How to Tell When It's Time To Transplant Seedlings

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Seedlings grow fast, but as they grow, how do you know when it is the right time to transplant them or up-pot then to larger containers? In this episode, I will cover all that information and more!
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Комментарии • 173

  • @MIgardener
    @MIgardener  Год назад +32

    We will have better audio soon!!! So sorry! Just going through some learning curves with our new microphone system.

    • @homeatlaska
      @homeatlaska Год назад

      I feel your pain, Luke. Battles with sound abound for me. No worries, you were just fine.

    • @TheEmpressSheba
      @TheEmpressSheba Год назад

      I think someone Mlgardener13 is trying to scam me under my comment.

  • @lunalou3489
    @lunalou3489 Год назад +70

    I find that when you drop a whole tray of seedlings it is time to pot them up. Yes, yesterday was a very sad day. Hoping to save them. Thanks for all the great information.

    • @andyhall375
      @andyhall375 Год назад +8

      I have found this to be true as well! Haha

    • @marilynruggeberg
      @marilynruggeberg Год назад +5

      So sorry. Hope they survive. That's alot of work.

    • @brandonstark7356
      @brandonstark7356 Год назад +1

      Haha yeah, that’s how I tell if some of my trays are ready too!!! Definitely done that a few times. Good luck!

    • @FrozEnbyWolf150
      @FrozEnbyWolf150 Год назад

      I feel your pain. My trays of rare kale sprouts got leggy despite being under grow lights in the sun. Then through a combination of stress, drying out, and the aphids attacking them, several of them keeled over dead. I think I have to transplant them the moment they come up, though if I can't bury the stems, I don't know how else to support them.

    • @Methras
      @Methras Год назад

      My condolences

  • @PalestinianLad
    @PalestinianLad Год назад +31

    Although I understood what you meant by 3 times the volume, but the engineer in me has to point out that 1x1x1 inch to 3x3x3 inch is much more than 3 times the volume, in fact that is 27 times the volume 😆

    • @setouttowonder9923
      @setouttowonder9923 Год назад +2

      Glad I didn't have to say it 😏

    • @michaelarcher9299
      @michaelarcher9299 Год назад +3

      Came here to make this comment lol

    • @jlseagull2.060
      @jlseagull2.060 Год назад +1

      Not home gardener is thinking like an engineer.

    • @clytriftg
      @clytriftg Год назад +5

      JL, home gardeners that wind up ordering 32 cubic yards of soil for their 2 new raised garden beds might appreciate how important math is LOL!

    • @smith899
      @smith899 Год назад +2

      😂 Engineer here, too. Came here to say the same thing.

  • @robertgappa5828
    @robertgappa5828 Год назад +67

    Thanks for the video, Luke. If you go from a 1"X 1" X 1" pot to a 3" X 3" X 3" pot, you are actually increasing the volume by 27 times, not tripling it.

    • @tylerlaman5446
      @tylerlaman5446 Год назад +2

      Maybe he meant area? It was bugging me too though.

    • @ramav87
      @ramav87 Год назад +4

      Yeah I guess he just means triple or quadruple the side length, assuming cubic shapes.

    • @JamesDeanDiedIn1955
      @JamesDeanDiedIn1955 Год назад +7

      1x1 to 3x3 is still 9x, lol

    • @zfloutek
      @zfloutek Год назад +6

      well, thats why he doesnt work in a bank. Luckily you can calculate by yourself, and you still get the idea :)

    • @jlseagull2.060
      @jlseagull2.060 Год назад +2

      I guess he tries to make it simple for some viewers; easier to choose the right size of pots. He is in gardening business, he should know the volume concept in and out.

  • @IAMGiftbearer
    @IAMGiftbearer 11 месяцев назад +3

    I've found that one way to fix floppy lettuce seedlings is to put a ring around them such as a toilet paper tube (the earlier the better as soon as you see floppiness). I've had a few I thought were goners whose leaves were even starting to get plastered to the soil that I saved this way and once their stems got thicker they stood up much better. I have gotten a good harvest from all of them and none went to waste. Also if you transplant them in a mason jar with a small bubbler in the bottom you can bury them a little deeper in clay pebbles inside a net cup without getting crown rot. Several of mine got really strong that way; even better than the toilet paper roll method!

  • @janellem6436
    @janellem6436 Год назад +5

    I was totally doing that "I'm gonna fix this plant and make it straighter by replanting it deeper." Did that to ALL my leggy seedlings before I found out I needed to buy a grow light lol. Watching this channel can save a lot of headaches!! Great content keep it up, one of my new favourite channels to watch!!👍👍😎

  • @bettinagrange
    @bettinagrange Год назад +9

    Very useful and informative. Thanks! Funnily enough I was just going through my daughter's science schoolwork with her a few hours ago before I watched this. Her chapter was about where molecules for plant growth come from. I assumed at least a large portion of the plant's mass from growth came from the soil, but an old experiment by Van Helmont actually showed that the mass of soil a plant grows in changes very little. It was later discovered that the new plant mass comes mostly from the air and water. The soil in your pots is likely about the same mass as it was when you first planted your house plants. It's just broken down a bit, so it takes up less space than it used to, to make room for all those roots. Very little of it was consumed by your plants.

  • @jackzampella5758
    @jackzampella5758 Год назад +7

    Thank you thank you!! This was perfect for me (lettuce) and my wife (her aloe house plant). Your timing couldn't have been more perfect LOL. thanks again. 😁👍

  • @kerry4987
    @kerry4987 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for your videos! I greatly appreciate them. I have been gardening for 3 years now and the seeds being started inside are confusing. But you just cleared up a lot of my concerns, thanks again!

  • @randimaerz9903
    @randimaerz9903 Год назад +7

    Luke, what I really need a info on at what temp it is safe to transplant outside, particularly lettuce and brassicas. I want to get them out as early as possible but don’t want to shock them too much with the cold. I have such issues with lettuce bolting before I can enjoy it.

    • @streitrat
      @streitrat Год назад +2

      General rule of thumb is when the SOIL temperature is 60 degrees

    • @ambergoreham
      @ambergoreham Год назад

      I have the same problem if I try to plant lettuce, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower. It just doesn’t work well where I live because spring is like 2 weeks long and then it’s 90°. Most in my area plant them inside in August and outside in September to get a harvest before the freeze. Don’t know if your area is like mine

    • @justuslightworkers
      @justuslightworkers Год назад +2

      @@ambergoreham same in my area (SW Michigan). In fact I still have iceberg leaf lettuce under the snow and it's fine. They are dormant, they don't grow right now, but they are alive and I can brush some snow off a small section and harvest some occasionally. I'm surprised they survived the blizzard. Come spring they should start growing again and I can actually have earlier salad than usual. The snow insulates these cold loving plants. Happened with my kale a few years ago as well. Given this new information I don't think I will plant lettuce in spring anymore in Michigan. Too easy to kill delicate seedlings and Too quick to go bitter and bolt.

  • @ml.5377
    @ml.5377 Год назад +1

    I have had great success using soil blocks for any plant I will transplant (except alliums). No shock, great roots, fast development.

  • @MikeDeacon76
    @MikeDeacon76 Год назад +1

    if something like kale or lettuce or broccoli is really leggy, you still just transplant it into your raised bad leggy? Seems like that would promote fungus issues with the leaves contacting the ground, no?

  • @vicamoroso2326
    @vicamoroso2326 Год назад +2

    Luke 3x3 is 27 inches and 1 x1x1 is 1inch. 3x3x3 is not three times the volume. Fan in Iowa

  • @generrosity
    @generrosity Год назад +2

    Wow, this episode answers the question of what happens to the dirt.

  • @haydenvachon5426
    @haydenvachon5426 Год назад +2

    This video was awesome. I’m very new to gardening and my buddy who has been gardening for years recommended me to your channel. This information is paramount for a beginner! Thank you!

  • @Lalrinmawii7
    @Lalrinmawii7 Год назад +1

    This is very helpful! Thank you so much..

  • @TCMedicare101
    @TCMedicare101 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this and all of the videos you make. I'm about to plant my first seeds EVER, TODAY. I'm in SW Michigan, so indoors, of course. I was so happy to see this instructional video, to help keep me from making mistakes when it's time to transplant the seedlings. Last frost date here is May 1st, so I have 7 weeks until then, AND, will still need to keep an eye on the weather before transplanting outdoors for the non-frost hardy varieties - as we all know that last frost date is the average and it's going to vary year to year. 3/12 and it's snowing, lightly. Here we go!

  • @joesqudy
    @joesqudy Год назад +4

    Very timely, just what I needed to know. Thank you ❌⭕️♥️🙏🏽

  • @annmoy8932
    @annmoy8932 Год назад +3

    Thank you, Luke! I learned about potting up either 3x or 4x the original size depending on the type of plant - vegetative or fruiting. Very helpful!

  • @christopherconaway3549
    @christopherconaway3549 Год назад +3

    when you said tomatoes are the only plant you can plant deeper, i instantly thought about brassicas. i thought those could be buried deeper too. i guess not, good to know :)

  • @chiefredbird7315
    @chiefredbird7315 Год назад +2

    Good info Luke. I alway learn something most times the hard way but it's lessons I never forget. Thanks dude

  • @suejarrard2221
    @suejarrard2221 Год назад +1

    I always look forward to your tips and pointers. Doesn't matter if you've said it all before, sometimes I pick up on things that I missed previously. Or could it be that I wasn't fully ready to comprehend it all before? Repetition is always good for learning. Blessings

  • @KansaSwede
    @KansaSwede Год назад +2

    Moving from a 1" x 1" container (1 square inch) to a 3" x 3" container (9 square inches) - assuming the same depth of container - is a 9 times volume increase, not a 3 times increase.

    • @bobertcronos8433
      @bobertcronos8433 Год назад +1

      Yeah a 1 X 1 x1 pot is one square inch but a 3 X 3 X 3 is 27 square inch pot. 27 times the volume

  • @Mona-fd5kf
    @Mona-fd5kf 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks Luke, Yes, I did learn something about re potting seedlings. I was burying them to deeply. Thanks for the example.

  • @ichangedmyname0001
    @ichangedmyname0001 Год назад +1

    Awesome - I just transplanted a few tomato sprouts into bigger pots because this is what I did - I made like 4 little holes in a 6x6 and just threw in like 4-6 seeds in each hole - so I gotta transplant them asap before they grow bigger and the roots get tangled!
    They are roughly 1-2 weeks old, tiny little things 🌱
    And that strategy kinda backfired - I now have more sprouts than available pots,
    Walmart doesn’t have those trays, only individual pots

  • @craighalle7892
    @craighalle7892 Год назад +2

    I was surprised to see your Aloe Vera. I and my Mom have been growing them for over 60 years. When she moved out of the house I took a plant with me to care for it. I have repotted several times, and in 2019, a 3 1/2 foot spike grew and bloomed. I had never seen anything like that in my life. The blossoms were green and not real pretty, but another growing miracle occurred. The original plant was found near a garbage drop, and when rolling the dice and planting grew like a champion. My Aloe Vera has 50 plus shoots growing in the pot with it, another surprise, and time to repot them and the parent now. With my seed starting system I transplant them from the small starting tray to 3 inch pots when they get the first main leaves on the stem. I grow tomatoes, peppers, basil and flowers this way and it seems to work well and I don't have to deal with any empty pots due to nonsprouting. I like this video Luke. Thanks.

  • @jbane2003
    @jbane2003 Год назад +1

    What about potato plants? I had always heard that during the growing time, we should pull the dirt up close and up onto the potato plant. Of course, that isn't a seedling or transplant-size plant.

    • @justuslightworkers
      @justuslightworkers Год назад

      Potatoes, like tomatoes, are a nightshade vining plant, and have determinate and indeterminate varieties. One will continue making potatoes as you hill it, all up the buried vine. Such as russets. Others will make a batch of potatoes and be done, no hilling needed, such as Norland.

    • @jlseagull2.060
      @jlseagull2.060 Год назад

      Potatoes need to form without light. The dirt is for covering up and preventing sunlight. Otherwise, they will turn into green potatoes and are toxic for consumption.

  • @angelblack2215
    @angelblack2215 Год назад +1

    Very helpful. I’m about ready to do some transplanting and was questioning the timing and size. Also, I had no idea using a “too large” container may cause root rot and fungus problems. Thank yoh!

  • @annetted8113
    @annetted8113 Год назад

    Thank you! I learned alot. I always buried my seedlings too deep. You just saved my garden!

  • @MikeReevesMcMillan
    @MikeReevesMcMillan Год назад +4

    Um... if you go from 1 x 1 x 1 (1 cubic inch) to 3 x 3 x 3 (27 cubic inches) that isn't three times the volume.

  • @roberttillotson6861
    @roberttillotson6861 Год назад +1

    It amazes me how you are of the few that KNOWS not to bury pepper stem when transplanting, unlike many that say to bury for more roots. Glad you know better.

  • @cherylchandler4605
    @cherylchandler4605 Год назад

    Thank you Luke! I learned about transplanting houseplants and that they consume their soil. *mindblown* I've been treating my houseplants like an outdoor garden plant... giving them too large of a home. It all makes sense now.

  • @RamiaSmith
    @RamiaSmith Год назад

    I just saw you in a 8 year old video for Larry's Orchid & Topicals .....Great info on this video and even back then

  • @scottysabrinadonaldson4531
    @scottysabrinadonaldson4531 Месяц назад

    Thanks! 💯 what I was looking for!

  • @fittobelive
    @fittobelive Год назад +1

    Thank-you Luke, so excited to get my lettuce started! I'm in central Ontario under much snow at the moment but spring is not far away and your Michigan weather is similar to ours. Your pot size guidelines were very helpful, another great video 👍
    Thank-you for You 😊

  • @Wellbaby94
    @Wellbaby94 Год назад +2

    Such helpful information! Thank you so much.

  • @nicholasnarcowich9163
    @nicholasnarcowich9163 Год назад +2

    I had just watched Gardiner Scott talking about seed packaging & he mentioned MIGardiner in that review :-) I felt I should get some seeds from you just for that reason, Mostly Walmart, Home Depot, or Green Acres... they are local. In a mobile home park, there is not much space to garden, but everybody has their own cross to bear. I don't have a green house, & trying to grow in side is an issue as my cats like to eat what germinates. So, I am late with tomatoes & peppers already, what can I plant outside in Sacramento, CA... BTW, I love your videos, lost of :-) Thank You, & your team... after all, Team Work, makes the Whole thing work!

    • @garynorcal4269
      @garynorcal4269 Год назад

      Hello neighbor..(I'm in Antelope .. just north of Sacramento)
      I am getting ready to plant potatoes, beans, beets, peas, chard, onions, to be followed later by summer crops.

  • @janelleroads6011
    @janelleroads6011 Год назад

    I just want to give an unsolicited review of my own! MI gardener seeds germinate at a great rate! Like, almost 100% and they popped up sooner than my seeds from other companys. I am very satisfied with my purchases. Looking forward to a great planting season!

  • @TREYCEMONE
    @TREYCEMONE Год назад

    I learned the measurement rule for transplanting to a diff container for vegetative versus fruiting plants, and burying the plant in soil attempting to correct it's floppy state, that's a no no unless it's a tomato plant. Thank you for the valuable information.

  • @dalegaa4094
    @dalegaa4094 Год назад +1

    Great and timely info. I was just thinking that I needed to check my many house plants.

  • @homeatlaska
    @homeatlaska Год назад

    So many questions answere here today. Thank you, Luke! Soaking-up everything you say in this series, because I've got an entire garden's worth of your seeds I don't want to screw-up this season. This year, we're going to try to live off what we produce here on our little farm, and I'm a 100% gardening noob. Learning all I can from you before I start making mistakes. Thank you for all you're doing, we really appreciate you.

  • @marcoAngeL0_
    @marcoAngeL0_ 2 месяца назад

    Nice video and thanks for sharing. I do have a question, is it possible to grow lettuce, tomato, cabbage and onion using only a growing light?

  • @hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
    @hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83 Год назад

    I don't have to worry with transplanting right NOW I have nothing started. I also need to rebuild my garden fence.

  • @bonniejackson7476
    @bonniejackson7476 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks. I started tomatoes in super small pots this year because of space constraints. I’m concerned how long I will need to leave them in these pots before I move them to my cold frame. 11:17

  • @cbak1819
    @cbak1819 Год назад

    Ty Luke! I have buried stems before and it didn't go well. My peppers never got tall.. they did bare fruit but stunted. Other seedlings rotted.

  • @MatthewC117
    @MatthewC117 Год назад

    I have found any fruiting crop I have grown can be planted higher up each replanting. Especially, peppers as long as they haven't gotten woody.

  • @SupremegreenlawncareLLC
    @SupremegreenlawncareLLC 7 месяцев назад

    Great information; my Tomato seedlings are super thriving!

  • @AcreGarden
    @AcreGarden Год назад

    My MIgardener seeds just shipped today. Looking forward to showing you how they turn out Luke!

  • @hdcoletti
    @hdcoletti Год назад

    More seeds arrived today. Nothing better than an mi gardener seed delivery day

  • @minnieabbey1449
    @minnieabbey1449 Год назад

    Wow…most of that info I never knew!! But so glad I watched this & learned some new things!! Thank you!!!

  • @JohnWood-tk1ge
    @JohnWood-tk1ge Год назад

    Every video of yours I watch I get useful information from!

  • @donnayoung5942
    @donnayoung5942 Год назад +1

    New information for me! Great job, Luke! Thanks

  • @shelbyr217
    @shelbyr217 Год назад

    I now know why my pepper seedlings are not thriving! I planted too deep! Time to start new seeds and get it right this time!

  • @Menditha
    @Menditha Год назад

    Thank you Luke! This was SUPER helpful! I know to keep a better eye on the bottom of my seedling tray to watch for roots starting to peek out of the bottom. Also, now I know how to decide what size container in which to pot them!

  • @johnnymccown6590
    @johnnymccown6590 Год назад

    Thanks Luke! I learned a lot as always. I LOVED the small shoe analogy😊

  • @bukuroshja_shqiptare
    @bukuroshja_shqiptare Год назад

    Your energy is so refreshing ☺️

  • @marilynrafla6628
    @marilynrafla6628 Год назад +1

    My tomatoes are in 3 inch pots but I have 2 to 4 seedlings per pot, do I move them to 3 inch pot each or 5 inch pot each? I expect to plant outside by the end of this month or a week into March.

  • @jeffs1062
    @jeffs1062 Год назад +1

    Good information. I have a question about other vining plants not re-rooting. I have seen butternut squash and sweet potatoes re-rooting as they grow. I've heard that you can actually cut them after they root and have multiple plants. Am I mistaken?

    • @jlseagull2.060
      @jlseagull2.060 Год назад +1

      Nope, you are correct. The difference is when tomato seedlings are buried deep, the tiny hairs of the main stem will develop into roots. The vining squash, sweet potatoes, potatoes, strawberries, etc grow roots from nodes if they touch on the ground soil (cannot be buried deep).

  • @christine9467
    @christine9467 Год назад +1

    I prefer to just grow seeds in 6 in clay pots. When they’re ready and hardy, they can just go from original pot to ground. No extra repotting.

  • @DavidRodriguez-gl5pn
    @DavidRodriguez-gl5pn Год назад

    Oh my.. the cutest plant daddy I’ve ever seen

  • @elaineaugustin9189
    @elaineaugustin9189 Год назад +1

    What about Broccoli transplants? Can you plant them deeper in the ground in the garden bed?

    • @bluewolf4915
      @bluewolf4915 Год назад +1

      Last summer I had broccoli and cabbage seedlings getting leggy on me so I potted them up and planted deeper. They all survived and thrived. Roll of the dice maybe.

  • @sth60
    @sth60 Год назад

    I hope we get a follow up video of this for the plants going into the ground.

  • @StarSphere222
    @StarSphere222 Год назад

    What category does medicinal plants fall under? A plant like peppermint? Or Borage?

  • @chriswinger7881
    @chriswinger7881 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this information. Happy growing.

  • @jeffreylangley
    @jeffreylangley Год назад

    Thanks for info. Very helpful. Previously mention that you might do some indoor gardening video's,, would like those. Like info on Orchid Cactus, Orchids, Hibiscus, and bonsai's.

  • @angelafaust3757
    @angelafaust3757 6 месяцев назад

    Needed this! Thanks starting out here

  • @andymontgomery3663
    @andymontgomery3663 Год назад +1

    Love the channel. However a 3" x 3" x 3" pot has 27 times as much space as a 1 " x 1" x 1" pot.

  • @myretiredhobbiesgainesvill8140

    Good information, thanks for educating us!

  • @jeaniepartridge6701
    @jeaniepartridge6701 Год назад

    I thought you could plant deeper so thanks!

  • @Hellkittenn
    @Hellkittenn Год назад

    Video is beyond helpful. Ty for this!

  • @TheEmpressSheba
    @TheEmpressSheba Год назад

    I learned a bunch and somethings I've been doing wrong. Thanks!

  • @sixfigurebookkeeper7588
    @sixfigurebookkeeper7588 Год назад

    That was an awesome episode Luke. I learned so much, thank you!

  • @rylerkubojiri6491
    @rylerkubojiri6491 Год назад

    Hey idk if he meant to transplant like for the winter time when u can’t transplant outside yet, or if u want 2 transplant regardless before planting outside?

  • @denisequillin5430
    @denisequillin5430 Год назад

    Should you always bring the soil all the way to the top of the pot?

  • @FujiNicole88
    @FujiNicole88 Год назад

    Thank you for all the videos! I started gardening last year but most of my plants did not make it sadly. Wish I would have found your channel sooner.
    I had a watermelon plant last year but an animal ate into it, is there anything I can do to prevent animals from eating my plants but still make sure they can get the sunlight and water they need?

  • @tamrawhitney
    @tamrawhitney Год назад

    I would like to know more about when to put soil block seedlings in the ground or in a bigger pot can you speak to that?

  • @sb2fyi167
    @sb2fyi167 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you this was very helpful

  • @lynnburroughs7507
    @lynnburroughs7507 5 месяцев назад

    Found this at the perfect time as I was in the middle of up potting tomatoes and lettuce. 😅

  • @BettyFL
    @BettyFL 10 дней назад

    Thank you for the great information. I’m a newbie 🪴

  • @jmo18
    @jmo18 Год назад

    Hi Luke and/or fellow gardeners...thoughts on whether you should let fruits set before transplanting? Have seen lots of videos from others on not buying plants that already have fruits, but what if you need a longer season to get certain veges and fruits ripe before end of season. Trying to decide how early to start melons and long growing vege indoors before transplanting but need some advice...thx a bunch! (I tried to find a video you may have already done on this but was unsuccessful)

  • @hoosierpioneer
    @hoosierpioneer Год назад +1

    I just pot into whatever size I have on hand.

  • @gretchendavis8974
    @gretchendavis8974 Год назад

    I agree, very low volume

  • @nikolateslawirelessradio
    @nikolateslawirelessradio Год назад

    I have a question. I;m planing my MI Gardener onion seeds I got from you earlier in the year. The onions are in a 1x1 right now and are about 2 inches in height. They are all flopped over right now. Will the straighten up and they continue to grow? I'll also be starting my MI Gardener tomatoes. Is end of Feb a good time to start them?

  • @milknhoneyheritagefarms4706
    @milknhoneyheritagefarms4706 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @marilynruggeberg
    @marilynruggeberg Год назад

    Such good information. Thank you 😊

  • @frsujongaming
    @frsujongaming Год назад

    Thank you so much

  • @wyattspop
    @wyattspop Год назад

    Hey Luke, what do we do when we can't transplant yet? SoCal is having the coldest spring in decades, so we can't put them in the earth yet, but my seed-starting pods are getting huge already. I began transplanting into 3.5" plastic pots with the largest ones, is this a good plan for the meantime? Nice to see you brother.

  • @shannybug04
    @shannybug04 Год назад

    Super helpful!! Ty!!!!

  • @tylerlaman5446
    @tylerlaman5446 Год назад

    Is the recommended time of "starting" your seeds the day it sprouts or not? As in, do I need my seeds germinated by that date or just to start them on that date?

  • @judydrouhard2651
    @judydrouhard2651 Год назад

    Very helpful. Thanks. 🥰

  • @chrisfisher3900
    @chrisfisher3900 Год назад

    Luke just curious why you don’t use bootstrap farmer or other trays instead of the cheap one use ones?

  • @cathyc7069
    @cathyc7069 Год назад

    When I plant the tomato plant deeper and continue to pack soil over the growth to help root establishment, do I tear off the leaves I’m going to bury?

    • @jlseagull2.060
      @jlseagull2.060 Год назад

      Not necessarily. I keep the leaves and let them compost in the dirt.

  • @kinginthenorf3034
    @kinginthenorf3034 Год назад

    A 4in x 4in x 4in container is actually 64x the volume!

  • @tretre1692
    @tretre1692 Год назад

    Do you have a video on splitting house plants?!

  • @Iranian.Shia-kurd
    @Iranian.Shia-kurd 5 месяцев назад

    1x1x1=1 cubic inch, but 3x3x3=27 i.e. 27 times volume

  • @brandonstark7356
    @brandonstark7356 Год назад

    Thanks great content appreciate you

  • @dopapier
    @dopapier 6 месяцев назад

    Nice macramé.

  • @annissa485
    @annissa485 Год назад

    Great info thank you

  • @johnwood738
    @johnwood738 Год назад

    Very good content

  • @conniesanrn2730
    @conniesanrn2730 Год назад

    When you pot up do you use regular potting soil or seed starting soil?

    • @lesliealvarez2967
      @lesliealvarez2967 Год назад

      Also wondering same.

    • @magnolia718
      @magnolia718 Год назад +2

      Potting soil has nutrients in it, seed starting does not, it is only for starting seeds.