First year gardening, soon to be starting tomato and peppers from seed (inside).
Question:
Option 1: start seeds in large tray and then transplant strong ones into my 3x3 plastic pots after germination to continue growth up to garden planting.
Option 2: start a few (how many?) seeds in 3x3 pots and cut off the weakest after a couple sets of real leaves develop, leaving one strong seedling in each pot all the way to garden planting.
I'm not sure if either method has any strong advantage, but curious what you experienced gardeners do.
My gratitude!
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
I do basically option one... start seeds crowded in cells, then transplant to pots (sometimes with an intermediate step of transplanting to one per cell).
I think the transplanting, if done gently, is actually helpful to them. Especially for the tomatoes -- every time you transplant them, bury them deeper than they were, up to the seed leaves while in pots and up to the true leaves when they go in the ground. They will root along the buried stem, so this gives them a more extensive root system.
And I hate killing perfectly good seedlings!
I think the transplanting, if done gently, is actually helpful to them. Especially for the tomatoes -- every time you transplant them, bury them deeper than they were, up to the seed leaves while in pots and up to the true leaves when they go in the ground. They will root along the buried stem, so this gives them a more extensive root system.
And I hate killing perfectly good seedlings!
-
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 6113
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm
-
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 6113
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm