So I had a pretty good start last year, that failed once I went in ground. Did I go out too early, not harden enough, have bad soil at my new house, or a combo of the above? Who knows, but Hurricane Matthew didn't help I am sure! Ironically, I still have pods on plants. A few might make it through the winter!
Regardless I am starting fresh.
My grow started on Jan 01. 35 varieties went in, I do not expect all 35 to come out due to using some 2014 and 2015 seeds. A bunch are fresh 2016 seeds though.
I am doing things a little different this year. My grows always have a little experimentation. So far so good!
I started seeds in ziplock bags with just perlite and a splash from a 17oz bottle of water with a capful of peroxide. No real measuring, but it was a repeatable dose.
I did a couple varieties in the paper towel method as well, but those seem to get mold super quick. The perlite worked so much better.
After sprouting, I prepared 2 72 cell peat pellet trays and a 36 peat pellet tray designed for tomatoes. I then filled in all the gaps with worm castings to provide a nice nutrient source that shouldn't hurt the young seedlings. I then poked the center hole of each peat pellet with a sharpie marker to make a seed hole, sprinkled in a little Mykos, added a sprouted seed or 3 per hole, and filled it in with peat and worm castings.
I currently have 27 varieties in, and 3 tomatoes.
More to come!
Regardless I am starting fresh.
My grow started on Jan 01. 35 varieties went in, I do not expect all 35 to come out due to using some 2014 and 2015 seeds. A bunch are fresh 2016 seeds though.
I am doing things a little different this year. My grows always have a little experimentation. So far so good!
I started seeds in ziplock bags with just perlite and a splash from a 17oz bottle of water with a capful of peroxide. No real measuring, but it was a repeatable dose.
I did a couple varieties in the paper towel method as well, but those seem to get mold super quick. The perlite worked so much better.
After sprouting, I prepared 2 72 cell peat pellet trays and a 36 peat pellet tray designed for tomatoes. I then filled in all the gaps with worm castings to provide a nice nutrient source that shouldn't hurt the young seedlings. I then poked the center hole of each peat pellet with a sharpie marker to make a seed hole, sprinkled in a little Mykos, added a sprouted seed or 3 per hole, and filled it in with peat and worm castings.
I currently have 27 varieties in, and 3 tomatoes.
More to come!