Am seeing some seedlings coming up in the garden now- of lettuce, carrots, bunching onions, and radishes... these are things that sprout and grow well in the cold Spring weather. They can be direct-seeded in the garden in early Spring, before the date of the last frost. Exciting to see the tiny baby seedlings pushing up through the dirt! Now if only the squirrels and birds will leave them alone.
Meanwhile, I've had to get creative concerning the warm weather veggies like peppers and tomatoes. Most people either just buy started plants (like I usually do) or start ahead of time from seed in their basement under grow lights.
I realized a few weeks ago that it might be impossible to buy started plants next month at the garden store, what with the Covid-19 shortages and everybody suddenly starting "victory gardens" in their yards. So I had ordered some seed early enough to get some before online sources run out of seed.
I didn't have the typical seed starting equipment or little seedling pots, and I imagined the local garden shop would be already out of all that anyway. So I cut in half a plastic milk jug and a cardboard milk carton, and also had a tupperware shallow container. I filled them with dirt from the garden and planted the seeds of tomato, red and orange sweet peppers, and purple tomatillos.
I had an electric pet warming pad that gives very low heat (as in 85F), like the kind you can put under reptile tanks. I stole it from our cats' bed... LOL. I sandwiched the heating pad between hand towels in the large wooden tray, and put the planted containers on top and covered loosely with plastic wrap. Put it in the bright window of the guest room... the only room closed off from the cats, who would likely tear all this up if they were allowed access. ;) I think I'll get a little table lamp and put that near it as well. (update: borrowed a 60w shop lamp from Brian and set it up overhead as well.)
I think they take 10 days to 2 weeks to germinate, so I'll need to monitor it all to not be either too wet or too dry.
Anyway, here's my crazy setup- I hope I did not waste my precious seed!:
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Site Owner
Those irritated by grain of sand best avoid beach.
-Strumelia proverb c.1990
updated by @strumelia: 04/05/20 03:05:36PM