CC Summer 1995: Dr. Clone does Seeds

sprout pic



Two days before you plan to plant your seeds, get some planter box mix for bedding plants, and some small peat pots. Wet the mix before filling peat to half an inch from the top. Put your peat pots about two inches below fluorescent light bulbs. Put a timer on the light with an 18 hour on / 6 hour off cycle. This will pre-warm the soil for the seeds.

To germinate seeds, take a clean coffee cup and add half a cup of tap water that has been boiled. Let it sit for a couple of hours until cool (20-25 degrees Celsius), as hot tap water is not good for plants or seedlings! Add seeds and put in warm place (top of fridge or in a waterbed drawer, etc.) for 24 hours.

If you have good seeds, about half will have sprouted a small root tip. Dump seeds onto a paper towel or clean face cloth. Take your pre-warmed peat pots, use a pencil or your finger to make a 1/4" to 1/2" deep hole in the centre of the pot. Put in one seed, root tip pointing up, and cover very gently.

Use a spray bottle, set for fine mist and mist gently (without disturbing the seeds) until soil is saturated. Check seedlings every few hours so that you can judge when to gently mist. The surface should not be dry. Peat shrinks when it dries, so if the edges of the soil look dry, give moisture as needed. When sprouts come up, move them to within six inches below light.

Transplant when all seedlings have two or three sets of leaves.

doctor pic Use one gallon nursery pots and Sunshine Mix #4 (or equal quality product). A four cubic foot amount will fill 52 one gallon pots. Before you wet the mix, get a dust mask, fine dolomite lime, a box of bat guano, and one litre of earthworm castings, all for each one gallon pot. A clean (or new) garbage can or large plastic tub will be needed to mix your dry ingredients.

To each cubic foot of sunshine mix, add:

1.25 cups of fine dolomite lime
2.5 cups of bat guano
12 litres of earthworm castings

Mix very well (using a dust mask, please). Wet until just moist, and then fill pots to two inches from top.

Make a small hole in the mix, and pop in the peat pots just as they are. Stake seedlings now so you won't disturb any roots in the new soils.

You should now water your plants, using trays to catch any excess water. Do not use fertilizers during the first week, and you shouldn't need to fertilize at all. Only fertilize if your plants are pale green or yellow.

If you do fertilize, use fish fertilizer at half strength first, then two waterings with plain water. Water each plant only when the pot is in light. A wet/dry cycle is better. A waterlogged plant grows slow, and is vulnerable to disease and insects.

Good growing!

 
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