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#1
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soaking seeds...positive results
From reading posts here and rec.gardens.edible I took the
recommendation of soaking seeds for 12 hours before planting them. I also covered the gardens since I have a lot of birds living around the house. While those that sprouted (with the exception of bachelor buttons) are showing a high germinaton success rate, Quite a few displayed better than average germination times. After four days I already saw green sprouting from radishes, marigolds, sweet allysum, bachelor buttons, cosmos, morning glories, poppies, silene, caladrina, lettuces & purslane. Some of these are quick to sprout, but they all are at the fewest days said to germinate, some below what their seed packets indicate. After seven days, spinach, snap peas, basil are definitely out. At nine days Calendula has just one breaking ground today. I think the first tiny nasturtium are coming up. Some carrots sprouted (most are slow to show though). The no-shows germinators at ten days: petunias, violas, flamenco, snapdragon, lavender, borage and most of the nasturtium & calendulas. Sanvitalia, blue lace, convolvulus are not out yet after 6 days. The violas & petunias concern me; packets say 4-7 days/6-10 days and its been past that for both. The petunias need light and we have had more than a week of dreary weather daily. Sun was out this morning agiain but completely clouded over after 1 o'clock. I'll try start more indoors and see if I have better luck. I planted some marigolds WITHOUT soaking and unlike their soaked cousins, they haven't sprouted after 6 days. I planted petunia both soaked and not. It will be interesting to see which, if any show up first. DiGiTAL_ViNYL (no email) |
#2
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soaking seeds...positive results
How long did you soak? I will be trying it soon, myself, and would
appreciate knowing. Thanks! -- -- pelirojaroja "dangerous redhead" "DigitalVinyl" wrote in message news From reading posts here and rec.gardens.edible I took the recommendation of soaking seeds for 12 hours before planting them. I also covered the gardens since I have a lot of birds living around the house. While those that sprouted (with the exception of bachelor buttons) are showing a high germinaton success rate, Quite a few displayed better than average germination times. After four days I already saw green sprouting from radishes, marigolds, sweet allysum, bachelor buttons, cosmos, morning glories, poppies, silene, caladrina, lettuces & purslane. Some of these are quick to sprout, but they all are at the fewest days said to germinate, some below what their seed packets indicate. After seven days, spinach, snap peas, basil are definitely out. At nine days Calendula has just one breaking ground today. I think the first tiny nasturtium are coming up. Some carrots sprouted (most are slow to show though). The no-shows germinators at ten days: petunias, violas, flamenco, snapdragon, lavender, borage and most of the nasturtium & calendulas. Sanvitalia, blue lace, convolvulus are not out yet after 6 days. The violas & petunias concern me; packets say 4-7 days/6-10 days and its been past that for both. The petunias need light and we have had more than a week of dreary weather daily. Sun was out this morning agiain but completely clouded over after 1 o'clock. I'll try start more indoors and see if I have better luck. I planted some marigolds WITHOUT soaking and unlike their soaked cousins, they haven't sprouted after 6 days. I planted petunia both soaked and not. It will be interesting to see which, if any show up first. DiGiTAL_ViNYL (no email) |
#3
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soaking seeds...positive results
"pelirojaroja" wrote:
How long did you soak? I will be trying it soon, myself, and would appreciate knowing. Thanks! Most of them 16+ hours, a few longer, a few as little as 12 hours. Basically I popualted the tray during the evening and planted them the next afternoon. I had some leftover lettuce seed in one cube that sat for two+ days and they all sprouted roots...so you don't want them to sit that long. I did keep them room temperature while soaking. I used two ice cube trays, with a legend keeping track of what was in each cube. After a few hours I stirred the seeds gently and many stopped floating... a good thing, absorbing water, getting heavier. By the next days almost everyone had stopped floating. Since some seeds were so tiny I used an eyedropper to suck up a few seeds with some water and squirt them to their planting spot. I was seeding very few and not doing large rows of seeding. Once wet they stick to fingers as does the dirt at planting so the eyedropper is a good way to go. I read a thread somewhere on using a weak chamomille or other tea solution. You make a cup of tea, throw it out, them reuse the same tea bag to make a second weaker cup. You then add that to 2qt of water. I don't really know if tea made any difference, but I think soaking did for most. Tuesday afternoon will be the 14-day mark for the first plantings. I'm hoping to see a few more sprouts from the slower germinators. Soaking may not benefit all seeds equally or speed germination dramatically. Of my bachelor buttons only 1 of 5 seeds seem to have grown (unless that one seedling is actually a stray from something else!). I would make a list of what you soak and try to track when they break ground. I'm wondering if it hurt the violas or petunias. Niether germinated. Sunday or monday I will probably start a new set of each indoors or jsut give in and get ordinary varieties from the nursery. The lack of sun for the last week+ is probably a cause as well. DiGiTAL_ViNYL (no email) |
#4
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soaking seeds...positive results
"pelirojaroja" wrote:
How long did you soak? I will be trying it soon, myself, and would appreciate knowing. "DigitalVinyl" wrote: From reading posts here and rec.gardens.edible I took the recommendation of soaking seeds for 12 hours before planting them. You only soak the seeds, soaking yourself is optional. -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA http://www.users.fast.net/~shenning |
#5
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soaking seeds...positive results
"pelirojaroja" wrote:
How long did you soak? I will be trying it soon, myself, and would appreciate knowing. Thanks! I'm thinking the larger and harder the seed the longer they should be soaked. Anyone disagree--I know it is a generalization and their would be exceptions. My snappeas (one of the largest seeds i worked with) only soaked a hour or so. I've had 100% germination on them in average time. The interesting thing is several of them crested the dirt as seed, the seed were three times what I planted, bloated like macadamia nuts instead of the pea-sized seed I planted. Their size surprised but it is apparently normal. Now I'm trying some snow peas, and I soaked the seeds (which are a bit smaller than a pea) since last night, about 18 hours so far. They have doubled in size. I wonder if I had soaked my Nasturtium and pumpkin seeds longer if I would have seen greater absorbtion and kick started the seeds better. My petunias may be finally showing up--either that or some other stray seed. Vanilla Marigolds aren't up at all--which is surprising. All other types of marigold have been easy and quick to sprout. Unless I got very confused and didn't plant any seed!? DiGiTAL_ViNYL (no email) |
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