rainbowgardener wrote:Starting seeds is not hard ONCE you have some basic knowledge of what they need and the ability to provide appropriate conditions. It is made more frustrating by the fact that the stores sell all this JUNK for seed starting that not only doesn't help, it actually kills plants. That includes peat pots, "moisture control" potting mix, and mini-greenhouses with covers.
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You mentioned the planters that hang off the deck railing. I have seen those and they are very nice for flowers. I have never seen one close to big enough to grow a tomato plant in. You know one tomato plant needs at least a 5 gallon bucket worth of soil. And it is going to turn into a vine that is more than 6 feet tall and maybe 3 feet wide depending on how it is managed. And it will need to be staked/ caged / supported. So if you are growing tomatoes in containers you need a BIG container and somewhere to put the big container where it gets at least 6 - 8 hrs of sun a day.
Yeah, the stores hook newbs like me with pretty colors and things like "easy-grow" and other non-sense that I'm learning first-hand only hinder instead of help.

I'm going to ditch the Miracle Gro brand all together because they make me sad.
I should have been clearer, as I see now I really only mentioned the tomatoes, which look pretty rockin (at least comparatively lol), btw. The tomatoes are probably going to grow in the ground, or in one of those hangy-upside down tomato planter thingies. (Unless the garden vets tell me those are poo-poo, too, in which I will then stick em in the ground.) The troughs are for the catnip, cilantro, and thyme. As for green onions, should those go in ground or can they go in a container like the troughs? They seem to be at least ALIVE, so I'd like to go ahead and plant em where they're going to go.
As for my soil, it seems to be mostly clay (whoopee Georgia

), and a professor here at UGA said I should mix compost in with the clay and it will be plantable. Anyone else second this, or have other suggestions? I'd hate for the ones that survived thus far to be wiped out by insufficient ground soil.
I was also putting the dome in the direct sun, I'm guessing this is what offed em.
Also, what exactly is this coconut coir? Is it also a peat mixture, then?

Can I get it at Home Depot, Lowes, or Wal-Mart? There really aren't any specialty garden stores around Athens aka Middle Of NoWheresVille Georgia that I know of.
(Was I the double poster you were talking about?

)