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Upcycle Small food container or even newspaper to start seeds in the interiors

By working on a newspaper sheet, the perfect pot of the size can lead to interior.
Jessica Damiano about AP

If you plan to start seeds in the interior this season, you will probably know that you will need a growing medium (packaged, sterile seed start mix is ​​ideal), a sunny windowsill or a growth of lights and of course seeds. But have you thought about which containers you will use?

You may plan to buy rand trays, torp pots or divided plastic apartments, but not your only options. With a little imagination, you can easily get to the trash on the trash on the trash.

Try some small food containers

If you have a coffee machine that uses the K-Cup style plastic capsules, do not dispose of it after brewing. Instead, peel off the film covers, let out the used coffee grids and remove the paper filters below. The pods have the perfect size for the start of seedlings and can be washed, disinfected and reused from year to year. You will notice that the machine even pushed a hole in the floor of every pod for drainage.

Most other small plastic plastic containers, such as yoghurt cups, Salad Packets of the Clamshell or egg boxes, are also well suited for starting seeds.

The newspaper or cardboard also work well

You can even produce seed pots from newspapers leaves. Much of today's newspaper paper also uses soy-based ink, which is generally considered non-toxic, also suitable for the start of food.

Here you can find out: Fold a newspaper page in half the length and fold it a second time to reach a long strip. Next, place a tomato paste, which is the perfect size for a seed pot along a edge of the newspaper, a few centimeters away from below. Then roll the newspaper tightly around the can to form a cylinder.

Fold the excess newspaper at the base of the can, insert the wrapped can to the right and press it firmly against a flat surface like a table or a counter to strengthen the bottom of your new pot. If necessary, use a small piece of adhesive tape to secure the floor.

Remove the can and voila! You have made a free starter home for your seedlings.

Instead of pouring conventionally, what the newspaper would risk searching the newspaper, keep the floor surface moist with a spray bottle.

Or four 1-inch blows, evenly distributed to end a toilet paper roll. Fold the resulting tabs and glue them on the spot to create a solid floor for your pot.

Why use such small pots?

As their names imply, seed start containers are only intended for the first phase of the life of seedlings. If you grow out of these first pots, sprouted seedlings must be laid to larger containers to absorb their expanding root systems.

Treat fragile seedling roots carefully when you around to minimize the likelihood of a transplant shock (newspapers and toilet paper roll pots are biodegradable, so that plants do not have to remove plants from them; simply the whole pot in a larger plant.)

You may be wondering why you shouldn't just start seeds in larger containers right from the start. It is a logical question with an equally logical answer: larger pots require a larger amount of flower mixture that would absorb more water than the young roots of a seedling can absorb. This excess moisture would be exposed to seedlings from root rot, an often fatal plant disease caused by excess moisture.

It is also inexpensive to get smaller. The sterile seed start mix is ​​more expensive than the ordinary flower leaf mixture, and they use considerably less in a smaller container than in a larger one. If you repot young plants, you can use an ordinary blind price mix in your promotion tanks, but never use normal garden floor. It is too tight and can accommodate pests or pathogens.

With a cardboard toilet paper roll and scissors, an upcycled -diy -seed pot can be made.
Jessica Damiano about AP

A cardboard toilet paper roll, which is glued to one end, can be used as an upcycled DIY -Samentpot.
Jessica Damiano about AP

A cardboard toilet paper roll converted into a stubborn DIY -Bank pot.
Jessica Damiano about AP

A completed DIY -seed pot from a newspaper sheet.
Jessica Damiano about AP