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Newspaper Starter Pots

 
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God's Warrior
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Joined: 13 May 2006
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 10:47 pm    Post subject: Newspaper Starter Pots Reply with quote

In the At Home Away from Home Forum CajuninKy discusses making newspaper seed starter pots.
http://thegatheringplacehome.myfastforum.org/about2644.html

Here is an article I found concerned with  filling the pots.
Elena
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Quote:
Filling the Newspaper Pots. A Soiled Topic!

Now that we have our handy dandy newspaper pots for starting our seeds - we move on to our next soiled topic. What to fill our pots with!

NOTE: There are other ways to start seeds including using straight vermiculite or planting with peat pellets. As well, there many types of containers, but the purpose of this post is to continue on with filling our newspaper pots and getting ready to plant

Starting seeds indoors can be ridiculously simple, but sometimes it becomes horrendously frustrating. We have all had seeds that refused to germinate and some that germinated just fine, but died off shortly thereafter.

The first ingredient for success is the seed starting mix. There are a plethora of mixes and brands out there and most of them are quite good. You can even mix your own as needed. Its really easy to do.

When selecting or mixing seed starting medium, you want to keep in mind that a seedling is just a baby. It is small and much more fragile than a full-grown plant. It has food reserves for its early growth, but moisture is at a premium and must be constantly provided and yet you don't want to drown it. Our infant plant does indeed need to be babied if it is to reach its full potential. You don't wrap a baby in a big, heavy, scratchy, dirty, old wool blanket. You use a soft, light, clean, wrap to give your baby a pleasant and safe environment. Treat your seeds the same way.

A seed starting medium needs to be completely sterile, anything less and you are likely to encounter soil bourn diseases that will cut down your sweet babies before they get a chance to really live. Especially dampening off fungus. Oh you know what I'm talking about - your sweet little seedlings are all green and new, then suddenly - POOF - they are lying limp and dead. You stare in disbelief and wonder what you did wrong.

Keep things light. Avoid using potting mix for your seedlings, it is far too heavy. The seedling has to struggle up through the soil to reach the light and it needs to be able to extend its delicate new roots through the medium to establish its future feeding mechanism and a firmly anchor itself in position. You also need room for good air circulation and heavy soil has less space for oxygen.

Your mix also needs to be able to hold an adequate amount of moisture to prevent the seedling from drying out. This is a very real danger for a small undeveloped plant. On the other hand you don't want to saturate your plant either, that might promote the growth of unwanted fungus or bacteria.

What you want is a growing medium that is light-weight, allowing the plant to breathe and grow easily, but at the same time will hold the moisture that your plant needs to thrive.

Sound like quite the balancing act, doesn't it? And that is exactly what it is.

Almost any good commercial seed starting medium will do. Most of these are artificial, they contain no garden loam and provide a safe sterile environment for your seedlings.

Seed Starting Mix Recipes:

You can even mix your own seed starting medium. A simple formula for this is:

1 part perlite
1 part peatmoss
1 part ground or milled sphagnum moss

You can get all these ingredients in the garden section of most department stores or your friendly neighborhood garden center.

If you absolutely insist on a making your own soil based mix, the following is a good recipe:

1 part loam
1 part leaf mould or peat moss
1 part sand

You will need to sterilize this mix. Sterilizing will kill off any pests, including eggs and larvae too small to see. It will also kill any bacteria, weed seeds and fungi.

Place the soil in a shallow baking pan and add one cup of water for each gallon of soil. Bake at 200 degrees Fahrenheit for two hours. Cool and let the soil stand for 24 hours before using.

So now you know why it is not a good idea to try bringing soil in from outside in your garden, toss it in a pot, plant your seeds and hope for the best, right? Excellent - now go forth and reproduce! Plants that is.

Article taken from the following website:
http://www.gardenstew.com/blog/e1...ewspaper-pots-a-soiled-topic.html
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God's Warrior
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Joined: 13 May 2006
Posts: 12027


Location: Southern - USA

PostPosted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 5:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Seed-starting mix

From another online source.........

Save on soil less seed-starting mix by buying a large bag from a farm supply or nursery. Avoid using garden soil, which is often too heavy for proper seedling development and can harbor plant diseases.

Seeds contain their own stored plant food. After the first set of true leaves develop, begin feeding with a dilute solution of liquid plant food (see package instructions for seedling rates).

When your seedlings are ready to plant out in the yard, you’ll feel great about all the money you didn’t spend on nursery plants. Plus, you’ll have the added thrill of watching your seeds sprout, grow and become the flowers and fruit they were always meant to be. At a couple of bucks and change, that’s about as cheap as thrills get these days.


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