Our 2024 Garden: pre-germinating seeds (videos)

Talk about making a difference!

Recently, I was going to start some new seeds in pots, but at the last moment, changed my mind. We had such trouble with these last year, and these seeds were anywhere from 2 to 4 years old. I decided to try pre-germinating them, and if some of the seeds turned out to be dead, I’d know right away. Plus, I could avoid our situation last year, where so many seeds didn’t germinate, or died soon after.

Here is a video from Maritime Gardening about the planting process.

Typically, pre-germinating seeds is done in slide lock baggies, but he does it in reusable plastic containers, and I liked that idea better. The take-out container I used was big enough to hold all the seeds I wanted to start, and they are all so different there was no concern about getting them mixed up.

Today – after only 4 days, with only a couple of those on the heat mat (I had the container elevated, so the wouldn’t get too hot) – they germinated! When I turned the lights on this morning and checked them, I saw a few little roots poking out. By the time I was ready to put them in pots this afternoon, every seed either had a root emerging, or just visible.

Before I got to that, though, I saw this new video from Gardening in Canada. Excellent timing.

Almost all plastic containers have that triple arrow reduce-reuse-recycle symbol, with a number in it. She goes through all of them, from 1 through 6. All the plastic containers she looked at are considered food safe, but some are better than others, though the green tray sets with the LED lights, which I now have, too, have no number on them at all.

When it was time to plant, I made sure to check the bottoms of the pots I’d bought for these, and was happy to see a number 5. Discovering that the Red Solo cups (which have a 6 on them) are made of a plastic that is among the worse for shedding was a bit of a surprise. I still have a lot of those!

Honestly, though, I’m not too worried about it. If I worried about all it all, I’d never do anything. Still, if I am in a position to choose one over the other, I now have the information to made an educated decision.

Thanks, Ashley!

So here is my little video of today’s progress!

The seeds had already been soaking for a while when I decided to take clippers to them and scarify the outer shells. Normally, I’d have used sandpaper. All the emerging radicles found their way through the clipped openings. It likely would have taken several more days for them to break through, otherwise, and even longer if they’d gone straight into pots.

I’m quite impressed that every single seed sprouted. The luffa are the oldest seeds of them all, so I was really expecting to have at least a couple of duds.

So now they are on the heat mat, and I expect to see them emerge from the soil in a few days. Theoretically, I should have given each seed its own pot, but we’ll see how they do, first.

Before I was able to get started on this, though, I had to finish cleaning up after my near disaster with the San Marzano tomato tray, yesterday. The remaining soil spilled onto the floor had finally dried enough to vacuum, though I was actually able to salvage some of it, first. As everything was put back in front of the window, I made sure to top up the soil on the onion tray that got knocked over. Mostly, it was filling in around the edges, since the roots held the soil together in the middle.

I’m really at a loss as to how I’m going to set up more seed trays as they get moved out of the big aquarium greenhouse. We won’t be able to do the same set up as we did last year. Hopefully, things will stay mild enough that I can start using the sun room, early. The outside cats won’t be happy, though. They’ll be losing their lounging spaces! We’ll probably have to start closing the sun room door completely. At least for the night.

If the door can close all the way. Things are still shifting, and I recall having trouble getting the outer door to fully close because of it.

The sun room certainly gets warm enough during the day – today, I saw the thermometer at about 25C/77F – but it loses pretty much all that heat, overnight, and that would be cold enough to kill seedlings. It’ll be a few weeks before we’re going to need the space, though, so it might be warm enough overnight, by then. We shall see.

For now, I’m really happy with how pre-germinating these seeds worked out. When it comes time to start things like the melons and winter squash indoors, I think it would be worthwhile to do it again!

The Re-Farmer

9 thoughts on “Our 2024 Garden: pre-germinating seeds (videos)

      • It means that something can be recycled, and the number is the type of plastic it is. Each type requires a slightly different recycling process.

        No number means it’ll sit forever in a landfill, but generally is “solid” enough that it doesn’t leech chemicals.

        Liked by 1 person

      • When we lived in a city that had recycling depots – we even got our enviro fees back! – they had signs showing which numbers they would take, and which they wouldn’t. Most things that already have recycled material in them are not suitable for recycling anymore.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Recycle fees are one of the things that pissed us off about California. At most redemption centers, we’d get back half of what we should. The thievery was blatant, as with most of the state and local governments. Funny thing; they always claimed it was needed to get people to recycle. No fees here in small town Tennessee and people still recycle like mad. Glass isn’t even eligible for curbside pickup, but the dropoff sites are overflowing with collected glass.

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      • All too often, yes. That’s how China ended up being the world’s biggest producer of ocean plastics waste. The really annoying part is that I saw an article a couple weeks ago (meant to blog it) that recycling is a bigger scam than we think. Most plastics can only be recycled once, then they end up in a landfill anyway. I’d say I don’t know why we don’t have real alternatives like bio-plastics yet, but the answer is big oil and it’s money.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Yup.

        I remember reading an article, years ago, about how the glass just piles up at landfills, because it’s not worth recycling.

        I do know that the plastic bags for meat at Costco are compostable, and the bags I get for our compost bucket are, of course, compostable. They’re just not useful for a lot of things, precisely because they break down so quickly.

        Liked by 1 person

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