A Homemade Life
Welcome to Homemade Life.

To take full advantage of everything offered by our forum, please log in if you are already a member or join our community if not ....

Chilli-head
A Homemade Life
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Who is online?
In total there are 2 users online :: 0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 2 Guests

None

Most users ever online was 112 on 8th October 2020, 7:09 am
Latest topics
» Hungry Birds
by Dirick55 7th December 2023, 6:04 am

» PRESENTATION
by Chilli-head 23rd November 2023, 2:55 pm

» New Kiva loan
by Chilli-head 21st July 2023, 12:35 pm

» A peat-free compost is top in UK Which? magazine trial
by Dandelion 25th April 2023, 9:42 pm

» New gardening year 2023
by Chilli-head 5th March 2023, 10:15 pm

» What have I done in the workshop today?
by Dandelion 2nd December 2022, 1:12 pm

» What are you harvesting today?
by Dandelion 2nd December 2022, 1:12 pm

» Wartime marrow casserole
by Dandelion 18th October 2022, 4:42 pm

» Late sowings in August ... beans ?
by Ploshkin 11th August 2022, 9:29 am

» Come August, come night in the garden
by Chilli-head 4th August 2022, 3:29 pm

» Welcome guest
by Ploshkin 31st July 2022, 9:16 am

» The Jolly July Garden
by Ploshkin 19th July 2022, 11:38 am

» More mead ...
by Chilli-head 13th July 2022, 12:52 pm

» The June garden thread
by Dandelion 25th June 2022, 9:55 pm

» Plastic bags
by Dandelion 5th June 2022, 7:28 pm

» The merry May garden
by Dandelion 31st May 2022, 10:04 pm

» Fooling around in the April garden
by freebird 1st May 2022, 8:33 am

» March into the garden
by Dandelion 1st April 2022, 7:26 pm

» Mow Suggestions
by freebird 29th March 2022, 5:48 pm

» Some thoughts on resilience
by Ploshkin 12th March 2022, 2:23 pm

Statistics
We have 270 registered users
The newest registered user is Lloyd

Our users have posted a total of 48045 messages in 2416 subjects
Pages we like:

Seed compost sterilisation Hca_button


Seed compost sterilisation

5 posters

Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 2nd February 2015, 5:26 pm

Ok. As I mentioned yesterday, I have been making up some seed compost using leaf mold, which I have steam sterilised. This leaves the odd dead woodlouse and millipede to be seen, and presumably kills a lot you can't see. but - is it needed or beneficial ?

I asked a long while ago how people cleaned plant pots etc. I was surprised that many people took a pretty relaxed view. But what about the compost you put in them ? I am very precious with my chilli seeds, and always use a sterilised mix - don't want anything eating them, or fungal problems in that warm damp propagator. But I don't bother for anything else. What bothered me a little while ago was a post on another forum, where someone tried a number of germination tests, mostly aimed at proving peat is best to support a vested interest. But the interesting thing was the comparison included homemade compost, both sterilised and "raw", and the sterilised was the worst emergence. Now, it could be a poor and biassed trial, or I suppose it could be that a compost full of living biota is somehow beneficial. Anyone have any thoughts ? Do I need to do my own trial bigthink
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by freebird 2nd February 2015, 7:00 pm

Interesting CH - but I can't see why sterilised compost should affect the emergence of seedlings. After all, you are planning to test some elderly broccoli seeds on just a piece of kitchen paper. That's hardly full of living organisms.

I've been gardening and growing from seed for many many years, but I would say I have quite limited experience. If something seems to work, I keep on doing it, and if something doesn't work I'll try another method, but I rarely experiment just for the sake of it. I'm also not great at making sure things are clean, as I'm nearly always in a hurry. But I've almost never had diseases at seedling stage - damping off once or maybe twice in my entire gardening career. I've certainly never sterilised compost, nor the seed trays.

So if you fancy doing a trial, I for one would be very interested in the results.
freebird
freebird

Posts : 2244
Join date : 2011-10-19
Age : 67
Location : Powys

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 3rd February 2015, 10:08 pm

freebird wrote:Interesting CH - but I can't see why sterilised compost should affect the emergence of seedlings. After all, you are planning to test some elderly broccoli seeds on just a piece of kitchen paper. That's hardly full of living organisms.

Yes, I see what you mean.  I would have thought that the texture, and especially the way it holds moisture, would be the most important thing for germination.  I too have had very few problems with "damping off".  For later growing stages I can just credit the idea that a "living" compost might be better - after all the use of mycorrhizal fungi is quite trendy in the gardening press.

I've been gardening and growing from seed for many many years, but I would say I have quite limited experience. If something seems to work, I keep on doing it, and if something doesn't work I'll try another method, but I rarely experiment just for the sake of it

It is tempting just to continue doing what seemed to work and not be too analytical about it.  But I am a scientist at heart, and worry that just believing what seemed to be true without putting it to the test is the way that myth and superstition arise !
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Dandelion 3rd February 2015, 10:20 pm

I had heard (I don't know if it's true...) that nutrients in compost can effect germination, so the stuff you buy from the garden centre specifically for sowing seeds is deliberately low in nutrients. (I suppose that was one of the qualities of peat, but I don't use it.) At the moment I'm using a mixture of garden compost and a bit of top soil with a layer of coir at the top where the seeds sit. This is probably a bit eccentric, but I like it because it's fine. Nothing is sterilised.
Dandelion
Dandelion
Admin

Posts : 5416
Join date : 2010-01-17
Age : 67
Location : Ledbury, Herefordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Ploshkin 5th February 2015, 11:10 am

I always get a bag of seed compost from a nursery near where I used to work. It's quite a trek now but I still make a trip because I've always had fantastic germination since I first used it. They make it themselves & I would guess that it is sterilised.

I'm afraid I'm pretty lackadaisical about cleaning things though I always try to do my small pots & trays with bleach. Everything else just gets a swill out in the river. I'm like FB - if it works I carry on & if it doesn't I keep trying.
Ploshkin
Ploshkin

Posts : 1779
Join date : 2013-07-18
Location : Mid Wales

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 5th February 2015, 11:30 am

Dandelion wrote:I had heard (I don't know if it's true...) that nutrients in compost can effect germination, so the stuff you buy from the garden centre specifically for sowing seeds is deliberately low in nutrients. (I suppose that was one of the qualities of peat, but I don't use it.) At the moment I'm using a mixture of garden compost and a bit of top soil with a layer of coir at the top where the seeds sit. This is probably a bit eccentric, but I like it because it's fine. Nothing is sterilised.

I think that the reasoning is that having a seed compost high in nitrogen is no use to the seeds whilst germinating - they are using their own reserves - but it does encorage rotting just as it would on a compost heap.  Because of this true seed composts aren't very good for growing on for any length of time - they are designed around sowing in trays and pricking out fairly early.  So not really suitable for module growing.  I think this may be part of why it seems to be getting harder to find a specialist seed compost rather than general purpose composts - it is part of a growing sysrtem that is bit out of fashion.  

Also, seed composts usually use peat (John Innes formula) because it is, as you say. low in nitrogen.  It also unfortunately has a texture/water retention property that is unsurpassed by anything else. Which is why I want to make my own (as well as that I'm perhaps a bit obsessive about homemade stuff).   Composted coconut fibre (coir) and leafmold are passable substitutes. Maybe a good use for that reclaimed peat dredged from resevoirs ?
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 6th February 2015, 4:39 pm

Following on from this line of logic ... the seeds I have used for a germination trial have chitted quite nicely on damp kitchen towel. I presume this is pretty clean, and doesn't contain nitrates to help the seed rot. It is also very easy to keep it somewhere warm until they sprout.

... Which makes me think. For these older seed, why not chit them first on damp paper in a warm place, then transfer them to modules with tweezers to grow on. Then there are no misses because of unviable seed, perhaps lower losses from rotting, and I maybe don't need to use a seed compost, so that they don't run out of nutirnts so quickly. Only obvious drawback is that it is a tedious job.
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Dandelion 6th February 2015, 5:42 pm

Have you come across the method of germinating them in either wallpaper paste (without fungicide) or flour and water paste, then piping the resulting paste into the soil using a polythene bag with a corner cut off?
Dandelion
Dandelion
Admin

Posts : 5416
Join date : 2010-01-17
Age : 67
Location : Ledbury, Herefordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 6th February 2015, 8:24 pm

I read about that in Geoff Hamilton's The organic garden book (my go-to book in case of doubt ...) I've not yet tried it though.

I do like module sowing for brassica, they give them a bit of a head start before the slugs and/or pidgeons find them Rolling Eyes
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by FloBear 15th February 2015, 9:42 am

Being very new, I don't want to cause confusion by posting in odd places or in threads where info doesn't belong so thought I'd ask.
I have some information on seed and cutting composts from the latest Which report and thought it might be useful to share. I've looked around for a suitable place to put it and wondered about here. Rather than start a new thread. Unless that would be preferable.
Promise I'll stop badgering with questions soon .
FloBear
FloBear

Posts : 868
Join date : 2015-02-10
Location : Forest of Dean

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 15th February 2015, 10:20 am

If it merits a new thread don't hesitate to start one. The search function on here is not the greatest, and it helps if the thread titles are a good key to the thread content.

I'd be interested in what Which have to say, as although I make my own seed compost, and 100-200 litres of tomato compost, I always run outand have to buy some. I've usually gone for Sinclair's New Horizons, but like a lot of the peat free composts it seems to get a bit worse each year.
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Chilli-head 16th April 2015, 11:16 am

I have just discovered an excellent reason for sterilising seed compost.

I ran out of the stuff I had steam sterilised, and rather than do some more, I used some unsterilised garden compost in a sowing mix. I now have two lush trays full of seedlings, but I have no idea which ones should be there, and which are "volunteers" !

Can anyone show me what Rudbeckia and Knautia seedlings should look like please Question
Chilli-head
Chilli-head
Admin and Boss man

Posts : 3305
Join date : 2010-02-23
Location : Bedfordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Dandelion 16th April 2015, 10:43 pm

My Rudbeckia seedlings have been a complete wash-out this year: I tried a dwarf variety which just haven't grown (ha ha - the lot I tried last year didn't grow either!) Anyway, I can't send a photo, but they have oval leaves which are greeny grey, look slightly rough (I.e. not shiny or fleshy), and have tiny hairs visible around the edges.
Dandelion
Dandelion
Admin

Posts : 5416
Join date : 2010-01-17
Age : 67
Location : Ledbury, Herefordshire

Back to top Go down

Seed compost sterilisation Empty Re: Seed compost sterilisation

Post by Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum