ronaldino
Member
So hypothetically...
Say you had these seeds from a crop that you've been holding onto for around 2 years.
Say you soak them overnight to get the shells loosened up and at about 10AM you soak a paper towel, lay the seeds down, and cover with another moist paper towel.
Now lets say something incredibly awesome and exciting attracts and demands your immediate attention forcing to place your freshly arranged sprouting project on the table next your houseplants.
Let's say this incredibly amazing event prompting your delayed zip-locking of your germinating embryos was so amazing, inspiring, and attention grabbing, that it managed to consume all of your attention throughout the rest of the afternoon and on to the early evening until right between brushing your teeth and heading for bed you think... "Hey, I should check on those moist supple vessels of life that I left sitting on the friggin table by the houseplants"
Let's say that our good friend 'evaporation' decided to take the day off and that moist paper womb was just as wet as it was when you left sitting there 12 hours prior.
Well it just so happens in this hypothetical situation that 'evaporation' WAS working on this day. Perhaps putting the final nails in the coffin of a vengeful, spiteful scheme to reign control over the poor seedlings hopeful futures and crap all over absent minded gardeners and their short attention spans. Perhaps it was just doing what it always does... I'm not here to judge
Your immediate response is to re-wet the paper towel and pray there is still life in the little seedlings, all of which were totally in-tact.
Given the circumstances of this hypothetical situation,
What do you think would happen over the next few days?
Say you had these seeds from a crop that you've been holding onto for around 2 years.
Say you soak them overnight to get the shells loosened up and at about 10AM you soak a paper towel, lay the seeds down, and cover with another moist paper towel.
Now lets say something incredibly awesome and exciting attracts and demands your immediate attention forcing to place your freshly arranged sprouting project on the table next your houseplants.
Let's say this incredibly amazing event prompting your delayed zip-locking of your germinating embryos was so amazing, inspiring, and attention grabbing, that it managed to consume all of your attention throughout the rest of the afternoon and on to the early evening until right between brushing your teeth and heading for bed you think... "Hey, I should check on those moist supple vessels of life that I left sitting on the friggin table by the houseplants"
Let's say that our good friend 'evaporation' decided to take the day off and that moist paper womb was just as wet as it was when you left sitting there 12 hours prior.
Well it just so happens in this hypothetical situation that 'evaporation' WAS working on this day. Perhaps putting the final nails in the coffin of a vengeful, spiteful scheme to reign control over the poor seedlings hopeful futures and crap all over absent minded gardeners and their short attention spans. Perhaps it was just doing what it always does... I'm not here to judge
Your immediate response is to re-wet the paper towel and pray there is still life in the little seedlings, all of which were totally in-tact.
Given the circumstances of this hypothetical situation,
What do you think would happen over the next few days?