May 14, 2024

30 thoughts on “VIDEO: Square Paper Seedling Pots – Quick, Easy, and Biodegradable

  1. Great Video. However, I wished you suggested whether it is a good idea to use newspaper to make the pots. It is quite expensive to buy the brown paper you are using.

  2. I looked into paper planters last year and what i found was that newspapers use food grade dye. One of the few positive outcomes of having such fragile generations coming up. No newspapers want to be the ones to poison a paper eating teen so they are relatively innocuous. The non glossy newspaper only.

  3. Fantastic video. Did you bottom water or water from the top as your seedlings grew in the basement? The watering method could affect the longevity of the bottom of the pot?

  4. Thanks for your informative videos! I live in the U.P. and I have to be creative, because we have such a short season. My husband and I use toilet paper rolls! No ink or bleach!

  5. How well did these break down once in the garden? I tried compostable peat pots one year only to find out they broke down very little and held my plants captive in the garden bed. It took 2 or 3 seasons for them to fully break down.

  6. I loved it. A well researched video and i liked every detail and calculation like how one could save their time and energy and make things faster and keep things eco-friendly and pocket friendly too.

  7. This is great! I love your thoroughness to detail. I want a system to grow at scale while being as minimal in plastic use as possible & this ticks all the boxes. Mahalo (Thanks) from Hawaiʻi island. (we really care about not putting more plastic into our ocean!)

  8. Hi,you are doing a great video,very impressed! One question I want to ask is: can we put the whole paper pot into the soil for transplanting which can save the time and keep the roots in their own shape. I am from HK, starting to grow sunflowers for a charity. Thx a lot

  9. I stopped putting bottoms on mine. I put a couple layers of paper in the bottom of the tray to hold the seed starter in place. As the plants grow, the roots hold the soil together enough so that you don't need a bottom to hold the soil together when you transplant. This method significantly reduces the time it takes to make the seed cups.
    Also, use a straight edge and a box cutter (razor knife) to cut the paper. Much faster than scissors.

  10. I really appreciate your work. You can distill plastic into diesel, instead of sending it to landfill. I hope to investigate this more; it is hard to find the info but I have seen one video about it.

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