Viewing post #1377256 by Cynthia59P

You are viewing a single post made by Cynthia59P in the thread called Mason Jar sprouting method and Stratification.
Image
Feb 24, 2017 12:57 PM CST
South Central Kentucky (Zone 6b)
Cat Lover Daylilies Garden Art
kidfishing said:Cynthia,
I have used both methods not exactly as described, with great success. Here is what I do or have done:

stratification- I use small ziplock bags and place a small amount of moist vermiculite in the bag with the seeds. This process takes several weeks for the seeds to sprout. (maybe 6 weeks) Currently I have over 4000 seedlings growing from this method. I have had a few that mold but a small percentage. (1bag out of 100)

Thumb of 2017-02-23/kidfishing/da7cdf

Water/Peroxide - I use small plastic mouthwash cups -the kind you can buy 100 for a couple of dollars.
I mix the water and peroxide and pour some in each cup and put the seeds in. Within a week or less, most of the seeds will sprout. Some will begin as soon as 1 day and others in the same cup take longer. I have thousands of seedlings growing in my gardens from this method. They do not need to go in the dark. Just sit them anywhere in the house and they will sprout. You can't just leave them for a long time or they can rot or mold.

Thumb of 2017-02-23/kidfishing/896d2b

After sprouting, I plant in cups, pots, or trays.

Thumb of 2017-02-23/kidfishing/36b72b



Thank you so much for the informative reply and also for including the pictures. An image always helps me to better understand things. I am actually going to try both of your methods. For the seeds I've had in the refrigerator, I am going to use the cup method with the peroxide mixture. For the seeds I just found that I forgot to refrigerate, I am going to try the vermiculite method. Thanks again for your help.
Cynthia

« Return to the thread "Mason Jar sprouting method and Stratification"
« Return to Daylilies forum
« Return to the Garden.org homepage

Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by Newyorkrita and is called "Rose Francois Rabelais"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.