I have not been relishing the idea of actually having to sow over 1,000 seeds one by one, especially into trays that have 288 cells. Just trying to make sure each cell has a seed, that it is close to the correct depth, which type goes into which cell - that stuff would be a nightmare for me. Then I recalled how we grew tobacco and tomatoes when I was a youngster.
Dad would bring home a couple of 5-gallon buckets of flyash. We would add a couple teaspoons full of seeds and stir it (using a concrete mixer) then dump the mixture into one of those typical yard seeders. We would then rake it gently into the ground.
So I am trying something similar. Put a couple of inches of potting soil in a tupperware container, add 50-60 seeds then add a 1/4 layer of soil. Water and set over a heat source.
Over the next few weeks, I'll see how transplanting them works at various stages. Probably start when they have their first set of leaves then try wait until they have two sets, three sets, etc. They will go into either six-cell flats or 3" containers.
The goal: to have 8-inch tall plants by January 10.
If this works not only should I have healthier looking plants with much less time involved but it might also give me an opportunity to sell seedlings to nurseries in quantity. It would cost me about $30 in seeds, soil, trays and electricity for 180 plants that I should be able to sell for a buck each.
Mike
Dad would bring home a couple of 5-gallon buckets of flyash. We would add a couple teaspoons full of seeds and stir it (using a concrete mixer) then dump the mixture into one of those typical yard seeders. We would then rake it gently into the ground.
So I am trying something similar. Put a couple of inches of potting soil in a tupperware container, add 50-60 seeds then add a 1/4 layer of soil. Water and set over a heat source.
Over the next few weeks, I'll see how transplanting them works at various stages. Probably start when they have their first set of leaves then try wait until they have two sets, three sets, etc. They will go into either six-cell flats or 3" containers.
The goal: to have 8-inch tall plants by January 10.
If this works not only should I have healthier looking plants with much less time involved but it might also give me an opportunity to sell seedlings to nurseries in quantity. It would cost me about $30 in seeds, soil, trays and electricity for 180 plants that I should be able to sell for a buck each.
Mike