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  2. When to Start Seeds Indoors for a Successful Spring Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/start-seeds-indoors-successful...

    Root crops, including carrots, turnips, and beets. Fast growing veggies, like lettuce, arugula, spinach, kale, and radishes. ... Can you start seeds indoors too early? Yes! If you start seeds ...

  3. When to start planting seeds indoors? Check your frost date - AOL

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    February marks the midpoint of winter, and with spring just over the horizon, many gardeners are dreaming of sunny days and dirty fingernails. A week before the last frost date, begin to “harden ...

  4. 12 Plants You Should Plant In The Winter (Plus, What You ...

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    These seeds are the start of next summer’s blooms. Gardeners can take a cue from nature and use winter as a time to plant seeds of a variety of annual and perennial flowers. ... Carrot. Getty ...

  5. Carrot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrot

    When first cultivated, carrots were grown for their aromatic leaves and seeds rather than their roots. Carrot seeds have been found in Switzerland and Southern Germany dating back to 2000–3000 BC. [17] Some close relatives of the carrot are still grown for their leaves and seeds, such as parsley, coriander (cilantro), fennel, anise, dill and ...

  6. Photoblasticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoblasticism

    Photoblastic response of Japanese katsura tree seed germination [1] Photoblasticism is a mechanism of seed dormancy. Photoblastic seeds require light in order to germinate. [2] Once germination starts, the stored nutrients that have accumulated during maturation start to be digested which then supports cell expansion and overall growth. [3]

  7. Germination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germination

    For seed physiologists and seed scientists "germination rate" is the reciprocal of time taken for the process of germination to complete starting from time of sowing. On the other hand, the number of seed able to complete germination in a population (i.e. seed lot) is referred to as germination capacity.