TopVeg – growing veg,fruit&herbs

April 15, 2009

Root Trainers aid Vegetable Gardeners.

Filed under: Uncategorized — TopVeg @ 1:04 pm

  Root trainers are an aid to vegetable gardeners which help plants establish quickly. New root trainers are on the market and worth investigating.

Root trainers are long pots, which encourage the growing roots to grow down, instead of becoming a tangled mass, going round and round a pot.
Root trainers allow young seedlings to be transplanted with minimal disturbance to the roots.

A compact rootrainers pack from http://www.rootrainers.co.uk/  contain separate books of rootrainers that fit into the rapid drip tray, which will fit onto a window sill.

compact-rootrainers

compact-rootrainers

There are 20 cells in a book & the cells enable the seedlings to be transplanted with minimal disturbance so that they can establish themselves quickly in the vegetable garden.

They also have a gutter type, called a ‘rowplanter’, which is ideal for rows of peas.

gutter rootrainers

gutter rootrainers

The seedlings are slipped out of the’gutter’, and planted straight into the row in the vegetable garden- and the roots are not disturbed at all.

Plants develop more quickly in root trainers and help the vegetable garden get away to a good start.

 

 

  14 Comments » <#postcomment>

   1.

      I’ve made my own equivalents of these products using loo roll
      innards and plastic bottles donated by neighbours – much cheaper !

      Comment by VP <http://vegplotting.blogspot.com> – February 13,
      2008 8:51 am <#comment-4593>

   2.

      Hi Vp

      I have my own collection of loo rolls, too! In fact also have a
      kitchen towel roll – & have spent hours deliberating how to make
      the most of that one!

      TopVeg

      Comment by TopVeg – February 13, 2008 9:00 am <#comment-4594>

   3.

      I am going to try and grow carrots in the loo rolls as you call
      them ( in the US they are toilet paper rolls, or t.p.rolls). We
      have very rocky soil so maybe the rolls will help the carrot grow
      straight. It will take a lot of rolls, however, but since zero
      carrots have been harvested after several years of attempting
      them, this might be the answer. Thanks for all you helpful info.

      Frances at Faire Garden

      Comment by Frances <http://www.fairegarden.blogspot.com/> -
      February 13, 2008 9:13 am <#comment-4595>

   4.

      Frances
      t.p.rolls sounds good! I am sure they will help your carrots.
      Growers of prize carrots use drain pipes to help produce long,
      straight carrots, so I am sure your t.p.rolls will do the job.
      Thanks for visiting
      TopVeg

      Comment by TopVeg – February 13, 2008 9:23 am <#comment-4596>

   5.

      Frances,

      I’ve grown peas and a few other things in loo rolls. They work
      well, only one thing to be aware of: sometimes, when you’ve
      planted them, during the night, small mushrooms come up from the
      loo rolls. they die back by morning, and i wouldn’t eat them, but
      if you get worried.. don’t, i don’t think they’re anything to
      worry about – we’re still here after a year of eating veg from the
      loo rolls!!

      keth
      xx

      Comment by kethry <http://kethry.wordpress.com> – February 13,
      2008 9:27 am <#comment-4597>

   6.

      Why would mushrooms grow from the rolls, do you bury the edges, or
      leave them up a bit out of the ground? I want to do this right.

      Frances at Faire Garden

      Comment by Frances <http://www.fairegarden.blogspot.com/> -
      February 13, 2008 9:36 am <#comment-4598>

   7.

      Frances – don’t worry – the cardboard in the t.p.rolls will break
      down in the garden – and add to the organic matter. Mushrooms like
      to grow on organic matter – so perhaps that is what is happening.
      I have never seen this, I wonder if anyone else has?

      I would place the top of the t.p.rolls below the soil level, so
      that they keep damp. This will help the roots within the t.p.rolls
      to grow & eventually to burst through the rotting t.p.rolls!

      Remember to thin your carrots when they are big enough, so you
      just have one per t.p.rolls

      TopVeg

      Comment by TopVeg – February 13, 2008 10:24 am <#comment-4599>

   8.

      I have a problem with mold on my loo rolls, but think that’s more
      due to the climate inside of the glas bell where I put them. Right
      now I’m experimenting with egg shells too, and I may continue
      using only shells in that one.

      I’ve come across people growing false morels that prepare the soil
      by burring large amounts of news papers underground and then
      ‘plant’ mycel on them. Perhaps paper of more coarse quality is
      easy to digest for the mushrooms?

      Comment by Rosengeranium (Indoor Gardener)
      <http://indoorgardener.blogspot.com/> – February 13, 2008 12:19 pm
      <#comment-4609>

   9.

      Hi TopVeg,

      I like the conversation’s that started on here! I just cut up the
      kitchen paper innards to t.p. size – makes 2 or 3 this side of the
      pond. I do the same with Xmas wrapping innards – makes about 5 :)

      Comment by VP <http://vegplotting.blogspot.com> – February 13,
      2008 2:31 pm <#comment-4613>

  10.

      Rosengeranium & VP-
      this is an interesting theme – particularly if we can double up
      our production from the feral mycelium that takes a fancy to our
      cardboard rolls.
      We tried to put cores of mycelium into our sawn off tree trunks.
      They took about two years to produce oyster mushrooms – but by
      then we had lost confidence & didn’t dare eat them! It would have
      been easier with t-p rolls!!

      Comment by TopVeg – February 13, 2008 3:57 pm <#comment-4614>

  11.

      I have read about these once before. TP rolls would be a great
      biodegradable alternative.

      Comment by Curtis <http://www.growingthumbs.com> – February 15,
      2008 12:42 am <#comment-4648>

  12.

      Frances – i heard that a good way to stop carrots from ‘forking’
      in rocky soil is to use the end of the rake or something long and
      cylindrical to make a deep narrow hole, fill it with lovely fine
      compost and sow the seed directly on top of the compost. Even with
      a bit of soil movement this should still help you have relatively
      normal shaped carrots.

      Comment by Caroline – March 29, 2008 4:01 pm <#comment-5158>

  13.

      Hi Caroline

      That is a useful bit of information. We have created a post about
      it at http://topveg.com/2008/03/30/*how-to-grow-straight-carrots*/
      <http://topveg.com/2008/03/30/how-to-grow-straight-carrots/>

      Thanks for your comment

      TopVeg

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    Pingback by ow to Grow straight Carrots « Top Veg — June 10, 2009 @ 7:33 am

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