rainbowgardener wrote: . . . I've been doing this for years now and with experience, I've gotten to where I lose very few plants once sprouted and especially once they have the first pair of true leaves, almost none once they make it as far as having a pair of true leaves. . . .
It takes some experience, Avonnow. Sometimes the seed hasn't much viability but once the plants begin to emerge, you are dealing with the most vulnerable stage of their lives. They are tender babies.
I probably just happened on to success and now I am afraid to do much of anything to change what probably isn't even the best choices in seed starting. Almost everything from size of container to moisture to depth of sowing to temperature to light, etc. make a difference in the first few days of life.
Cookie boxes have worked best for me - the kind you carry home with a dozen oatmeal & raisin cookies from the supermarket. I punch holes in the bottom (after emptying

), fill them with the starting mix, and allow them to soak in a basin of water for a couple of hours. After draining, seed is sprinkled on top and soil is sprinkled on the seed to the necessary depth.
The containers are then stacked on top my fridge where it is a fairly consistent, 70°F. Once the plants begin to emerge - and, I have to watch them carefully - the lid is taken off and they are moved to a sunny, south window in a cool room. There cannot be much delay or they will stretch, since there isn't adequate light for them on the kitchen fridge.
When they need water, I will half-fill the lid (now serving as a tray under the container) with tepid water and set them in it for an hour, dumping out the excess water later. If the sky is cloudy for several days, I may need to set up a light. Overnight, I will move the cookie boxes of seedlings away from the cold glass of the window to a table a few feet into the room.
All this is taking place
before the tiny plants go out to a heated greenhouse. They are coddled during their 1st days altho' it isn't quite like one would treat a new-born or baby chicks and may even vary from one species of plant to another. See, experience comes to play here and about all you can do is read and observe others when you are first starting out. You will find success, too.
Steve
