[Arisaema-l] What Happened To My Seedlings
Pat Taylor
pataylor54 at yahoo.com
Sat Dec 28 18:15:06 CET 2013
That's why I grow my seeds indoors. Then transplant outdoors the following year. However, Louise Parson's idea is very good for outdoors.
...Pat in Vancouver, Canada
Zone 8
On Saturday, December 28, 2013 8:22 AM, Louise Parsons <parsont at peak.org> wrote:
Mice can also uproot seedlings or seeds with little, if any, visible
soil disturbance.
Generally I place seed pots in a heavy plastic utility box with holes
drilled in the bottom. It is lined with spun poly fabric ("remay") to
keep worms and most bugs out. A thick layer of pumice is placed on top
of the fabric. Any sort of grit would work fine.
There is enough depth to these boxes to place seed pots on top of the
pumice and cover each box with an old window screen and/or a piece of
hardware cloth, weighted down with a couple of small bricks. Not only
does screen protect from various bugs and critters, it also keeps our
heavy winter rain from compacting soil.
All the best for a bloomin' fine 2014!
Louise Parsons
Chilly Corvallis, western Oregon
This year's mintemp so far = -18 degrees C
(Arisaema seed pots are in our basement this winter.)
On 12/28/2013 07:31 AM, Ellen Hornig wrote:
> Mother Nature is a b***h, David. If they don't come from above (birds,
> squirrels, chipmunks, mice) they come from below (sow bugs, earwigs).
> If they didn't, the world would be overrun with seedlings. Consider the
> ratio of seeds to mama plants. Scary thought!
>
> Happy Holidays. :-)
>
> Ellen
>
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