My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find tips and tricks to make your garden or allotment flourish on our Gardening forum.

Gardening

What do i do next with my seedlings?

6 replies

LovelyDear · 05/04/2010 23:15

I've sewn lots of tomato seeds in a propagator on the window sill, and now they are about 4cm high. What do i do next? the packet doesn't tell me....

OP posts:
Report
WynkenBlynkenandNod · 06/04/2010 07:49

Once they've got one or two pairs of true leaves (not the original seed leaves) you can pot them on into 3 inch pots. If they have gone leggy ie. tall and thin you can pop them in and bury them up to their seed leaves as new roots will form on the stem and make them stronger. Pick them up carefully by the leaves .

Report
taffetacat · 06/04/2010 10:09

Yes bury each one you want to keep ( you say you have sown lots - think carefully about how many big plants you want at this stage -I always sow too many and end up giving them away or throwing them away at this stage ) a little deeper in a bigger pot as this makes for better roots.

When you take them out, loosen the soil around the roots first so you don't yank them up by the leaves, IYSWIM, as otherwise the roots will break off. Sorry if this is very obvious, don't know how experienced you are. I am super clumsy and was inexperienced a few years ago and lost lots of seedlings this way.

Report
HopeForTheBestExpectTheWorst · 06/04/2010 11:37

Was about to post asking same question, but am at the earlier stage - all our seedlings have just started poking up through soil, and I wanted to know when to repot them.
I've got them in those biodegradable cardboard-type squares in a propagator - do I need to take them out of these, or put them all together into a bigger pot?

Ds (3) and I got a bit over-enthusiastic at the garden centre and bought seeds for tomatoes, zucchini, beans, peas, parsely, sunflowers, romane salad and sweetcorn

We have nowhere to plant anything in the garden, either, so it's ALL going into pots (lord knows where I'm going to put all this!)

But it's utterly amazing watching the seeds grow every day. I haven't done this since I was a kid, and you sort of forget how miraculous it is.

I shall be watching the thread for any more tips!

Report
LovelyDear · 06/04/2010 14:36

thank you! so if i've got clumps of seedlings where the seeds were right next to each other do I need to get rid of all but one? they're so hair-like at the moment that i'll probably break their roots off if i do much touching.

also, i planted some romanesque cauli seeds, and they have rapidly become very tall thin shoots with only a pair of leaves. they're starting to fall over. when do i put them in pots? and for both, do the pots go outside or inside? i don't have a greenhouse but lots of sunny rooms.

OP posts:
Report
seimum · 06/04/2010 14:39

If you don't have a greenhouse, then keep the pots inside until May. If it is nice you can put them outside during the day & bring them in at night.

Report
SerenaSays · 06/04/2010 15:14

I use something like a lolly stick, or even a pencil, to gently lever the seedlings from underneath while holding the leaves with the fingers of the other hand, and as everyone else advises, handling it all very carefully. Tugging them out of the compost is a big no-no.
It's sensible to let them put on a bit of growth so they're robust enough to cope with being handled.

Personally I'm not a big fan of the Gardeners' World presenting team (can't be doing with Toby'n'Alys), but this may be useful to watch nevertheless! www.bbc.co.uk/gardenersworld/video/dig_in/tomatoes_malvern.shtml

I too always sow far too many - I felt so guilty at just chucking the ones I didn't need that I put them on Freecycle last year - they were snapped up in seconds, so felt a warm glow of virtuousness!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.