Seeds Don’t Read Very Well

magicherb | January 14th, 2010 - 10:37 am

It was around 1992 when I became irrevocably hooked on growing plants from seed. I was the proud, often exhausted and overly ambitious owner of a large perennial garden and far too many gardening books (Yeah I know, “Not Possible!”) and I took it into my head that life would not be complete without one or two Crambe cordifolia (of Vita Sackville-West “White Garden” fame) and some rather finicky Himalayan blue poppies – both of which needed to be started from seed.Himalayan Blue Poppy

Unlike the annual vegetable seeds that (be warned) I’ll be relentlessly promoting for anyone who wants to grow container vegetables, these perennial seeds were not considered easy to germinate or grow. But, to make a long story short, although it’s a little late for that already, I was eventually successful and from then on – totally hooked.

I have a new project that I’m starting this year and if I’m lucky, I’ll be working on it for the rest of my life. I have an online bonsai store and I’ve basically given up on finding outdoor bonsai trees in Canada. There are a few very limited sources, but they aren’t offering much depth in their online inventory and other than the odd Trident Maple, outdoor deciduous trees are not available. I’m going to change that and start growing outdoor stock and to get the variety I need, my only option is to start them all from seeds.

We’re not talking the easiest of seeds to start here (nor the hardest) since they all require extra steps like scarification and stratification. One of them – the Korean Hornbeam, Carpinus Koreana – requires about two months of warm stratification, followed by three months of cold, before anything like germination can be expected. I timed the start so that my seeds will be sprouting around April, which is when I’ll be set up to deal with them.

My delight was heavily mixed with surprise and a light sprinkling of dismay when I checked on the seeds a full 4 months before I expected to be dealing with little trees, to find that two have already sprouted. I had no pots in the house, which is hard to imagine, but true and nowhere set up to put them.

Korean Hornbeam SeedlingSo now, I have two Korean Hornbeams, the first two trees in my outdoor bonsai nursery, growing in converted plastic water bottles on my office window sill. I check them out a few times a day. To my delight I find they remind me that that new beginnings are always possible although they won’t necessarily appear when or how you expect.

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