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Old March 25, 2017   #1
AlittleSalt
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Default Thinning Out Plants

The varieties you see in the trays have little bitty seeds. I overplanted and it looks like every seed germinated. I'm thinking, they need to be thinned out. My idea is to take a pair of tweezers and very gently remove some of them.

Is there a better way to thin them out? Other ideas?
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Old March 25, 2017   #2
Gardeneer
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get a pair of small scissors and cut them at the soil level. I prefer it over pulling at close proximity to the others.

Interestingly my Oregano germinated like that too. But I will try to separate them instead of culling. I love Oregano.
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Old March 25, 2017   #3
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I used to hate oregano until I started using Mexican oregano.
Mexican oregano isn't really oregano but it doesn't give me heartburn.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_oregano


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Old March 25, 2017   #4
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Cutting them with scissors sounds like the right thing to do.

When I was much younger, I didn't like oregano either. But my tastes changed.
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Old March 25, 2017   #5
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Hey! Just lately I've been thinking how weird it is that there are some foods I've always loved and now not so much or not at all. Avocados, asparagus, green beans and radishes. Yet I'm CRAVING really sweet oranges and red grapefruit. I wonder why?
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Old March 25, 2017   #6
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Unless you've already taken the scissors to them, leave the oregano and thyme as is. They grow more like ground cover does -- low and spreading, so you really want more than one plant. When it's time to transplant them, divide them into clumps and put one clump in a container.

The basil you can thin by cutting.

I've never grown catnip, so can't help with that one.
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Old March 25, 2017   #7
KarenO
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And don't forget to eat anything you cut from either. beautiful flavour right from the smallest seedling stage.
I would dig out little clumps with a teaspoon and pot the little clumps up rather than try to separate individual plants.
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Old March 25, 2017   #8
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I didn't use to like fat but now I do.
I dont know whether I started liking fat and got fat or got fat and started liking fat.
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Old March 25, 2017   #9
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I haven't thinned them out. I ran out of gas (not the car) ... me.
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Old March 25, 2017   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AlittleSalt View Post
I haven't thinned them out. I ran out of gas (not the car) ... me.
It's ok to run out of gas. When you run out of rum, then there is a problem!
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Old March 25, 2017   #11
pmcgrady
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Worth1 View Post
I didn't use to like fat but now I do.
I dont know whether I started liking fat and got fat or got fat and started liking fat.
Worth
If I was young again... I'd have a small herd of Wagyu (straight out of Japan) and a small herd of Illinois Black Angus. Fat = Flavor
A fat marbled steak... hand picked at a Chicago Italian Steakhouse... served by male waiters... wearing white aprons... and all the patrons look like/act like they are all Soprano's!
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Old March 25, 2017   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhines81 View Post
It's ok to run out of gas. When you run out of rum, then there is a problem!
You got it. Vodka bottles seem to have a hole in them. It must be a slow leak because I don't see anything wet on the bar around it. hmm...
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Old March 25, 2017   #13
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pmcgrady View Post
If I was young again... I'd have a small herd of Wagyu (straight out of Japan) and a small herd of Illinois Black Angus. Fat = Flavor
A fat marbled steak... hand picked at a Chicago Italian Steakhouse... served by male waiters... wearing white aprons... and all the patrons look like/act like they are all Soprano's!
I miss the good ole days when cattle and steaks were loaded with fat.
The good fat that solidified in you mouth if you drank something cold.
Kidney fat from the porter house.
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Old March 26, 2017   #14
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As a kid, I'd pull apart a piece of chuck roast string by string to scrape out all that nasty fat. Never ate fat, never will. Except bacon, of course.

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Old March 27, 2017   #15
rhines81
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When I broadcast seed in a tray like this, I just use a spoon and dig, dig, dig until everything is loose. Then I just grab each plant by the base and if another one comes with the clump, I shake it loose.
If you are only going to grow 20% of what you planted, you can be pretty ruthless when you do this.
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