Seeds not breaking soil

con1ey

Well-Known Member
Could have put them too deep and got boulders on top of them. Maybe take some tweezers and take a peek?
 

driver77

Well-Known Member
Depending on how deep you planted them, they may still be ok...If your daring, lightly brush soil away to take a peek. Just be very very careful.
 
I have noticed with the current batch of seeds that I have 6 in total, three seeds I pre-germinated and other three I planted straight in to soil,. Straight in to moist soil worked 100% of the time while with pre-germination in a paper-towel method all germinated seeds didn't break soil and eventually died.
 

tinyukaz

Member
Yeah I looked today couldn’t see any change from when I planted so I scrapped them I’m gonna plant some chocolate mint og and see if those do better
 

farmingfisherman

Well-Known Member
Soaked in H202 mixture for 24 hours then planted them in coco, no dome!
View attachment 5212773
23-24c 50-60% rh.
Those look happy! Was the coco pre soaked before you planted the seeds? Any nutrients added to the coco when you put the seeds in or do you treat the coco the same way you do when you use a seedling mix and wait for the first set of true leaves to appear before feeding? Also are you using salt or organic nutrients?
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
Mine always go directly into soaked Jiffy Pellets and into a warm, dark area. I usually see sprouts in 2-5 days. Our hands carry bacteria and fungus and touching the unprotected germ can inoculate them with a pathogen leading to damping off.

If they are older seeds and you think you may have a germination problem that's about the only time I start considering scuffing, soaking (my tap water has chlorine), or gibberellins. Good luck
 

Dorian2

Well-Known Member
Hey. I was having an issue with a seed not sprouting after I soaked and planted. I dug around in the area I planted it and managed to find it. After pretty much mangling the poor thing and replanting, she made it. I figured it would because when I dug it up the root was in good shape, so I just avoided touching the root and used tweezers on the husk to place it again. This is day after.

If you're careful it's not totally out of the question to do this. They're pretty resilient. Just not highly recommended for practical purposes.


GSC - Hello World.jpg

Day 2
GSC - October 15 2022 Day 2.jpg
 

Dorian2

Well-Known Member
I'll also mention I was really carefull to make sure that the entire root was properly covered with soil. It was a delicate operation.
 
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