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Chewdadda
25-06-2009, 11:18 PM
Hi Guys,

I'm new here and, although over 60, new to real gardening too. I have huge experience at sitting in them, but almost none in creating them.

Here's the thing, I'm produced quite a few, and varied seedlings and am thrilled to see them emerge. Instructions are typically to plant them into pots when they are bid enough - how do I know when they are big enough? Is there a rough rule of thumb that would work? In particular, I'm trying to produce a number of ornamental grasses, so they'll be very fine when young.

Any advice would be most welcome.

Cheers all

Rob

Mahender
26-06-2009, 04:50 AM
On Jun 25, 5:18*pm, Chewdadda >
wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I'm new here and, although over 60, new to real gardening too. *I have
> huge experience at sitting in them, but almost none in creating them.
>
> Here's the thing, I'm produced quite a few, and varied seedlings and am
> thrilled to see them emerge. *Instructions are typically to plant them
> into pots when they are bid enough - how do I know when they are big
> enough? *Is there a rough rule of thumb that would work? *In
> particular, I'm trying to produce a number of ornamental grasses, so
> they'll be very fine when young.
>
> Any advice would be most welcome.
>
> Cheers all
>
> Rob
>
> --
> Chewdadda

jeff
26-06-2009, 10:54 AM
Chewdadda wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> I'm new here and, although over 60, new to real gardening too. I have
> huge experience at sitting in them, but almost none in creating them.
>
> Here's the thing, I'm produced quite a few, and varied seedlings and am
> thrilled to see them emerge. Instructions are typically to plant them
> into pots when they are bid enough - how do I know when they are big
> enough? Is there a rough rule of thumb that would work? In
> particular, I'm trying to produce a number of ornamental grasses, so
> they'll be very fine when young.
>
> Any advice would be most welcome.

http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/vegetable/when-to-transplant-a-seedling-plant-into-the-garden.htm

I think it is not so much how soon, but to transplant before it is
root bound.

Jeff
>
> Cheers all
>
> Rob
>
>
>
>

Billy[_7_]
26-06-2009, 06:09 PM
In article
>,
Mahender > wrote:

> On Jun 25, 5:18*pm, Chewdadda >
> wrote:
> > Hi Guys,
> >
> > I'm new here and, although over 60, new to real gardening too. *I have
> > huge experience at sitting in them, but almost none in creating them.
> >
> > Here's the thing, I'm produced quite a few, and varied seedlings and am
> > thrilled to see them emerge. *Instructions are typically to plant them
> > into pots when they are bid enough - how do I know when they are big
> > enough? *Is there a rough rule of thumb that would work? *In
> > particular, I'm trying to produce a number of ornamental grasses, so
> > they'll be very fine when young.
> >
> > Any advice would be most welcome.
> >
> > Cheers all
> >
> > Rob
> >
> > --
> > Chewdadda

How old are the seedlings? I usually pot veggies after the second set of
true leaves, but that's not much help with a monocot. I'd give them 2 or
3 weeks to develop their root systems, transplant, and fish emulsion.
You could use chemferts, but you may over fertilize, and burn the roots,
and lose the seedlings. What are they growing in now? Wouldn't it be
better to transfer them into trays?
--

- Billy

There are three kinds of men: The ones that learn by reading. The few who
learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and
find out for themselves.
Will Rogers

http://green-house.tv/video/the-spring-garden-tour
http://www.tomdispatch.com/p/zinn

Chewdadda
26-06-2009, 06:29 PM
Thanks for that, Jeff, that makes sense to me. I had been concerned that I'd have to move them while they were very small and fragile.

Cheers

Rob

beccabunga
26-06-2009, 09:30 PM
Hi Guys,

I'm new here and, although over 60, new to real gardening too. I have huge experience at sitting in them, but almost none in creating them.

Here's the thing, I'm produced quite a few, and varied seedlings and am thrilled to see them emerge. Instructions are typically to plant them into pots when they are bid enough - how do I know when they are big enough? Is there a rough rule of thumb that would work? In particular, I'm trying to produce a number of ornamental grasses, so they'll be very fine when young.

Any advice would be most welcome.

Cheers all

Rob


You pot up your seedlings when their first true leaves [as opposed to coyledons] appear. Do not pot into too large a pot, They need their roots slightly restricted.

Chewdadda
27-06-2009, 11:29 AM
You pot up your seedlings when their first true leaves [as opposed to coyledons] appear. Do not pot into too large a pot, They need their roots slightly restricted.

Thanks for that info, that's something I wasn't aware of. Off to the small pot shop to stock up :-)

Rob

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