Our seed starter is a bakery rack that's been framed out and covered with 6mil poly. Inside there's a small portable fan type electric heater set to 400w, a thermostat that controls the heater, a hydrometer and a remote sensing thermometer that lets me monitor the temperature from my bedroom. There is some temperature variation due to air stratification which is why we use a fan heater and put our heat loving seeds such as peppers at the top and cooler veggies at the bottom.
Here's a selection of the peppers we seeded yesterday. Strawberries in the red pots behind are starting to break dormancy.
That leads me to your Wednesday Wisdom: Know your Temperatures.
Some seeds like a cooler soil to sprout but several varieties will either rot or sprout and wilt because they're too cool. Here's a list of some of the seeds we grow that require lots of warmth to sprout:
Sweet peppers
Hot peppers
Tomatoes
Melons
Bush and pole beans
Corn, especially the super sweet and sugar enhanced varieties
These can be started indoors or outside once the soil temperature is over 21 degrees. I recommend planting them at the beginning of a warm spell in June or July here in the north.
Another thing to know is storage temperatures of produce. I know you may be thinking that I'm talking about root cellars but I mean everyday fruits and veggies you probably have right now.
Keep at room temperature:
Bananas
Avocados
Tomatoes
Garlic
Keep cooler but not in fridge:
Onions
Potatoes
Oranges
Apples
Nuts
Refrigerate:
Lettuce
Greens
Carrots
Turnips
Parsnips
Cut fruit and veggies
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