GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Gardening (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/)
-   -   Why clay coat seeds? (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/gardening/44517-why-clay-coat-seeds.html)

Scott 01-10-2003 11:32 PM

Why clay coat seeds?
 
Hi All,

Can anyone explain the reason that seeds would be coated with clay? I
realize that it makes the seeds bigger and easier to handle, but what
effect does it have on the seed germination, etc.

Thanks a bunch!!

Phrederik 02-10-2003 12:02 AM

Why clay coat seeds?
 
Wouldn't the clay help hold moisture where the seeds could get it?

"Scott" wrote in message
om...
Hi All,

Can anyone explain the reason that seeds would be coated with clay? I
realize that it makes the seeds bigger and easier to handle, but what
effect does it have on the seed germination, etc.

Thanks a bunch!!




Dwight Sipler 02-10-2003 11:42 AM

Why clay coat seeds?
 
Scott wrote:

Hi All,

Can anyone explain the reason that seeds would be coated with clay? I
realize that it makes the seeds bigger and easier to handle, but what
effect does it have on the seed germination, etc.



The clay coating (pelleting) is primarily to make them bigger and easier
to handle. For example, I plant lettuce in 200 trays (200 cells per
flat) and I want only 1 plant in each cell. With normal lettuce seed
it's a real chore to handle only 1 seed. With the pelleted seed it's a
snap.

The process of pelleting seeds sometimes also involves "priming" the
seed. I'm not sure whether this is intentional or not, or actually how
it is done, but the effect is to pre-germinate the seed. This stresses
the seed somewhat, limiting its storage life, but it makes a batch of
seed germinate more uniformly. In the case of lettuce, there may be a
couple of days difference in the germination time of raw seed, but for
the primed seed it's maybe half a day. This helps people who are
planting large quantities of seed on a schedule manage the plantings
better.

animaux 02-10-2003 02:22 PM

Why clay coat seeds?
 
On 1 Oct 2003 15:26:22 -0700, (Scott) opined:

Hi All,

Can anyone explain the reason that seeds would be coated with clay? I
realize that it makes the seeds bigger and easier to handle, but what
effect does it have on the seed germination, etc.

Thanks a bunch!!



http://www.seedballs.com/3seedpa.html

Dwight Sipler 02-10-2003 04:02 PM

Why clay coat seeds?
 
animaux wrote:

...http://www.seedballs.com/3seedpa.html...




The seedballs look interesting for something like a wildflower area, but
they don't look as if they would work for my application (single seed in
each cell) since you have to handle the seed to get one in each ball.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:09 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter