10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (2024)

I do a lot of seed starting to keep up with our market production. I’ve learned to avoid a lot of common pitfalls and hopefully, you can learn from my mistakes.

Don’t Start Seeds Too Early

One of the biggest issues people get themselves is starting seeds too early for their own good. Most seedlings are expected to be transplanted outside 30 to 60 days after sowing the seeds. When you plant earlier than this without specialized equipment, you will have problems with plant stunting, lack of proper light, and lesser disease resistance.

For example, a tomato plant started two and a half months early should be nearly three feet tall and two feet wide in good condition. That’s a lot of space. I can’t put many of those on my seedling shelves. As plants grow, their fertility needs and sunlight needs become more extreme. In my consultations, have seen that fairly often and it gets pretty bad.

All the sudden, plants finally get their feet in the ground and want to explode with growth. It very often becomes more to keep up with than people have extra time. Things get neglected and they get sickly. It can be mitigated with close monitoring, but it’s just not something I recomend because so many people have trouble with it. Like credit cards, it usually bites you.

faster growing plants like melons, beans, peas, and squashes should not be started indoors in my opinion. They are very easily damaged during transplanting and they grow very big very fast. If they are started indoors, they usually need planting outside after 2 weeks or so.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (1)

Know How Big Your Seedlings Will Get

Every plant variety has different growth rates and growth habits. Every situation has a slightly different effect on that growth. You need to be able to estimate how big your plants will get before they go outside so you know how much space you will need and how many plants you actually have room for.

It does depend on some, but I expect something like a tomato to be 18 inches tall at transplant time if you started it 2 months early. Some grow a bit slower, and it can depend on your lighting and temperature. Cooler temperatures retard plant growth and tomatoes are very sensitive to air temperatures under 67 degrees.

Also, consider the size of pots you will need for your plants. I have a rule of thumb. Plants should be no more than twice the height of the pot. From the standpoint of considering plant health and vigor, that’s a very good rule to stick to. But, you also need to consider the total soil volume in a pot. Another much too common problem is having plants in too small fo a pot. It makes for weak, sick plants after transplanting.

Honestly, I prefer to transplant things as early (and thus as small) as possible. The earlier in a plant’s growth cycle, you can get in in the ground, the better it will acclimate to your soil and grow a more robust root system. The microbiology in your outside soil will have effects on your plant’s hormone regulation and genetic expression, all for the better. The younger/smaller you can afford to get them in the ground, the better.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (2)

Avoid Using Windows

Windows are often a poor place for starting seeds. Even though they are commonly used, they seldom provide enough light and are normally too cold for most young seedlings. Starting seeds on a window sill will often not produce the same quality of results that can be achieved with a warm shelf and good plant lights.

Sunlight on a clear day is about 10,000 lumens per square foot at ground level. That’s great, Unfortunately, most household windows let in less than 1,000 lumens per square foot. A good south-facing window is better and will have enough light if your plants are very close to it, the glass is clean, and the sky is clear. If not, you’re probably going to have seedling trouble.

I grew a lot of unhealthy seedlings until I stopped trying to use my windowsills. Most windows weren’t installed with seedlings in mind. The other half of the issue is that the coldest place in a house is right in front of a window. Seeds and seedlings are all very temperature-sensitive and most need a lot of heat. It’s hard to keep a windowsill warm enough.

If you have your thermostat set to 70 degrees F, it’s probably barely 60 on the windowsill. That’s too cold for a lot of seedlings. You may get past that with a heating mat to give extra warmth, but I find it much easier ti just put my seedlings in a warmer spot and supplement the lighting instead of heat.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (3)

Don’t Buy Expensive Plant Lights

Most lights sold as plant lights are actually just normal lights with different branding and packaging at a significantly higher price. You can buy the same light for cheaper if you look at shop lights. Some specialty plant lights are better, but only slightly and the cost is in the hundreds of dollars for one.

Led and florescent shop lights are commonly used by professional growers for both seedlings and full-sized plants. I have used fluorescent t-8 tube lights, but I’m switching over to LED lights as I expand my growing operation. I am currently installing SZHLUX 8,700-lumen LED lights. They have by far the best output I’ve found for under the cost of a home mortgage.

I paid around $90 for a pack of six. Here’s a link to it on Amazon be sure to get the SZ- model, not the ZM-. It’s better for plants.

Monitor Temperature Constantly

You need to check the ambient temperature of your seedlings two or three times daily. Just monitoring air temperature is enough. Cool-weather plants can handle 60-65 degrees fairly well but warm-weather plants prefer a minimum of 70 degrees air temperature. The warmer the air, the faster your seeds will germinate and grow.

I use storage a set of storage shelves to hold my seedlings. I have found the temperature to differ in the 18 inches between shelves by a degree or so, getting colder as it gets lower. That means two things, I should put my warmer-preferring seeds toward the top, and I need to monitor the temperature of multiple shelves.

I have a wireless thermometer on each shelf and the display screen is on the wall in my living room. Every time I walk by, glance at my temperatures. There is one unit in particular that I have found to be both cheap and durable. I use and recomend this wireless thermometer. I use it in my greenhouse and on my sheed shelves. I even buried it once to watch my soil temperature all summer long. Here’s a link to it on Amazon.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (4)

Turn Up The Thermostat

Turning up the heat a few degrees for a month will likely benefit your seedlings significantly. The average home is around 67 to 69 degrees in the winter. Most garden seeds will sprout at 67 degrees but will germinate twice as fast at 70. Seeds and seedlings show significantly increased growth to only one or two degrees increase in ambient temperature.

It’s a painful decision, but even I turn up the heat for my seedlings now. As a bachelor, I used to heat my house to 45-50 degrees F. I don’t like seeing my fuel consumption rack up like that. I can skimp by but my seedlings can’t. We’re trying to re-create the condition of nature here and it’s hard. Nature has been programmed with these seasons and conditions. We are trying to artificially re-construct them.

Instead of heating up your whole home, you may be able to just heat a single room extra with a cheap electric space heater. Just be sure you monitor the temperature in there. I actually had seedlings in our nursery room for a while. We kept it warmer in there for the baby and I turned off the lights for night every day. It actually worked pretty well.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (5)

Cover Seeds with Plastic Wrap to Speed Germination

If you cover pots and seed trays with plastic wrap, they will stay moist and have a more consistent temperature. It makes a more ideal germination environment for seeds. You must remove the cover when seedlings first start emerging and make sure they have good light at that time.

Check your seedlings at least twice daily to see when they have started emerging and pull the plastic off right away. The seed can germinate fine if covered, but the seedlings need fresh air. I don’t fret too much about it, but I do really want the plastic wrap off the same day I notice emergence.

10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (6)

Let Your Soil Dry a Bit

Most of the seed starting tray kits you buy have a plastic cover to keep a more optimized environment inside for the seed. It’s a great idea, but the clear plastic lids never last as long as the tray or cells. I have found that I can just take a sheet of cheap plastic wrap and cover my seedlings with that instead. It works great. a regular-width roll will cover a standard 10×20 tray, or any pot 10 inches or less in diameter at the top.

Most seedlings are over-watered, leading to various plant infections and diseases. Your soil needs to dry out a bit between waterings. It should be soggy after watering, then drain a bit, and then remain moist until the next watering. Your sol should not be wet or soggy except immediately after watering.

The second most common big mistake, after not enough light, is over-watering seedlings. People like to tend to and care for their pants so there is a natural propensity to over-water them. It’s two-part. Sometimes you just give that hydration too much or too often. Other times the soil or pot itself is the problem.

Whatever you are using as a pot needs to drain. It has to be able to drip excess water out the bottom so you don’t create a swamp. If you are using a very heavy, thick soil, You need extra drainage. I like one pencil-sized hole for every one or two square inches of bottom. That should do.

You also need to make sure your soil is able to drain. This is common when a soil has a lot of fine particles in it. A clay soil will do that. I have fairly silt-heavy soil, but it’s balanced out well with silica sand. I can use my native soil as a functional seed-starting soil if I treat it properly. I regularly use it as an ingredient in my soil blends.

You can read more about that in these articles:

  • Potting Soil vs Garden Soil (differences and DIY recipes)
  • How Much Biochar Can You Add to Potting Soil?
10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (7)

Use Larger Pots or Trays

Using too small of a pot for seedlings is a common mistake leading to sick or dead seedlings. The common-sized seedling pots sold at stores are too small for proper growth and health. They don’t hold enough soil, they have a poor height-to-width ratio, and plants quickly outgrow them.

The two most common sized seed-starting trays are the 16-cell and the 72-cell disposables. I call them shorties because they are the shortest height of available options. These are designed to be cheap first and foremost. I like cheap, but I also need them to work. It’s usually around $7 to $10 for one set, a bottom tray, a seed cell, and a plastic cover.

I have decided to pay just a little more for tougher-taller pots that are sturdy enough for reliable re-use. I bought the cell inserts on Amazon and the bottom trays from my local hardware store for $1.99 each. You can also find them on Amazon.

The trays I really recomend are quite expensive and only available at Johny’s. They are 5′ tall, 50-cell Sunroot trays. The close second is a 3-inch tall 50-cell tray I found on Amazon. I would use these any day instead of the 72 or 16-cell trays they sell at most stores. I paid about three dollars each for them, hardly any more than regular cheap ones. Here’s a link to them.

Keep Lighting Close

Most artificial lighting sources should be within 8 inches of young plants and seedlings. Professional growers often prefer between 1 and 6 inches maximum between plants and a light source. Artificial lighting is not as strong as the sun and it diminishes quickly in short distances. Some lights lose 50 percent of their lumen strength in one inch.

I try to keep my lights between 1 and 4 inches from the tip top of my plants. It’s a careful balance. The closer they are, the higher intensity of light they can absorb. But, as I move them closer, the lights cover significantly less area. I struggle a bit with this balance of keeping within my lighting budget and having the intensity I really want.

With my lesser fluorescent lights (about 5,000 lumens per 2-bulb fixture) I need them quite close. These t-8, 48-inch lighting fixtures will cover two 10×20 trays quite well. My single tube LED lights with 8,700 lumens per fixture are not as wide, but they have a wider angle of reflection and are suited quite well to two 10×20 trays each. I am still deciding if I want them three or four inches above my plants. We shall see.

Related articles:

  • Raised Bed Soil vs Garden Soil
  • 7 Tips For Using biochar In Your Soil
  • Best Soil pH for Tomatoes
  • When Should You Fertilize Your Garden
10 Tips for Starting Seeds Indoors (advice from pros) | Northern Homesteading (2024)

FAQs

What are the best conditions for starting seeds indoors? ›

Most seeds will not germinate without sunlight and will perform best with 12 to 16 hours each day. Indoors, place seed containers in a sunny, south-facing window and give the container a quarter turn each day to prevent the seedlings from overreaching toward the light and developing weak, elongated stems.

What is the best soil for starting seeds indoors? ›

Commercial seed-starting mixes, usually composed of vermiculite and peat, without any true soil, are recommended for starting seeds. They're sterile, lightweight and free from weed seeds, with a texture and porosity especially suited to the needs of germinating seeds and tiny seedlings.

What is the best light for starting seeds indoors? ›

According to Pilarchik, any white LED shop lights with a brightness of 5,000 lumens or higher and a color temperature of 5,000 K or higher—like the Hyper Tough shop light—can be used as grow lights for seedlings.

Should I soak seeds before planting? ›

It is traditional to soak some seeds before planting them. Soaking can accelerate germination and increase the proportion of seeds that successfully germinate. Seeds have evolved a protective coating around the embryo so the embryo can survive being dispersed by some means.

What month is best to start seeds indoors? ›

Mid-March is the best time to start many vegetables and annual flowers indoors for transplanting outside once the threat of frost has passed.

How long can seedlings stay in egg cartons? ›

But you also can't leave your seedlings in their egg cartons for too long, waiting for the weather to heat up. Seedlings should be moved to the garden once the roots reach the bottom of the tray, but before they start to grow into a circle.

Is potting soil OK for seed starting? ›

Although potting soils may be used to start seeds, they tend to have a more coarse texture and may contain field soil, compost or composted manure along with vermiculite, peat moss or perlite. Some seed-starting or potting mixes may contain fertilizer as an additive.

Can you put seeds straight into soil indoors? ›

Start these seeds indoors. Other heat-loving crops, such as pumpkin, squash, cucumber, beans and melons, thrive when direct-sown after all danger of frost is past. Some flowers, including Sweet Pea, Larkspur and Bachelor's Buttons, germinate best in cool soil and should be direct-sown early in the growing season.

Do I need a grow light to start seeds indoors? ›

The natural light from a window is seldom enough for good, strong seedling growth. They will usually stretch and lean towards the light and will not produce sturdy plants. Sowing seeds indoors under fluorescent lights is the easiest way for the home gardener to control growing conditions and grow healthy transplants.

How long should the light be on for starting seeds indoors? ›

Most seeds need a minimum of 14-16 hours of light per day to germinate and grow. Shop lights are a great option because they can be left on for long periods of time without generating too much heat but just enough for the plant needs.

What color light helps seeds grow? ›

If you are just using grow lights to start seeds or to grow leafy vegetables, stick to lights that are labeled either as blue-green spectrum or balanced light spectrum. It is increasingly common for lights to be labeled “for greens and seeds” or “for flowers and fruit”.

Are egg cartons good for starting seeds? ›

Seeds can grow in just about anything that holds soil and allows for proper drainage. Using cardboard egg cartons is a great option because they are biodegradable, and you likely have a carton already in your fridge. Plus, starting your seeds in cardboard egg cartons is easy!

What seeds should not be soaked before planting? ›

By soaking the seed, it enables the new growth from the inside to push through the hard shell and grow. The seeds that could benefit from a good soaking include: corn, pumpkin, beans, chard, beets, and peas. The seeds you shouldn't soak include: carrots, lettuce, radish, celery, turnips, and spinach.

Should soaking seeds float or sink? ›

If the seeds sink, they are still viable; if they float, discard, because they probably will not sprout. Question: Can the seeds that sink still be planted? Answer: Yes. Sow the seeds directly in the soil if it is the proper planting time or thoroughly dry seeds and plant when it is the appropriate time.

What temperature do you start seeds indoors? ›

The closer the temperature is to the optimum, the quicker germination will occur. Most seeds germinate when the soil temperature is between 68° and 86°F.

How warm does it need to be to start seeds inside? ›

Most seeds germinate best when the temperature is between 65 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit, but check the information on the seed packet for specifics. The top of a refrigerator is an ideal spot, or you could consider purchasing heating mats specially made for germinating the seeds.

How often do you water starting seeds indoors? ›

Watering. Check on your seedlings at least once or twice a day to see if they need misting. You want the surface of your soil to stay lightly damp because if your seeds dry out they won't germinate but if they stay too wet, they could rot. When at least 1/2 to 2/3 of the seeds sprout, you can remove the cover.

What happens if you start seeds indoors too early? ›

But, starting your seeds too soon is still a problem. How? Seeds sown too early will result in bigger plants which then need to be potted up into bigger containers which quickly take over your seed starting area/house and cost you more money is potting soil, organic fertilizer and pots.

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