Hey all - for my hot peppers, I tried to put just one seed in each cell of the seed starting tray - but perhaps I dropped a few in. They all took. So for a few, I have two sprouts.
Are these in fact two separate plants? They are so delicate - I hate to separate. I'm soon moving to 4 inch plastic pots.
1. Should I keep the plants grouped, or just try to get place good sprout per pot with peppers.
2. Related - I don't recall what the parsley seeds looked like, but they are growing like mad. Each cell in my tray seems to have a bunch. Should I keep them bunched or try to somehow separate single sprouts?
3. Any reason to keep any sprout with it's sibling from an early age? Seems like they could grow into one - or maybe not.
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
Yes they are all separate plants and they will all need to be separated.
I didn't follow this: just try to get place good sprout per pot with peppers
but any way one plant per little pot.
Yes parsley has tiny seeds, easy to get too many. If you have more than you want, you can just clip some off with manicure scissors.
One way to separate little plants is just to (gently!) take the whole clump out and drop it in a cup of water. After the soil is washed off, they will separate easily, maybe even float apart.
They are separate individuals and can't grow together in to one, any more than you and your brother could. They will compete with each other for light and nutrients.
I didn't follow this: just try to get place good sprout per pot with peppers
but any way one plant per little pot.
Yes parsley has tiny seeds, easy to get too many. If you have more than you want, you can just clip some off with manicure scissors.
One way to separate little plants is just to (gently!) take the whole clump out and drop it in a cup of water. After the soil is washed off, they will separate easily, maybe even float apart.
They are separate individuals and can't grow together in to one, any more than you and your brother could. They will compete with each other for light and nutrients.
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
thanks. I will try today to separate them. If I successful separate them, should I bring them indoors to protect them from shock? How long will it take to know if I successfully separated them, like what is the critical period? is it ok to bury a little bit of coffee ground and a banana piece in their new home, or is that too much shock? thank you:)
I think I separated them successfully. I heard a few cracks when I was trying to tease them apart. I hope they are not too tramatized:( If they don't live, then maybe I will just get some sweet pepper from my local flower shop:) thank you all so much for the advice:)
I think I separated them successfully. I heard a few cracks when I was trying to tease them apart. I hope they are not too tramatized:( If they don't live, then maybe I will just get some sweet pepper from my local flower shop:) thank you all so much for the advice:)
Concerns like this seem odd to those of us who tear apart our seedlings every year to pot up. There are very few losses and those are usually from a stem that gets crushed in the process when I drop a tool or something and squash the little plant, not from root damage, no matter how severe.
Peppers do have a tap root and like a tomato plant, it is best (or at least not a problem) if you damage it through replanting to get a more fibrous root system. Peppers are as tough as tomatoes so you can dense plant (see the thread on that) and then literally tear the roots apart to separate the plants when they get their true leaves. Deep plant them to the cotyledon leaves, soak the soil and put in a shady spot for a few days to recover. Light means water loss from the leaves. It has to happen for photosynthesis to proceed. So if you don't want water loss cut down on the light and the air movement. Fluorescent lights with no fan running is fine, outside or direct sunlight through a window is bad.
Peppers do have a tap root and like a tomato plant, it is best (or at least not a problem) if you damage it through replanting to get a more fibrous root system. Peppers are as tough as tomatoes so you can dense plant (see the thread on that) and then literally tear the roots apart to separate the plants when they get their true leaves. Deep plant them to the cotyledon leaves, soak the soil and put in a shady spot for a few days to recover. Light means water loss from the leaves. It has to happen for photosynthesis to proceed. So if you don't want water loss cut down on the light and the air movement. Fluorescent lights with no fan running is fine, outside or direct sunlight through a window is bad.