They are ready to be thinned down to one per cell.
When you say transplant to larger pot, will that be their permanent home or as an intermediate step?
Personally, I don't have an intermediate step, my seedlings stay in their cells (after thinning to one plant per cell) until time to transplant to their permanent home. Larger pots as an intermediate step means more soil, water, fertilizer, more lighting, and a much larger footprint so more space. Some members do that but I personally prefer to not do that. I claim that I am eliminating steps that I see as superfluous but the truth is I am lazy. Usually, the plants are going to end up the same size at harvest time regardless. One benefit of the intermediate step is plants that can better withstand insect attack because they are initially larger at transplant. I don't have a huge slug problem early and my main pests are hornworms and aphids that usually show up after the plants are well established so it depends on your situation.
When you say transplant to larger pot, will that be their permanent home or as an intermediate step?
Personally, I don't have an intermediate step, my seedlings stay in their cells (after thinning to one plant per cell) until time to transplant to their permanent home. Larger pots as an intermediate step means more soil, water, fertilizer, more lighting, and a much larger footprint so more space. Some members do that but I personally prefer to not do that. I claim that I am eliminating steps that I see as superfluous but the truth is I am lazy. Usually, the plants are going to end up the same size at harvest time regardless. One benefit of the intermediate step is plants that can better withstand insect attack because they are initially larger at transplant. I don't have a huge slug problem early and my main pests are hornworms and aphids that usually show up after the plants are well established so it depends on your situation.
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