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Successful Parsnip Sowing.

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ed dibbles:
Many of you have had trouble getting parsnips to germinate this year. Some have trouble most years so here is a foolproof way to guarantee success.

1. Sow your parsnips sometime in March/April when the soil is workable.

2 Sow them in the usual way either sowing along the row as I do or station sowing, what ever is your procedure.

3 Cover the sown row with a plank of wood or similar long piece of wood. This prevents the seeds drying out in warm weather or the soil caking hard in wet weather.

4 After two weeks check under plank for signs of germination, removing said plank once you can see the first seedlings appear.

This method has worked very well for me the last few years. :)

ACE:
Another way of being certain of germination is use an icecream tub with a sheet of wet kitchen roll in the bottom sprinkle the seed on the wet paper and leave in a warm place until you see the roots starting, (don't let them dry out)  cut the individual seeds out and plant with the paper they are stuck to in your lottie. You can space them and it saves thinning later. Fiddly but sure.

I like the plank idea though and will give it a try, not that I like them, but everybody else does.

davyw1:


Robert_Brenchley:
I used the plank method. Some of the ones under the plank germinated, but they died when I lifted it. The few that weren't under it are OK.

ed dibbles:
Agreed it is a fine judgement when to remove the wood. It better when the very first signs of germination are showing. In other words when you see the first one or two, before most of them have broke the surface, but they have begun growing underground.

The plank does protect their papery seeds from drying out or too much wet though.

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