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Gardening Articles
(for a greener you)
Prepare for Seed Starting
by Arzeena Hamir
How do you satisfy the gardening itch in the middle of winter? Easily! Start
plants from seed. Now is a great time to get a jumpstart on the gardening
season. Just a little preparation will help ensure you seed starting
success. Here is some of the equipment you'll need:
Containers
Almost any type of container can be used to start your seedlings in, as long
as it can hold moisture and is sturdy enough to handle a wet potting mix.
Gardeners have always recycled yogurt & cottage cheese containers, milk
cartons, & even egg cartons. Whatever container you use, make sure that it
has a hole through which excess water can drain or is porous and will
eventually drain. Any sitting water at the bottom of a container can rob
growing roots of oxygen and encourage fungal diseases.
Before filling your container with potting mix, wash it well to get rid of
any food particles. This is especially important for containers that are
reused year after year. Certain fungal diseases, such as Fusarium, can be
spread through contaminated soil that is still hanging on to the sides of
containers. If your seedlings succumbed to any diseases last year, make sure
the containers are rinsed with a 10% solution of bleach to kill off any
remaining spores.
Soil Mix
One of the most important factors when starting your seedlings is choosing
your potting mix. It is often recommended to use a sterilized, soil-free
starter mix to prevent diseases such as damping-off from taking hold of
tender seedlings. I still recommend soil-less mixes to beginner gardeners
but I, myself, have started to add compost and worm casts to my own mix.
Here are a few reasons why:
First, soil-less mixes are totally free of any nutrients whatsoever. While
young seedlings don't require fertilizers until they develop their first set
of true leaves, I find having to feed them solely through a liquid feed
quite cumbersome. Organic fertilizers like compost and worm casts release
their nutrients slowly and don't burn seedlings the way inorganic
fertilizers may. Having these fertilizers already in the potting mix means I
don't have to worry about feeding for at least 5-6 weeks. By then, I'm
usually potting up the seedlings and adding fresh fertilizer anyway.
Second, I have found that growing seedlings with organic fertilizers in the
mix tends to produce healthier seedlings. The organic fertilizers help to
mimic conditions in the garden where there is a multitude of fungi, bacteria
and other soil organisms. Seedlings have to extract nutrients from the
organic fertilizers just the way they would in garden soil. In contrast, I
find that seedlings fed solely with liquid fertilizers tend to be less
efficient at extracting nutrients since the liquid feeds provide them in a
highly soluble form.
Third, the organic fertilizers help the soil mix hold moisture for longer
periods of time. Most soil-less mixes are a combination of peat, perlite &
vermiculite and drain very quickly. They require frequent watering,
especially when seedlings grow their first set of true leaves and really
begin to transpire. Both compost and worm casts retain moisture well and
keep it available for growing roots.
Lastly, adding organic material into the potting mix helps to stretch the
mix and make it go farther. This can be quite a cost savings, especially if
your make your own compost or raise worms yourself.
One word of caution about adding organic fertilizers to your potting mix -
remember that they will contain a wide variety of soil organisms and your
soil mix will not longer be sterile. If you've had a problem with
damping-off in the past, i.e. you tend to overwater your seedlings, you may
want to only water your seedlings from the bottom or else stay with a
sterile mix.
Light
Have you ever tried starting seeds inside on a windowsill and found that
they grew spindly and kept falling over? Early spring light just doesn't
have the intensity and duration that young seedlings need, forcing them to
stretch for more and more light. Most seedlings require 12-14 hours of
direct light in order to keep them short and stocky and producing healthy
leaves. Therefore, artificial lights are required early in the season.
Although you can purchase grow lights in your local nursery or garden
center, I find a combination of warm and cool fluorescent bulbs just as
effective at a fraction of the cost. Since seedlings need high light
intensity, these bulbs need to be no more than 3-4 inches away from the top
of the plant. I attach the light ballast to the underside of a shelf or even
the underside of a table and place my seedling trays under the tubes. If the
lights are still too far away, you can also raise the trays on boxes. As the
plants grow, the boxes can be removed so that the leaves do not touch the
bulbs.
Seeds
Last but not least, gather your seeds together and select what you're going
to grow this year and how much of each variety. If you have left over seed
from previous seasons and are not sure if the seed is still viable, do a
quick & easy germination test between moist paper towel to see if the seeds
sprout. Plant any seeds that do germinate and discard any mould.
If you're really itching to do some kind of gardening now, you can start the
following types of seed indoors near the end of January/early February:
Vegetables
Celery
Celeriac
Leeks
Giant Onion
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Flowers
Aquilegia
Myostosis
Perennial Alyssum
Pansies
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Arzeena is an agronomist and gardenwriter for Organic Living Newsletter.
Subscribe to this free e-newsletter at http://www.tvorganics.com
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