I never remember to buy trays or start vegetable garden seeds until
after our frost date. I end up directly sowing the seeds in my
container garden. My garden takes a bit longer to start producing
food we can eat.
Most of the time I
cheat and buy vegetable plants that have already been started. It’s
a little more expensive way to garden but as a novice vegetable
gardener it was a better way to go.
And also, the not
knowing when to start seeds for planting thing.
I have the itch for
an outdoor project but the weather still says no way. I
scratched that itch by planting baby bok choy seeds from last year’s
seed stash in our Aerogarden and put it in darkish corner where I had
room for it. The baby bok choy and arugula are doing well. It’s
wild how wide the grow light throws light into that corner of the
room now.
I thought why not
look up the best time to start vegetable garden seed in my area and
use the Aerogarden grow light to start some?
I don’t have any
fancy seed starting trays and even though I know seed starting
trays are a click away here on Amazon it
was a lazy weekend and I want to get this project started now
while I had the time and energy to do it. (Disclosure:
I am including affiliate links for your convenience.)
Luckily, I had the
perfect and free seed starting trays on hand – clean and empty
take out containers courtesy of our weekly Take Out Date Night. I try
to find ways to reuse plastic take out containers since I cannot put
them in the recycling and in this case we ordered from a restaurant
that we knew used plastic food containers like these.
You can read my post 10 Ways to Reuse Plastic
Takeout Containers here if you wan get more ideas on to organize pretty much everything you
own with take out containers.
How to Use Plastic
Takeout Containers as DIY Seed Starting Trays
It’s so easy I
almost don’t have to write a tutorial but I will, because that’s
what I do: I write tutorials and share things.
1. Poke a drainage
hole in the bottom of the container.
2. Optional: Fill
the bottom of the container with rocks (I used this perlite here ) to help with drainage.
Drainage!
3. Fill the
container with potting soil.
4. Plant the seeds
in the dirt. I let my seeds soak in water overnight since some of
them were old. Some gardeners say you can just wet the seeds before
sowing, let them soak in water for a few hours. Other rebel gardeners
just plop them from the envelop into the dirt.
If your container has a clear plastic lid you can lightly cover the container to make a mini greenhouse seed starting tray. Most of my containers have outage lids which won't work so I left them off of their containers.
5. Water the seeds
and put them in a sunny place. I put my DIY seed starting trays on a
tray to catch draining water so I won’t ruin the wood surface
underneath.
Pin this money saving gardening idea to your Pinterest boards for later! Share it with your friends!
6. Watch them grow!
When (if?) the
seedlings start growing and it is warm enough to plant them in a my
container garden, I will harden off the seedlings by moving the tray
outside in the sun for a few hours a day increasing the time as the
days pass until they are ready to spend a full day outside.
Looking for more
vegetable gardening tricks, tips, and ideas? Check out the following
options – and more! - below!
Did you like this post? Get more like it by subscribing to the Lazy Budget Chef RSS feed
Comments
Hugs,
Bev
Post a Comment
Share what you have to say! The good and the not so good. Disagreeing is fine but no hair pulling please. Thanks!