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Old April 10, 2014   #1
gus1225
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Default Why won't they germinate?

Every year I start my tomato and pepper plants the same and have great results. This year out of 120 peppers I had 100% germination. Tomatoes are another story. The seeds I planted that are leftovers from other years are doing great. The seeds I purchased this year are doing awful. I oredered from the same place as last year. Anyone know what may be causing this?
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Old April 10, 2014   #2
Doug9345
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Did you order many different varieties or only a couple. If you ordered only a couple then you could have just gotten a bad pack. Have you contacted the seed company?
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Old April 11, 2014   #3
Growing Giants
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I just checked my heating pad as germination has been bad for me and I found temps reaching 104 degrees. The seeds were cooked. You may not have a heating pad.
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Old April 11, 2014   #4
tam91
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I've had 80-100% germination on approx. 40 varieties. And then 0% on 3, all treated the exact same way. Two of which were just purchased this year. I got 4 from the vendor - 2 worked, 2 didn't. Very strange.
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Old April 11, 2014   #5
Labradors2
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Maybe they got zapped in the mail?

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Old April 11, 2014   #6
SharonRossy
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I'm finding better germination this year in general, but a few varieties only 1-2 seeds germinated or 3 weeks later they've started. Kelloggs breakfast was a no show last year, so I ordered from another source and so far only two seeds germinated, so who knows? I never use a heat mat, but had domes with vents which I ended up removing when white fuzz started from too much humidity. I also wondered about damage in the mail.
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Old April 11, 2014   #7
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I usually have a few no-shows or single seedlings as well. Thinking back, they tend to be from mailed seeds, but vary as to trades, SSE requests and one seed company that I will not name, since it can happen with others as well.

I started a bunch of 8 and 9 year old seeds of my own that I needed fresh seeds for. I store seeds at room temperature in no special conditions. I oversowed figuring only two or three might germinate. Well Coustralee from 2005 was 100% - 14 of 14, first up in 4 days, last in 6 days! (what will I do with the extra 12 plants?) and Orange Strawberry also 2005, was 100%, all up in 5-7 days, luckily I only put in 9 seeds of that one! But I have no shows for not my own seed for Nepal 2004 - 11 seeds, and Anna Banana Russian, 2008, 6 seeds which were the last seeds I had for those two. Spudakee from 2009 also did not come up, though I had seeds left to replant of that one.

What is weird and frustrating to me, is that those 9 year old seeds came up so fast, and yet three of my new currently in development dwarf project selections from last year are germinating very poorly, only 1 seedling each of my own 5 fresh seeds sown in 9 days. They may yet come up, but I've put a bunch more to soak in MG water, since my short season gives me a short sowing window. The dwarf seeds were from three different plants in one selection line, so it's possible that line just tends toward poor seed quality, which I found to be true in another line a couple of years ago.

I've given up trying to figure out why some come up and some don't - especially when a first batch has 0 or few, and the 2nd sowing of the same seeds can give you nearing all hatching.
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Old April 11, 2014   #8
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I zapped some of my seeds last week...ooooops! but not all of them. only the ones that were sitting in full sun up against the brick wall side of my greenhouse ( I wasn't expecting it to be sunshiny that afternoon). depending on where they were setting and if they have sunshine directly on them you could zap off a batch or two not too hard. If I hadn't actually been to the greenhouse in the middle of the day, I probably wouldn't have noticed that had happened and wondered why none of "those" seeds didn't germinate. I opened the container of cal wonder seeds and the soil was steaming.
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Old April 11, 2014   #9
Doug9345
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I agree that there is a multitude of ways to kill one packet of seed and not the one next to it. This year I have to be careful to not lay them on my laptop when I'm looking for a particular packet. If I've had the cover closed the surface seems quite warm.

I know from going through a house fire last year that it was little things that make a big difference whether something survived or not. I'm not going to have finally tallies on my tomato seed for a couple of weeks. My peppers didn't do very good at all, but they were already marginal in 2011. Many of the tomatoes where better protected, relatively younger and are just tougher in general.
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Old April 11, 2014   #10
Tom A To
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I zapped two trays of seeds using heating pads and the greenhouse getting to 100 degrees. Doh! That's why I order way more seeds than I need.
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Old April 12, 2014   #11
gus1225
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Stuck a reptile thermometer sensor between the tray and the heat mat - highest temp was 83. That shouldn't be a problem right? At least my sungolds and German Johnsons are doing really well. Both of those are good. I might have to buy some plants which I haven't done in probably 10 years. Our local greenhouse - which is quite large - carries the same 3 tomatoes every year - better boy, early girl, and yellow pear - yuck. Hopefully Walmart has some big beef and sweet 100 - those are at least edible. At least I know I'll have penty of peppers!
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Old April 13, 2014   #12
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using a heating pad without a thermostat switching it off above a chosen temperature is very risky. Why not buy one from -bay ? Some cheap and reliable ones come from China. Check the seller provides its description in English unless you are proficient in Chinese...
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Old April 14, 2014   #13
luigiwu
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Loulac, what do i type in the search on ebay? I only get hydrafarm ones when i do 'heat mat thermostat,' ? Thanks!
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Old April 14, 2014   #14
beeman
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Quote:
Originally Posted by luigiwu View Post
Loulac, what do i type in the search on ebay? I only get hydrafarm ones when i do 'heat mat thermostat,' ? Thanks!
The best place I've found for greenhouse thermostats is here.http://www.littlegreenhouse.com/acce...heaters3.shtml Knowledgeable and keen for business.
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Old April 14, 2014   #15
loulac
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Quote:
luigiwu asked : "Loulac, what do i type in the search on ebay? "
You can have a look at :
http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_saca...ening+Supplies

This is a well known model . Check the voltages, most are designed for 110-220V.
C 110V Digital Temperature Temp Controller Incubation Thermostat


Switch Sensor

If you can’t find directions for use in English see :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mGT4av5n3o
http://www.e-bookspdf.org/download/wh7016-manual.html WH17016. loading is free
http://www.e-bookspdf.org/view/aHR0c...R1Y3QgTWFudWFs

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