Boboro
Well-Known Member
Water from the bottom.
I think it was left over at the store from last year and was dry as a bone to start with.
You can make a wood frame wider than the trays all set inside. Then line it with bisquin with some sand under it to protect the plastic from a hole. Then fold it over and staple it to the wood. A 2x6 will do the trick around it. You can put a stick with water level marks to see when to add water. I have a pond pump I will use next year to keep the water moving.Anyone use these? The problem I'm having is trying to find a "tray" for the float tray to set in and float. I'll probably end up (tonight) making a wooden box and seal it with beeswax/paraffin to make it water tight. Any ideas for a container? I have 3- 72 cell trays.
Randy B
Store bought "seedling mix" usually has a wetting agent added to it such as Polysorbate 20. After about a year's time the wetting agent evaporates so what you are left with is a seedling mix that takes days to absorb water instead of a few hours.
You can mist the soil from the top, until it is thoroughly damp, then it will wick.as anyone waited more than 6 days to the mix to absorb water? mine is in the 6 day now and I still waiting
I think there is something wrong with your "soil" mix. I used dryed out peat moss this year and it took 2 full days to soak up the water. Is this the soil that is in your float tray, floating in water?
deluxestogie said:You can mist the soil from the top, until it is thoroughly damp, then it will wick.
Bob
I bought some really dry Miracle Gro Seed Starting Mix that I think was leftover from last year. It is 85-90% sifted peat moss, the rest is, damn, not vermiculite but that other one. lol. Anyway it took three days to wick up completely from the bottom.
It's a matter of scale. The greater your capacity to produce starts, the lower the cost per start. For home growers, if you have adequate space and conditions to germinate your own, then it makes sense. Otherwise, ordering starts from BigBonner in March makes a lot of sense. My opinion is that the major advantage of float trays is that it allows a single person to manage a massive production. For just a few hundred plants, I suggest using 1020 flats and inserts....and talking to the farmers, i only found one guy who started his seed, all the others purchased thier plants from these seed starting companies.
Any 20-10-20 fertilizer without urea will work. As a matter of fact I'll bet ANY fertilizer will work. Don't make it harder than it is.
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