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To grow your own tomato seedlings, seeds need to be started indoors by the end of the January. Otherwise, your plants won’t have enough time to mature and fruit before the summer heat arrives. Here’s your tomato-starting checklist: 🔲 Make sure you have fresh seeds from a reputable seed company. 🔲 Set up your seed-starting station. 🔲 Sow seeds, and set lights to 16 hours per day. 🔲 After germination, provide adequate moisture (but not too much), nutrients and air movement. 🔲 Pot up and harden off before transplanting outside. Take the Indoor Seed-Starting course that starts tomorrow (Jan 21 and 28, 6:30pm, online), and check off this list with confidence. In this seed-starting class, I share:
This class and all upcoming live classes are available to all enrolled students. Plus, if you need help along the way, you can get direct seed-starting help from me through the “Ask Callie” feature. Enroll now for just $40 per month (paid quarterly) and get access to everything. What students are saying:
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Callie is an expert garden educator for North Texas and a gardening columnist for D Magazine. Based in Dallas, Texas.