today's pictures from the garden: the chili pepper seedlings continue to grow.
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today's pictures from the garden: the chili pepper seedlings continue to grow. It may be time for thinning and planting outside soon.
Inside my other planter, I've added a lot of pods from the mini greenhouse. I have several pea pods, and green bean seedlings that matured enough over the weekend to be added to the green house. additionally the tiny little things that look like a blade of grass next to the huge green sproutlings I think may be early carrot seed sprouts.


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today's pictures from the garden: the chili pepper seedlings continue to grow. It may be time for thinning and planting outside soon.
Inside my other planter, I've added a lot of pods from the mini greenhouse. I have several pea pods, and green bean seedlings that matured enough over the weekend to be added to the green house. additionally the tiny little things that look like a blade of grass next to the huge green sproutlings I think may be early carrot seed sprouts.


also, those big green plants on the edge in the second picture? I thought that they may have been green bean seedlings at first, but I'm almost certain by now that those are zucchini squash. I'm going to plan them outdoors soon. I just want the leaves to open up on the smaller ones right beside the huge ones that are progressing at an insane rate. I hope to be able to separate their root systems without damaging them and give them all plenty of room to grow.
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also, those big green plants on the edge in the second picture? I thought that they may have been green bean seedlings at first, but I'm almost certain by now that those are zucchini squash. I'm going to plan them outdoors soon. I just want the leaves to open up on the smaller ones right beside the huge ones that are progressing at an insane rate. I hope to be able to separate their root systems without damaging them and give them all plenty of room to grow.
@da_667 those plants sure look a lot like squash/cucumber cotyledon to me. If so, squash tend to have more sensitive roots than most culinary plants so extra care is warranted when moving them. If it doesn't outcompete your other stuff it might be best to let the true leaves develop a bit more before moving them
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@da_667 those plants sure look a lot like squash/cucumber cotyledon to me. If so, squash tend to have more sensitive roots than most culinary plants so extra care is warranted when moving them. If it doesn't outcompete your other stuff it might be best to let the true leaves develop a bit more before moving them
@cyberfarmer duly noted. Most of them time, I buy zucchini/squash from a garden nursery, and right about this point is where I tend to purchase them. and they just EXPLODE in size.
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