The last of them went in yesterday, 96 seedlings out of 105 seeds. I expect to loose a few more but I only require 88 plants.
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Peas rotting in pot (again)
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This is the time of year when this happens a lot, as it is still too cool for easy germination and pots get very wet and don't dry out. It has happened to me very often.
Nowadays, I mix my pea seed with damp vermiculite in a seed tray, having sown very thickly, and put the tray somewhere warm. As soon as the peas start sprouting I pop them on into pots and compost where they grow away quickly.
You could do the same with a couple of layers of damp kitchen paper in a warm kitchen windowsill, though I find it easier to get the sprouting seeds out of vermiculite without damaging any shoot.
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Peas are big, dry seeds. unless you soaked them overnight, they need to rehydrate before they start to grow, so you are looking at 6 to 9 days at least before the shoots emerge.Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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Originally posted by Marb67 View PostThey are heated so hopefully soon as it'll cost me the longer it takes. The soil is damp but not too wet as peas hydrate very fast and in the past have rotted everytime, which suggests they can hydrate a bit too much.
Also, peas can't be overhydrated. You can germinated them sitting in water (children literally do this with peas or beans as an experiment in primary school). If yours rotted before then the problem was either dead seeds or bacterial contamination of the seeds.
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