On Monday (4 days ago) the Xanthi Yaka 18a looked like mere babies. Today, the larger ones were shading their smaller siblings. Out came the scissors.
Bob

Bob
May I ask the dimensions in your bags sir?![]()
Today, I sewed the 3 bud bags that I will need for 2022. They are cut from Agribon AG-15, and the stitched-in tags are cut from a used, Tyvek mailing envelope—written with a Sharpie marker on both surfaces. Two straight lines of stitching (or one, with a turned corner) for each bag. [Finely honed sartorial skills.] In the time it would take me to drive to a big box store, and squander my wealth on a package of "paint strainer bags", I could cut and label and sew a couple of dozen of these. I've been slowly using the same roll of Agribon for the last 5 or 6 or 7 years, and there is still plenty remaining.
Bob
Thank you sir. I apologize for asking, I noticed it in a key forum thread later on…Once sewn, the bags are roughly 30 inches tall and 24 inches wide, for full-size plants. For most Orientals, the bags are about 24" x 15". The Tyvek name tag is sewn into the seam, and marked with a Sharpie on both sides. When I first place and tie a bag onto a plant (preferably after bud-head stalk lengthening), it always seems laughably large. By the time I'm cutting the matured pod heads, most of the bags are stretched nearly to their bursting point.
Bob
As the forum content continues to accumulate, the process of finding what you are looking for becomes more of a challenge. Sometimes, I've struggled to locate information that I myself had posted in the past.I noticed it in a key forum thread later on…
Clipping is just to keep plants from shading each other right? Or are there other benefits/reasons to do it?
Is it possible to use a heating pad instead of a seedling mat? If so, what, (if any) differences are there?Using a 5 gallon bucket, I mixed a new batch of my usual seedling mix:
- 2/3 Miracle Gro Sphagnum Peat Moss
- 1/6 Miracle Gro Perlite
- 1/6 Vermiculite
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I filled my 8 germination cups, as well as a single 3" pot insert. The jars and their lids will be labeled, one by one, as each has a varietal seed sprinkled into it—which I will do the first week of March. The 3" pot is resting inside a 4" plastic lid from a large canister of peanuts.
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It has been over 3 weeks since I began a germination test of the Tofta seed I received. During that time, only a single seed out of 6 has germinated. I've placed the received bag of seed into the freezer now, with the hope of stimulating better germination in a germination cup.
But, just one germinated Tofta seed. This tiny seedling is likely the only Tofta plant currently growing in the Western Hemisphere. So I used scissors to cut out a square surrounding that seedling from the germination filter paper. Although sometimes a germinated seed will have intertwined itself into the paper fiber, this little seedling just fell out onto the counter. I licked the tip of my little finger, and transferred the seedling into a divot in the pre-moistened mix in the pot. There, I misted the adjacent seedling mix, to help settle the seedling into place.
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The filter paper with the germination test was again moistened, and returned to its bag, to see if further patience will produce more germination.
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I saved a cute little dome that came from a package of mini-pie crusts. It neatly snaps into place in the rim of the 3" pot, to help minimize evaporation.
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The 3" pot, resting in its plastic lid "coaster" was placed beside a window in my warm study, so I won't have to run a seedling heat mat just for that.
Bob
Nope. No proof of that anywhere I have ever seen. It's a myth perpetuated in this forum. I will happily change my view if someone can show me a study that shows its true. But we have been here before and no one could show me anything substantial. Maybe Anders little double blind experiment will finally prove me wrong. We'll see. I actually hope it does. I will eat my hat and never say a word about it again.strengthens roots
Why the glyphosate sir?Unfortunately, the bed I tilled today will be squandered on growing veggies. [If I tilled all the tobacco beds first, I might be tempted to stop at that.] Each of the beds will be nuked with glyphosate 2-3 weeks prior to planting. Just prior to planting/transplant, I will apply 10-10-10 fertilizer, then till them again. What I really don't look forward to is tilling the two beds that I planted "no-till" last year.
Bob
I clip for the increase in stem strength. If I grew a ton of seedlings it would become too much hassle and I would stick to a fan for strenghening stems and roots. (I currently don't have a fan and don't want to buy one just for seedlings) For roots, I allow the soil to dry between waterings, which in my opinion, forces the roots to go deeper and wider in search of moisture. I also move the seedlings outside for a few hours as often as possible, weather permitting, in the hopes that wind will force the plants to both strengthen lateral roots and strengthen stalks in response to being blown around. This is not based on any study but what I feel like how the plant may respond to natural forces. It is purely my opinion and I admit to being wrong quite often, but it seems to make sense and works for me. As far as clipping and roots, I have no idea. I've seen no study aside from here on the forum and just stated that I clip in hopes that it strengthens the stalk and didn't mention roots in my grow blog because I simply don't know. For me, the stalk is reason enough for the 48 seedlings that I grew. I don't know about myths but I can be superstitious and try to face all fears but three. I'm deathly afraid of haints, voodoo, and crazy chicks. I'm not facing those fears, I'm screaming out of there like my hair was on fire.Nope. No proof of that anywhere I have ever seen. It's a myth perpetuated in this forum. I will happily change my view if someone can show me a study that shows its true. But we have been here before and no one could show me anything substantial. Maybe Anders little double blind experiment will finally prove me wrong. We'll see. I actually hope it does. I will eat my hat and never say a word about it again.
Clipping does increase stem strength. Lots of studies that show that is true. But it is really only beneficial when using planting machines. I clipped plants one year and saw 0 benefit to me for the time spent doing it. I have grown 10's of thousands of tobacco plants. This year I will be doing around 4000. All will be hand planted.
Absolutely. The biggest reason people kill seedlings is over watering. You have been doing this long enough I'm sure you have seen a cell or two that didn't drain properly for some reason. And seen for yourself what those roots and plants look like. Roots barely half way down the cell, brown root tips from drowning, and a runty little plant on top. I think many people go way overboard on misting them too. I start with well soaked potting mix. sprinkle the seed on top and mist them in a little. Then I only do it once more about 3 days later. Once those first sprouts appear I want those roots headed down. I water from the bottom up from then on and only when the top soil starts looking dry. Too much misting keeps the top of the cell wet while the bottom dries out and the roots want to stay on top.For roots, I allow the soil to dry between waterings, which in my opinion, forces the roots to go deeper and wider in search of moisture.
I bought three propagation heat mats from greenhousemegastore.com. One for a single 1020 tray and two double mats that each span two 1020 trays. I've owned them 10 years but only used them five seasons. I run them 24/7 for two months each season. They are built for the water spills and high humidity periods. I can't speak to the longevity of a heat pad (like for a sore back?) that runs 24/7 for months at a time. I would certainly worry about the electrocution risk if wet or fire possibility due to overheating from overuse. They are not built for it.Is it possible to use a heating pad instead of a seedling mat? If so, what, (if any) differences are there?
What is the benefit of using a heating mat vs. not?
This statement is actually in the product description in the link.I think I found the details in FAQ section. If memory serves they state 10-20F increase over ambient temps.
And for some reason birds like to yank them out that first week too.
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