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I went to the store for another full spectrum light for my seedlings. After I looked at the options and prices, I decided it wasn't too much trouble to move the flats around after all.
I'm hoping to build cold frames in the next week or so - it is still early enough I will need to either bring them in some nights or leave gallons of hot water in the with them.
Those LED shop lights should work fine.After watching a number of YouTube videos and reading stuff online, I ended up buy some 4 foot LED shop lights that I got on sale for $10.00 each. Much cheaper than the $80.00 grow lights. From what I understand, the LED shop lights should be plenty good for seed starting and preparing the plants to go outside. I checked the K value and the lumens of the LED shop lights I bought, and they were within the "grow" light range - although on the lower end of the spectrum.
Love the planting part of that!I don't know if I posted it here before, but this is my trick for starting my own garden plants. I make pots out of quart-sized yogurt or cottage cheese containers.
You need the lid too. Poke holes in it for drainage.
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Cut the bottom of the container off. It's easier, and safer, to do with them nested in a stack. When you're about half way around, the container gets less stable. Using scissors is safer, but VERY hard on the hands. Or I have dull scissors.
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The bottom of the container is now the top of the pot, and the lid is the bottom. Fill with potting soil. Since my pots are out in the green house, my light (the sun) is coming from an angle, not directly above. I fill the pots full, as the rim will cast a shadow over some of the soil. If the light is from grow lights above the plants, this isn't an issue.
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Plant seeds. Water. Wait. Water. Wait. waterwaitwaterwait, you know what I mean.
The pots are plenty big, so there isn't any up potting. When it's time to transplant them into the garden, dig the hole, add amendments as you need to. Take the lid off the bottom of the pot (support the dirt with your hand), place the pot in the hole. Wiggle the pot loose from the soil, and carefully lift it off and over the plant. The taper (draft angle, if you like) of the pot makes it lift off easily. Very little root disturbance.
One thing... these are big pots. It takes a lot of potting soil to fill them. That would be very expensive for the number of starts I do, 85 +/- this year. So I make my own potting soil. The compost I get out of my compost pile and chicken run is a BIG part of that.
If you don't have one get you a timer. I like not having to turn them on and off each day.