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| Home > About Flowers > Gardening with Grower Direct > Bedding Plants | |||||||||
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Gardening with Grower DirectBedding Plants From SeedYou can save yourself lots of money every year by growing your own bedding plants. Some are very easy to grow, some are more challenging, but well worth the attempt. SEED If you're using seed you collected yourself, old seed from last year, or other unknown types, plant these a little heavier in the tray to make up for low germination rates. SOIL Use this mix straight out of the bag for your first planting. Make sure you pack the soil firmly in the trays, level and smooth. Water the mix before you fill the trays, after you fill the trays and once more after you add the seed. Always add water from the bottom for newly planted seed. For the transplants you may want to add some black soil to the commercial mix to give it some body, some more minerals, and a little more nutrients for the plants. You will have to fertilize these trays over the growing period. Use sterilized black soil if possible, otherwise you'll have weeds growing in your seed trays. Heat garden loam in the oven at 350 F for about an hour to kill weed seeds, pests and disease organisms. TRAYS Transplant individual seedlings to 48 per tray or smaller so that you get individual plants and can transplant them into the garden without damaging the roots. SEEDING WATER Over watering is the most common cause of disease in bedding plants. The soil surface should not be constantly moist! Allow the soil to dry out between watering. Do not stress the plants for lack of water, wilting will slow down growth and may cause the plants to harden up, and mature too soon. TRANSPLANTING Use a dibble, a pencil sized stick with a rounded end (actually a dull pencil works fine) to loosen the seedlings from the bottom. Grasp the plant by the leaves, never by the stem. The tiny stems are delicate and easily crushed just from the pressure of your fingers hold on. Make a hole with the dibble in the new soil, drop the seedling in and pack the soil up sideways around it with the dibble. You can set the seedlings a little deeper in the soil than they were before. New roots will grow out of the section of the stem that's now under the surface. DISEASE STRESS To avoid this problem don't let the plants get drought stressed in the trays. Don't let them get over heated in a hot dry location. Don't let them get crowded in containers that are too small, or with too many plants in the same pot. Adding nitrogen fertilizer will keep the plants in the juvenile stages with softer growth, less likely to mature ahead of time. Stay away from too much potassium fertilizer. Many garden centres will offer bedding plants already in Flower in the transplant trays. Don't buy these, they are already too mature for such a small plant and will not be vigorous enough and large enough to be useful. LABELS WHICH PLANTS TO START AHEAD Here's a list of species that are easy to start ahead and should be attempted. Annual statice - leaps out of the ground. Start 4 - 6 weeks ahead to get large vigorous transplants. StrawFlowers - same as annual statice, very easy. Perennials - any perennials can be seeded at home. Even if you're late planting them, if you can get a small plant established in the garden before fall, you'll have a healthy perennial plant going for the following year. You can leave the perennials until after the spring annuals rush. Cuttings - many herbs belong to the mint family, look for square stems. All of hese can be grown easily from cuttings and transplanted just like the seeded bedding plants. Geraniums best from cuttings. Watch for fungal diseases and over watering problems with unrooted stems. Celosia - do not stress too much. Ornamental Corn - the only way to get mature cobs from the fancy types. WHICH PLANTS TO DIRECT SEED - DON'T START AHEAD Many plants actually produce better if they're planted directly into the ground rather than started indoors. Larkspur - definitely needs to be direct seeded. Can be planted in fall and very early in spring. Gourds and pumpkins - Cucurbits do not transplant well. Celosia - may do better if direct seeded early. May need some protection from spring cold temperatures. Poppies, Bachelor Buttons, Cosmos, Dill - anything that self sows will be good for direct seeding. May be fall planted. Grains and Grasses - ornamental grasses and field crops. SunFlowers - can be planted sequentially from fall, early spring, to the end of July. Nigella Basil - try this, it works. Extend the season by covering early plantings with a tunnel of double layer poly to keep spring frosts out.
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