Seedling shell not falling off

slaboosh

Member
Hi, my seedlings seems to have soil inside of the shell of the seed and it has still not cracked off of the seedling, should this concern me? Posted images below.
 

Attachments

jwreck

Well-Known Member
If you dont remove it by hand it will keep stretching thinking its still underground. Next time leave them in paper towels until the shell slides off usually around 48-72 hrs then plant
 

slaboosh

Member
If you dont remove it by hand it will keep stretching thinking its still underground. Next time leave them in paper towels until the shell slides off usually around 48-72 hrs then plant
I popped it open with some tweezers and this is how it looks now. There appears to be a brown spot on one of the leafs. Does everything look in tact?
 

Attachments

SouthCross

Well-Known Member
Mist it with water. The shell will soften up and falls off. I wouldn't go to yanking on the sprout. Keep it moist and it'll come off naturally.
 

slaboosh

Member
Mist it with water. The shell will soften up and falls off. I wouldn't go to yanking on the sprout. Keep it moist and it'll come off naturally.
Kinda already yanked on it to get the seed off. I tried to be as careful as possible. The seedlings came out of the soil a bit but i pushed them back in and put some soil around the base. Should they be alright?
 

SouthCross

Well-Known Member
There's a membrane inside the shell. If it gets dry, the seed pod halves will stick to the sprout. Usually misting softens the membrane and the pod falls off in a day or two.
 

slaboosh

Member
Im using jiffy seed starting mix. It says its a dry mix. I've just been sprinkling small amounts of water around the plants a couple of times per day. Should I completely soak the mix or just keep watering in small amounts as normal?
 

SouthCross

Well-Known Member
I believe it's a protective measure. If it's not upwards to 80-90% humidity when the sprout emerges. The pod halves will stay on longer until a moisture level is reached or the sprout pushes it off.
 

SouthCross

Well-Known Member
Im using jiffy seed starting mix. It says its a dry mix. I've just been sprinkling small amounts of water around the plants a couple of times per day. Should I completely soak the mix or just keep watering in small amounts as normal?
On a drenched pot, soil. It won't need water for another 7-10 days. It'll be three to four times it's size before it needs to be watered. Then it's a light water.

Example, Two gallon pot should need about 4-6 cups water per pot. Don't drench to runoff until the plant can handle it. That's around 4 weeks old. You should only be watering in veg around 4-5 times. Sprout to 12" tall. 5 times...
 

slaboosh

Member
On a drenched pot, soil. It won't need water for another 7-10 days. It'll be three to four times it's size before it needs to be watered. Then it's a light water.

Example, Two gallon pot should need about 4-6 cups water per pot. Don't drench to runoff until the plant can handle it. That's around 4 weeks old. You should only be watering in veg around 4-5 times. Sprout to 12" tall. 5 times...
So just continue with the dry soil and keep adding small amounts of water around the seedling until it gets bigger?
 

SouthCross

Well-Known Member
So just continue with the dry soil and keep adding small amounts of water around the seedling until it gets bigger?

If you didn't drench it first then yes. Be extremely light with the amount. Cover the entire soil top. You can use a spray bottle. That's enough. Spray about a cup of water in the soil. Think of it as a baby. It can't drink that much water so the soil stays wet. If you use a watering pot. Water towards the outsides of the pot. Let the water soak towards the sprout.
 

bigsteve

Well-Known Member
Two ways to approach this problem --

If you are using the paper towel method for germinating make sure you have removed both halves of the seed cap before removing from the paper towels. It is easiest to manipulate the seed cap pieces while the seedling is still lying mostly flat in the paper towels.

To separate the seed cap parts when she is already in dirt - use 2 toothpicks to separate and remove the seed cap halves.

Good luck, BigSteve.
 
Top