Germinate seeds before you sow them in potting mix. Pre-sprouting helps accelerate your tomato seedling crop. Pre-sprouting is easy. It takes just a couple of days.
When you germinate tomato seeds before planting them, they have a greater chance of growing into seedlings than those you sow directly. You’ll give your seeds a jump start on the growing season.
Plus, you’ll get more plants from the same amount of seeds that you sow directly into your indoor pots.
What you need
When you germinate tomato seeds before planting them, they have a greater chance of growing into seedlings than those you sow directly. You’ll give your seeds a jump start on the growing season.
Plus, you’ll get more plants from the same amount of seeds that you sow directly into your indoor pots.
- tomato seeds
- paper towel or paper napkin
- ziploc sandwich bags
- marker to label bags
- water
- seedling heat mat
- Moisten a single paper towel sheet or paper napkin. Paper should be damp but not sopping wet.
- Sprinkle tomato seeds on paper towel so they are not touching. Seeds will adhere to paper. Use only one variety of tomato seed per
- roll. If you’d like to pre-sprout just a few seeds of one variety, tear the paper towel into smaller sections.
- Starting at one end, roll the paper towel or napkin loosely in cylinder-fashion.
- Place the rolled paper towel into a zipped plastic bag.
- Label the bag with tomato variety and date.
- Place bag in a warm place away from drafts, such as on the top of the refrigerator or stereo. Or use a seedling heat mat.
- Check the seeds a couple of times each day for germination. Carefully unroll the paper cylinder and look for the root emerging from the seed. Some seeds germinate within 24-48 hours. Other varieties, especially smaller varieties and those suited to grow in containers, take longer to sprout – as much as 10-14 days.
- As soon as the seed’s tap root emerges, plant your germinated seeds.
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