How do I tell when they are ready to transplant from the seed tray? I have had several failures and am a little worried I am doing something very wrong.
Thanks
Seedlings help
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Daxtell71
How many beans make five?
How many beans make five?
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Usually when a few true leaves you pot on as seed trays are too shallow for the roots. You might have to pot again a few times getting bigger pots if weather doesn't play! Maybe leaving them a bit to long in the seed trays?
Westi
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The easy way for the future is to use modular trays. If you three quarter fill them with potting compost and top up with seed compost you can thin to one plant per module then let them grow quite big before you have to handle them. What were you growing by the way?
I am growing Marigolds, Aquilega and Radish not in that order
Daxtell71
How many beans make five?
How many beans make five?
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Dear Daxtell,
Marigolds (either Tagetes or Calendula) are best done once the seed leaves are big enough to handle. Leave them longer and the roots can become too entwined and they risk having their roots damaged by the transplantation process. That said the Calendula kind are really best sown outdoors where they are to flower if at all possible.
Aquilegias are quite frail as babies and are best left until at least the second or third true leaf has appeared. The roots are stronger than the leaves on these seedlings.
Radish (winter or summer types) are best sown in the ground where they are to spend the rest of their lives until harvest. They do not transplant well as they have a main root called a taproot. It is from this root that the radish swells from; so any interference or damage to this root will cause misshapen radishes. If you have to start off radishes in pots for what ever reason then I suggest sowing five or six seeds to a very small pot and then putting the whole rootball out as one into the ground without splitting them up. With about 8-9 inches between the potfuls in the row.
Regards Sally Wright.
Marigolds (either Tagetes or Calendula) are best done once the seed leaves are big enough to handle. Leave them longer and the roots can become too entwined and they risk having their roots damaged by the transplantation process. That said the Calendula kind are really best sown outdoors where they are to flower if at all possible.
Aquilegias are quite frail as babies and are best left until at least the second or third true leaf has appeared. The roots are stronger than the leaves on these seedlings.
Radish (winter or summer types) are best sown in the ground where they are to spend the rest of their lives until harvest. They do not transplant well as they have a main root called a taproot. It is from this root that the radish swells from; so any interference or damage to this root will cause misshapen radishes. If you have to start off radishes in pots for what ever reason then I suggest sowing five or six seeds to a very small pot and then putting the whole rootball out as one into the ground without splitting them up. With about 8-9 inches between the potfuls in the row.
Regards Sally Wright.
Many thanks I will follow your advice its very helpful
Best Wishes
Debs
Best Wishes
Debs
Daxtell71
How many beans make five?
How many beans make five?