First and foremost, I only speak from my own experience and give no guarantee for the result - many other compositions and methods might also be possible. Your experience ( positive or negative) can also help me . Other forum members are already sowing on cardbord and therefore have more experience ( I like to hear their experiences , especially in the further propagation of the seedlings )
I sow not only on cardboard, because I have found that there is still a chance that something goes wrong and the wrong fungi destrois the sowings
Cardboard remains an important ingrediënt of the seed medium , because
the necessary good fungi grows well on it .
I use quite a lot of small square plastic pots with a transparent or opal cover
So, if a problem occurs in one seed jar I still have many pots to go on
Pots with à lid, for optimal humidity, to ensure that the fungi and the seedlings never dry out .In the bottem I make a lot of holes , so they can get compost thea from below , and the seeds do not wash away.
Composition of the medium:
A good fine , permeable soil ( try yourself different compositions and record everything very carefully , so that later, you still know what you did
and what gave the best results) Possibly even fine pure leaf mold is also sufficient.
I sift all ingredients through a fine sieve.
now I have a composition of :
- 3x filtered compost tea ( to bring no bugs in the medium )
- 1 part perlite
- 1/3 part very fine akadama (bonsai soil)
- 2 p.fine brown lava ( aquarium)
- 1 p. verry fine bark
- 2 p. verry fine peat
- 1 p vermiculite
- 1 p. dry fine peat moss -
- 1 + 1/4 p. chopped cardboard scraps (1 to 2 cm)
This year I mixed everything 3 weeks in advance and put it away in a sealed bucket , so the good mold can begin to grow . In this way, the seeds come in an optimal medium with plenty off good mold . Last year I didn't do it this way, and maybe it is not really necessary, but hopefully it helps more.
Sowing:
Pots half filled with the medium, so there is still headroom left for the seedlings, as the lid is on it.
Make the ground level and give it a very light pressure . Scatter the seeds verry thin and cover it very lightly with fine brown lava (aquarium) or very fine real leaf mold. Then sprinkle some seed on top of it all, so you can follow beter, the evolution of the germination ( with a strong magnifying glass !)
In this years experiment, I do also a test with some deeper pots, with the same composition, but in the bottom layer I mixed in a little bit of bonemeal, hoping that the the seedlings will benefit later . This way de seedlings are not in direct contact with the bonemeal . It might be that this is totally wrong, I 'll see wat comes of it!
I number each pot en weigh them before I let them suck in, compost tea (5 min) so later on I willl know when to water them.
For the moment the pots are in a dark place, and I'm waiting for the best...
greetings
Lily-Anne
These are the Dactylorhiza seedlings (sown September 2011) . They are still doing very well, but grow very slowly.In the best pot, are at least 50 seedlings
They are still in the kitchen in a light spot