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Old February 28, 2015   #1
gregory
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Default Hardening Tomatoe plants

I just started today. We will have a few days of good weather and then by Thursday back inside. I am hoping after this cold front that I will be fortunate enough to get them in the ground no later then March 14th or so 2 weeks from now.

Time is of the essence since the growing season is short. My problem is a third of the plants are 19-20 inches in 6weeks amazing how fast they grow. I will have to trench plant the tall ones. The others are around 12 inches hopefully the hardening process will slow the growth height wise.
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Old February 28, 2015   #2
heirloomtomaguy
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Cool air and lights an inch or 2 above your plants are your slow grow friends.
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Old February 28, 2015   #3
gregory
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Quote:
Originally Posted by heirloomtomaguy View Post
Cool air and lights an inch or 2 above your plants are your slow grow friends.
My wife likes the house cool. So the temps are between 60-65 and the lights were
Inch or two above. I bet those are the best growing temps. Now that they are outside tonight with a low of 47 maybe that will slow them down
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Old February 28, 2015   #4
Cole_Robbie
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Hardening is mostly about tolerance to UV light. My seedlings will get sun burnt down to stems and then regrow all new leaves unless I take it gradually.
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Old March 5, 2015   #5
Direct Sunlight
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My plants start getting lighter on the leaves after they've been out for a few days, and quit growing. They eventually come back in the spring but takes about 2 weeks. In the late summer most of them die. I do set them out gradually, sliding them a little further each day from the shade provided by the house. Am wondering if they'd do better with the trays on grass vs concrete, would make it messier to bring in and out of the house in our unpredictable March.
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Old March 11, 2015   #6
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A few years ago I did my "master race" cruel experiment and waited until 99% of my little ones died from frost. I think it did the trick that I have naturally hardened cold-tolerant germoplasm, but I replaced my monocle and swagger stick with loving kindness now, and am less cruel to the little ones.
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Old March 16, 2015   #7
spuriousmonkey
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I put my seedlings in the unheated greenhouse from 10:30 till 15.00 atm.

That's because before 10 the greenhouse is still frozen and after 15:00 temperatures drop rapidly.

They seem to be fine with the direct sunlight. Did the same last year. But then again, I am far up north and the sun isn't that strong.
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Old March 16, 2015   #8
joseph
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spuriousmonkey View Post
I put my seedlings in the unheated greenhouse ... I am far up north and the sun isn't that strong.
If the greenhouse has plastic glazing, then that is screening out the UV light. I love hardening off plants under 6 mil or thicker plastic!
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Old May 1, 2015   #9
lexusnexus
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cole_Robbie View Post
Hardening is mostly about tolerance to UV light. My seedlings will get sun burnt down to stems and then regrow all new leaves unless I take it gradually.
I hadn't looked at it in this way.

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