Results 1 to 8 of 8
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05-06-2008, 08:59 PM #1OPSenior Member
Oh no!!
I placed four seeds inside a damp paper towel, and then put that inside a zip-lock bag and sealed it. I then put the zip-lock bag on top of my cable box (nice and warm). Well, three of the seeds germinated and one didn't. The ones that germinated had two little flowers on top, and then the prominent taproot sticking down. I took them and transported them into pots with dirt, so only the two little leaves were sticking up.
And now I've come back several hours later, to find that the leaves are shriveled up. Not completely, but definitely withered. Is this shock due to the transplant or did I do something terribly wrong??Backpacker420 Reviewed by Backpacker420 on . Oh no!! I placed four seeds inside a damp paper towel, and then put that inside a zip-lock bag and sealed it. I then put the zip-lock bag on top of my cable box (nice and warm). Well, three of the seeds germinated and one didn't. The ones that germinated had two little flowers on top, and then the prominent taproot sticking down. I took them and transported them into pots with dirt, so only the two little leaves were sticking up. And now I've come back several hours later, to find that the leaves Rating: 5
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05-06-2008, 09:42 PM #2Senior Member
Oh no!!
You really want to transplant seeds into your medium of choice when the taproot is just barely protruding out of the shell. If it comes too far out, it's common to stunt them by damaging the micro roots by peeling it away from the paper towel and/or roughly placing it in the soil.
Don't let the medium dry out, and hopefully they'll make a turnaround. Also, I once tried germinating some seeds on a piece of equipment that gets a little too warm, and ended up having one of the seedlings sprout itself entirely out of the shell and into the paper towel. This is definitely undesirable, and I can't give any advice on survivability because I just threw that sprout away on account of its poor demeanor. If you went ahead and planted them anyway, just make sure the soil is doesn't dry out completely. Underwatering seedlings is usually a death sentence because the seedling doesn't hold enough moisture to sustain long droughts. But overwatering can lead to poor growth and damping off, so you just have to be watchful during the early stages.
Next time, if you plan on using paper towels to germinate, keep the seedlings in a dark spot that's slightly warm (NOT hot) to the touch. I use paper towels most of the time, and I actually don't even bother leaving them in a warm spot anymore. I just keep them in a ziplock baggy inside a drawer in my nightstand. I get the same germination method that way as I do keeping them on a warm appliance.
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05-07-2008, 12:37 AM #3Junior Member
Oh no!!
If you have trouble with the papertowl, perhaps you should try stinkyattic's idea on using a test tube. Good luck
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05-07-2008, 04:56 AM #4Senior Member
Oh no!!
Originally Posted by Mr. Clandestine
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05-07-2008, 07:52 AM #5Senior Member
Oh no!!
I put seeds in a damp paper towel, watered it every day, except the one day i forgot and it dried up, then continued watering and over the course of 2 weeks 15/19 hatched. No warm surfaces were used.
\"If we want a beautiful garden, we must first have a blueprint in the imagination, a vision\" - His Holiness the Dalai Lama
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05-07-2008, 08:41 AM #6Senior Member
Oh no!!
Originally Posted by allrollsin21
[SIZE=\"1\"]My 250w White Widow Grow
Simple nOOb instructions for growin\' da dankness - Stinkyattic
Noob\'s guide to growroom setup - Rhizome
Cheap & easy diy cloner - Justanotherbozo[/SIZE]
\"An\' though the rules of the road have been lodged,
It\'s only people\'s games that you got to dodge\" - Bob Dylan
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05-07-2008, 02:45 PM #7Senior Member
Oh no!!
Originally Posted by hudson88
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05-07-2008, 03:53 PM #8Senior Member
Oh no!!
Originally Posted by daihashi
As soon as that root pops its tendril through the shell, it's in soil before it ever even knows what hit it. :jointsmile: