Propagation House: Space Saving Tips
Okay, so we are all SUPER EAGER for spring to be here and we are seeding like maniacs. Give me one afternoon and you know what happens? I can fill every surface in the greenhouse and it wont know what hit it.
So instead of seeding yourself out of greenhouse and home, what techniques can you use to make sure that everything keeps moving along in the right direction without too much “space crunch!” in your greenhouse or under your grow lights.
The Germination “Short Stack”
Start Small & Dense
Another space saver is to seed into a densely planted open flat (a tray with no cells), a row tray, or a small cell tray (pictured is a 409 cell tray). You can seed 400- 1000 seedlings in these flats and only take up 10’’x20’’ instead of seeding directly into a larger cell plug flat. Seedlings are likely to sit in these small cell trays on heat mats germinating, and growing just enough for 2-3 weeks. Once they have a little root and some leaves they can be potted up (pricked out, spotted, or up-potted) into a plug flat with larger cells. For tomatoes the typical plan is to seed into a row tray, then 3 weeks late pot up to a 50 cell tray (or soil block!), and 3 weeks later pot up to a 4’’ pot (or Soil block!) until its ready to go into the field or greenhouse.