Thanks for all the info! It’s really helpful! My main issue is my little apartment thing just isn’t that big so no room for big shelves and stuffIf you don't use lights, then your seed starts will grow thin and leggy. At least that is what happened to me. Then the starts just died. So, if you can't set up some light system, then I am guessing your starts might not do well.
I tried to start plants in my south facing sliding deck window, but we don't get nearly enough daylight for the young plants to thrive. I needed to put my starts on a shelf under the lights before I ever had any success.
If you can't do shelves and lights, there might be a way to start plants, but I just don't know if it would be successful. I did not have any success until I really committed to the shelf and lights setup. But I live in northern Minnesota, so we don't have much daylight in the winter months. My starts needed those shop lights on about 12 hours per day.
The dirt will not fall out the slots in the net cups. And if you use good potting soil in the cups and bottom water them, the soil will soak up the water from the tray and feed the plants. Of course, I had my net cups in a 10X20 tray that held the water and later I used some storage bin covers that were stronger and held even more cups.
Although I built my starter shelf for free out of pallet wood and old shelving boards, I still ended up investing about $100 in lights, net cups, potting soil, a heater pad, and a timer. If I would have purchased all my starter plants at the nursery, I would have spent more than $100, so I consider my investment paid for itself in the first year alone. Other than buying new potting soil next year, I will be able to reuse everything else from this year.
Having said that, for many years, I just bought veggie 6-packs from the stores and transplanted them into my gardens. It's easy, and mostly it worked well for me. But this year our local stores did not have much of a variety of veggies in 6-packs and I was not willing to pay $5.00 per plant in the larger pots. So, it really worked out good for me that I started a lot of my own plants this year.
