Novacastrian said:I think you may have transplanted too early. The roots are very fragile at this early age and can be easily damaged.
A good practice is to wait until the roots get "rootbound" or enough to hold the soil together so you can transplant them as a plug so to speak. They will live i think but they will be stunted, you could try using superthrive for a while to see what happens.
SV1000 said:Explain this please, assuming a person does not break up the soil around the root.
And, this completely contradicts what others have said about sprouting multiple seeds in small dixie cups and then separating them after they have sprouted.
How is transplanting a seedling into a two gallon bucket different than a seed that germinates in a two gallon bucket?
How is this different than a seed that sprouts in a garden?
Or a seed that sprouts in the wild?
Maybe you are only referring to disturbing the roots and not referring to the container size.
LUCKYDOG said:They will be fine its just a little shock of the transplant .... careful not to over micro manage --
LUCKYDOG said:They will be fine its just a little shock of the transplant .... careful not to over micro manage --