I'm trying to start my lettuces for this fall in pots in the house (I'm in North Florida and it's still quite hot out). I'm keeping them in a sunny window for light. They start out nicely with little shoots with leaves at the ends. But then they seem to get quite long and fall over and kind of drown in the water I put in them and then they shrivel and die. So my question is, should I be repotting them and covering most of that original shoot with soil? I read in a gardening book that when you transplant plants, you should put the first two leaves that always come out first under the soil, but I'm not sure if that applies to lettuce. Thanks for any pointers.
starting lettuces in pots
I'm not an expert, but my guess is that if you're getting long, spindly plants that they're not getting enough sun. And if they're drowning, you might want to try watering from underneath rather than at the soil level, so that they're not getting flooded.
I wouldn't transplant lettuce deeper than level with the original surface; I don't think it will form roots along the buried stem (like tomatoes will), and I think it would just make for an unhappy seedling.
Hopefully someone will come along who knows more than I do!
I start my lettuce inside and when the seeds sprout, they are placed under a flourscent light fixture within one inch of the bulbs. The little plants grow very stocky until I transplant them outside. Down here in south Florida, they don't go outside until October. Then I grow nonstop till April/ may.
Beautiful! Nothing as lush as baby lettuces. :)
Hey Bob!
Those are nice. Are they in 4"-6" pots?
They are in 4", but 6" is better.
Bob,
Do I still have time to sow some lettuce seeds inside? It's still pretty hot outside. Today we're at 93 with a 105 heat index. But, a cool snap is expected this weekend. I can put lettuce outside in a stagger planting up until December 1st.
Or, should I just go ahead and sow them outside? I do have a problem with snails and roly poly bugs that like to munch on green leaves. I bought some Sluggo Plus to try to deter them this upcoming season. So far, they've not attacked my tomato plants. LMK soonest.
Linda
I prefer to start mine inside anytime. I keep them within a inch of the florescent light and they get real stocky before I set them outside. So I say the answer is yes.
Thanks, Bob!
Stephanie, I'm a little confused. You say you put your seed starter trays in total shade where there was plenty of sunshine? Can you please explain? And forgive me if it's obvious to anyone who's not tuckered out from a day of hard gardening? :)
Gotcha--thanks!
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