Planting Seeds: The Right Way

easy2mem

Active Member
Many people on the Internet tell you to place the newly germinated seed root down into the soil. This is wrong, but not entirely because doing so will still work but there are consequences from doing so.

The proper way is to plant the seed with root tip up, just about 3-5 mm in the middle of your pot. You can use the tip of your finger to make this shallow impression in your soil.

The reason that you should plant your seed root tip up is because you want to help your seedling along as much as possible, for two reasons:

01. To provide the plant with a thicker stem.
02. To preserve vital energy.

When you plant the seed with root down, the tiny seedling will waste time and energy flipping itself upside down so that it can break through the soil. The seedling does not have the energy to push through straight up, besides the seedling does not exit from beneath the soil head first. What happens is that the seedling will stretch horizontally and push outward through the soil with its side.

Therefore, if you place the seed in the soil root tip down then your seedling must reverse its direction and burrow through the soil in order to position its self for breaking through the soil's surface.

When you place the germinated seed with root tip up, then your plant will only have to burrow just a small degree and hook the soil in order to literally bend its stem to break soil then to slowly pull its head through. By doing this you will shorten the time it takes to break soil by at least 24 - 36 hours, so your new ETA is ~2 days rather than the standard ETA ~3-5 days.

Another benefit is that your stem will remain shorter and thicker, because it will not need to stretch as far to correct its position. This means your plants start out short and stout and grow to be strong and healthy.

A better plan may be to place the seed about the size of the seed into the soil in a horizontal position (I haven't tried this). By doing this you may see your plants break soil much sooner, but the root may be shallow, so it may be more beneficial to sort of force the seedling to work a little first, but not too much.

The rest is up to you. Hope this helps.
 

unforgiven1420

Well-Known Member
Many people on the Internet tell you to place the newly germinated seed root down into the soil. This is wrong, but not entirely because doing so will still work but there are consequences from doing so.

The proper way is to plant the seed with root tip up, just about 3-5 mm in the middle of your pot. You can use the tip of your finger to make this shallow impression in your soil.

The reason that you should plant your seed root tip up is because you want to help your seedling along as much as possible, for two reasons:

01. To provide the plant with a thicker stem.
02. To preserve vital energy.

When you plant the seed with root down, the tiny seedling will waste time and energy flipping itself upside down so that it can break through the soil. The seedling does not have the energy to push through straight up, besides the seedling does not exit from beneath the soil head first. What happens is that the seedling will stretch horizontally and push outward through the soil with its side.

Therefore, if you place the seed in the soil root tip down then your seedling must reverse its direction and burrow through the soil in order to position its self for breaking through the soil's surface.

When you place the germinated seed with root tip up, then your plant will only have to burrow just a small degree and hook the soil in order to literally bend its stem to break soil then to slowly pull its head through. By doing this you will shorten the time it takes to break soil by at least 24 - 36 hours, so your new ETA is ~2 days rather than the standard ETA ~3-5 days.

Another benefit is that your stem will remain shorter and thicker, because it will not need to stretch as far to correct its position. This means your plants start out short and stout and grow to be strong and healthy.

A better plan may be to place the seed about the size of the seed into the soil in a horizontal position (I haven't tried this). By doing this you may see your plants break soil much sooner, but the root may be shallow, so it may be more beneficial to sort of force the seedling to work a little first, but not too much.

The rest is up to you. Hope this helps.
you devise this method all by yourself?
 

easy2mem

Active Member
No, but it is not without its reason. Think about the head and how it is shaped. It is oval shaped or elliptical which is not a very good shape for digging. The root tip is pointy and sharp and is much better designed for burrowing. Therefore if you force the tip to dig rather than the head then it is simple to see why this method works best and provides early ETAs.

Hope this helps.
 

ODGROP

Well-Known Member
I put mine in root down and they never take over 48 hours to break ground, usually break ground in about 24 hours. The reason I started using tweezers to position the root down is because I used to just drop them in not caring how the landed. One of my plants broke ground as a loop because of this and the leafs never came up after about 2 weeks so I threw it away. So you keep planting them how you do and I'll keep planting em how I do....
 

easy2mem

Active Member
well if your pulling that time off doing it root down then that is super seed. How can your seed sprout in 2 days if you plant it backwards? It has to work way too hard to accomplish what I achieve in less time and energy guaranteed.

You love what you learn with I suppose so if that works for you then great, but truthfully the best approach is root up.
 

unforgiven1420

Well-Known Member
well if your pulling that time off doing it root down then that is super seed. How can your seed sprout in 2 days if you plant it backwards? It has to work way too hard to accomplish what I achieve in less time and energy guaranteed.

You love what you learn with I suppose so if that works for you then great, but truthfully the best approach is root up.
how long you been at this man? you really seem like a pro.
 

easy2mem

Active Member
I been learning from some really good mountain growers for a while I guess. I started outside but I like the indoors better because you can really control the ecosystem in more precise details.

I can't make a picture but here is some ASCII:


(
O

that is up. =)
 

socom3riot

Well-Known Member
Just look at a seed that is germinating, and u will see that planting root up is better... heres a picture with an explination. This way , having the root up, allows the tip of the root to simply travel downward. Having the root facing down, the tip has to finish going upward, then make a 180 turn and go back down again.
 

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Cannabox

Well-Known Member
hmmm.. i dunno.. seems logical when you say it like that, i never really studied or looked into what seeds actually do from the time you put them in till the time they sprout .. seems crazy though, don't it? :P
 

SmokeDoggy

Well-Known Member
socom, what you say makes sense but in this picture the red looks like the blue, yet one claims root is up and the other is root down - they look the same to me, both going upwards.

But I do get what you're saying - make the tip of the root face down, regardless of position.
 

socom3riot

Well-Known Member
socom, what you say makes sense but in this picture the red looks like the blue, yet one claims root is up and the other is root down - they look the same to me, both going upwards.

But I do get what you're saying - make the tip of the root face down, regardless of position.
I get what ur saying, it is kinda confusing, because u could think of root down as, the tip pointing down, or u can think of root down as the actual starting of the root pointing down. I was all high last night thinking of that , and I confused the fuck outa myself lol'

but what most people think of root up or down as, is the starting of the root coming out of the seed pointing up or down.
 

Picasso345

Well-Known Member
Here is what he is saying: When you plant the seed, you have the choice to either plant it so the root is in the proper position or the head is in the proper position. Most people put the root in the proper position because that is what you can see, but by doing so it puts the head in the wrong position. his claim is that the root can maneuver into position quicker than than the head, so plant it with the head in the right position, but the root in the wrong position.

Now the truth? He is 100% correct, but it doesn't matter in the least. 159 other things will have more of a bearing on your bud three months down the road. Do whatever you want and move on.
 

SmokeDoggy

Well-Known Member
Yeah I'm more confused than ever, even with the pic (which I still think they both look the same) so I'm just going to plant my root facing SIDEWAYS - that way it is equidistant from needing to go up or down.. :)
 

socom3riot

Well-Known Member
dunno how u guys are confused... the root pops out from the bottom of the seed..the tip goes towards the top of the seed. Placing where it poped from the seed straight up, makes the seed TIP keep on growing in the direction it went, which would be downward. If u put where it poped from the seed straight down, the root would continue growing in the upward direction, then make a turn to go back down again.

anyways, it really doesnt matter. I've tried both way, they both work.
 
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