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Starting Seeds on Coffee Filters
It was with great delight that I opened my little bag of treasures this morning. No, not silver, not gold, stocks or bonds, precious gemstones, or cash. My treasure is the little seeds sprouting on coffee filters.
Three days ago I put some herb and pepper seeds on damp coffee filters. I opened them this morning to see precious little sprouts emerging from the sweet basil and the parsley seeds. I once used paper towels for this process but the coffee filters are much more durable and easier to work with.
Okay, I know, you want instructions, so here goes.
MATERIALS NEEDED:
Coffee filters
Plastic Bags
Permanent marker or ball point pen
Shoe box or other container for seedlings
Knife
Foam cups, egg cartons, seed starting tray or other container to transfer the sprouted seeds
Potting soil
First decide what plants you would like to grow in containers, on a window sill, under a grow light or in the garden. Purchase good quality seeds packaged for this year. Old seeds will sprout better on coffee filters than in soil, so if you have some old ones, try them. However, you will have a greater assurance of success with new seeds.
Mark your coffee filters with a permanent marker or ball point pen with the name of the seeds. Dampen the coffee filter by spritzing or sprinkling but do not leave it sopping wet. If you get the filter too wet place it on a paper towel to absorb some of the water. Place the seeds on one half of the filter then fold it in half and put it in a plastic bag. Leave the top of the plastic bag open. Place your bags in a shoebox or other container and place in a warm place. Check your seed package for temperature requirements for sprouting. I have had good luck at room temperature. Some tropical plants may need warmer temperatures to sprout. In this case you can put them near a light or on top of the refrigerator. Other seeds may need cold storage (inside the refrigerator), before sprouting, check your package.
After preparing the seeds for sprouting, wait three days, but be sure the coffee filters stay damp. Sprinkle or spritz with water as needed to keep the filters damp. After three days check the filters daily for sprouted seeds. When you see sprouts emerging, transfer the sprouted seeds to containers prepared with a good potting soil by very gently lifting them from the filter with the blade of a knife.
My advice to you is to buy a good quality potting soil, don't skimp on this item.
Prepare pots or trays for transferring your seeds by wetting potting soil or seed starter mix before putting it into the container. I put some potting soil in a bucket and add hot water just enough to wet the desired medium. Hot water makes dampening the potting soil easier than using cold water. Be sure to let the mixture cool before placing the sprouted seed in the soil.
Now is a good time to recycle those plastic containers that everyone has. Yogurt cups, sour cream, cottage cheese tubs or any plastic tub can be used. The plastic containers like the ones for strawberries can be used by lining them with coffee filters. Foam egg cartons can be used by cutting the top from the bottom at the fold, making a hole for drainage in each cup with a knife and placing the top under it to act as a drip tray. Be sure to mark your container with a permanent marker with the variety of seed planted. If you don't have any of empty food containers, foam coffee cups are inexpensive and also make good substitutes for plastic flower pots, just make a hole in the bottom for drainage. Use your imagination, just remember to make sure you have holes in the containers for drainage. One year I bought spray paint for plastics and painted the outside of large yogurt cups with beige paint prior to preparing them for planting. This was simply for aesthetics and is not needed if the labels on the containers do not bother you. The lids can be used for drip trays. Once painted, they looked like flower pots.
Place the sprouted seed on potting soil in the pots, cups or trays you have prepared. Cover with potting soil according to the size of the seed. Tiny seeds can be placed on top of the potting soil without covering. Small seeds need just a slight covering of soil and larger seeds need to be placed a little deeper into the soil If your seeds already have leaves, make sure the leaves are above the soil.
Your containers can be placed under a florescence light in a garage or a spare room or on a kitchen counter under an under cabinet light. You can also place them in South facing window sill, just turn them ¼ way around each day. In a warm climate the little seedlings may be placed outside. When big enough they can be transplanted into flower beds, the garden, five gallon buckets, or flower pots for the spring and summer growing period. You may also grow them on window sills or under grow lights. Container plants can be brought indoors during next winter, put near a South facing window and will be ready to go back outside next year.
Herbs are so nice to have growing at home for tasty meals. Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and squash do well in containers if you don't have a garden or can no longer plant a full garden.
Try this method of starting seeds for cost savings and for varieties that may not be available to you as plants in your area. You can choose certified organic seed, or heirloom seeds and have plants you cannot find in stores.
There are many good seed sources available on the web. Here are two that I have used with great success.
http://www.gourmetseed.com/c=7gVsPw9UDU8J3ybiknymMeAK0/
Please follow this link and see the mirrored topic in another forum, where I (Mardy) have added information about soil, and what is in soil (and water and air) that is ultimately, apparently per some emerging research I explain thoroughly) the root cause of our health issues, from A to Z. Whether 0 or 100. www.lumigrate.com/forum/gardening-starting-seeds-coffee-filters ... Please ALSO see other pieces by Alice in this forum, it is a very nice collection she provided to the Lumigrate YOUsers with her wonderful way of spinning stories with information. ~ Mardy
Alice Franklin was raised on a sandy beach in Point Clear, AL and lived along the Gulf Coast from Texas to Alabama in her youth, graduating from Fairhope High School on Mobile Bay. Prior to becoming disabled due to severe spine problems, she worked her way into management and purchasing positions in industrial manufacturing and art industries. She worked her way into Lumigrate unknowingly by impressively writing at Lent 2010 about utilizing her religious and spiritual beliefs with chronic pain/disease management (she has had fibromyalgia and chronic myofascial pain for decades); it turns out she holds the priesthood office of elder in her church and became active again in this office in May 2010 and has been pastor or copastor in previous churches. We are so very proud to have her words and thoughts gracing our 'pages' of this website and look forward to what the future holds for her.
This forum is provided to allow members of Lumigrate to share information and ideas. Any recommendations made by forum members regarding medical treatments, medications, or procedures are not endorsed by Lumigrate or practitioners who serve as Lumigrate's medical experts.