6,340 Garden Web Discussions | Growing from Seed

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Crazy_Gardener(Z2b AB Canada)

Sowing is the process of planting seeds.

    Bookmark     May 14, 2007 at 2:42AM
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ornata(London UK (8/9?))

... and planting is the process of putting plants, not seeds, in the ground!

    Bookmark     May 15, 2007 at 9:51AM
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sheltieche

Also read up on winter sowing forum FAQ. Easy and great results.
Never liked coffee filters myself. I either use moist sand inside of ziplock bag or just put whole pot/ moist medium and seeds/ inside of plastic bag.

    Bookmark     May 14, 2007 at 10:11PM
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sundazing

Hey, thanks, Linda. I've tried winter sowing with disastrous results so the coffee filter thing is my latest attempt to succeed at something with seeds!

Can you tell me more about your method? For instance, do you use tea or hydrogen peroxide after you sow them, what kind of medium do you sow in when using pots, do you refrigerate overnight for regular seeds (not those needing stratification...I'll be starting a new thread later for that), do you seal up the baggie or poke holes in it, and where do you put them afterward? I'm not sure if all of the ones on my first list here are ok in dark or not. Thanks a lot for the tips.

    Bookmark     May 15, 2007 at 4:04AM
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naturemitch(3/4 WI)

Hi derekh,

I too sowed mine in a 4" pot...and yes they just keep germinating every so often:)

I just prick them out when they get some size...and let the others continue to come up or get a bit bigger. Guess it is up to you what you want to do after that point. I'll probably let the ones pricked out get some size to them and then transplant a few spread out in their new home(for us pots to bring in over winter).

I sow all my seed in 3.5 to 4" pots and prick out...think you're doing just fine. You'll just have to see if this is what you are comfortable doing...it works great for me.

good luck
m

    Bookmark     May 15, 2007 at 1:42AM
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morz8(Washington Coast Z8b)

Either is fine, stratification not required. Hibiscus syriacus - soak seeds overnight, sow outdoors or in, Germination in less than 2 weeks at 68ºF

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 11:05AM
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vela75

Thank you!

    Bookmark     May 13, 2007 at 4:16PM
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kek19

I'm starting from scratch too, I'm using the wintersowing method, most for space!

Here is a link that might be useful: Wintersow Forum

    Bookmark     May 8, 2007 at 8:58PM
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richinaiken

I have had success growing milkweed from seed and transplanting. I think It is hard to dig a wild one and have it survive because of the taproot.

    Bookmark     May 12, 2007 at 6:54PM
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tussiemussies(z6 NJ)

Good luck w/your morning glories. One year I had the opposite -- great m.g. and the moon flowers never took off -- sometimes I think it is the year itself! : ))) They may be okay -- are they transplanted outside now in full sun?

    Bookmark     May 9, 2007 at 2:17PM
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mrs.micki

I haven't planted outside because we still have the chance of getting frost here.The weatherman said we are suppose to get freezing frost tonight,low of 43.I'm gonna wait a couple of days and see what happpens then.

    Bookmark     May 12, 2007 at 5:41PM
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aliska12000(Z5)

That might work. I've been reading instruction after instruction to cover with plastic. So I have been having good luck and fast germination sowing in McDonald's salad trays (the ones with the black bottoms and clear plastic tops). I mixed a little good potting soil in with the peat, but I don't think you have to do that. I pour hot water over it and let it sit until it cools. If you can squeeze water out of it, then you need to let it dry until it is just nice and damp.

I set them outside in the shade now, but it also works in the house, they just do better starting outside, but you get a later start that way.

I cut 7 slits in the bottom with an exacto knife. When they are sealed shut, water droplets appear in the lid. When they germinate, I take the lids off, set them in a sunnier spot and mist.

Then I can fill the lids with a little water and set the plants in that to bottom water.

I got a bunch of free six pack, nine packs and transplant into those when the second set of leaves appear and let them grow on a bit.

I will be using coir to line things and may try rooting some rose cuttings in that (ground up, not like what you likely have). I don't know how it would be to start seeds in. It would probably work, but can you bury the whole pot? I never wanted to bother with peat pots, too expensive for one thing and don't degrade in the ground fast enough unless you do what you do. Who needs it?

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 7:44PM
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littleonefb(zone 5, MA)

tussiemussies, Check out the link below for the WS/spring sowing forum on GW. Will provide you with all the info you can possibly imagine.

Been WS/ Spring sowing for 4 years and always have overflowing seedlings from the method.

As for doing your snapdragon seeds again. All I did was put drainage holes in the bottom of a 9x13 inch disposable cake pan that has a plastic dome lid to it. Bought them in the market, quite a few years ago. And put good size air holes in the cover.

I filled the container with miracle grow potting mix. made sure the soil was good and wet but not drowning in water. Sprinkled all the snapdragon seeds on the surface of the soil. gently pressed them into the soil with a smooth bottom glass. Then put the pan cover on and put it outside in mostly direct sun. Seedlings are up now in 8 days.

My overall germination rate with WS/spring sowing is roughly 90-95%.

Check it out.

Fran

Here is a link that might be useful: Winter sowing forum on GW

    Bookmark     May 9, 2007 at 11:38PM
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tussiemussies(z6 NJ)

Thanks so much Fran -- did look that over and is all new to me , something to look forward to trying in the future! Thanks! : )

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 4:22PM
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tussiemussies(z6 NJ)

Was wondering if maybe you have a picture of it from your past gardens that you could post -- maybe help?

    Bookmark     May 9, 2007 at 1:55PM
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maineman(z5a ME)

Ann,

Perhaps you are thinking of one of the older celosia varieties. Century Mixed grows 24" - 28" and comes in a range of colors. But not the 4 feet tall that you mentioned. Although there are some feather-type celosias that might grow that tall.

MM

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 12:17PM
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GawdinFever(z5b/St. Louis, MO)

Pretty hard to kill tomatoes, really. They'll be fine, just pout for awhile...lol.

Really!

Susanne

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 10:44AM
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redcryptonite

yep, tomatoes are tough and those ones will recover.

    Bookmark     May 11, 2007 at 11:15AM
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rokal(LongIsland/z6b)

Liatris is very easy to start from seed. I wintersowed a bunch a few years ago. I now have volunteer seedlings from last years blooms popping up all over the garden.

    Bookmark     May 10, 2007 at 10:31AM
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vela75

Thank you!!

    Bookmark     May 10, 2007 at 9:44PM
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echquiltstorm

Since they are in the pots, I will just wait to see what happens. I can always bail later and buy a plant. I bought the seeds on ebay and have no idea when they were harvested.

    Bookmark     May 7, 2007 at 5:10PM
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ottawapepper

echquiltstorm,

I recently purchased Bay Laurel seeds from a Canadian seed company (IÂm in Canada). They arrived 3 weeks ago. I paid $7 CDN ($6 USD?) and received 12 seeds packed in a sealed air tight envelope. The seeds were shipped in a moist pre-germinated state packed with vermiculite. So far, I have one of 12 sprouting.

My seeds came with a fairly comprehensive information sheet regarding history and germination instructions and care instructions. morz8's post pretty much reflected what the sheet said regarding germination times etc.

If you send me an email at ottawapepper(at)hotmail(dot)com, IÂll forward a scanned copy of the sheet.

Good luck with your Bay Laurel adventures.

Bill

    Bookmark     May 10, 2007 at 8:21PM
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kellyrie(z5 ME)

NYgardener- now when you say row covers work really well- do you mean you plant the seedlings out and use the row cover for a couple of weeks, or do you just set them out and drape the covers over them while they are still in their pots?
Thanks for starting this thread Tonia- it has helped me too!

    Bookmark     May 9, 2007 at 5:09PM
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stevation(z5a Utah)

I had my seedlings hardened off pretty well, and then the temps dropped to the mid-30s at night last week, so I brought them back in the basement. After four days inside, I put them back out, and now the temps are in the 80s in the day, and it's been tough on a few of the plants. I was hoping they wouldn't get wimpy again after just a few days inside, but a few did. I moved those to a shadier spot, and hopefully, they'll be fine in a few more days. The place where I harden all these off is under a small plum tree, which gives them morning and afternoon sun but shades them during mid-day.

    Bookmark     May 10, 2007 at 1:28PM
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cranebill(6)

Hey CBGC,

I commiserate. My "What a Dope: Part 1" posting tells of my mishap with rare Tacca chanterii seeds, an account that surpasses yours in terms of the idiocy it tells of.

morz8's expert opinion is no doubt reassuring to you. As for me, I did manage to recover three of my seeds.

Good luck,

cranebill

    Bookmark     March 17, 2007 at 11:14AM
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cityboygonecountry

UPDATE:

15 out of 50 have successfully germinated. Considering the germination rate of giant sequoia seeds is low to begin with, I have to say I came out alright!

    Bookmark     May 10, 2007 at 11:22AM
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