LogRhythmic
New member
I started this on May 26th. Better late than never!
May 26, 2018:
Eighteen seeds - six Ethiopian and twelve Lebanese - sowed in disposable poly sacks. A mix of 7% worm castings, 15% sterilized coco, 30% perlite (most of which I accidentally ground into sand as I mixed) and the balance (~45%) limed peat from E.B. Stone starter mix.
I soaked in BioAg TM-7 (humic/fulvic + micros) and liquid kelp for an hour before inoculating with BioAg VAM.
June 9:
Nearly all have sprouted, less one that damped off. Sadly, I somehow planted two together. Oops.
June 17:
The Ethiopians are absolutely thriving. The Lebanese are slower to grow and four more started damping off. I discarded all but one as I was worried about contagion. The sick one was left to dry out a bit and then watered again. It survived but it's a bit behind.
The Ethiopians have white tags..
June 22:
Growth is steady and the two cultivars are now easy to identify by sight. You can see the 'quarantined' Lebanese on the right. A day or two before I thought I'd be clever and put them outside a bit but the elements were too much and one of the Ethiopians, upper left, was damaged. Some leaf tips turned brown (related?) but this did not progress.
June 25:
Upper left Ethiopian is trying to come back. I don't have pics but the growing bits (leaflets? growth tip?) appeared damaged.
May 26, 2018:
Eighteen seeds - six Ethiopian and twelve Lebanese - sowed in disposable poly sacks. A mix of 7% worm castings, 15% sterilized coco, 30% perlite (most of which I accidentally ground into sand as I mixed) and the balance (~45%) limed peat from E.B. Stone starter mix.
I soaked in BioAg TM-7 (humic/fulvic + micros) and liquid kelp for an hour before inoculating with BioAg VAM.
June 9:
Nearly all have sprouted, less one that damped off. Sadly, I somehow planted two together. Oops.
June 17:
The Ethiopians are absolutely thriving. The Lebanese are slower to grow and four more started damping off. I discarded all but one as I was worried about contagion. The sick one was left to dry out a bit and then watered again. It survived but it's a bit behind.
The Ethiopians have white tags..
June 22:
Growth is steady and the two cultivars are now easy to identify by sight. You can see the 'quarantined' Lebanese on the right. A day or two before I thought I'd be clever and put them outside a bit but the elements were too much and one of the Ethiopians, upper left, was damaged. Some leaf tips turned brown (related?) but this did not progress.
June 25:
Upper left Ethiopian is trying to come back. I don't have pics but the growing bits (leaflets? growth tip?) appeared damaged.