oh! for once, I think all the seeds are germinating!
so they are tight: you transplant/ split them at what stage?
I have been trying
Aconitum hemseleyanum every year for at least 7 years, and I only get a few seedlings that end up badly with slugs, as you say.
and even with
A. vilmorinianum, here is one that is starting to germinate!
perhaps it works better because I rehydrated the seeds gently for a few days on damp paper towels...
[Slugs: [/b] This year, to limit slug damage, I'm trying to transplant the seedlings in the garden by putting a bell (or an upturned jar) over them until they are a bit hardened off.
I figure that under a cloche, the little plants give off less of a slug-attracting smell. I had already noticed that it worked for courgettes that we had just transplanted.
Well, it's good for now or for plants in the shade, so that they don't cook with the greenhouse effect.
since 1 week, it seems to work remarkably well for 2 small
Mutisia of 2 cm high and for seedlings of
Meconopsis.
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