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For large and/or fast sprouting seeds direct sowing has worked very well for me.
However, when I am lazy or if I need to start things indoors then move out, I've often used peat pellets or coir pellets which works well for transplanting into towers and beds alike.
I've also used trays of coco fiber for baby greens or shoots.
It all kinda works, just gotta figure out what works best for you.
Anything but perlite. I can start a seed in a cotton string and I don't have to worry about it blowing into the fish tank and getting eaten.
Usually I do direct sow, my medium is expanded shale which wicks water up a bit above the actual water line. And if a late spring Cold Front threatens, the seedlings can be pulled out of the loose medium and brought indoors no matter how big they've gotten.
If you're in gravel, you may want to employ a wick (like a mop string) to be the middleman between the seed and the water until the roots reach down far enough.
I just bought a bunch of Botanicare CocoGro 5kg bales (each compressed bale expands to ~65-70L, or ~18 gal, when soaked. This stuff looks great, and the best price I could find, by far. Here's the description: http://www.sea-of-green.com/cocogro-brick-clone-2.html).
I also bought 72-cell seed starter trays as well as 2" flats for microgreens/shoots. The cell trays have holes in each cell, but I will have to drill holes in the trays. These will sit on wicking mats, and I'll also use heat mats on cold winter nights. I also got a number of the matching humidity domes, some 2" high and some 7" high, for cold nights.
I'm planning on starting with a coco & sand mixture, but I wonder if the roots will get enough oxygen this way. I think they will be okay, but does anyone have advice about this? One drawback is that clean sand is expensive (and heavy)! OK I have only checked Home Depot so far, but dang! (Also I found it hilarious that the sand package had images of kids playing in a sandbox, and the package said ideal for sandboxes, gardens etc.. but then RIGHT below the images of the kids there was a fine print disclaimer saying prolonged exposure to the sand dust could cause serious lung problems, maybe even lung cancer.. and then.. KEEP AWAY FROM CHILDREN. Ha! So, buy this for your kid's sandbox.. but DON'T let them near it!! Wow.).
I was thinking of experimenting with coco and hydroton too. I could justify buying a small amount of hydroton for seed starting, but getting enough for my GBs is out of the question. Does anyone know how easily hydroton can be crushed into smaller pieces? I think the balls might be just a little too big for my purposes.
My notes tell me to avoid perlite, rockwool and vermiculite, the dusts can be very bad for your lungs and the small particles that will inevitably get into your system can be very bad for the fish. I doubt this is much on an issue in a big system without too much of the stuff in it, but still I will try to avoid it if I can.
I am very interested in seeing what media others are using for successful seed starting. Thanks for sharing!
Sand-dust can cause silicosis. Washed sand has the fine dust particles removed so it is safe in children sand boxes the added effort raises the cost. Since aquaponic sand is covered with water the dust will not become air borngetting into your lungs because it is wet. Use a dust mask before you wet the sand and you will be safe.
Greener said:
I just bought a bunch of Botanicare CocoGro 5kg bales (each compressed bale expands to ~65-70L, or ~18 gal, when soaked. This stuff looks great, and the best price I could find, by far. Here's the description: http://www.sea-of-green.com/cocogro-brick-clone-2.html).
I also bought 72-cell seed starter trays as well as 2" flats for microgreens/shoots. The cell trays have holes in each cell, but I will have to drill holes in the trays. These will sit on wicking mats, and I'll also use heat mats on cold winter nights. I also got a number of the matching humidity domes, some 2" high and some 7" high, for cold nights.
I'm planning on starting with a coco & sand mixture, but I wonder if the roots will get enough oxygen this way. I think they will be okay, but does anyone have advice about this? One drawback is that clean sand is expensive (and heavy)! OK I have only checked Home Depot so far, but dang! (Also I found it hilarious that the sand package had images of kids playing in a sandbox, and the package said ideal for sandboxes, gardens etc.. but then RIGHT below the images of the kids there was a fine print disclaimer saying prolonged exposure to the sand dust could cause serious lung problems, maybe even lung cancer.. and then.. KEEP AWAY FROM CHILDREN. Ha! So, buy this for your kid's sandbox.. but DON'T let them near it!! Wow.).
I was thinking of experimenting with coco and hydroton too. I could justify buying a small amount of hydroton for seed starting, but getting enough for my GBs is out of the question. Does anyone know how easily hydroton can be crushed into smaller pieces? I think the balls might be just a little too big for my purposes.
My notes tell me to avoid perlite, rockwool and vermiculite, the dusts can be very bad for your lungs and the small particles that will inevitably get into your system can be very bad for the fish. I doubt this is much on an issue in a big system without too much of the stuff in it, but still I will try to avoid it if I can.
I am very interested in seeing what media others are using for successful seed starting. Thanks for sharing!
My first batch of stuff I used a 50-50 mix of coir and vermiculite. It worked pretty well, but the media got washed out of my net pots pretty easily if the bubbles hit it.
I switched many of the started plants over to small chipped marble.
My latest experiment, which I'll have to report back on is this:
Filled the net pot 2/3 with pebbles. Then I made a wet paste of vermiculite in a small bucket. I smeared a little on top of the pebbles, sprinkled my seeds in, then smeared some more vermiculite paste on top. I'll be watching them carefully to see if the vermiculite stays moist - I might have to hand water a bit, or go with the pebbles lower in the pot so the vermiculite has better contact with the water and wicks better.
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