It's finally time after months of waiting! 🍅
It's finally time after months of waiting! 🍅
Starting up 18 varieties of tomatoes, after creating some more bed space for this year. It's so nice to sit down and take some time to start the seeds 🌱
It's finally time after months of waiting! 🍅
Starting up 18 varieties of tomatoes, after creating some more bed space for this year. It's so nice to sit down and take some time to start the seeds 🌱
Dumb question, but how are you transplanting these without harming the roots from a contiguous plot of soil like this?
I just pluck them out with a small spoon or a chopstick while they are still pretty small. It works well, I did this for some years already.
But if you wait too long the roots get bigger and tangled, so it's a bit more effort because I usually transplant early into a small pot and then repot them later into a bigger pot. I try to save space while growing from seed because our last potential frost date is mid may and there's not so much space on our south windowsills where I put all my seedlings. So it does get crowded with fennel, zucchini, peppers/chilis and the tomatoes.
As long as you get most of the roots, tomatoes won't really care. I start mine in red solo cups with holes in the bottom.
Yeah, individual spaces for seedlings makes sense. I just feel like I'd destroy them if trying to get them out of something like this, so was curious.