken to lottie and planted out as soon as the seedlings are big enough. Say 2-3 weeks in small trays, 2-3 weeks in big ones then out into the lottie. 2-3 weeks in big trays = hardened off.
I do like a bit of random It'll be interesting
I'm trying to think of a slightly different random method that would work for me in my random garden. When I've sussed it I'll put it here for consideration!
I do like a bit of random It'll be interesting
I'm trying to think of a slightly different random method that would work for me in my random garden. When I've sussed it I'll put it here for consideration!
I might have one for you to ponder once I have found the link on you tube...I can't remember the lady's name though.
Given that this year one of my six brussels turned out to be a cabbage, and my turnips disappeared entirely (I can't tell the difference between turnips and radishes apparently), and I'm not sure if I actually have a parsnip (just the one) or if it's a weed with a fat root that I'm nurturing, perhaps I should try this? With an organised approach I'm getting a bizarre mix of plants, I might as well just sow with abandon.
On a pragmatic note, my only concern is onions. How do you tell the difference between a salad onion and an immature yellow onion without just waiting to see if they grow bigger?
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Life goal: become Barbara Good.
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