Put seeds in soil or water then soil?

BodegaBud

Well-Known Member
In winter I have shit luck cracking seeds. I just lost 2 Lebanese, 2 Afghan #1 and a White widow. I cracked the seeds in water then put in soil but think I overwatered and killed them
 
In winter I have shit luck cracking seeds. I just lost 2 Lebanese, 2 Afghan #1 and a White widow. I cracked the seeds in water then put in soil but think I overwatered and killed them
Sometimes older seeds lack the vigor. Don't be hard on yourself. One suggestion if your going from water to soil is just to put the seeds on the top of soil and then add just enuff moist soil to cover them. You dont need to add any more water than a couple spray bottle pumps if the topsoil starts to show drying. (Fresh germed seedlings are most at risk for overwatering during the next 2 weeks.)
 

dbz

Well-Known Member
I usually plant into solo cups directly on a seedling mat and add about 2 oz water. 2 to 3 days I water again.
If old, I scuff the outsides of the seed lightly with sandpaper.
I don't really get all the elaborate methods when just plain old fashioned damp dirt works fine.
 
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Oldreefer

Well-Known Member
There's no improvement on simply placing a seed at 1/2" deep in moistened medium, on heat mat. Any further handling is unnecessary. Living in a farming community, I've yet to see anyone soak a seed or sand the shells....and we're still eating the results.
All these bro-science ideas are just that...something someone made up to make themselves appear a smarter grower. Get over it and just plant a seed. It ain't rocket science.....
 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
75F water with a drop of H2O2 here. I also spritz older beans before I soak them with H2O2. 24 -48 hours most times. Has taken up to 5 for a few really old beans. But rarely fails for me. Good luck and be gentle with the tap root.

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BodegaBud

Well-Known Member
I think where I went wrong was trying to sprout them in temps just below what they like( I now use a heat mat) then I sprayed them too much in the beginning after putting them in soil. I dug one up and it looked like the taproot was rotted. So this was last week and the other seeds which were crosses I made and just fooling around with already sprouted. So they are probably gone if no sign by now right?
 

Jahfarmer95

Active Member
In winter I have shit luck cracking seeds. I just lost 2 Lebanese, 2 Afghan #1 and a White widow. I cracked the seeds in water then put in soil but think I overwatered and killed them
Soak until they sink poke them down after 24hr then soak in tissue 24hrs then plant
 

natureboygrower

Well-Known Member
I think where I went wrong was trying to sprout them in temps just below what they like( I now use a heat mat) then I sprayed them too much in the beginning after putting them in soil. I dug one up and it looked like the taproot was rotted. So this was last week and the other seeds which were crosses I made and just fooling around with already sprouted. So they are probably gone if no sign by now right?
I put my seeds between moist paper towels then in a sealable sandwich bag. That gets put into a tupperware container then put in a kitchen cabinet that has a undercabinet light below it. Usually within 24-36 hours they have tails sprouted. Depending on the seeds of course.
put the seeds on the top of soil and then add just enuff moist soil to cover them.
Ime, if you dont cover the seed with enough dirt, the seedling has a hard time shedding the seed shell. Once I started planting deeper, I've had way less problems with this. That extra soil/medium helps pull the shell off.
There's no improvement on simply placing a seed at 1/2" deep in moistened medium, on heat mat. Any further handling is unnecessary. Living in a farming community, I've yet to see anyone soak a seed or sand the shells....and we're still eating the results.
All these bro-science ideas are just that...something someone made up to make themselves appear a smarter grower. Get over it and just plant a seed. It ain't rocket science.....
Not trying to argue, but farmers are dealing with thousands of seeds at a clip. How in the world could they handle germinating/soaking that many seeds then separating lol. Seeing a tail helps peace of mind
At this rate some one is going to suggest a rain dance, virgin sacrafice and strong psychedelics
I dont like planting a seed if it doesn't germ. It's a waste of promix and space. Putting it in paper towels ensures I know whether its a dud or not..
 

BBQtoast

Well-Known Member
Duh....Thermostats fix that...
Thermostats have a habit of being simple on off switches not regulated supply, heat mat goes on full then off, sometimes this can cause problems.

Some are lower power don't use thermostats but provide constant low heat that's never too much.
 

BBQtoast

Well-Known Member
I put my seeds between moist paper towels then in a sealable sandwich bag. That gets put into a tupperware container then put in a kitchen cabinet that has a undercabinet light below it. Usually within 24-36 hours they have tails sprouted. Depending on the seeds of course.

Ime, if you dont cover the seed with enough dirt, the seedling has a hard time shedding the seed shell. Once I started planting deeper, I've had way less problems with this. That extra soil/medium helps pull the shell off.

Not trying to argue, but farmers are dealing with thousands of seeds at a clip. How in the world could they handle germinating/soaking that many seeds then separating lol. Seeing a tail helps peace of mind

I dont like planting a seed if it doesn't germ. It's a waste of promix and space. Putting it in paper towels ensures I know whether its a dud or not..
Farmers over plant and thin, too costly for us at our seed price
 
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Ukulele Haze

Well-Known Member
I'm a straight-to-soil kind of guy. If you're concerned about over-watering, I would recommend saturating a paper towel with water, then gently wringing it around the seed area like gentle rain. It gives you a lot more control (eg. helps avoid the seed) and lets you do a little at time as you keep re-dunking your paper towel in water. It's totally zen and relaxing as a bonus.
 
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