Okay, it could have been worse, but I had a bit of a disaster this morning.
While trending the seedlings and doing a tray rotation, I topped up the larger cell tray of San Marzano tomatoes with more soil. I’d deliberately half filled the cells to start, and now I’m “potting up” the seedlings this way.
After carefully putting the soil around the seedlings, tamping it down gently, then gently top watering to settle the soil around the stems more and avoid air gaps, I went to put the tray back into the mini greenhouse frame at the window. I had to rotate the peppers and eggplant tray back to the top, as they’re getting too tall to be anywhere else, so the tomatoes needed to go one shelf down. I’ve got the LED lights set up above the lower shelves, but I did move the cables around to get them out of the way.
Well, not enough.
Between getting caught on a cable and the uneven bottom of the tray catching on one of the wire squares on the shelf itself, the entire tray ended up sliding off the far side. There is a gap between the shelf and the wall, because of a baseboard heater (these are never used and the breakers are off. I don’t remember them ever being used when this part of the house was built!). The tray, however, landed against the window sill, rather than sliding all the way down to the floor.
In the process of falling, it knocked one of the onion trays on the shelf below, off in the other direction.
What. A. Mess.
I was able to retrieve the tray, but a lot of the soil – and water! – was all over the window sill, down the wall, and on the carpet below.
The shag carpet.
*sigh*

I think they’ll survive, though.
Once the tomato tray was cleared away, I had to pick up the onions before I could reach anything else. They are in four sections of a vegetable tray, and the roots actually held everything together pretty well, but some soil was lost. The bundles could be popped back into the tray. I think they’ll survive, too.
The mini greenhouse frame had to be cleared of everything else before I could move it and reach the biggest mess. I was able to save some of the spilled soil, but most of it will have to be vacuumed up.
I fixed up the tomato seedlings as best I could, and had to add more soil to a few of them.
For now, I’ve got the trays spread out in various sun spots, though those will be gone soon. We have a fan going in the room for the seedlings all the time, so that will help dry things out faster. Once the mess can be vacuumed, we can put the frame back and return the seedling trays.
It could have been worse.
Well. I suppose it still could be. Let’s see how the seedlings survive over the next little while!
The Re-Farmer

Sounds like a terrible accident to clean up! That happened to me a few times with potted plants and seedlings. I feel your pain. The seedlings look like they will be fine though.
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Thanks! I sure hope so!
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Bummer! So much can go wrong. Something similar just happened here too. I was adding more height to the lights, suspended from hooks, because the tomatoes were getting so big already and were too close. Well, with my fumble fingers I dropped one, smashed right down on all the tomatoe pots and broke most of them in half. 😩. Luckily they will recover, but that was some good growth gone right into the compost!
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Oh, no!!!
I’m glad they’ll recover, but having to toss healthy growth – even if it’s into the compost – really sucks!
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That sounds like one of my moves.
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😄😄😄
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Definitely a big mess, but the plants should be all salvageable.
Hang in there. :)
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