germinating Veltheimia seeds

Joseph Kraatz plantnut@cox.net
Thu, 05 Jan 2012 16:45:06 PST
Here in San Diego county my Veltheimia sprout like weeds.  Just sow them on top of a potting mix covered with grit in Sep. or Oct.  Water well from the bottom and they are up in less than three weeks.  There doesn't seem to be an inhibitor.   Joe


On Jan 5, 2012, at 4:37 PM, pbs@pilling.demon.co.uk wrote:

> *posted on behalf of Ina Crossley*
> 
> I am growing some Veltheimia seeds on paper towels with a thin cover of  propagating sand in a sealed container. Was Googling when they should be planted into soil and came across this bit:
> 
> The reason for using moist sand instead of moist paper are
> 1) the sand colour changes when drying out
> 2) the root of the sprouted seed is not easily damaged when removed from sand.
> 3) the sand doesn't decompose.
> 4) the seeds are easily separated from the sand by using a kitchen wire strainer with mesh large enough to pass the sand particles but not the seeds. The last is important as some seeds leach out inhibitor chemicals. A "freshen up" every once in a while gets rid of the leached out inhibitor. The leaching away of the inhibitor is one of the possible reasons given for an explosion of seed germination outside after heavy rain.
> 
> I am particularly interested in the inhibitor thing. What is known about it? Is this a general concern when growing seed? Any particular seed which is affected by it?
> 
> Ina Crossley
> 
> 
> 
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