You don't need to use grow lights with this method either as we'll take advantage of the free light the sun provides. It's a really easy and cheap way to start plants for a garden that's either there for your enjoyment or for growing your own food.
After you've grown your seeds you can use it to beautify your home, or do some guerrilla gardening, donate them to charity or sell your plants for raise money for your favorite cause.
Who doesn't love plants?
(that was rhetorical)
You can see more stuff on one of my blogs.
You can also check out this as the seed starterseed starter blog entry. Check out the comments section for a couple of cool links to other people using this method.
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or is your head still buried in the sand?
notice that no one shares your view?
"well-it's been 2 years now, have you looked up this topic yet? "
Begging the question.
"or is your head still buried in the sand?"
Ad hominym"
"notice that no one shares your view?"
Argumentum ad populum.
Heirloom seeds are just hype same with organic farming. Neither are safer. Neither are better for you, and in many cases they're actually worse for you, IE carrots (many heirloom varieties have much less betakaroten). And in blind taste tests there is no noticeable pattern between heirloom, organic, and conventionally grown fruits and vegetables.
In other words you are the one who needs to open you're mind.
aside from taste or quality, its important to protect the diversity of our produce, its a better idea to grow unique vegetables, like herlooms, just to keep the strains going. monopolizing produce strains could be detrimental to our food source (potato famine)
at any rate, sweet instructable, i'm gonna use this idea. thanks!
There is validity to what princessbunnyrooroo is saying: hybrids often don't reproduce, due to shifts in the genetic code. Further, many companies hold patents on their hybrids making it illegal to attempt to harvest seed, regardless. My local nursery has many, many plants whose hang-tags specify home propagation is illegal, for example, and Monsanto has been suing people for saving seed.
Beyond those bits, there are zones for which growing seasons and climates vary wildly, making some seed-starting projects doomed to failure before beginning, and others that might be considered invasive or foreign to your particular area (example: I grew up a few hours from my current location - and one of my favourite plants from home (lantana, if you're interested) was a perennial there and struggles where I am now, because the climate is not right).
Plants are very strong-willed! *laugh*
Now companies can patent what they do, a strain of plants, a posses, they can't however patent a gene that exists in nature. Again we're talking hype. It's not illegal to plant a store bought fruit's seed.
As a side note, I grew using the term jerry rigged,to describe ingenious use of minimal materials to create a needed item.
I picked it up from Tom Swift Jr. novels that where dated when I read them.
It was not used pejoratively, in fact the ability to do much with little was presented as a skill to be admired.
Much later in life I became an industrial electrician, and became acquainted with the terms Afro-Engineering and N!gger-Rigging.
Being born into the 70's and Black, I was not unaware of racial slurs, but,hadn't heard these particular ones.
The Afro -Engineering term was used pointedly, repeatedly,with intent to harm. The N!gger Rigging term was used in an off handed manner, the user was immediately ashamed and apologetic and embarrassed.
One of these men I was able to trust to have my back, despite the differences in our back ground.Guess which one?
I say this to suggest that we not look for offense when none is intended.For example, It was only after decades of use that I became aware of one possible etomology of the term Jerry-Rigged entered my awareness.
Wiki says it better than I:
"The folk etymology is that "Jerry-rigged" was employed by World War II British troops to refer to the German use of scavenged parts to keep vehicles and weapons functional, from the use of "Jerry" as a pejorative term for German soldier"
Huh.Mind you I have been born and raised in a city that claimes to have the largest Oktoberfest outside of Germany, but of even so Germans in Cincinnati don't think about their German heritage everyday.
After all, their forefathers had the German crushed out of them.
Again Wiki says it better, but just a link this time:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Over-the-Rhine#Economic_Decline
Do I still use Jerry Rigged?
Yeah.No one seems to mind, and frankly, I feel a kinship with this idea of a minority population struggling to do more with less.
That is a skill to be proud of.So even though I didn't grow up in ghetto of any kind, I cherish this one positive connotation of the word, and practice it every chance I get.
It is fascinating how words can shift and have different meanings. For example, one uncle visiting from California kept using "Mickey Mouse Job" as a way to describe shoddy construction/ home remodeling attempts. I didn't think much of it, just figured it was a verbal tick. Then I went to visit family in California last summer and learned that just about all of them refer to cheap/poor construction as a "Mickey Mouse Jobs." How did the name of a cartoon character become a description for bad craftsmanship? Who know.
Keep on posting and remember your right to freedom of speech.
Good job!
Look at mine ^^ (still have to cover the earth)
and whatever the eariler 20th century "connotation" refering to "jewish ghetto"
it has taken on a different meaning now referring in a negative manner to black people and their culture.
its not a neutral term NOW, if it ever was and by claiming that it is intellectually a little dishonest.