Sowing celery

General tips / questions on seeding & planting

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Allan
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What is the best way to sow celery.e.g. temperature range, compost type, depth of sowing etc. I am having trouble and don't know if it is sun scorch, use of multi-purpose compost, uneven watering. I don't remember things going wrong in the past.
Allan
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Colin_M
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I'd be interested in answers to this too.

I'm trying celery this year for the first time (our Guinea Pig eats so much it seemed worth the investment :D ).

So far, I put some in jiffy pots, so I could start them indoors. They still took 4-5 days to germinate and are currently around 1cm high with 2 sets of leaves.

I've put them outside now and was going to put them into the ground fairly soon. However any other advice would be welcome.


Colin
Allan
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This is Medwyn's idea:-
Seed Compost and Vermiculite
Ideally celery needs to be sown on the surface of some good quality seed compost and then very lightly covered over with a small amount of Vermiculite. The seed tray should then be placed in a propagator or on a propagating bench or heated blanket allowing plenty of bottom heat to warm up the compost and induce an even germination. It can take anything up to 3 weeks to germinate and it should be transplanted whilst still at the seedling leaf stage and just before the true rough leaf appears.
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Tigger
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I've given up on celery and only grow celeriac. For the amount of celery I need - it's more cost effective to buy it locally, whilst I can use (and give away) large amounts of celeriac.

Happy to be persuaded otherwise, of course......
Allan
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I have only tried celariac once. Result was no usable crop. In contrast my block of celery last year sold very well and at a good price, I could have used at least twice as much. I can't see celariac being acceptable as a salad ingredient but if that's what suits you carry on.
I sowed Loretta this year, a new Fothergill British F1, RHS recommended.Good picture on Fothergill website. I picked up a recommendation to surface sow on vermiculite, scatter with more vermiculite. It is about the smallest vegetable seed there is.
Allan
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