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Can I ask where you guys are getting cinder? Please forgive my ignorance but are you harvesting it somehow or is it a commercial product? Sounds interesting....
I do the same thing with small seeds that I would normally direct sow into the dirt garden, like salad greens, radishes and carrots. Murray has a great looking seeding technique on his Secrets video. I haven't tried it yet, but it looks like it could be a good way to go
Toads - I've had 'em. The problem with toads is that they breed in water troughs and you have zillions of tadpoles. The tads may eat some roots, or may nibble at scum on the sides and bottom; they definitely do get sucked into the pump inlet, which is sad and yucky and makes for work cleaning it out. Some make it into the fish tank, where the little toadlets can't get out and the fish don't eat them. I've had my students scooping out hundreds of 1/2" toadlets a day... Now, thank goodness, they seem to be pretty much gone.
Sylvia Bernstein said:
Thanks for explaining, Raychel. Never occurred to me that toads could be a problem!
Seeds - I start them in shallow plastic tupperware-type containers, in mulch, potting soil, or sometimes plain dirt. We feel our worms all kinds of old food and plant stuff, so vermicompost tends to have weed seeds (such as tomatoes) in it, and I don't use that. When plants are 1 to 2 " tall I flood the container, carefully loosen and pick out seedlings and put them in peat pellets - soak the pellet, split it in half, fold the seedling into the middle. Then I put those into plastic Dixie cups with the bottoms cut out and set them into the holes in my styrofoam floats.
Why such a procedure? Well, starting in the small tubs takes much less space than direct seeding into peat pellets, and I have very little table space. I started with the Dixie cups when my first batch of net pots were too small for the holes I'd drilled. Now I really like them because the roots don't get tangled in the smooth plastic cylinder as they do in net pots - very easy cleanup and re-use. The peat pellets don't leak much into my troughs, and I compost them.
Toads - I've had 'em. The problem with toads is that they breed in water troughs and you have zillions of tadpoles. The tads may eat some roots, or may nibble at scum on the sides and bottom; they definitely do get sucked into the pump inlet, which is sad and yucky and makes for work cleaning it out. Some make it into the fish tank, where the little toadlets can't get out and the fish don't eat them. I've had my students scooping out hundreds of 1/2" toadlets a day... Now, thank goodness, they seem to be pretty much gone.
Sylvia Bernstein said:Thanks for explaining, Raychel. Never occurred to me that toads could be a problem!
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