![]() ![]() So romantic!ĭavid Posted in Six on Saturday, Sweet Peas | Tagged Root trainers, Sweet Peas | 7 Replies October Sweet Peas! Lots more next week though, February is weed, feed and mulch time and I have 1000 litres of blended soil conditioner arriving in a dumpy bag on Monday! Valentines Day present for the wife. So there we are, Six on Saturday all about Sweet Peas! Sorry, but there’s not much else going on this week. I don’t want to encourage too much soft growth before they are ready to go outside. I don’t add any feed in the compost at this stage, other than what is already provided by the supplier in the bag. They both fit nicely in a mushroom tray for moving them about and watering and provide the same amount of compost and growing room. However, I have given so many away over the years to intrigued friends that I now only have 30 left, so I use 9cm pots as well. Hard to come by these days, I think I bought mine from Roger Parsons many years ago. The two little plants separate easily without any damage to the roots and are potted up individually in 9cm pots or, my preference which is Sweet Pea bags. ![]() You also can’t pot them on unless you put the whole thing into a pot which seems to defeat the object of sowing them in the toilet roll tube in the first place! Root trainers are definitely the best. I have tried cardboard toilet roll tubes but they just turn to mush and can only accommodate one seed. The root trainers produce really good root systems and I think it is essential to give them plenty of room at this stage. I start pinching out in mid January and by now they have all been pinched out and ready for potting-on. ![]() As soon as they have grown two pairs of leaves I pinch out the top and let them start to produce side shoots. I don’t soak them or chit them as some recommend, I have never found this necessary if you plant fresh seed in October/November. I sow two seeds into each cell of root trainers and, most of the time, both seeds grow. It only took a few days after pinching the tops out for them to start producing side shoots which will result in nice bushy plants with more flowering stems and therefore more flowers. I think this additional stage is worthwhile to get stronger stocky plants which are well fed and better prepared for life outside when they are hardened off in mid-March. Most people grow them in a pot and then just plant that out, even though the roots have probably been going round the pot for many weeks trying to find water and nourishment. Some people are surprised by me doing this. It was time to pot-on the sweet peas this week to give them 6 weeks to establish a good root system before planting out at the end of March. ![]()
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