Seed Starting Exposé!! Part I
It's spring. You have that packet of 'homemade heirloom tomato seeds' your Uncle Ebeneezer gave you for Christmas, you figure you oughta grow them (ProTip #239: Most seeds can/should be stored in an environment where "temp in degrees" + "rel. humidity in %" < 100, if you exceed those figures, say by storing them in an area where the temp. is 70F and the humidity is 40%, then you are degrading the "Germination Rate" or the % of seeds that will sprout when you put them in the ground) but you could use a few lil tips on seed starting.
This multi-part exposé on the secret world of 'Prop. Domes', 'Germ. rates', 'hot houses,' 'cold frames,' and 'hardening off' will help you get your seeds off to a strong start.
Propagation Domes |
Simply take 10 of the seeds, put them onto a paper towel, spritz them with some water, fold the paper towel over onto itself numerous times and moisten the paper towel to 'damp sponge' level then put the paper towel into a Ziploc bag, seal it, and place it in a warm place in your house (above the refrigerator is the old cliché place.) Look up the 'days to germination' listed on the seed packet or online, and after the # of days +/- 1-2 days, open up the bag and see how many of the seeds sprouted. 7 out of 10 did? Your 'germination rate' is 70% meaning for every 100 seeds you plant in the field, you can expect 70 to sprout. Basically it's just a viability test to ensure that the seeds you are relying on are still good. In this economic environment where quality seed can be sparse and popular varieties can sell out months before the growing season, it would suck to be relying on your stash of 'super duper beet seeds' from 2005 to fulfill your beet needs for the upcoming 2011 season, plant them in the fields and have none of them come up then go to order more online and find out that 'super duper beet' seeds have been sold out for 3 months. FOILED!
What the little exercise above indicates is that for a seed to sprout, it needs, at a minimum, 3 things: X amount of moisture, X amount of thermal units, and seed to soil contact at a depth under the soil surface specified for that seed. Every seed has contained in it the energy required to sprout, drop a 'tap root' (basically a baby root system), push up a sprout, and develop its first set of 'true leaves.' After that it relies on the soil, water and photosynthesis for further growth.
Your mission when starting your own seeds for transplant is to supply the required environmental conditions needed to get the seeds into the 'vegetative growth stage' (the stages are basically: 1.Seed 2.Germination/sprouting 3.Vegetative Growth 4.Flowering 5. Fruiting).
So, to review, we've covered the basics of seed sprouting and how to make sure your seeds actually 'work,' or stage 1 of the 5 above.
In Part II we'll cover how to get through Stage 2--Germination.