Thursday, January 22, 2009

Making Gorgeous Bouquets With Your Garden Flowers Seeds—Indoor Planting






A great time to use all those container you’ve been saving!


One of the best times of the year is when I get to start my garden flower seeds. I love to see the little starts coming up knowing the beautiful flowers they will produce in about 3 to 4 months. Growing your own garden flower seeds gives you the opportunity to grow flowers not available in your nursery shops. It’s also less expensive and you get more garden flowers than you can buy.

Growing garden flower seeds also means you can use organic methods from the start and that means a healthy plant without diseases and pests. Ohhh, it’s a good start for any garden flower.

Germination And Temperature For Garden Flower Seeds

These are the two most important conditions for starting your garden flower seeds. If the temperature is wrong then the seeds won’t start or they will start slow. What you want is for your garden flower seeds to germinate quickly and have the seedlings grow vigorously. Providing the right conditions is the key to growing your garden flowers.

If you buy your seeds the information will be found on the packet or in a gardening book. Most garden flower seeds germinate better in warmth but there are some that require cold in order to germinate (called stratify, I will explain this later). The best degree of warmth is a few degrees above what the garden flower seed packet says. If they suggest 70 degrees then the best temperature is about 73 to 75 degrees.

Unlike the garden flower seed packet I don’t agree they need light, just warmth to germinate. But if you want to put them in a window sill or under a grow light then go ahead, you have my permission (like you need it). Anyway, they only need light when they peak out of the soil with their little smiles on. Then they need strong light to grow up to be that gorgeous garden flower bouquet on your dining room table.

What is Stratification?

Some garden flower seeds need the cold to germinate. I sure you noticed how Mother Nature has different seasons. At the end of the growing season, usually the end of summer, your flowers have dropped seeds all through the season and they are waiting for spring and the warm weather to germinate and grow new flowers for your viewing pleasure.

When starting garden flower seeds indoors they need a bit of cold to break down the outer shell of the seed for water to get in and start the germination process. By putting them in the refrigerator or the freezer acts like Mother Nature and when you start your seedlings indoors you mimic Mother Nature and fool the seeds into thinking they have gone through the winter and now it’s time to start the germination process all over again.

All flower seeds need the rest of winter and the warmth of spring to germinate. Some garden flower seeds need it more than others. Such as lavender, heathers, apples, oranges, lily of the valley, and bluebells are just some of the seeds that need stratification. I usually use a wet paper towel and put the seeds in between then put them in a plastic bag. I write the name of the seed, date I put them in and when to take them out. I have started apples in August with this method. See the picture of my little apples seeds.





Once your garden flower seeds have germinated, they don’t need the high temperatures but they still need some heat plus they need the light. If your garden flower seeds become straggly and pale, they are reaching for the light and need to be moved closer to the light source. At this time your garden flower seedlings need to be protected against frosts and draughts.

Just don’t put your flower seedlings outside the minute they pop their little heads up in the soil. They need to be acclimated to outdoors a little bit at a time. I usually take two weeks to acclimate my garden flower seeds then transplant them to the garden where I want them. Keep them watered but not soggy and they will make beautiful flower arrangements for your house or they make wonderful gifts to cheer anybody’s soul.

A little bit a time and attention with your garden flower seeds will yield you some gorgeous flowers.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Container, Containers And More Containers For Your Garden Flower Seeds

If you’ve never start garden flower seeds before then it might seem complicated. But it’s not. You can start them indoors as early as January and as late as October. You can start garden flower seeds on a window sill, in that old fish tank sitting in your garage, or the buckets sitting in the closet. You can even start them in trash bags. All you need is a little soil, water, a container, and flower seeds.

Remember that seeds and seedlings are not quite the same. They require different conditions to succeed.

Seeds require warmth to germinate and seedlings require light and water to grow and bloom. There are tons of containers to use for to start you garden flower seeds. No need to buy anything, you already have hundreds of containers and seeds don’t really care what type of container they are started in. So, let’s go!

Let’s see what kind of container you have?

Well, there’s your milk and half and half carton, the yogurt container, cottage cheese container, Styrofoam dish your meat or vegetable came in and your egg carton (one of the best seed starters ever!), sour cream container, oatmeal container, butter, beer cans, soda cans, liter bottles, gallon jugs, the holder for the blank CDs you bought, the box of cereal, juice, even frozen juice concentrate containers, ice cream, pies, cakes, cookies, bread, coffee, tea, any type of box and ever box your take out food comes in.

And then there’s the cans your beans came in or any fruit or vegetable, even the glass jar the tomato paste came in can be used as a starter container for your garden flower seeds.

Phew, that’s a lot of different containers and that’s not even half of them. Every time you buy some food or product at the store it comes in some type of container. So don’t throw them away, keep them to start your garden flower seeds. Then throw them away.




These containers are one of the best little garden flower seeds starter you can save. Little greenhouses just waiting to be used to start seeds.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Ha! Start your seedlings in egg shells!


What? Egg shell? That’s right! Egg Shells...Did you know they are loaded with calcium? And are very good for your garden. Almost everyone uses eggs so you might as well use them for your garden. Even if you don’t start your garden flower seeds in them you can crush them up and put them in your garden for the added calcium you will get.

The easy way to start your garden flower seeds with egg shell is to save the egg shells and the container they come in. Break the eggs in half and wash them with water (sometimes they may have salmonella in them). Another way is to use a knife and cut to tops (on the pointy end) off and still wash them with water.

Put some soil in them and put the egg shell back into the carton. First though, fill the carton with wet sand then put the egg shells in them. Plant the garden flower seeds of choice and put into a plastic bag such as a zip lock, bread bag, or trash bag. Don’t put them in the light yet! Just keep them warm at about 70 degrees. Putting them in a bag will help keep the moisture until the seeds sprout.

After the garden flower seeds have sprouted then take them out of the bag or open up the bag so they get air flow. Put them in a place where they will receive at leas 4 hours of sunshine a day without being over heated. Check them everyday to keep the moisture level as even as possible.