dead ones with tweezers, we added it all up and got the results. In total their were a whopping 1485 seeds 390 of which sprouted creating a (drum-roll) 26.263 percent germination rate. This is a surprisingly large successes rate considering they were not only 20 years old but that the package had been open for all twenty years. After doing some looking around on the internet I found out that onions seeds have one of the shortest shelf lives of all vegetables, all sites agreeing that they are good for only 1 year. All things considered the results amazing me as I was expecting a much smaller number especial after having had no success earlier in soil. Now you may be asking yourself how can seeds that have a 26.263 % germination rate have utterly none sprout in my previous attempt. There are most likely a few contributing factors to this but almost certainly the largest one was the temperature. My first go at growing them had been under the grow lights in our basement (the ones mentioned earlier) and being unfinished, the basement can get quite chilly in the winter. Seeds like warm soil when germinating and will fail to do so if it is below a certain temperature, causing the seeds to rot in the dirt. Doing a bit more looking around I found out that the ideal germination temperature for these particular seeds is anywhere from 60 to 70 degrees, a good deal warmer then the 54 of the soil in our basement. In conclusion the failure to germinate the onion seeds in the basement was almost without doubt due to the cold temperatures and therefore it is not surprising that when the seeds were tried out in the warmer up stairs that the rate correspondingly went up. But this isn't the first time I have had a difficult time getting many seeds to sprout or not even any at all and so this experience was what finally spurred us into getting a heating mat to put underSaturday, February 13, 2010
Onion Seeds
dead ones with tweezers, we added it all up and got the results. In total their were a whopping 1485 seeds 390 of which sprouted creating a (drum-roll) 26.263 percent germination rate. This is a surprisingly large successes rate considering they were not only 20 years old but that the package had been open for all twenty years. After doing some looking around on the internet I found out that onions seeds have one of the shortest shelf lives of all vegetables, all sites agreeing that they are good for only 1 year. All things considered the results amazing me as I was expecting a much smaller number especial after having had no success earlier in soil. Now you may be asking yourself how can seeds that have a 26.263 % germination rate have utterly none sprout in my previous attempt. There are most likely a few contributing factors to this but almost certainly the largest one was the temperature. My first go at growing them had been under the grow lights in our basement (the ones mentioned earlier) and being unfinished, the basement can get quite chilly in the winter. Seeds like warm soil when germinating and will fail to do so if it is below a certain temperature, causing the seeds to rot in the dirt. Doing a bit more looking around I found out that the ideal germination temperature for these particular seeds is anywhere from 60 to 70 degrees, a good deal warmer then the 54 of the soil in our basement. In conclusion the failure to germinate the onion seeds in the basement was almost without doubt due to the cold temperatures and therefore it is not surprising that when the seeds were tried out in the warmer up stairs that the rate correspondingly went up. But this isn't the first time I have had a difficult time getting many seeds to sprout or not even any at all and so this experience was what finally spurred us into getting a heating mat to put under
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