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-   -   Diatomaceous Earth as a seed starting medium (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=22329)

RayR January 9, 2022 12:23 AM

[QUOTE=DK2021;766448]Working my way through this very long thread and decided to jump to the end to ask if anyone has used this specific product: EP Minerals "Floor Dry"


[URL]https://www.grainger.com/product/EP-MINERALS-Loose-Absorbent-191W88[/URL]


The tech sheet (link on above page) states that the pH is 6.5. I had seen a few earlier posts mentioning pH being too high but this is slightly acidic so I think (?) it could work for seed starting.


Any advise would be welcome. I usually just use commercial germinating medium for starting seed. Would love to try a DE medium if it reduces damping off/fungus but I also don't want to waste precious seed.



BTW Grainger lists 3 DE-based sorbents (not counting one that is "scented"):
[URL]https://www.grainger.com/category/safety/sorbents-spill-control-spill-containment/sorbents-spill-kits/universal-sorbents-spill-kits/universal-loose-granular-sorbents?attrs=Composition+Detail%7CDiatomaceous+Earth&filters=attrs[/URL][/QUOTE]

[SIZE=1][SIZE=2]Haven't been here in a while.


As far as PH, it's going to vary, you could get some that is 6.5 or up in the 7's. The DE I have tested here anyway seem to be in the 7's. It never presented a problem for the germination stage anyway, which is my main use, Actually growing seedlings in pure DE can be a problem with some plant types if the PH is in the high 7's. I create mixes with DE,Coco or peat,and compost or worm castings that I've grown seedlings out to the potting up stage. I like to mess around like that to see what works and doesn't, but I've got a good PH meter so I can fine tune the PH of the final mix.

[/SIZE]
[/SIZE]

RayR January 9, 2022 12:56 AM

[QUOTE=DK2021;766448]Working my way through this very long thread and decided to jump to the end to ask if anyone has used this specific product: EP Minerals "Floor Dry"


[URL]https://www.grainger.com/product/EP-MINERALS-Loose-Absorbent-191W88[/URL]


The tech sheet (link on above page) states that the pH is 6.5. I had seen a few earlier posts mentioning pH being too high but this is slightly acidic so I think (?) it could work for seed starting.


Any advise would be welcome. I usually just use commercial germinating medium for starting seed. Would love to try a DE medium if it reduces damping off/fungus but I also don't want to waste precious seed.



BTW Grainger lists 3 DE-based sorbents (not counting one that is "scented"):
[URL]https://www.grainger.com/category/safety/sorbents-spill-control-spill-containment/sorbents-spill-kits/universal-sorbents-spill-kits/universal-loose-granular-sorbents?attrs=Composition+Detail%7CDiatomaceous+Earth&filters=attrs[/URL][/QUOTE]


[SIZE=2]As long as the EP Minerals Floor Dry is pure granular Diatomaceous Earth, that'll be the one to get for seed starting or a soil amendment. I see Granger has [B]Floor-Dry[/B] which is Medium-Coarse Granules, [B]Optisorb[/B] (Large Coarse Granules) and [B]Solid-A-Sorb[/B] (Fine Coarse Granules) See the PDF Sell Sheets for details on each product at Granger.



You may also some at Autozone also as well as other Autoparts stores.

I see Autozone has 2 EP Minerals DE products, one called Oil Absorbent DE 25lb and the other is EP Minerals Floor-Dry 15lb. I don't know what the size of the granules are if one is coarse and the other is finer
I still have a stash here that I bought years ago, so I haven't bought any recently.[/SIZE]

kurt January 9, 2022 09:03 AM

Plenty info on DE nutrients.
 
[url]https://www.google.com/search?q=beneficial+elements+in+diatomatous+earth+for+planting&rlz=1C9BKJA_enUS768US768&oq=beneficial+elements+in+diatomatous+earth+for+planting&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i333.40397j0j7&hl=en-US&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8[/url]

DK2021 January 9, 2022 06:02 PM

Thanks for the input. I think I will pick up a bag of Floor-Dry at the closest Napa Auto Parts shop. Might experiment with mixtures.

Father'sDaughter January 9, 2022 11:08 PM

I've been using the EP Minerals Floor Dry from Autozone these last few years. It seems identical to what they used to sell as Ultra-Sorb.

kycountryboy April 6, 2022 01:58 AM

I just started reading this thread. I have a 50 lb bag of DE, it is ground very fine, like flour. I have been using pro mix with
Fungazide. I still have more vegetables to plant. I'm thinking about mixing, it with pro mix.
Has anyone done this or have any ideas for very fine DE.
Thanks

paradajky April 6, 2022 10:06 AM

Kycountryboy: powdered DE best for pool filters, but if you wish to use in the garden, then use it against insects, either spread dry or mixed with water and sprayed. I think some people use it for soil amendment, you'll have to research that. The powdered form will cake up and not be good for seedlings.

RayR April 6, 2022 07:36 PM

There are 2 different kinds of powdered DE

The DE produced for pool filters is DE calcined at high heat with transforms it into [B]crystalline Silicon Dioxide[/B], basically finely powdered sand. It is not safe to ingest or breathe in the dust. Breathing it in can cause the lung disease Silicosis.

Powdered DE used for insect control is Food Grade DE, it is natural [B]amorphous silicon dioxide (Diatomite) [/B], which has a very low content of any crystaline SiO2. It is safe to use around the garden (you still want to avoid breathing in the fine dust though or getting it into your eyes) It will also slowly break down in the soil and provide plant-available Silicon. For applying to plant surfaces for insect control it is best to mix it with water and spray it on.

MrsJustice April 6, 2022 08:34 PM

Thank you for all the information with pictures.

I am learning from you all.
This is what I am learning by getting the Definition, uses, and Natural Uses for any plant.
[url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatomaceous_earth[/url]

kycountryboy April 9, 2022 07:18 AM

I found what I needed at AutoZone yesterday, I will get busy planting today!

MrsJustice April 9, 2022 03:09 PM

I am surprised that DE is used in many everyday products. I am learning the farming terminology to Apply for a Farming Loan, as I have collected all of the Food History of the Contraband Slaves.

paradajky April 28, 2022 09:55 AM

Long story short, how to I safely transplant root-sensitive seedlings like squash and cucumbers out of a small, 72-cell starter with Autozone's FloorDry? I did not start in egg-cartons. Not worried about the tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers, those will be easy.

KarenO April 28, 2022 11:45 AM

Can we look at all the professional growers and horticulture experts plants that use something designed to soak up spilled oil in your garage to start plants in?
It Might be pretty hard to find Some I think. But since it’s so great, all the professionals should be using it I guess?
No? Hmmmm
What are those experts using?

Seedling mix.
Me too.

KarenO

RayR April 28, 2022 03:38 PM

[QUOTE=paradajky;767839]Long story short, how to I safely transplant root-sensitive seedlings like squash and cucumbers out of a small, 72-cell starter with Autozone's FloorDry? I did not start in egg-cartons. Not worried about the tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers, those will be easy.[/QUOTE]

Why would you want to transplant squash and cucumber seedlings into DE?

I only use DE for seed starting and more than half of everything I grow seedlings in these days that is not root sensitive is my own mixture of DE, Coco Coir and compost.
You can grow them in straight DE but I prefer my mix where I have good control over the PH of the mix and I grow organically, so the organic components of the mix are a plus.
For potting up stage for the final weeks before transplant in the garden, they go in a good soil mix like Pro-Mix or such.

Squash and cucumbers I grow directly from pre-sprouted seed in 3" or 4" pots in soil mix. No potting up before transplant in the garden. For pre-sproutiing, i usually place the seeds on a moist bed of DE in a closed container. It works just like the paper towel method for pre-sprouting seeds.

Onions and Leeks I grow directly from seed in my DE/Coir/Compost mix and there they grow until separating the seedlings and transplanting in the garden. Since my mix is 50% DE, it is very loose and seedlings, even densely planted seedlings are very easy to separate without tearing up the roots to bad.
I've grown them is straight DE in the past, but again I prefer my mix of the inorganic DE with the organic coco coir and compost.

paradajky April 28, 2022 07:31 PM

My apologies for asking the question. Thanks for the response.

MrsJustice April 29, 2022 09:56 AM

[QUOTE=paradajky;767839]Long story short, how to I safely transplant root-sensitive seedlings like squash and cucumbers out of a small, 72-cell starter with Autozone's FloorDry? I did not start in egg-cartons. Not worried about the tomatoes, eggplants, and peppers, those will be easy.[/QUOTE]

I would not use Autozone's Floordry, because I grow Organically. For any root-sensitive vegetables, I would mix a little sand and natural planting soil together around my transplants. :)

RayR April 30, 2022 10:15 AM

[QUOTE=paradajky;767844]My apologies for asking the question. Thanks for the response.[/QUOTE]


Apologize for what? It's a good question. Any plant that is sensitive to having it's roots disturbed should be grown in a medium that minimizes root disturbance when transplanted in it's final place in the garden. You can't minimize root disturbance in a medium that is all or high in DE anymore than if you were growing in a medium that was all or high in sand or perlite.


How sensitive are squash and cucumber seedlings to root disturbance? I'm not even sure.

RayR April 30, 2022 10:27 AM

[QUOTE=MrsJustice;767850]I would not use Autozone's Floordry, because I grow Organically. For any root-sensitive vegetables, I would mix a little sand and natural planting soil together around my transplants. :)[/QUOTE]


Pure freshwater DE mined from the earth is as natural as sand. If DE is approved for organic gardening as a finely ground flour for insect control then how could it not be safe for organic gardening in granular form?

MrsJustice May 1, 2022 10:34 AM

[QUOTE=RayR;767860]Pure freshwater DE mined from the earth is as natural as sand. If DE is approved for organic gardening as a finely ground flour for insect control then how could it not be safe for organic gardening in granular form?[/QUOTE]

I never said DE was safe for Organic growing. I use one Organic safe method from Natives, and If my sol needs something else I will use Products from Miracle-Gro Products like "Miracle-Gro® Performance Organics" that I learn to trust like Natives from Hawaii. I do not get any help from anyone, so I will communicate the best products I use to everyone here, as I was helped here by Dr. Carolyn and Everyone since 2006, Amen!!

I hope Miracle-Gro does not mind me stating the products I use.

paradajky May 1, 2022 01:07 PM

Mrs. J: FloorDry from autozone is 100% natural DE. You are welcome to read the whole thread if you are interested in using DE as a seed starting medium and learning about its benefits and drawbacks. There are nearly 900 posts in this thread :)



Ray: your answer to my question is helpful in teaching those who are thinking about this process with root-sensitive seeds, and why they should try other methods, so they can avoid the mistake I made. When I posted my question, I had already sowed the seeds in DE. As such, I was looking for ideas on how to safely transplant them into either their final destination or an intermediary pot with regular potting mix, now that they've germinated since I realized the mistake. I was probably not clear about that. Would be easy to resow properly if I had more of the seeds, but I do not.



The trays have a hole in the bottom, I'll just try sticking something from below and maybe they'll pop out in one go once they are ready, and hope for the best.




EDIT: to clarify, I'm trying to figure out how to get the cucumber and squash seedlings out of the seed starting tray filled with DE, with minimal disruption to the roots.

RayR May 3, 2022 11:22 AM

I always seen it said that cucurbits were sensitive to root disturance, but I've never experimented to find out how true that is. Even if you started them in trays or plastic pots with a peat or coco based medium, you'd still be disturbing roots to a degree when transplanting.

Aside from direct seeding, to get an early start before consistently warm weather comes and frost is no longer a threat I've always started cukes and squash in peat pots to avoid disturbing the roots when transplanting.

DK2021 May 3, 2022 08:46 PM

I always read that one should direct-sow certain crops (corn, peas, squash and other cucurbits, and root crops), but aside from root crops, I have often started these "sow directly only" crops in containers for later transplanting. This is because I have had too many frustrating experiences with something killing my sown-direct seedlings. I have just transplanted five types of peas which I started in cowpots (which disintegrate better than peat in my experience and are made in my state).
Last year something decapitated my corn seedlings--didn't dig up the seed and didn't eat the shoot! I transplanted the next corn planting after that. Had never done so before but it worked fine and I had a good harvest.
@paradajky I think 72-cells are way too small for squash and other cucurbits. That, plus the crumbly nature of DE, makes transplanting a challenge. I was thinking perhaps there was something you could pour into the cell to make the DE "sticky" or even somewhat solidify, but materials like gelatin or agar need temperatures that your seedlings would not like. (Agar is used in plant culture and roots grow in it quite happily, but it is solidified before the roots ever touch it.) Maybe pectin would work? It's soluble in cold water and makes things sticky.

paradajky May 4, 2022 12:13 PM

FWIW, in the past I've helped my parents plant cucumbers and zucchini seedlings they purchased from the nursery with no problems. My mom would crunch up and mangle the rootball to loosen it a bit, and there were no issues that I could recall. So maybe my oversensitivity here is that I don't have any seeds left :) I do not want to derail this topic from germinating seeds in DE to discussing cucurbits, et all, so let's leave it at that for now :)






[QUOTE=DK2021;767883]@paradajky I was thinking perhaps there was something you could pour into the cell to make the DE "sticky" or even somewhat solidify, but materials like gelatin or agar need temperatures that your seedlings would not like. (Agar is used in plant culture and roots grow in it quite happily, but it is solidified before the roots ever touch it.) Maybe pectin would work? It's soluble in cold water and makes things sticky.[/QUOTE]



This is an interesting idea..! Other thoughts would be flax/chia seeds, which gel up in contact with water after a bit (I'd grind them first, so they would not germinate). I have a few empty cell to test this.. and if it works, I can try with one or two cucumbers since I have plenty of those. The more precious sprouts, I'm just going to soak it so the DE clumps together, then push from the bottom. I may also try cutting out the plastic cell, and then carry that to the final destination, and either poke holes in it for roots to grow out of, or, try to cut away the plastic.


Let's consider this idea "solved" for now, and I'll report back if anything interesting happens. Mostly for entertainment, but also in case someone else happens to do what I've done in the future and they come back to read this.


Thanks for the help :D

MrsJustice May 4, 2022 02:42 PM

[QUOTE=RayR;272493]The Tomato plants were starting to look unhappy in those small cells, so a few days ago I started potting them up. As you can see from the pictures, the roots of the tomato seedlings grown in the DE were long, thicker, and fibrous. It was a lot easier to separate the seedlings in the DE than in the Jiffy Mix. It took a lot of massaging of the Jiffy Mix roots to minimize damage so I could get a fair comparison.
I think next time I do this, bigger cells would work better. I didn't expect the roots of the plants in the DE to get this huge. Anyway they are all looking much happier now that they are separated and potted up with lots of room to stretch.[/QUOTE]

Going back and reading this forum from the beginning, it is good to learn that DE can be used by people that enjoy DE. Yes, it can be used for people's survival methods if we were in a war or a natural disaster. I still would not trade in my Miracle-Gro Planting Soil. I am trying Pitt-Mott for the first time this year on Shepard Mallory Muscadine GrapeVine requested by a Local Pastor following his Growing Methods he wants me to use.
But I still want my Miracle-Gro, Amen!!. I guess it's easy to use for Female Farmers like me, and a Safe product for the Native Americans who mix this product with their own yard dirt.

paradajky May 22, 2022 01:16 PM

3 Attachment(s)
A follow-up. I transplanted the five-week old squash and cucumbers from DE to their final resting places. One of two squash plants and two of five cucumber seedlings came out easy from the starter tray as they all had strong set of roots wrapped up along the bottom. Everything else was a stressful mess, where I used a knife to shimmy in and under. Some roots were left behind. I did not do any trickery with gelatin, agar, chia seeds, etc.

Today, the day after, all the squash and cucumbers look great. Pictured: squash seedling root-bound and two squash in final containers.

In the same starter tray with DE:

- 13 of 16 tomatoes germinated (no go with 2xtaz chocolate, 1x amalfi orange, oh well)
- only 3 of 16 peppers germinated but all three had messed up tops (see bottom right image... any idea what happened?), so I'm trying them again, this time in regular 4" pots.

- 6 of 8 eggplants germinated (2x Ao eggplants did not make it).


I've never grown eggplant. It took 2.5 weeks for them to germinate, and I decided to try to up-pot them yesterday (total five weeks), but they had almost no roots. They seem okay so far, maybe just slower growing. Perhaps I should've given them longer.

b54red July 31, 2022 12:03 PM

I have successfully transplanted squash and cucumbers from DE to other pots and into the garden directly with no problems. I just wet the DE an hour before transplanting and scoop them out with a spoon or knife.

I prefer DE for starting tomatoes, peppers, broccoli, cabbage, lettuce, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower and spinach. I later move all of them except lettuce into a small cup with potting soil. For larger faster growing things like cucumbers, squash and beans I prefer to start them in the pots with potting soil since they get larger faster and require more room and watering. I rarely if ever have any damping off problems with my seedlings planted in DE unless I leave them in a watering tray keeping them soaked. I used to have major problems especially with tomatoes damping off in potting soil or other potting mixtures.

One thing that I have found that DE is especially good for is starting onion seed. I use a fairly large pot and fill it with a mix of medium size DE and the smaller sand size DE and sow the seeds heavily. I have to be very careful when fertilizing them to not disturb the small seedlings but once they get four or five inches tall they have a good root system and are not disturbed as easily by top feeding. Once they get to the size I want I let the DE get fairly dry and pull the whole clump of seedlings and the DE out and shake the DE off the roots. It works much better than trying to separate onion seedlings that are densely planted in potting soil. My success with onions improved dramatically once I figured out how to do this.

Bill

Father'sDaughter August 5, 2022 09:41 PM

Bill, DE has been my go-to with onion seeds for several years now. I've also had huge success with densely sown lettuce seeds in DE. The DE does not dry out as quickly as other seed starting mixes and, as you found, the roots are easy to tease apart when planting out.

kenny_j September 4, 2022 10:40 AM

Can't wait for next year to try the DE. I always seem to run into mold issues on plants while still very ypung. Happened this year with some that ended up stunted and unhealthy. As far as cukes and squash and even corn, I have started all indoors and never had ant issues transplanting. It's a myth.


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